Blank Check with Griffin & David - The Curious Case of Benjamin Button with Richard Lawson
Episode Date: October 22, 20232007’s THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON is a film that dares to ask the question, “What if he baby but old?” Despite the meme-ification of David Fincher’s trip to the uncanny valley, we are... pleased to make our belated case for why this movie is GOOD, actually, and in step with the themes of Da Finch Man’s body of work - not a sappy outlier. Vanity Fair’s Richard Lawson returns to the podcast as we all grapple with mortality, wistfully opine about tugboats, and develop an absurd running bit about late character actor Orson Bean (who is not in this movie). Did you know Producer Ben has been struck by lightning seven times? This episode is sponsored by: Bombas (bombas.com/check CODE: CHECK) ExpressVPN (ExpressVPN.com/check) Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com or at teepublic.com/stores/blank-check
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Some people were born to sit by a river.
Some get struck by lightning.
Some have an ear for music.
Some are artists.
Some swim.
Some know buttons.
Some know Shakespeare.
Some are mothers.
And some people podcast.
That was good.
Hello, thank you.
I can't do this for very long.
You can't do this for very long.
So one of you is doing Fran Lebowitz,
and the other is doing Tom Waits in Shortcuts.
There's no good restaurants anymore.
Me or Kissy, come on.
We should just say that we are all, in fact, old.
That's how the episode is starting out.
We've never started an episode.
Can't rightly walk, can I?
No.
David's in a wicker wheelchair.
We're going to end this episode in the crib.
But we start in one foot in the grave.
Do you know, have any of you read the short story?
Ow.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The drunkest short story he ever wrote.
I read it.
You read it?
In preparation for this.
It's only like 20 pages long.
It doesn't have too much in common with the film, right?
It's quite different.
Ask me how many pages it is.
You said 20, so I'm going to ask you how many pages it is.
20.
But it feels a lot longer.
but it feels a lot longer.
That just feels like it was like, wow,
whatever,
God,
age backwards.
And they're like,
yeah,
sure,
Scott,
can you fucking,
where's your novel?
And he's like,
I just gotta go get some cigarettes.
I can't,
I don't know why I'm doing that.
That's how we talked.
It's about him waking up with a hangover,
feeling really old.
And by the end of the night,
he's kind of like,
Google got,
got baby drunk. Every impression the end of the night, he's kind of like, goo-goo-ga-ga, baby drunk.
Every impression we do in this episode
is going to end up being...
It's going to be like this.
Look at that old man.
Man.
You know who I love?
Who?
Benjamin Button?
Yeah, especially that flavor.
This guy.
Benjamin Button.
I want that guy around.
One of the ten coolest characters we've ever covered on this podcast.
Like, he should be on Jackass.
Snake Plissken.
You know, just hanging out with everyone else.
Seven-year-old Benjamin Button.
Neo from The Matrix.
The Terminator.
Ripley.
Who are the biggest badasses we've ever covered on this show?
I was just going to ask if Brad Pitt
is the only actor,
other than Thornton, obviously, to be nominated
for doing a Sling Blade
for at least half of this movie.
French fried potatoes.
He's gone full Sling Blade
for at least a good chunk of it. The thing I was going to say
about the story. Yeah. F. Scott
Fitzgerald. In the story. He kind of talked like this. I was going to say about the story. Yeah. F. Scott Fitzgerald.
In the story.
He kind of talked like this.
I don't know.
What did he talk like?
Old sport?
Yeah, sure.
I don't know.
Take a swing.
I never heard him on the, you know, phonograph.
All right.
The story.
Your rock cylinder collection is not great, by the way.
Last time I was at your place, I was leafing through it. I fucking put a wick in one of them and lit it by mistake.
I was taking a bath.
You have rumors.
I have rumors.
I'm born to run.
I've got no jacket required.
No deep cuts.
The thing in the story is it's like the father goes to walk around the block pacing and waiting for the doctor to come out with the cigar.
The son, it's a boy.
Congratulations, right?
Right.
He goes to the post office.
He gets his residual check for LXG.
How to baby eats a boy.
How to make a Jason Fleming joke.
Doctor walks out.
He's like, I'm ruined.
I'm ruined, I tell you.
And he's like, what happens?
Is it a boy?
Is it a girl?
And he's like, it's something so awful.
They'll take my degree away.
Your family is banned from this hospital forever.
And the accents are written phonetically exactly the way I'm doing them right now.
And he's like, tell me what it is.
He's like, I can't tell you.
You go in there.
You see for yourself.
And he walks in and the nurses are like, oh, curse you.
Curse you, Mr. Button.
And he's like, what happened?
What was so bad?
Point to me.
Which one is my baby?
And they go, it's that one over there.
And it is a little old
man with a long beard who's like hello father he's not a baby right he has an old man he has an old
like an old man just kind of tiptoed out it's richard farnsworth tractor right basically right
that's how it's presented and they're like we have to swallow you in a blanket blanket that's
no clothes for an old man like let's go watch batlock like a fully
sentient old man correct right with like his own personality and history which makes sense when
you hear that the first version of this movie to like properly be set up was frank oz directing as
a martin short vehicle right yeah which is which is basically like right ben yeah it's a real it's
a real path not taken moment right it's. It's basically a Clifford sequel.
Basically Clifford.
Clifford the whole life.
This might have predated Clifford or was it right after?
I think it probably is around the same time.
But I do think it was optioned in the 80s.
We'll dig in, obviously.
But that's what you think about.
Martin Short playing a literal old man in like probably I assume it was meant to be a modern day adaptation.
Sure.
But like going to
school it sounds really fun and it sounds great right we would have gotten jiminy glick that much
earlier you know because i feel like that would be sort of the voice interviewing seven-year-old
ben jimmy buck yeah how funny would that have been no you say you're seven but you look a lot older this movie but you look a lot older
yeah they look a lot older don't you
look a little bit later short has been defended on the internet the worst take in the internet
and i don't say that lightly was dropped and in in as a reward for us all having to only read the headline and
not read the body of that piece right we had the best four days of the internet in a long time
which was just everyone sharing martin short clips and my new favorite glickism is when a guest makes
a joke and he goes like i almost get it exactly Exactly. He laughs first and then says,
I don't think I understand.
You know, the way this movie,
I mean, sort of like the magic trick of this movie
is like building to the moment
where you have Brad Pitt at the exact midpoint
where he finally gets to be Brad Pitt, right?
Where he's not de-aging,
he's not kicked in makeup and whatever.
It'd be so funny if the Martin Short movie,
his perfect moment in the middle was glick that's what he is ideal he glicks it right yeah it all
glicks together and that's when he gets with his love interest and she's like we're meeting in the
middle like yeah right yeah it's his love interest dixie yeah exactly it's dixie listen uh this is
blank check with griffin and david i am David I am Griffin I'm David I look a lot older
I look a lot Simzer
this is
a podcast about
filmographies
directors who have
massive success
early on in their careers
and are given a series
of blank checks
to make whatever
crazy passion projects
they want
sometimes those checks
clear and sometimes
they bounce
baby
it's a mini series
on the films of David Fincher.
It is called The Curious Case of Ben...
I'm sorry.
The Curious Pod of Benjamin Buttcast.
Yep.
And today we're talking about that film.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,
which I think is fair to say is kind of his most maligned movie.
I feel like it has the worst reputation
it's a joke
it's more of a meme
than a movie
at this point
and I think
after re-watching it
for the first time
since it was in theaters
that it deserves
to be a lot more
I think this movie
is very good
this movie is
very very good
I think this movie
is wildly misunderstood
and I think it is
a perfect example
of a movie
that was
fucked by being
placed in the center of Oscar discourse.
That's part of it.
And having a crazy digital stunt.
That was all anyone talked about in the lead up to the movie.
Right.
The context in which this movie was released with those two forces framed it horribly.
David Fincher directing it, I think, is a huge problem for this movie.
Coming off of what is his entire career arguably his best
film the peak of his career but it's not just that it's just this is to this day kind of an odd uh
sappy in a good way entry in his career well we can talk about it i'm just saying like people are
sort of thrown i think being like this is a fincher movie but i also think that's why its
reputation is so weird is that people also view it as a failed weepy that they're like this is a Fincher movie? But I also think that's why its reputation is so weird is that people also
view it as
a failed weepy.
That they're like,
this is him trying
to go full emotional catharsis
and failing.
That's the thing,
it's easy to tag it
with exactly like,
he's going Oscar bait.
But he's going for
something kind of
darker here
and then for other people
they're like,
this is sappier than I want
out of his cynicism.
Well, look,
I'm going to say my journey with this film and I bet you I'm going to say your two journeys with this film when I say this.
Sure.
Saw this film in 2008 when it came out.
Yeah.
I was 22.
You were probably a little younger.
But I looked a lot older.
And you were probably just a little older. I was a little older, yeah.
But you looked a lot younger.
Well, no, you didn't.
I could argue that.
And I was like, boring. And then I didn't. But you looked a lot younger. Well, no, you didn't. I could argue that. And I was like, boring!
And then I didn't watch it again for a long time,
and then I watched it for this,
and I cried my little eyes out.
Interesting.
And I was like, what a wonderful film.
I don't think when you're that age, you...
Yeah, I think I was not really...
You have to really have thought about death a lot more.
You know, we've all had death in our lives,
but, like, I mean, your own mortality.
And this is a movie where, like,
everyone's like, oh, it's a sentimental Oscar bait. Yes, about
the inevitability and the horrifying
inevitability of death and trying
to eke some small modicum of hope.
Not only that, but this movie is kind of about
like, meaninglessness. Yeah, exactly.
Like, it's like, we're here and we're gone
and like, there's not much we can do about that.
This movie's mostly about working a tugboat.
So I don't know. Well, yeah, sure.
Which, David, is meaningless.
To be as reductive as possible,
but I do think this is like the cultural narrative
of this movie,
is he's trying to do Gump, right?
Yes, right.
Eric Roth wrote it.
Totally.
And it's positioned that way.
It's paramount.
They put a ton of money into it.
It's got a huge beloved star,
two huge beloved stars,
but you're sort of like,
this doesn't feel like the kind of movies big studios
make anymore. And it's because
Forrest Gump is this fucking aberration
that every couple years studios would
be like, could we replicate that in any
way? And Big Fish is an attempt
at a Gump. Couple years after
this, Walter Mitty's an attempt at a Gump.
When's the last time we Gumped? I think
Walter Mitty was the end of them trying to even
get a Gump. Has there not been one Gump since middy and walter middy parodies benjamin button almost as
if to say they fucked up we're gonna gump it correctly right but is like also haunted by
a little bit of stiller being like how much like studio comedy do i need to put in this right to
satisfy satisfy my audiences um but this movie i think people saw it as oh he fucked up trying to
gump rather than isn't that embarrassing right rather than i think fincher going here's my
interpretation of forrest gump which i think he executed pretty successfully to his worldview
but it is almost by design a movie that is kind of prickly and off-putting and like it's it's not
going to offer you any emotional catharsis
it's deeply sad if you really engage with what it's saying but in a way that like most people
don't really want to have to think in this movie um it's funny though because it's like i was
talking to my friend who hadn't seen button because she's like five years younger than me
and that's it's kind of enough our guest, by the way, is Richard Lawson.
Hello.
A Vandy Fair local man.
Can I just say before you finish your point, David,
I am so honored just a few days after
its New York Fashion Week debut
to be in the Congratulations Atelier.
Yes.
I don't think a lot of people get to come here.
I'm wearing my recycle polo.
I want one.
David, I'm going to get you one.
I love a polo.
Absolutely.
Yes.
We are.
Call me a British mint because I love polo.
Okay.
Okay.
Some people get that.
Yeah.
We are like just almost about a week.
It's been about a week since we did.
Ben's Fashion Week.
Congratulations.
Live at the Bell House.
Yeah.
Richard was gracious enough to be a celebrity judge.
I had a small amount of participation in the show.
And then I felt like the second half of the show, Mrs. Harris kind of took over.
Yeah, you really got body checked off the stage by Mrs. Harris.
But it's so weird, though, because I feel like there was no reason why you guys couldn't have done something together.
But you just kind of disappeared.
I'm such a big fan.
I'm so on the record as being such a big fan of your work.
I saw her backstage.
That lady's ego.
I don't know, man.
She was fucking carrying it around with her.
She threw a phone at me.
Now, to be fair, you wouldn't hurry up.
Right.
And I had stolen her Dior dress.
She did dust it first, too.
That's true.
It was a squeaky clean phone.
It was so fun being backstage.
It reminded me of being in college and putting on a play.
And so I'm grateful for the opportunity, Ben.
And you too, also.
Thank you.
Yes, that's all true.
It was so fun.
And I want to thank you guys for letting me do that crazy show.
Of course.
This is like two months old by the time this episode is up.
It was very much Griff and I just sort of being like,
We're long for the run.
So this is your thing.
Like people kept texting me questions.
And I would just be like, guys, I understand that I'm often a logistical person.
I'm all the talent this time.
You arrived backstage exasperated and said like, what is this fucking thing?
Why is everyone asking me where to go?
I was getting texts from a lot of people being like i'm here where do i go and i'm like
this is ben's show it's not my show ben you and marie your fashion shows in the spring in milan
i always do milan in the spring everyone knows that everyone knows that um you guys have a non-compete clause with each other You and Marie
Party party party
Did a long segment of
Your favorite looks in film history
Yeah that I actually didn't really see much of
Because I was backstage
Had you seen Button before?
I had never seen Button
I feel like there's some stuff in Button
That could repurpose itself into a
Congratulations formal wear line
There's some looks
Okay such as
Beings have been looking a lot older
Tattoos you can kiss
Tattoos you can kiss
The Jared Harris character who does his own tattoos
He's an artist
Those are some fantastic looking tattoos
Yes
They shot up my paint They shot up my painting Painting tattoos that's he's an artist those are some fantastic looking tattoos yes yeah yeah they
shot up my paint isn't that what he says they shot my painting yeah painting painting he's
just talking about his own a lot of a lot of hot southern wool yeah i like movies where people wear
wool down in the bayou yeah yeah well it breathes so well you know yes to finish my point please um
talking to uh my friend who's right just a little younger than me and that's
enough to have not seen this in theaters and then basically missed the boat on button sure because
button didn't really endure that much no it bought its way into the criterion collection god bless i
have and otherwise yes exists as a joke exists as a meme and i was like you know this movie got 13
oscar nominations which is like almost like it's to the record. It's like two below the record.
Obviously, it's a technical move.
But it got 13 Oscar nominations.
It won three.
It made $330 million worldwide.
It was a hit.
It starred Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett.
It was directed by...
It has like, you know, career launching performances from people like Mahershala Ali and Taraji
Henson.
Not only that, it's like basically, it's immediately followed by Fincher's most successful run.
Like this kickstarts him finally getting accepted by the Academy.
They recognize him.
And then he does the run where it's like three for three.
The movies do well.
They get Oscar nominations.
People are into them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And yet it is a completely forgotten movie in some way.
It's a bit of a forgotten movie.
Other than she was like, oh, he has Benjamin Button's disease.
She was like, I know he ages backwards right and i was like yeah you know it's sort of related
uh to his you know long lost love in a diary while hurricane katrina bears down on him i'm
realizing this sounds insane as i type this out this is my whole read on the movie they're like
it's that tiffany pollard like meme like hurricane katrina like question mark question mark like like an hour in forky was like
wait that it's hurricane katrina like literally yeah it is and they're like knowing newsroom
lines of like oh it's it's gonna skip it's not gonna hit the city right yeah anyway but then
no this is part of your big take okay that's very big take but if i can just put i kicked my face
down this is usually what david does and I've gotten to the bad habit.
The power is transferring.
I know.
I'll say my big take in a second, but my adjourn to this movie was, I liked Fincher well enough,
but he was not one of my guys.
I go to see Zodiac opening weekend.
I'm like, holy shit, he is the guy.
In my mind at that moment
i'm like you're saying about the zodiac killer yes and i was like and the director did a pretty
good job i like what he stands for i like how he does it i hope zodiac still work and i'd love to
see him do a couple more murders i felt the way about the zodiac killer i did about axel rose
where i was like i got into him too later they ever to get back together and do the old routines again?
The point is... Sorry, I was...
I know,
and David checked his emails
and you checked your phone
and Ben started editing
a different episode.
I saw Zodiac,
I was all about it.
Right.
And so then I'm like...
Hard not to be.
Whatever this guy's next movie is,
this is now
my most anticipated movie.
And you'd hear these things
because it had, like,
such a long
post-production process. I remember reading an article in in the new york times about what they were trying to
like pioneer um or no i'm sorry i remember reading that article in 2006 before zodiac even comes out
um and then i'm all in after zodiac the trailer for this movie i remember seeing for the first
time opening weekend crystal Crystal Skull.
The trailer was not online.
Yep.
It's summer 2008.
It's kicking off the summer.
It's a lot of trailers for the big summer movies.
Yeah.
This thing plays.
And much like I remember the feeling of when the Social Network Theater trailer played for the first time.
Yep.
Two great fucking teasers.
Yep.
That have such a different tone than everything else that was playing that the audience just went pin drop silent i was like what is this
fucking thing i must have seen this trailer 100 times it was unbelievable and it's a great trip
it is a movie that if anything suffers from the fact that its trailer is a better version of what
it's trying to do in 90 seconds than the movie is. It's just such a concise, evocative...
He cuts a good trailer. Remember that
Mank trailer? Everyone's saying Mank all the time?
Oh, yeah. Mank! What's Mank?
Uh, excuse me? Is that a movie?
It's an alert.
It's a state of mind. I say it to mean that there's a bird
near you. Mank!
For me, it's more of a worldview.
Look, in 2008, I think we're probably
pretty similar, Griffin. Yeah.
I saw a lot of movies.
I had just moved to New York.
That was prime.
Yeah.
Didn't have a lot of friends.
Not to humble brag.
I had no friends.
I lived in New York.
I saw a movie every week, if not more.
Saw this trailer a thousand times.
My rewatch of this movie was probably the second time I've seen it.
But there are so many lines like, oh, that older.
Or we're meeting in the middle or whatever.
That's main trailer.
The teaser has almost no dialogue other than the opening narration.
And it runs through his whole
life. The trailer, the last shot of
the trailer is Cate Blanchett walking the little
boy. I mean, and I remember that very
clearly. And it's just kind of like tone
poem stuff, but done in order. And you're like,
holy shit. I also remember thinking
is Fincher the first guy who's cracked the uncanny
valley that was the whole and that's the
promise of the teaser right because
you're like this is like pretty
evocative and kind of magical seeming art
like but but it's also
damned by those expectations totally it's kind
of why like the a24 trailers for
the whale yes like did not want
to show you Fraser you know because it was like
what do you mean we had one perfectly good picture of him
right that was just
worth a thousand words
that was all you needed
the Benjamin Button film was even more withholding
you know and it really worked until it kind of
doesn't because you eventually do have to see the thing
yes yes but that first teaser
I was like holy fucking shit
and I remember saying to my dad
they played the trailer for the new fincher movie it looks like it's like one of the best things
ever made and he was like like the trailer is one of the best things ever made or the movie
looks like it's going to be one of the best films ever made and i said i think both yeah i went into
this with unrealistically high expectations of my man's just going to make one of the 10 greatest
films of all time.
A lot of us did have really big expectations.
And this wasn't a festival movie, so like,
we were just seeing it.
I love a long movie title like that.
Totally.
That's kind of exciting and intriguing.
The film's called Benjamin Button.
Right.
I'm going to bed.
But what if I told you about the curious case?
This case is a curious one.
And you're like, how curious?
Like, what are we talking about here? Like, George? Right. Like, is there And you're like, how curious? Like, what are we talking about here?
Like, George?
Right.
Like, is there a man with a big yellow hat?
Like, what are we doing?
But I saw it.
I was slightly disappointed,
but I don't think I dismissed it the same way you did.
I thought it was terrible,
but I was definitely kind of like,
oh, that was a little bit of a slog.
Technically, so impressive.
I think I was,
I had been in New York for two years.
I was, you know, where I was i was working where gawker.com a perfect as a staff writer that was my first full
year and so i was not in that kind of headspace and i was and because i mean i i'd loved still
love forrest gump like i i owned the vhs like whatever so i i have a chocolate my sentimentalism
has re-emerged sure but i just knew
working for gawker i was like there's no way that i can no like that movie no you know and so maybe
i went in even though that trailer was snarky feeling snarky yeah um and then i just kind of
forgot about it until i re-watched it for this podcast i remember uh seeing it thinking it was
good defending it feeling like i get what he's trying to do here. I understand
why people are going to dislike this.
I can't deny I feel a little
disappointed by it, but I respect
it. And then I felt like it kind of got a
bad rap, but it was also like, I don't
really feel an amount of enthusiasm to
want to defend it. And it partly got a bad rap
because it did well in Ganashtra. Totally.
So people were like, you know, had very
lofty feelings. Yes.
And then maybe three or four years ago,
I feel like I said it on this podcast,
but I was like,
I re-watched some of Benjamin Button
and I think I kind of get it now,
like in a deeper way.
And I've been like metastasizing
this Benjamin Button take for a while now.
That is...
I mean, we can unpack it at large right we should get into the making of the movie a little but i think it's almost like a pointedly an anti-gump yes it is it
is saying here's what it actually is to sort of tumble through time right right you know and gump
addresses death but this is like no everything about being alive, unfortunately, is about death. It's not just this kind of like picker-esque where you just kind of like go through eras of whatever. It's like, no, we have a horrible World War II scene. And look, the scene in Gump that's the Vietnam scene is like there's death in that. But like, yeah, I feel like he's like, no, here's what's here's the darkness behind the sort of Gump Americana. I think the fundamental thing that's frustrating about this movie to watch for a lot of people
is that the character is so passive.
He is such a wallflower.
The opposite of Gump where it's like, here's this ordinary man who's just like driven by
the beat of his own drum and he marches through life and he positively impacts everything
he touches.
Every important moment has changed because of him.
And Benjamin Button's a character where, like, if you remove him from
the movie, there aren't
a ton of events that change radically.
He's floating through life like most of us are.
He witnesses stuff. He touches people.
His impact is the emotional connections
he makes with people briefly in passing.
Yeah. But those people's lives
are not, like, changed by course of action
by meeting him by and large,
right? Outside of his daughter being born. Yeah. He he abandons his daughter which is the cruelest thing
he does and i think that's the other part of it which is like um everything that seems unfintry
about this movie being kind of like sappy it being sort of fantastical you know having this sort of
like storybook quality that feels so against his like absolute
detail-oriented realism cynicism whatever is like it's the framing device it is here we are in the
middle of katrina right here's julia or am i giving a very very good performance yes a kind
of key performance she's awesome and a big a big movie for her to have been in at that point in her
career totally yeah obviously she is literally Brad Pitt's
love interest in Legends
of the Fall, so it's kind of funny to have her
play his daughter. And there's a lot of, like,
Pitt career-carrying
people bringing them back
in this movie. I mean, he and Blanchard were
supposed to do The Fountain together,
so this is sort of the realization of them spending
years trying to find a movie to do together.
Jared Harris used to be his captain.
Fincher says he cast Jared Harris specifically because of his, like, one moment in Ocean's Twelve.
Oh, wow.
Yes.
Wasn't Lost in Space?
That he, like, loved him in that.
No.
Well, he thought that was a documentary.
No, that's why Fincher cast Matt LeBlanc.
Yes.
Yes, right.
And then Matt LeBlanc showed up
and Fincher was like,
you have the armor, right?
You know Lacey Chabert
plays the hummingbird in this movie, right?
Yeah, and of course,
and Blarp was the first AD.
Yeah.
Pitt recommended Tilda,
although I think
because of post-production,
this must have been shot
before Burn After Reading,
even though that came out first.
Okay.
Do you think if you're Tilda,
did they have to sit Tilda down and be like, okay, so,
you are going to be referred to as
plain as paper,
looks-wise. Are you okay with that?
Forky was like, what?
If there's anything that Tilda Swinton
is not... They do their best to make her seem
dowdy, like, sort of in personality
or whatever. But yeah, she's a very striking
looking woman. I'm the first to say this.
And I had completely forgotten she was in the movie.
Oh, really?
Oh, that's the part I was looking forward to.
Speaking of forgetting things,
I have to preface this episode by saying,
in a fit of, in a really misguided fit of peak,
I decided after watching Benjamin Button
that I needed to rewatch for the hundredth time
Brad Pitt's other somewhat misbegotten epic
about death, Meet Joe Black.
So if at any point I say something
and you're like, Richard, no,
that happens in Meet Joe Black,
just, I apologize.
Okay.
Thank you.
Meet Joe Black, a film I am committed
to someday covering on this podcast.
One of the craziest performances.
We're definitely going to cover it.
We'll get there.
Can I do it?
I'm calling it now. Yeah, fine yeah done you're in shot call um the the julio ormond deathbed blanchett superstructure of this movie happening during katrina read that
here diary over there is is the one section of the movie that is in like kind of the trademark finchery style it has no heightened storybook quality it feels very emotionally sparse right
and stripped washed out yeah right and i think ormond in the silences speaks very well this sort
of history of their relationship right a mother who perhaps was always a little bit at arm's length
was not cruel was not you know uh uh necessarily, but was a little bit unknowable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's that feeling that like.
It was a later in life pregnancy.
She probably.
Correct.
It was not like dying to be a mother.
I have not lost a parent, but I've lost people in my life.
And there is that thing of just like either you lose someone unexpectedly and you're immediately overcome with the things
you never got to talk about the things you never got to know or you're in this sort of position
where someone's leaving you and you're trying to squeeze out everything you can you're trying to
get some sense of resolution or some sense of understanding at the very least right and this
movie is about like from that prism her trying to understand the life of a mother that has never really made sense to her.
And beyond that now, the introduction of a father character she never even knew.
And it all has this heightened quality because it's like, it's not a memory play.
It's like her reading her mother's diaries and trying to project.
No, her father's diary.
Oh, yes.
I'm sorry.
Her father's diaries at her mother's behest trying to project an understanding
of what these things must have looked like and i feel like when i hear stories about my children
my parents as children their childhood and especially when i was a child i almost picture
them as like muppet baby versions of themselves where it's hard to think of them as an actual
child i think of them as just an adult with a bigger head and a tinier body right you know and i'm not saying this movie is arguing this is not an actual truth but
you could argue that it is like kind of a fanciful not to get all hassan minaj emotional truth right
oh dear yeah but it's like her benjamin button does get anthraxed at one point in this movie
we're trying to learn the story you know griff Griffin didn't actually grow up in New York City.
I didn't. But he emotionally
did. The real
Benjamin Button was played by Steve Ranicisi.
Correct.
That man.
What's he up to? He told one lie. It was never part
of his act. One easy white
lie. He showed a lot of contrition.
He backed off.
That's all I'm saying i i can't believe how much
better i think he looks now in his handling of that entire situation he he did tell just the
the one i mean that we know of obviously just but he did tell a lot in a way that was a little
freaky i agree i mean it was long it was a long story it was long. It was a long story. It was long.
Another long story is the curious case of Benjamin Button.
That's true.
My point is, it feels like this is sort of like theater of the mind, her trying to wrap her head around lives that she's learning about at the last second.
Just before it's all how quickly memories become fiction.
Yeah.
Because at a certain point,
what you actually live through and experience
has started to become the version of it
that you tell in your head.
Your brain changes things that you don't even realize.
And then when other people tell you their things,
I swear to God, this happened.
This is my memory.
It was exactly like this.
You're then now filling in, in your mind's eye,
the version of what they're telling you is reality
that's already a story that they tell themselves.
And this sort of, like, structure of the movie is, like,
that's the real film is Julia Orman at Cape Blanchett,
and this is her trying to make sense of two lives
that she didn't really know in her last glimpses.
Happening in the backdrop of Hurricane Katrina,
because much like her mother's death in that entire life
that remains something
of a mystery to her, this whole city is about to be washed away. Yeah. This clock's going to get
drowned. You know, like all of this eventually just sort of like goes off. Right. And it's like
it's both not incredibly important and deeply sad. Yeah. Benjamin Button was not someone who
changed the course of American history, but he had a life, and his life impacted her mother
and resulted in her,
and they'll both be gone,
and then it's just myth.
Right, right.
And sometimes the myth is something insane,
like a man who was,
a baby was born,
an old man turned into a young teenager,
whatever.
Right.
But also, like,
anything becomes distorted to that level of myth.
My dad, who's an older gentleman,
will tell us, you know, in a life, well, he was 49 when I was born.
So he had a whole life.
But he was 45 when he married my mom.
So like whole life before then.
He was one of the first professors at UC Irvine.
And he used to like drink martinis and smoke a pipe.
And I'm like, there is no way that's actually real because it sounds like a myth.
And it's like, no, because it's just so far in the past.
Right.
That like it's just like, was there really a baby that was born old like i
don't know when you try to picture that version of your dad in your head does it feel any more
absurd than the version of benjamin batman in the bathtub it's a story like you're right like if i
try to picture right stories from the past about my immediate family or whatever right i'm imagining
a movie version of their lives.
Yes.
Right?
Obviously.
Yeah.
I can't go see it myself.
No, you can't.
Griffin.
I accept your point.
I can't.
I watched this movie with the commentary,
and there's the opening little kind of prologue
to the story within the story of Elias Kodias
and Mr. Cake and the clock.
And he said that they screened it for audiences and they were just like,
I don't understand what this has to do with the movie.
Is this going to pay off in some larger way?
They didn't like that being seeded and then two hours and 45 minutes later being paid off
in a way that's more thematic, that isn't like super plot oriented or whatever, right?
And he said the shift was late in post-production.
We added all the filters of the film grain
and the pops and the crackles
and the distortion and whatever.
Which looks so good.
And once we did that, everyone was into it.
Right.
Because it was sort of like, well, this isn't real.
This is a story you're being told.
This is old.
We're using the language of old film or whatever.
And it's like important to do that tone
setting of like well here's basically the diary starting out with a fable that he heard that he's
just taking on word that feels as abstracted to him as everything she's about to read about him
recounting by by his own word his real life and what would it be to go backwards? But of course, he's not actually,
I mean, he's living backwards in some ways,
but he is moving towards death,
same as everybody else.
I think there's maybe points in this movie
where characters who see him after a long time,
and they're like, oh my God, you're so young,
don't think like,
but they think that he might just kind of
look that way forever or something.
They don't imagine that there's an end to it and the fact that button dies before daisy yes is interesting
but also the fact that he's not reversing time because i was alive for that part in a weird way
look as scott fitzgerald i'm cracking the dossier well. Heard of this guy? Yeah. 1922. Love to pull the cord.
The curious case of Benjamin Button.
Now you've cracked the voice.
That is what he sounded like.
It's, you know, published in Collier's.
That was Trumbo, actually.
Yeah, how wet were the keys on his typewriter?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, yeah, how wet's the script?
That's always the question.
Fitzgerald said the story was inspired by a remark of Mark Twain's.
The fact that it was a pity the best part of life came at the beginning and the worst part at the end.
Youth is wasted on the young, et cetera.
Yes, exactly.
And so he submits this story.
An anonymous admirer says to him,
I read this story and I wish to say that as a short story writer you would make a good lunatic
I have seen many pieces of cheese
In my life but all the pieces of cheese
I have ever seen
You are the biggest piece
I hate to waste a piece of stationery on you
But I will
That's what that replies were like back then
And then Zelda said lunatic don't mind if I do
Wow
Where was this in his career this is well that's a great
question and i will of course answer it by googling f scott fitzgerald's date of birth uh he would
only have been like like not even 30 like i mean but then again he died when he was 44 so it's not
but any of his it's after the sight of paradise which is his debut debut novelle which is a wonderful book yes
uh and it's the same year as the beautiful and damned which is his difficult second album you
know and then gatsby is 1925 but this is pre-gatsby it's pre-gatsby okay so he was how old when gatsby
was written he was like you know 30 want to feel old? I have to go home. That's depressing. For me, not for him.
Well, I mean, he had some depressing shit happen to him, too.
Such as he drank like a quart of whiskey every fucking hour.
Until he melted.
That's only depressing after a certain point.
For a while, it's pretty fun.
Sounds like a lot of fun, actually.
60 years later, Ray Stark, A producer Brings this story
To Universal
And in 1988
Is the fabled
Frank Oz
Martin Short
Project
So that's
Probably right before
Clifford
Because Clifford is
Made in 1990
I think
I think Clifford films
In 89
Comes out in 94
So maybe
When Benjamin Button
Fell apart
Short was like
But Clifford It kind of feels possible yes that short was like i gotta do something where
i'm a you know young person the body of an old person or whatever you know um universal chairman
casey silver so we have f and losing his damn mind yes yeah i'm just glad that clifford is
coming up like if f coming up If he walked back
Into our lives
Scott Fitzgerald
We're going to fire up a movie for you
I loved it
Tear in his eyes
This is where this art form was headed
I always dreamed to write something this good
I've always just wanted to say Mason
He wants to say Mason
He really does
So want to say Mason. Well, he wants to say Mason. He really does.
So,
Casey Silver has a next-door neighbor
by the name of Robin Swaggord,
a lady who wrote
the 90s Little Women.
She wrote Matilda.
She wrote
a pure masterpiece
with lightning
called Practical Magic.
Your favorite movie of all time all the day she wrote that
the roof blew off her house from quality um also the kazan's mom yes yes right right right she is
she's part of the right exactly right um and uh she gives that one to amblin that script that she
writes and spielberg wants to make it with tom cruise uh yeah correct kathleen kennedy and frank
marshall come aboard as producers would have been... Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall
come aboard as producers.
Cruise would have been particularly bad
Well, they wouldn't have had to
digitally shrink him at all,
which is nice.
But the stilt's budget...
Yeah, baby size as it is!
Yeah.
No, it's that thing of like,
Minor Report in 2002
was like the culmination of 10 years.
Right, they've been circling.
Of them circling and being like,
it has to be the right thing.
Spielberg decides instead to do some like
bullshit too for jurassic park and schindler's list or whatever those are he was gonna make one
benjamin button instead he does jurassic and schindler uh kennedy marshall then found their
production company they take this over to paramount and that is when fincher who has not even made
alien 3 yet is shown this script uh So he... But the Slycord
script originally is what he's shown. Correct.
He liked it, but he said
it was a beautiful script, but it hinged on the audience's
affinity for and knowledge
of jazz. Because
this is part of Fitzgerald's, like, Tales
of the Jazz Age, and I imagine this
original script might have been more indebted to the Fitzgerald
story. Interesting. Oh, this is in a
collection called Tales of the Jazz Age? age okay now it's often just printed with benjamin button on
the cover and brad pitt's there his dick is out and you're like jesus so like jazz it's benjamin
button's about the ages you don't look like right yes right right it's about the ages you don't live
through right um so then it's like uh they're shopping this around and they are like fuck the real problem
we have here is you would need to cast five actors yeah because you're gonna need to do this you know
you can't do this with visual effects the martin short version of it makes sense the second they
push it towards drama right it requires some sort of at least and if you cast that many actors you're
losing all the impact totally and
and you can't bill it as a movie star movie you know it's like you can't get a talent in the same
way uh agneska holland uh who did the secret garden signs on pretty much after that and she
just had a big hit in the festivals she did i'm excited to see it uh what's it calling a green
border border it is well sequel to green zone most of the directors and writers who are flirting with
it at this point in time are people who worked on a lot of like august yes children's literature
adaptations yes you know you're like things where the sun is streaming through the trees
i'm surprised karen wasn't involved after a little princess perfect sense obviously ron howard uh
steps in but uh john travolta steps in with him
i can only imagine how subtle that performance would have been well it would benjamin button
would have smoked cigarettes the entire time and they wouldn't have needed wigs in the beginning
he was gonna play him like edna turnblad and i think by the late 90s and you do hear this sometimes
marshall and kennedy are like you know what this is just just one of those scripts that's really good on the page
and it will never get made.
Unmakeable.
Like, it's just,
that's just what it is.
Then Spike Jonze comes aboard,
gets Jim Taylor,
uh,
uh,
to rewrite the script.
Charlie Kaufman supposedly rewrote the script
at one point.
They turned it into more of a comedy,
something quirky.
Yes.
Uh,
who knows what that movie is.
They never had an actor attached
right never and they just i guess they just took some shots at a script about a guy going backwards
and is this in in the time between being john malkovich and aptation straight off of malkovich
okay and it kind of makes sense that it's like after malkovich they're to their jones like
what do you want like so there were our hottest was another one of those right five no one can crack
this can't be done right you want to crack something else did uh kaufman write an actual
script for this or just kind of like look at it rewrote this script but there's not much about
like whatever that was eric roth is the first person post swikard to do like a full page one
right go back to the adaptation, start over.
Right?
Everyone else is building on this white card draft.
He gets brought in to rewrite.
Jones exits at that point.
Yeah.
Those who are not, like, a natural fit, I would say.
No.
But Eric Roth is really hot stuff still.
I mean, he remains hot stuff. He is a great screenwriter, in my opinion,
even though Gump is not really what I...
But, like, he a an a-list
pro writer yes um even though he's written some boring ass shit probably one of the highest paid
yeah him like steve's alien like you know people like that cap david cab it's that tier of the 90s
guys who just yeah richard le gravine by the time he's done with it, the movie has no resemblance to Benjamin Button apart from
it's called Benjamin Button.
Sure, it's gotten so far.
It's about a backwards man.
He calls the love interest Daisy as a tribute to the Great Gatsby.
There's some sort of nanny in the short story, apparently,
who Queenie sort of vaguely resembles.
But not a huge part.
And the mother, apparently, is in the story.
Obviously not in this. And in this story, he is raised by his father. Yes. a huge part. And the mother apparently is in the story. Obviously not in this.
And in this story, like, he is raised by his father.
Yes.
Mr. Button.
Yes.
Yes.
Whereas, obviously, you know.
Roth had his mom get diagnosed with cancer while he was writing the script.
His dad died a couple years after that.
He's still working on the script.
He says, this movie is all about that shit.
Like, about these, like, tragedies, you know, ordinary all about that shit like yeah about these like
tragedies you know ordinary tragedies that like you go through in life you know trying to make
sense of these things in retrospect yeah and i think that's the other thing it makes sense it
took this long to get made because you're just like wow what a concept i could just imagine the
movie that could be made off of that and then you're like what is the dramatic crux of this
story it is fascinating that this man was born this way and lives you're like what is the dramatic crux of this story it is fascinating that
this man was born this way and lives this way but what's the story and then you go like well
forrest gump similarly on paper the guy just moves forward in time if anyone's going to be able to
crack this have the gump guy crack it and what they were lucky to find is that the gump guy rather
than just like repeating himself was going through was in the midst of working through some shit and poured all of that directly into it.
Um, 100%.
Uh, that line where Cate Blanchett, old lady Cate Blanchett says, I'm curious.
Rather than I'm afraid.
He says that's something his mother said when she was in the hospital.
Uh, Joan Didion's book, The Year of Magical Thinking.
Uh, she says, which is about her husband dying um
you have to go to this land of grief whether you want to or not and go experience grief he's like
that's what i'm thinking about here this is all in for i feel like this is all like backing up
griff's case totally like you're the prosecutor right now sitting like a big smile on your face
it's interesting to think about the movie in that context because you were saying griffin about how
like he's such a cipher like this lead title character this movie is kind of a blank
so it's really not a movie about him it's a movie about everyone around him totally
right like and that's fascinating that's what's fascinating is that he is he's in so much more
of the film than everyone else right right right like it's not even like well blanchett's right
there by his side the whole
film so you can argue that she's actually the protagonist right she's missing for long swaths
of the movie yeah she does not appear as like and she is played by younger actors like she's you
know yeah although you know she dubbed all the younger actresses over right um but yes you see
her caked under pounds of makeup then it's younger actresses with her voice it takes over an hour
until she enters as kind of like pretty it's an hour it's i i checked the yeah time code yeah
to you know 19 or whatever but still like her looking blanchett is l fanning to this day that's
a role she's doing yes and she's good at it she's great um but yeah but yes yes it is odd that like
i i think in a certain way you need to view this movie through Julia Ormond as it is her interpretation of the story.
But she's not in a ton of the film.
He is the guy.
It's about people beholding him and being like, I think the most crucial scene in the movie for me as someone who just turned 40 and is dealing with a lot of like pretty modeling like is that all there is you know
middle-aged stuff um is her in the swimming pool saying like i hate i i don't i hate getting older
and it's so much about her like beholding him and it's like here's a guy who is living what we would
all dream of what if after all of the experience of adolescence i looked so much better in my 40s
than i did then you know or whatever it is and's like, but it's not enough, you know?
And they kind of learn
that through him.
Oh, he's so lonely, whatever.
It's not really about
Benjamin Button's trajectory.
No.
At all.
No.
And then it ends
with her taking care of him.
She's in the last,
she's in, you know,
the last 15 minutes of the movie
and he's gone.
He is gone.
There as a baby.
He's a baby.
Can we talk about the law?
Oh, wait, I'm sorry.
Fincher says it shows the fallacy and the idea that youth is wasted on the young.
Right.
Like, to reaffirm your point.
Yeah.
Like, you know what I mean? And what you said, Richard, of like, if only I knew what I know now, then when I was in that body or whatever.
It's like, when you get that place.
He's an idiot.
Yeah.
His dumbest decisions happen when he's at his physical peak. The thing where people say like, man, if I could be 80 in the body of myself at 20. Right. What would really be like a selfish asshole? So not to direct the conversation, but like I think that one of the elephants in the room, why why this movie gets made fun of and became a meme and a joke is I'm curious what you guys think does the logic of this actually work no obviously it
doesn't right but is that detrimental to it what do you mean by the logic like like obviously because
the question is okay he's born a tiny old man why doesn't he die a giant baby right look here's the
answer right that would that's the big question but baked within that is like obviously i wish
they had gone full-spirited like like that would be great like his his body gets younger i don't know i just love the room just imagine like walking
down the street like the stay puff marshmallow guy that's yeah the final scene of this movie
benjamin button stomping across central not only is he getting younger he's getting a lot
julia ormond looks out the window and he's just like lumbering toward her.
I'll stop Katrina.
Yeah.
No.
He actually broke
the levies unfortunately.
He has to become a baby.
Obviously.
Yes.
Because that's the only way
we can handle this.
Right.
We can handle
an old man baby
at the beginning
because babies already
look a little bit
like old people.
But that's sort of
the weird logic thing as you said is like they make this choice to not have him be the old
man with a long beard being like why do i get to leave this place right right they make the choice
to have him be a wrinkly baby right which at that point everyone's like i haven't seen a baby that
looks like this but it could be like progeria it could be yes there are conditions that exist in
the world right you. You also,
right,
exactly.
Like he would have been seen as freakish in some way maybe,
but it's not just like,
Oh my God,
like real science of just, you know,
ailments,
conditions,
diseases that make people age rapidly,
or at least the illusion of it.
Right.
Right.
You're like,
what's weird is that he like gets younger and hotter. And then you get to that point where You're like, what's weird is that he, like, gets younger and hotter.
And then you get to that point where you're like,
and then what happens?
Does he, like, turn into sperm?
Like, is he...
Right.
The...
Where does life begin?
Actually, Griffin, I want you to answer that political question.
They very wisely do not answer that question.
But even the giant baby thing, right?
Like, if you were actually treating this as hard science,
right?
What should happen is
whenever he's at his, like,
physical tallest, right?
At that point,
his brain should start, like,
going down.
Right.
But in the adult body.
Right.
It doesn't make sense
that he would start shrinking
in that same way.
I know that, like,
old people get smaller.
Yeah, but not,
they don't become...
Right.
And, like, I think the thing is they they don't become right and like i think the
thing is they add the dementia thing is like oh it's like it's like a baby yes but like our old
people with dementia really playing with blocks like you know like like benjamin maybe i don't
know i think they just skip through this i also think that's the other thing he's getting at is
it's like those are the two most similar states or when you're at your absolute oldest your
absolute youngest yeah Yeah. Yeah.
For me,
the one that really got it watching at this time that really stuck in my head was when he's probably physically in his,
uh,
sixties,
seventies,
but like an adolescent in,
in mind is when he goes to the brothel and the woman's like, whoa!
You really wore me out. It's like, no,
but he's still physically old.
I know he might be...
I just don't know where the physiognomy...
I just don't know how that all works
and maybe it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter.
You have to accept... But I think back in the day,
people made fun of it because of the giant
baby question.
Maybe Ferdinand Gianni had the routine that was like,
let's put an old man turned into baby.
What if Brad Pitt
old man baby? Like, I'm just like,
yes, I'm going to make fun of this.
Kumail had the routine of like, what do you mean you've never
been to a doctor?
People
need to study you.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Now,
re the visual effects. Are you guys aware of this commercial the orville redenbacher commercial yes yep was this a super bowl commercial i think it might
have been it was 2007 i think it was early 07 i remember it was either it was it would have been
the oscars or the super bowl or some event like that that I was watching with my family.
I think even in a party setting with like other family friends.
I think there's maybe one other one where he's like at a table or something.
This was done by Digital Domain as proof of concept for this movie.
That commercial comes out.
Okay, I see.
This is where I remember reading this article that was in the New York Times.
And it looks perfect.
I think the first of these aired in 06.
It said 07, but I mean, you know.
There was like a full campaign,
but I'm at some family, friends,
sitting around watching TV.
That ad comes up.
Everyone goes like, oh.
Like it was similar to that feeling of that like uneasy ad
where they made Christopher Reeves walk again in the 90s.
Do you remember that ad?
Oh, jeez, that's cool.
That played during the Oscars,
and it was about, like, medical advancements,
and it just felt a little ghoulish.
Yeah.
Or the, like, Fred Astaire
for the vacuum commercial.
Fred Astaire dancing with the vacuum.
It was in that mode where it's like,
what are they doing here?
And I was so perplexed by it,
and then I think I read on Slashfilm
or whatever a week later,
like, you want to hear something weird?
David Fincher directed that commercial. Right. And everyone's like, what the fuck is this? And or whatever a week later, like, you want to hear something weird? David Fincher directed that commercial.
And everyone's like, what the fuck is this?
And then it came out of like, yes, he has used this commercial,
this bizarre thing of like, why?
I know Orville Redenbacher was the spokesperson.
He was a likable on-camera personality during the heyday.
But no one was like, gotta bring him back.
The brand's been dying without him as the spokesperson.
Why are you
investing this much money and this much tech into it and the answer was he was like i'm basically
stealing money from orville redbacher to figure out whether this film is makeable or not which
is interesting because obviously in panic room fincher's doing an end fight club all those kind
of camera digital like we're gonna go inside the wires or whatever but i don't think of him as like
a zemeckis no well like he's not but this is like a Zemeckis. No. Like he's not.
But this was his kind of
Zemeckis-y
going back to the
Forrest Gump thing.
His like big Zemeckis project.
It's obviously,
I think there are people
who literally think
Robert Zemeckis
made this movie.
Like, you know,
like they have to be told.
They have to be sat down
and told.
It's David Fincher.
David Fincher.
And they must be told.
Zemeckis did make
Mank though, right?
Yes, he did.
Right.
I mean, the guy.
He went back in time and this is Grandpa. For they must be told. Zemeckis did make Mank, though, right? Yes, he did. I mean, the guy.
He went back in time,
and this is his grandpa.
Fuck Mank's mom.
He's got a DeLorean.
Yeah.
First honor in business.
I go fuck Mrs. Mank.
We just have to establish for anyone listening,
yes, Robert Zemeckis
went back in time.
Yes.
He had sex with Mank's mom.
This is hard science.
It's fact. This is hard science. It's fact.
This is in the congressional record.
He was going to be called Zank,
but then they said that's kind of ugly.
Oh my goodness.
No, you are right,
but that's part of it.
A friend of the podcast,
Drew McQueen,
he was saying to us,
like he remembers the scuttlebutt
at this point in time.
This is one of those great unmade scripts.
And even when the Roth draft came in, which Gary Ross almost did.
Gary Ross was at some point under consideration for this job, which makes sense.
It's got Pleasantville-y vibes.
Like, it's, you know, it makes sense.
But even at this point, we're like, computer graphics have advanced.
They were like, I don't know if you can pull this off.
You know, it's cutting edge.
Post Gollum was the first time where they were suddenly like all these scripts that we used to think were unmakeable.
Maybe the tech is there.
And even still, people were like uneasy about it because it's like it's the main character.
It's the whole movie.
He's got to go through 20 different states, all this sort of shit.
And and and the scuttlebutt was like fincher might have finally cracked this
but i do think in that way that's more often the like the zemeckis peter jackson what becomes of
angley trap of like i need to make this movie to pioneer the technology to hand off to a generation
of filmmakers is not usually how fincher worked i don't think he has that sort of like um promethean
vision of his career like No. Yeah. No.
And he's a big nerd.
He is.
Yeah.
And I've heard tell of him like emailing other filmmakers with like, hey, I got a new camera.
Like, if you want to fuck around with it, like come over.
Like that kind of shit.
Yeah.
He's also, look, he talks a lot about how like.
My mom said you could come over.
Just sort of like.
Getting pizza.
The rise of like 90s, early 2000s auteurs he's like i think
that really comes out of how robust the music video industry was for so long where there were
stupid amount of money going around for filmmakers to cut their teeth on in a way that was more
creative and longer form than commercials and and with a little more freedom but you got to
experiment with all this different technology where like current day filmmakers will talk about that when todd field isn't making a movie for 15
years and he's directing car commercials he's like i go into it saying this is my excuse to try out
this this camera this lens this fucking yeah totally maybe this isn't creative expression
but i'm like building muscles on something whereas music videos it also was creative expression
and so these guys
some of them were all style over substance but they all were able to hit the ground running
somewhat when they started making movies and fincher smartly in this situation goes like i
need to find a commercial i can use to cut my teeth for this film in the same way now did he
also direct that six flags commercial with the old man dancing? Well, Benjamin Button's in that, of course.
Oh, okay.
The real guy.
Because Benjamin Button is based on the real
Benjamin Button.
And that's who's in the Six Flags.
That's the real guy.
He would catch the Venga bus home every day
down Bourbon Street.
Ben, ask me how many flags there were
over Texas. Griffin, how many flags there were over Texas. A streetcar named called Vanga.
Griffin, how many flags
were there?
Six, but they look
a lot bolder.
Oh.
I've been to Six Flags.
Those flags don't look
too bold.
They're pretty bold.
I don't think anyone's
cleaned them in a while.
They're bold flags.
Look, obviously,
this film's shot in New Orleans
right after Katrina.
They thought that Katrina
would ruin their chances of making it in New Orleans.
Instead, New Orleans was like, please come.
Like, we want people here.
Ushering in a real era.
Yes.
It's one of several things that Brad Pitt remains in litigation over, deep litigation.
But he was one of the stars who, in the wake of Katrina, was like, we need to do what we can to revitalize this place.
And so it was his big push i believe to be
like i want to set it there and i want to film there actually film there it was originally going
to be set in baltimore right uh but then david simon was like stay off my turf yes uh no uh
eric roth fincher read the similarities to eric roth instead of an ordinary man in extraordinary
circumstances i thought of benjamin as an extraordinary man in ordinary circumstances just to sort of reinforce what you guys were saying uh and uh you know he's like the
movie's experiential there's no backstory like it's it's mundane you know there's kisses hangovers
like you get dumped and all that stuff but like the the only thing that's crazy really is that he's he backwards man wait the part of fincher that's obsessed with process and how things are done
and depicting the actual process on camera rather than doing the movie version of it comes through
and being like the process of this man's life is all the shit that happens you know it's all these
little chance encounters and periods he goes through and all of that. And it puts as much weight in some ways on a ship crashing into a U-boat in the middle of the sea as it does these happy years we spent sleeping on a mattress in an apartment in New Orleans.
It's all of it.
Yeah.
And Pitt's other huge thing is I want to play as much of this person as I can.
Like, do not hand it off to other
people how much is it is him as the old mate like right like it's his face it's body doubles and is
he going like this or and they're kind of shrinking him or is that like they had they had multiple
body doubles right and then it was a lot of him sitting in a chair surrounded by a hundred cameras
his face painted totally green rather than having the dots,
and he would act it all out.
Because he talked about, like, he hired different actors
at different ages, different body types and whatever.
And one of the guys who's sort of playing the brothel age Benjamin
was an older man who was, like, in his 70s but had mime training.
And he was, like, the guy was a really good performer
because his background was in miming his
motions were like too exaggerated he put too much of a point on them right and pitt's a pretty still
actor and especially with the way he was doing it in the volume or whatever uh the facial expressions
didn't match so we had to go back and reshoot stuff so yeah it's it's body doubles that he's then doing his face. Because they even
say the
was his first scene
his first time
on set with
Taraji P. Henson is the scene where he comes back
home.
Sure. And he's an adult. Right.
Because he was never present on set.
He was on set for these scenes.
Right. Right. Right.
He was off stage going, seven years old.
And Brad Pitt thinks that's what old men sound like?
I mean, we don't even see Benjamin smoking.
Well, actually, why would that make sense, though?
Because he was born with that voice.
You're looking for logic where there are problems.
I mean, the voice is great.
He should start smoking when he's a baby.
He should come out.
Mr. Button should look into the crib, and this little wrinkled thing is like smoking a little baby. That's when he should. He should come out with, like, like the guy should, Mr. Button should look into the crib
and this little wrinkled thing
is like smoking a little cigarette.
Yes.
That's what it should be.
But yeah,
no,
I know another thing Fincher said
is that he wanted,
I think down to him being
a child,
you know,
a tween,
a kid,
a baby,
it's still to be pit
digitally modified.
And he was like,
we ran out of budget.
I'm basically the last 12 years were more than we could spend.
But even the last time when he walks into the dance studio and briefly meets
his now somewhat grown daughter,
um,
it's interesting that they choose to do that with light instead of,
cause I thought,
cause I had forgotten this until I watched it now
and was like
oh I remember being disappointed
because I was like
oh they're going to digitally
make him
Thelma and Louise Brad
yeah
River Runs Through It Brad
that's going to be so exciting
yeah
and then it was just like
oh no it's the same guy
just a different haircut
and he's kind of in shadow
right
maybe that was a budget thing
it's such a D.H.
but yeah
but yes
but maybe if you're a big movie star
you're like
I don't really want to remind people
of what I looked like 10 years ago totally i am at perfection now
well that's the other thing it is like the the movie has to be about this one moment of the two
of them in the middle yeah so you do kind of have to argue that the age he was when he shot this
film was his perfect age right even if he's going to look more angelic as he ages down i think it's kind of
his perfect age i think it is i think i mean like or whatever also have you seen me joe black recently
that was pretty good age but like you know when when it suddenly turns into a fucking luxury watch
commercial and he's like you know riding a yacht around with sunglasses he gets very stylish
yeah this is the fucking best. I remember Fincher saying that
in interviews at the time of, like,
this is the great magic trick of the movie
is we spend, like,
$100 million on special effects
for the first hour and a half
of the movie.
The effect, yes.
And then the effect is the moment
you finally get to pull everything off of him.
Put on another jacket on it.
And just have him walk in and go, like,
holding shit.
With a great haircut.
Or when he goes to see Daisy
in the Parisian hospital.
Yeah.
And he's wearing this, like,
kind of caramel-colored overcoat,
and you're like, Jesus Christ, like,
Benjamin Button has good style.
He's a cool fucking guy.
I mean, honestly.
I mean, would Chewby, if he did all that?
I think his tugboat look is his best look, though.
Yeah.
Sort of stringy, long hair, and the cap.
And the commentary Fincher referred to him
as looking like Barry Levinson.
There you go.
And when he's born, he kind of looks like Sam.
Hell yeah.
Okay, wait.
I want to say a couple things.
Taraji P. Henson.
Obviously, her first appearance is in Big Baby Boy,
which you discussed on this podcast,
her first screen appearance.
But it was Hustle & Flow that puts her on Fincher's radar.
She's amazing in that movie.
Singleton really made a concerted effort
to try to single-handedly make her a movie star.
And he does Baby Boy,
puts her in Hustle & Flow as a producer,
puts her in Four Brothers.
It doesn't totally stick,
even though I think certain wise people
were ahead of the curve on her.
This is the movie where
she finally like lands you can you know ask a bunch of questions about like she gave three
great performances in john singleton movies playing very different characters the second she plays
an old housekeeper mother kindly mom yes yes right and the type of role that oscars would
been paying attention to for 100 years years, basically. She is good.
She's such a warm, like, wonderful presence.
Yes.
I mean, him calling his shots on her and Mahershala,
and then also, you think,
this is Jared Harris a year before Mad Men.
He had done a lot of work up until this point.
Jared Harris, right, is a guy without a doubt.
The year after this is the next stage of his career
that I think levels up. Yeah. And even Elle Fanning is a pretty early pick doubt. The year after this is the next stage of his career that I think levels up.
Yeah.
And even Elle Fanning is a pretty early pick.
Yeah, definitely.
He's got like four casting choices in this movie
that have paid off.
Who plays the old lady in the hospital bed
with Julia Orman?
God kidding.
Is she good at that old stuff?
She's fine.
It's the most risible part of the movie in a way
just because
like it feels like
something from a UCB
sketch.
Let me tell you a story.
That door over there,
do you mind
opening it?
It's very
home for Purim,
you know?
100%.
I do think it's maybe
the most impressive
old age makeup
I've ever seen.
The makeup is really good.
The makeup is astonishing.
They also wisely
keep her basically
always prone.
She's always lying down.
And so like you don't have to deal with her moving around too much to complicate things but i look at the neck and
i'm just like that's astonishing yeah but you what about what about the neck the back sorry
and then two other body parts i'm not gonna mention by name no um yes yes this is the thing
that gets taraji the the oscar nomination and finally kind of
puts her on on the path in hollywood's eyes um mahrishali uh credited by his uh longer
which i used to when i because i'd already seen him in a few things before this this was definitely
the first i saw him because i remember thinking that guy's good and then seeing the name of the end credits and going holy it's so ridiculous to write to say this but
yes i his name being so long was so interesting to me he actually just done a lot of television
like he'd popped up on crossing jordan and csi and stuff like that right was he on 4400
that's the one yes that's another one he was on that for years. And he doesn't shorten his name until, like, Place Beyond the Pines?
Like, years and years later.
Like, Mockingjay, he's in that.
He's talked about how it was a point of pride for him that when people said, of course you have to shorten your name, he dug his heels in.
And that he ultimately said, like, I don't need to change my name to Bob Smith.
Right.
But this might be a little self-destructive right and it is wild that like he he chops the final 25 of his first name off
and immediately has the transcendent year where people are like who the fuck is this guy but i
mean look fincher puts him from this into house of cards which is one of the things that definitely
levels him up you know this directly leads to his like full anointment he's so good in this movie he's i mean yeah it's great he's one of he he's
always good it we talked about in a different episode recently i forget why how uh absurd it
is that he won the green book oscar but he's also just like undeniably one of the best living actors
in my money yeah he is even if i'm not always excited by everything he does,
he is...
Well, the thing about him in Green Book
is he's really good in it.
He's really fucking good in it.
So is Viggo.
I have no complaints
about his performance in that movie.
It's just a lead performance
it's the same to give to him
that quickly after.
Yeah, and also he took
Sam Elliott's Oscar away.
And Richard E. Grant's Oscar.
Those are the two.
You had two guys...
Two, like, lifelong character actor guys.
Flip it to...
Wait, is it true
that you guys are gonna retape the power
of the dog episode with Sam Elliott yeah
he's got a lot of thoughts it's gonna be
two minutes long yeah I have more to say
fellas the fuck is this
no we're gonna retape it with Vigo in
character from Green Book yeah
fuck is he doing?
I don't know what he would say.
Mouthful of pizza.
But yeah, no, Mahershala,
he's great in this.
And like, I don't know,
the commentary was interesting.
Fincher talked more about
the psychology of these two characters
than any other characters in the movie.
And I think it's because
like the first chunk of it you do see a lot of it through their eyes benjamin's so passive when he's
young he's still understanding the world that they are the characters you're really relating to at
the beginning and he was like this thing of like she has a better position in the house you know
yeah that she holds the power that they are together but
they live separately yeah you know that there's sort of like this this um this very kind of modern
couple in a lot of ways and that he is disapproving i mean there's i forget what his line is, but like, he's so freaked out by Benjamin Button as a baby.
Yeah.
And so wary of her taking him in of like, what's this going to be the next 20 years of your life?
Right.
What's this kid going to turn into?
And made on, like, made like in a split second.
Babies on the stairs.
Do you need to burden yourself with all of this?
But she is kind of like, he could die tomorrow, too.
Like, she does have that, yeah.
And the second she says that, he basically is like, I'm 100% in.
You know, he tries to talk her out of it.
And I think that, like, a lesser piece of writing, a more obvious piece of writing,
would have him be, you know, an early quarter of the movie antagonist.
Yes.
Like, Mama loved me, but this guy was always kind of whatever.
And that's the thing.
Like, when she has a child, you know, when she announces she's pregnant,
and you're briefly like,
oh, is this going to kind of play some sort of jealousy note?
And it's like, no, it's just sort of a moving on.
Like, it's another signpost for him
that it's time to leave the coop a little bit.
But the other thing Fincher talks about is, like,
a lot of Benjamin's passivity as a character,
him being the sort of observer wallflower.
His button-in-in-the, you know.
Right, yes, his deep button-in-in-in. Right, yes.
His deep button-in-in.
Him being seven
but looking a lot older.
Is that,
like, he was well-raised.
Like, he is, like,
a kind of old-fashioned
southern gentleman
of, like, proper manners.
Right?
He is sort of, like,
polite to the point
of absurdity.
And he said
when he would screen
the movie for Paramount,
they'd be like,
why is like
taraji so mean she's playing all these scenes so mean and he's like she's not mean she's like
firm in a way that she's a good parent not like a tough love way but she's like really trying to
teach him the world and he said it wasn't until the scene where he goes back and sees her again
and she's so warm and loving that they were like why could she have been like this the whole movie
it's like because now she doesn't need to raise him and no parent is like that all the time
you know like it's that's a reunion that's a happy no that's his point he was like yeah it's really
crucial that the two of them are great parents yeah and that the time spent with them the
beginning of the movie sets up how this guy behaves for the rest of the film and that everything
surrounding them i mean minus phyllis somerville kind of yelling at him about being under the table with Elle Fanning, which is a great Dave Matthews album.
Did I hit that joke?
But he has this wonderful education of being around old people.
And it's mostly like, you know, age isn't anything to be afraid of or whatever.
But also, yes, it is sad.
And he gets this incredible perspective on death.
They give him perspective.
And then the rest of the movie
is in some ways him teaching that
to people in the audience
and people he meets.
Yeah.
You know, the way he consoles Jared Harris
as he's dying on a ship
is not like,
no, you're going to be fine.
The helicopter's coming.
He's like, no, you're going.
Yeah, it's true.
But like, there's a nice place waiting for you.
You know, he has this like really
rational view of all this that is because of the upbringing and you would expect the beginnings
of this movie to be like house of horrors yeah you know raised in a in a you know gothic orphanage
and it's like the complete opposite of that like uh 10 years ago it must have been i went to a
fucking rosh hashanah dinner uh with my great aunt uncle who was
very close to growing up who had moved to florida by this point and it was them and their friend who
had also just moved into this retirement community with them all three of these people are dead now
right and uh my great aunt uncle were together for like 65 years 70 years. And this guy's wife, who they had grown up with both of them
in the same neighborhood,
had, like, just died.
And my great-uncle, very matter-of-factly,
say, like, and this is Jerry.
Jerry's one of our oldest friends.
He grew up around the block,
and his wife was Cynthia,
and she went to school with us.
And he just looked at me, and he went,
she was the love of my life.
I will never care about anyone
as much as I cared about her.
She was the most extraordinary woman I ever knew,
and she died six months ago, and I've been so sad since.
Can you pass the mashed potatoes?
There you go.
And it was like one run-on sentence.
Yeah.
And it was said with emotion,
but it was also just like that point
where people get to that point in their lives,
and you're like, you lose the most important people every day.
They're just all dropping off like flies. Yeah yeah but you imagine that happening if you are in preschool
right or in grade school and if you're like quote-unquote friends once a week a friend gets
trucked away and benjamin button is a child he has the mentality of a child but he's growing up
in a retirement home where everyone else has this like them's the brakes. People get carted off. Yeah. And he's it teaches him the the sort of I don't know the ephemerality.
Yeah.
And it's all it's not it's not Veda Saltenfuss and my girl work, you know, growing up in the fucking funeral home.
That's a little too extreme.
I also think that it doesn't curse him.
It doesn't make him dark for all of his like innate sort of you know high-mindedness or
sort of like evolved view of death i like that the movie also in little ways like kind of it's
like he's kind of annoying like like because us who are aging the other direction are like okay
yeah great we get it like it's nothing to be scared of but it is scary yes yes and i think
that's part of why daisy who is you know a really well-drawn kind of blithe artist character, is also just like a little bit like, get out of my face, man.
Like, I can't have this.
She's not ready for him.
You're too enlightened.
Right.
And I think we all, a lot of us aren't.
But look, my baby was not born 80 years old.
I'm willing to admit this.
Born baby-ish.
She was born baby-ish.
But like, there are those early scenes, too, where he's just by her bed and he's so helpless.
It does remind me of that.
You know, it's it is so universal.
Just like, you know, the bond you have just caring for that.
Oh, God, this movie like really fucked me up at the end.
So another thing Fincher kept saying in the commentary, because we're getting to the Daisy meeting.
Sure.
kept saying in the commentary because we're we're getting to the daisy meeting sure is like my read on this movie is fundamentally that this is not a story about them being destined for each other
no because that would be ludicrous these are not star-crossed lovers he's always loved her yes but
that's a little different but that's what he said he said it's basically two people who whether they
know it or not almost non-verbally made a promise to each other when they were young and it's about how this promise ties them in their minds to each other but it's not that i think they
could only be together or they were destined to always be together and i think paramount really
wanted that for it to be this like epic faded romance and he kept on pushing back up jenny
and jenny running across the reflecting pool sells it that way as best they can with them on the poster and all that but like when we get to the scene paris the accident the
sort of butterfly effect of her legs getting uh fucked up at the car crash and everything
they were like see this is what we're saying do this the world is bringing them together and it's
like yeah but when he goes to visit her she's like get out of here right i'm not ready for you
yeah right yeah right and it is that thing of like there's something she is an old soul right It's like, yeah, but when he goes to visit her, she's like, get out of here. Right. I'm not ready for you yet, man. Right. Yeah.
Right.
And it is that thing of like, there's something, she is an old soul, right?
Which is helped by the fact that you have an adult woman voicing it over Dakota Fanning.
Right.
Elle Fanning, excuse me.
They recognize something in each other.
They have some connection.
But it is that like, it's like the ex you never got over.
Or not even, it's the person where the circumstances never lined up right and can you ever go home again you know because going
back going to him is in her view an admission of defeat yeah and defeat is given to her not by her
own choice you know unfortunately but even then she's like i don't you know no you're totally
right like he is kind of too familiar in a way.
And I think a thing that, like, crystallizes the fact that they're going to be hung up on each other forever,
not that they're destined together, but that they're sort of, like, stuck being fixated on each other,
is Phyllis Summerfield's reaction to them being under the table,
where it's, like, an incredibly innocent thing to them that is treated with such disgust and paranoia and disdain,
where they were
like well if you're making a big deal out of this what is actually going on here right you know and
i think it's interesting because i feel like i mean obviously in forrest gump he doesn't really
have the capacity to understand he he's you know he understands jenny in a way and that he loves
her in a way but i think in this movie i feel like i would have expected um kind of love to re-enter his life but like he pursues her in a very direct
way it's not like we met up and like oh how you been oh how oh i see you're dating this guy like
okay he's like up front he's like no i came here to think i thought i was going to sweep you off
your feet like i like how direct that is but also it's fascinating that every time she's kind
of leading the scene and then there's the moment where she goes i'm sorry i've been talking about
myself all night you haven't said anything he's like well i like to listen and then when she
finally passes the baton to him he's like here i stand before you once again asking for a hand
right right she's like fuck off and he disappears for another seven years I think she's such a well-drawn character
I mean Blanchett turns out
can act
I mean we all are in the arts
I fucking know those people
who are like oh my god it's so good to see you
and then talk for 30 minutes
and have not even asked you if they can hang your coat up
I think she gets that about that character
exactly
where was she about to go? Was she about to do Sydney Theatre Company? CB? Yeah hang your coat up. I think she gets that about that character. Really?
Where was she about to go? Was she about to do Sydney Theatre Company? CB?
Well, she's just coming off her
Oscar for The Aviator
Golem. Right. And her near
win for I'm Not There.
That's the year before this. The year before
this? Yeah. Because Aviator is, of course,
04, right, and then I'm Not There is 07.
Kind of astonishing she didn't get nominated for this i remember especially because so oscar rich yeah
but she didn't she didn't have the buzz like people it's big it's because this movie disappointed
quote unquote i just remember thinking this performance in particular was undeniable
and it's equally fascinating that pitt got nominated for such a passive character that
they usually don't go for but it's the it's the special effects of the thing it's it's partly that but it's also
partly not to be an Oscar like you know overread or whatever like Pitt had not been nominated since
12 Monkeys 12 Monkeys that was time people thought was kind of right but it was sort of time to be
like yes yes forgot they had done that together already at this point they had yeah they had I
mean almost everyone in this movie battle was what 2006 yeah uh and kate you know
had won an oscar and been nominated multiple times and i think they're probably like yeah we can give
you a pass like frozen you know um melissa leo for frozen river is the surprise nominee that year
which is a good nom uh-huh uh angeline halfway jolie jolie changeling right julian changeling she's sort of
sneaking in because that movie it had kind of like up and down buzz that's the slot that i
thought should have been blanchett's i think so well the thing about the budget is that up until
re-watching it that movie's not good she's not i recommend re-watching it i recommend re-watching
it beginning of the railroading it's his first movie about railroading i'm not
kidding i'm honestly really serious really the train is pulling into the station because i was
like well he loves stories about railroading and then i was like wait no this is the beginning
eastwood's love affair with railroad ease she got railroad she fucking got railroad
they gave her a boy
that didn't have a foreskin.
And she was like, my kid was
uncircumcised. That's the other reason you like this.
He probably got circumcised. You like that it's a foreskin
thriller. It's just so crazy
that she's like, my kid had a different penis.
And they're like, penis has changed
all the time, you crazy old lady.
Pulled it out. He's got
Benjamin Dick's disease. I don't know.
Like,
that's how
railroaded her ass was.
Yeah.
Well,
she couldn't even be like,
look,
the one fundamental thing
with guys
where it's one or the other.
It's,
it's,
you know,
it went from a Y to an N,
you know?
Uh-huh.
And she got railroaded,
man.
By fucking Burn Notice.
Burn Notice is her. She got railroaded. Sorry By fucking Burn Notice Burn Notice is her
I was gonna say about the Blanchett
She's good in this, the Blanchett
It's just kind of like, it's Cate Blanchett, she's fine
I'm sorry, it's Hathaway, it's Jolie, it's Leo
The winner that year is
Go ahead
Why am I not thinking of who this is?
This is the Slumdog year
Is it Winslet?
Oh, it's the reader
And then who's the fifth nominee? I'm sorry, Hathaway, J year. Is it Winslet? Oh, it's the Reader. Yes. And then who's the fifth nominee?
Sorry, I'm sorry.
Hathaway, Jolie, Leo, Winslet.
Sorry, where the fuck are the Oscars?
I just had them.
Jeez Louise.
They went away because I got so pumped up about getting railed.
You were saying something, you want to get railed by Jeffrey Donovan?
Oh, well, the fifth nominee.
What?
I have some doubts about this nomination.
Oh, it's your least favorite performer.
It's Meryl Streep in that.
But I mean, she was pretty much guaranteed that nom.
That is not a field that you're like, well, Blanchett was going to be on the outside because the competition was so stiff.
Maybe it's not a field that you would say that about, but there's certainly big names. Sure.
You know, like Jolie,
Streep, these are big names.
A couple huge names with soft nominations.
But
Blanchett didn't even get
a Golden Globe.
Do you want to know the Golden Globe
nominees? Yes, please. And Drama for 2008?
It's four of the ones
we just said and then
kristen scott thomas doubts and comedy oh and i know i loved it was i've loved you so long right
oh that's sort of a surprise the french language one yeah yeah has this had an oscar buzz done
that movie yet they should that's a quintessential david can you imagine if kristen scott thomas
directed a bad movie one of the worst fucking. One of those things were two minutes and I was like, uh-oh.
David and I just got back from Toronto.
But then you said she comes in at the end and does ten minutes and proves herself as the Kristen Scott Thomas of acting?
The whole point, the whole, I can just imagine, this is Kristen Scott Thomas in a movie called North Star.
She directed it.
It's clearly about her own life.
And we're all rooting for Mere to Toronto.
I love Kristen Scott Thomas.
Yeah, she's great.
And it's got Scarlett Johansson, who she's now worked with three times,
Horse Whisperer,
Other Berlin Girl,
and this.
Wild.
Wild.
But it's nice that they clearly
have a lifelong connection.
Sienna Miller
and unnamed British actress
who's very good,
whose name I forget.
It's Emily Beecham.
Emily Beecham, yes.
A Cannes Best Actress winner.
Poor Scar Jo is doing
an English accent
next to the Sienna.
Playing an aircraft carrier captain? Correct. A gay aircraft carrier Actress winner. Poor Scar Jo is doing an English accent next to the Sienna and Beecham. Playing an aircraft carrier captain?
Correct.
A gay aircraft carrier captain.
Normal.
Of course.
But like every time she has to,
you know, Sienna Miller is good.
And Beecham is good
and they are speaking in there
and then Scarlett Johansson will be like,
oh, bloody hell, mates.
And I'm just like, oh God, this is so rough.
And then Kristen Scottomas plays their mom
her own mother yes i see you know and i can just see her on set being like yes no i'll just i'll
be over here i'll you know i'll have a couple scenes every time she's fucking there's a hydro
cannon on her black back yeah that's what you said he said she's just hydro blasting everyone
off the screen she's so good yeah i also, you're just dying in this movie,
so her just being kind of funny,
you're like, thank God,
a professional has arrived.
God, that movie stunk.
Did you see it?
No, because I heard it was bad.
Fucking Katie Rich brought me to it.
The one tiff mistake I made was that one.
Well, never listen to her.
No, that's not true.
She told me to see His Three Daughters,
and I wept like a baby.
I also did. Anyway, Chris, it's got Thomas. She told me to see his three daughters and I wept like a baby. I also did.
Anyway, Chris, it's Scott Thomas.
What else, Golden Globes?
Oh, that's it, though.
They put Hathaway in drama.
Oh, who was in comedy?
Oh, it was Angelina for Dickswap.
No, excuse me.
Wasn't it Winslet in lead lead for revolutionary road and then reader for
support that's right correct but still it's a winslet hathaway jolie streep yeah and then
chris and scott thomas and then melissa leo sneaks in okay uh which is that's a good movie she gets
the um right wood river um no frozen river wind river i'm shaky no frozen river is a good movie
i mean she she, she's excellent.
Is Melissa Leo still running drugs
across the Canadian border?
During the strike, yeah.
Well, I mean...
She's got to earn a living.
Jesus.
Wow, she just does...
Melissa, here's my pitch.
Yeah.
Melissa Leo in a Liam Neeson-style
action thriller.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
You finally joined me on Equalizer Island,
been watching the Equalizer movies.
Melissa Leo's throwing a heat.
She is.
She's good.
And there's one action scene she has in two that you can tell she's excited that she's like, I finally get to do one of these.
You leave that wanting more.
Yeah.
And she's hard bitten.
But in that movie, she's wearing the medical glasses from the big short.
Yes.
And she's also wearing the consider fur coat.
That's the costume. Yes. And her dodecahedron costume from the big short. Yes. And she's also wearing the consider fur coat. That's the costume.
Yes.
And her dodecahedron costume from Oblivion.
She plays dodecahedron in that movie.
She plays the thing from Out of This World.
Remember that show?
No.
Oh, yeah.
Curious case of Ben Hemmon Button.
Okay, so he old little.
He makes a connection with Daisy.
He's star old and little. Yeah. He old little little he makes a connection with daisy he started he started
a little yeah he old little he makes the connection with daisy um he uh meets various
people such as ot yes right right that's the guy who kind of opens up his world uh who's the first
person to take him out of the old people's home, basically. Right? Like, they go to a place.
He tests out what it is to have people regard him.
Right.
And look at him a bit askance, but also it's like, well, okay.
Right.
And it helps that, you know, OT is a little fellow, right?
Yes.
Right.
But he's comfortable in his own skin.
Right.
Yes.
And he does the thing with the kids where he, you know, he startles them And it's cute
Takes him to a brothel for the first time
Where he by pure happenstance
Sees Mr. Button
Well Mr. Button sees him
And says that might be my
Weird ass
That might be my old man
15 year old
Going into that lady's room
I'm sharing a wall with some 85 year old who fucks like a 15 year old.
That might be my son.
This movie is crazy.
This movie's insane.
It's fundamentally so crazy.
That's why it's so funny that it is this like lovely,
treacly movie.
Yeah.
That it's also a movie where this,
this,
my friends,
was a poster.
This was a poster. This was a poster.
This, this, the butt poster.
Baby butt poster.
A wrinkly baby butt.
There you go.
Doesn't that make you want to see a movie?
Because the main poster was just Blanchett and Pitt looking hot as hell.
Just their two faces with like Vanity Fair portraits.
Right.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I feel like wasn't the hummingbird in a lot of the marketing.
It was.
I feel like I remember.
Here's the thing Fincher said that I thought was interesting.
He was like,
people were like,
Eric broth trying to do the,
the feather thing again with the hummingbird can't get out of his own way.
And he's like,
the hummingbird is the exact opposite of the feather.
The feather in Forrest Gump is this like magical creation.
This thing that in theory has no mind of its own, that blows in the wind and touches everything.
The Humboldt has its own agency.
Yeah, exactly.
It is not ending up here by chance.
It's on a mission.
It's making infinity with its wings.
Right.
Yeah, yeah.
But can we admit that Eric Roth should open a suit restaurant called Eric Broth?
Yes.
If he hasn't already.
David, when have I ever disagreed on that point?
From the day I met you.
Hello, I'm David Sims.
I think Eric Roth
should open a soup restaurant
called Eric Roth.
I agree.
Let's have a podcast.
Wait, no, can I get that clean
one more time?
Eric Roth should open
a soup restaurant
called Eric Broth.
Great, perfect.
Yeah, exactly.
Eventually, okay, look.
Yeah.
He fuck,
he meet Daisy.
Oh, that's what I want to say. That's what I want to say. Sorry. That, okay, look. Yeah. He fuck. He meet Daisy. Oh, that's what I want to say.
That's what I want to say.
Sorry.
That the thing the sex worker says is like, you're a regular Dick Tracy.
Right.
That's her line for how good he is at sex.
Sure.
Was he known to be a...
I don't really think of it.
I think he had lady loves.
Is that why Warren Beatty was drawn to the role?
Maybe.
Yeah.
He is named Dick?
He does.
Maybe he was tracing his dick for her on some wax paper.
Fincher in the comments here keeps saying, like, this was the shot that my special effects supervisor almost quit over.
Right, where he'd be like, he's got to be in the bathtub.
And they'd be like, can we put a collar on him?
It's easier if there's some line between the neck and the body.
He's like, no, he doesn't wear a collar in the bathtub. And they get to the stuff. And he was like, I just kept a collar on him? It's easier if there's some line between the neck and the body. He's like, no,
he doesn't wear a collar in the bathtub.
And they get to the stuff
and he was like,
I just kept saying to him,
this is the job you signed up for.
You have to do it, right?
They would...
Go ahead.
He said the sexy in the brothel
is the one he folded on
where there was a...
Like, as written,
a four-page scene
where she gave him a cloth
and he washed his genitals
and they had a long conversation.
Sure. And the special effects guy was like, can he just be under the covers right come on if they're
both that's logical their bodies touching each other with covers on top it's gonna take 15 years
right they would i i forgot to say you don't see him during that scene they would call the people
who play the the body double smurfs because they wore a blue sock over their head yeah it is insane to imagine all these scenes
being shot with a little body double blue sock over his head while everyone else is just acting
normal it's like the dana carvey finding out about 9-11 while in the master of disguise turtle suit
he was in the turtle suit we know that right like it's that kind of thing of like like this serious
movie and the surreality of actually being on set and he's just like men covered in blue.
Yes.
Look, I just have to tell you that he fuck, he meet Daisy, and then he become tugboat.
Yes.
That's where we're going.
He becomes a guy on a tugboat.
Yes.
Like, I watched this movie in two chunks.
It's two hours and 45 minutes long.
Very long.
And it's slow.
It's long, it's slow, it's methodical,
and it has digressions like Mr. Cake,
like the long, oh, all the things that happened
before Daisy got hit by a car,
you know, things like that,
where I'm sure there was a person being like,
um, could we?
Oh, Fincher keeps saying,
talking about stuff they cut,
and saying we ultimately made the decision
to cut the thing down to the bone.
So I'm like, oh, so there was a five-hour version.
Honestly, I would down to the bone. So I'm like, oh, so there was a five-hour version of this.
Honestly, I would love to see that.
Yeah.
Because I don't, because the Daisy stuff, the lightning stuff, all that,
like the Daisy, you know, the butterfly effect.
Like, I think it's all great.
Yeah.
And I think it doesn't feel like embellishment in a way that it would in a lesser director's hands.
I agree.
Like, had Gary Ross done that?
Yeah.
I'd say, Gary, get in and out in 90 minutes.
Come on.
Yeah.
But, uh, the Daisy, out in 90 minutes. Come on. Yeah. But, uh, da-da-da-daisy-day.
Oh, tugboat, tugboat.
Right.
Yeah, I watched it.
It's, you know, two hours.
So I watched an hour 25, hour 25, pretty much.
Okay.
I split it up.
And I will say, Benjamin Button Part 1, I do prefer to Benjamin Button Part 2.
Okay.
Benjamin Button Part 1, I cut it off right when the war ends.
Okay.
After when Jared Harris dies.
Mm-hmm.
And you're kind of like,
this is a masterpiece.
And then I think the latter half,
which is a lot of Daisy,
is very slow.
And is sometimes a little watch commercial.
Not that it's a bad thing,
but you know,
Benjamin Button's adventures are sometimes,
I do think he's about to turn around
and offer me like a timeshare,
you know?
When he's like brushing his teeth in the Himalayas or whatever?
He'll have a cup of Nespresso.
100%.
And it can only air in Japan.
Exactly.
The ending hits really hard for me, and I think it's good.
But, you know, Tugboat is so much of this movie.
Tugboat's good.
I mean, Jared Harris.
It's just a lot.
One of my favorite guys.
He has come up a number of times on the podcast.
I'm always delighted by him.
But I do think his run after this is really good where it feels like people start giving him more meat.
You know?
Yeah.
I mean, yeah.
Because it's like, obviously, he's burdened and helped by being the son of a famous actor who kind of looks like his dad.
Yes.
They resemble each other.
And so it's like he's been getting work for you.
Obviously, I shot Andy Warhol.
I feel like his biggest role in a way.
Yeah.
Before Mad Men, right?
I'm like looking at his very...
But like, you know, Lost in Space.
I mean, he's dubbed in that movie.
He's in Smoke.
Yes.
Peter Newman produced.
It goes down my favorite movie when I was 12.
Yeah. I can't believe what you saw in that movie.
I can't even imagine.
I remind you I was 12.
No, no, I'm joking, Griffin.
You were like, you know, come on.
I saw too much in that movie.
Resident for you as a 12-year-old.
But he's really good in that film.
You know, lots of other stuff.
Mr. Deeds, apparently, he's in that.
Oh, he's really good in Mr. Deeds.
He's one of Naraya's boss.
I feel like he has a pretty big role in Sylvia, which is sort of a forgotten movie.
But I remember him being good.
Doesn't he play the foreskin in Changeling?
He does.
Yeah, he does.
But he's someone where.
They took me off.
At this point, still, I'm like, that's nice that someone hired Jared Harrison is letting him go off.
Right.
And then it's like the second he gets Madman it's everyone like realizing like why have we been
sleeping on this guy this guy should be getting everything and a big just like i think kind of
turning point moment is you know in in the first sherlock holmes moriarty is in shadows right yes
he is and they're like in the second one we're actually going to put moriarty in and guy richie's
claim were a claim was i'm trying to get brad pitt to do it
and our backup is daniel day lewis cool right they were just shooting big yeah and they couldn't get
either guy to commit brad pitt would have been horrible would have been terrible and daniel day
lewis never would have done it and they couldn't get either guy to commit they started filming the
second movie without the roll cast and they were like like, we're hoping we're going to get one of them on board.
And then they just go like, fuck it, Jared Harris.
And it works.
And they just made the choice of being like, we don't need to cast a big star.
Jared Harris will just kill this.
He'll kill this.
Give him a character poster.
Which is often a good choice to make.
Yeah.
He's good in it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's always good.
And I think it's fun in this to watch him on the more disheveled end of what he normally plays.
Yes.
You know, like, because, I mean, I first really knew him from Mad Men.
And, you know, he has a tragic ending in that.
But he's more buttoned up and whatever.
He's, you know, British and, you know, in a suit.
And this is just, like, full tilt, just, like, messy, drunk all the time.
And he does it just as well.
He does it really well.
And it's also like,
you want some life in this movie.
The most Ben character
in the movie, right?
Yeah, I love this guy.
The tattooed tugboat captain.
He looks so damn good.
He looks great.
That scene where him and Benjamin
are watching videotapes
on the porch.
He's got Hosley colors.
Playing Sega Genesis.
I don't know how they got one
in the 40s.
He does.
He has your complexion.
He does. 100%. Absolutely. I don't know how they got one in the 40s. He does. He has your complexion. He does.
Oh, no, 100%.
Absolutely.
I would love to hang with Jared.
You're always getting shot
on boats, you know.
I mean, truly,
in a different life,
I would have been
a tugboat captain.
Absolutely.
It's almost astounding
that it isn't happening
in this life.
Also, just kind of seems
like the best job
where it's like,
what do you do?
I'm on the seas.
You know, I'm a captain.
Okay, what is your job?
Well, they tie a rope to a big boat and i just kind of go forward my wife be the ocean
david a rope i i have a feeling it might be a huge fucking chain oh okay okay um benjamin does
tugboating tugboats uh over to russia all that stuff they get shot up by a U-boat
he dies
I didn't know that tugboats could go all that way
are they doing more cargo at that point?
I don't really know
but I love the stuff with them sort of
heading into this wintry
you know
it's always night time
I feel like in those
is that Siberia?
it's not it's sort of the other side it's near like Finland I also love in those, is that Siberia? It's not. It's sort of the other side.
It's near like Finland.
Oh, okay.
I also love that when Button is very young, everyone who looks at him is like, well, that's a freak of nature, right?
They look at him with like disgust and disdain.
And then basically, starting from the brothel age on, they're like, this old man behaves a little strangely.
they're like this old man behaves a little strangely right but he gets to basically be in the biological equivalent of like two kids stacked on top of each other in a trench coat
where he's like an undercover kid that adults speak to as if he is wiser than them and has
lived more than they have yeah and he just kind of hangs back and is like as long as no one catches
me and in his kind of laconic nature, they respect him more.
There's a bit of a Chauncey Gardner
where they're projecting onto his silence.
Exactly.
This man is run so deep,
which is what everyone in the movie is doing.
He must know something we don't.
He must be wise.
He's aging like the rest of us.
I'm 15 years old.
Right.
Exactly.
I love all this.
He's so excited to be living a life of high adventure. I'm a real dick, exactly. Like, I love all this. He's, like, so excited to be living a life of high adventure.
I'm a real dick, Tracy.
Of course, this is, yes, when he has his first love affair
with Elizabeth Abbott, played by Tilda Swinton,
the wife of a spy.
Yes, a performance I'm also a little astounded didn't get a nomination.
She's so good.
I think it's probably too quiet a performance.
No, and Taraji obviously gets the nomination.
And she's so good in Burn After Reading this year as well,
which they have to give her a nomination.
Well, she won an Oscar the year after.
Year before.
Is Clayton year after or year before?
Oh, year before.
Year before, so she's just won an Oscar.
Yeah, let it happen.
I love Tilda.
She's so good in this.
She's plain as paper, though.
I know.
I barely fucking remember that she's in it. Yeah, fincher like mocks that on the commentary uh it's like she's the most
extraordinary looking person how could we do this she's very strict he didn't say who it was but he
said there was an actress he really wanted and he kept on saying that's why i think we should hire
and pit when i don't know i don't know and it was getting to the point where he was like if we're
not gonna what's your problem with this person he's like i don't know i don't dislike that person but i think we can do better and he's like okay then i give you
five minutes sure call me back in five minutes if there's someone who's better than this person who
is very good and we both agree it should be so obvious that if you can't think of the name in
five minutes i'm we're going with melissa leo right yeah and then like pick called him three
minutes later and said,
tell us when he was like, you're right.
No,
she's better.
I wonder who was.
I know.
That's,
that's intriguing.
Uh,
but,
uh,
it's sort of an insult if it comes out though,
which is why he clearly didn't even allude to who it was.
Yes.
Had they worked together before they hadn't?
Well,
that was,
I think I don't burn after reading must've happened.
Right.
That's the thing.
When did those two...
I think it comes out a couple months before.
But did he produce Adaptation?
She's in that.
I can't remember when Plan B was rolling up its sleeves.
I mean, not that Brad Pitt's an active producer on some of these.
Although he has two Best Picture Oscars.
He won one for 12 Years a S right did he win and he didn't
get one for moonlight but those are both plan b they are uh but right but i think no he was left
off for moonlight but i think 12 years a slave but he's in it yeah great performance um but uh
but like i guess because he's in i don I don't know. It doesn't matter. Anyway, that whole segment is sort of my favorite part of the movie.
Yeah.
Is them in the hotel having tea and then...
Yeah.
Well, fucking.
Yeah.
Doing a little Dick Tracy-ing.
It's also, like, this is where the age stuff gets interesting, where it's like, here's
this woman who's maybe like given up on excitement
in her life right and here she's having this kind of like final surprise surge whirlwind romance for
a moment and for him this is his first love yeah you know like he's catching someone on the decline
and this is the first time it's not his first time having sex and she thinks that they're
simpatico in that yes yeah've both gone over some peak of life.
And we've ended up in this wintry town in the middle of nowhere.
But he's like a college freshman.
Yeah.
It's undeniable.
He has a crush on his professor, and that's her.
Of course, she is a Diana Nyad type who wants to swim the channel.
There are so many Diana Ny and i had times i'm sick
of them time with dawson uh jellyfish always after them and uh so uh you know that's her
lifelong dream she's incredibly good and it's that kind of performance where you're just like
just it's just all stripped away it's so simple what she's doing it's just presence you know
and it's honest and it's a beautiful backstory like it's a
it's if they're if they were going to pick one pertinent detail for her backstory she almost
swam the english channel once 40 years ago or however long it's supposed to be 30 years ago
yeah because it's this other running theme of the movies which is like missed opportunities yeah
yeah yeah and like all of the regret about that and obviously that line about like that jared
harris has about like you can hate how this happened.
Right. Yeah. Almost everyone he's meeting along the way is in some way burdened by the thing they fucked up or the thing that fucked them over from getting to do what they wanted to do at their peak.
So you feel like, well, Benjamin Button is going to peak so late that he'll have the knowledge that all of us wish we had when we were in our body in that state and he does he doesn't oh you know no exactly he has regrets same as anybody else
gain him anything no we can talk about that more in a second but obviously um then he goes back to
nolans nolans uh learns that uh marcia died, meets Mr. Button for real for the first time.
Reveals who he is.
Uh,
he reveals who he is,
shows him a big button factory and leaves it to him.
Yeah.
Button factory never comes up again.
No.
But I guess he's just kind of collecting button checks.
It is so funny.
Well,
I don't know,
the button industry probably was winding down after,
right?
Well,
but he kind of says like,
look,
World War I,
a two,
good time for buttons.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Good time for buttons.
People need buttons. Yeah. Right. It's just so funny that like, you're I, II, good time for buttons. People need buttons.
It's just so funny that, like, Benjamin Button, good character name.
What's his deal?
He's the heir to the button fortune.
What do they do?
Make buttons?
Yeah, they do.
They fucking make buttons.
That's what he wants from me.
Okay, well, can the Paramount logo be a bunch of buttons?
Yeah, I already did it for you.
Here it is.
First play.
Warner Brothers 2.
Yeah, fucking all of it.
Buttons everywhere. Like, that movie starts with the buttons
You know damn
Is this movie gonna be buttony?
And then like after
For a while
I got no buttons
It's about an old guy
And then now we're in
They're like buttons
Yeah more butt than buttons
For the first 20 minutes
There's some butt
You got a little baby tushy
Benjamin goes to see New York
Daisy in New York
But you know she's yeah
she's a young woman she's being bohemian she's being bohemian she's standing there in the corner
he looks like fucking orson bean you know come on you know i was thinking about it like someone
watched equalizer 2 today did you know orson bean died of a in a car accident yes you're like oh
orson bean died how old is he 91 you're like oh that's a grand old age. Oh, he died in 2020. He did die of COVID.
No, he died February 2020.
Oh, okay.
Well, but of old age, right?
No, a car hit him.
That guy was indestructible.
It's like someone mowed him down.
What is it?
Desmond Lewin or whatever?
Desmond Lewin.
Terrible.
I was thinking about in the great scene
when he goes to see her in New York
and she's like,
when I would do plays in college
and like a high school friend would come see it.
And then after the play, I want to go to the cast party or hang out with my theater friends.
And here's this person from my old other life.
Yes.
And it was, who I love, but, like, it was so hard to reconcile those things.
And I think this movie, that's a pretty complicated dynamic for a big blockbuster prestige Oscarcar movie to like even bother with but this is a
movie that i think you know fincher is only interested in those dynamics he goes for all
the weird hard to pin down little like moments and energy shifts and all that thing rather than
the huge things right well because the thing is about to usually lead a movie like this to oscar
glory he's not like i think he had obviously and you guys are going to talk talking about this on the
whole season but like obviously reputation cool dark all that stuff but he's always a humanist
yes like he is interested in human behavior these people are not just sort of like objects that he
wants to move around to get pretty pictures you know or interesting and also by the way this movie
he takes this on pretty shortly after his own
father dies as well right he said the benjamin button behavior is largely modeled after his
father that his father was this kind of passive listener wallflower guy and that his father had
all this ambition to make films which he tried to realize within his father's own life and he didn't
you know like this movie is him working through his shit
as much as Eric Roth was in writing the script.
Mank.
Yeah.
Mank.
Mank.
Yeah, and so there's something gentle about it.
Mank, Mank, Mank.
Sank.
Sank, Sank, Sank.
Then, Kate Blanchett gets Orson Bean'd.
I'm sorry.
It's an incredibly, incredibly offensive joke.
I'm really sorry.
But she does get hit by a car.
That sequence is,
you know, it's a little like
Paul Thomas, a little Magnolia.
Yeah, it's a little Magnolia.
Where you're kind of like, okay.
But it's effective, I think.
You know, the, oh, if only, you know.
But in the same way that a lot of
this movie's gumpisms are actually
anti-gumpisms this is sort of the anti-magnolia which is like ricky jay is saying like surely
these things mean something the connectedness is is crucial right even if we can't and benjamin
is just like man i don't know shit happens roll the clock backwards yeah everything is
causally related in some way and so whatever what can you do but
that doesn't make you important no no it doesn't mean there was any vendetta being settled no but
and it's like it means that daisy will not be quote-unquote important in terms of like she will
not enjoy celebrity sure right you know she will have to go back and marry a you know a button
freak but even beyond that just her her life will remain fundamentally forever unfulfilled
there is a part of her that never got to know of course that doesn't mean she has a bad life in
any way i mean you know maybe benji could have stuck around it's sarah silverman in take this
waltz life has a gap you don't go crazy trying to fill it you know good movie and that's a pretty
big gap for for daisy but like yes remember when sar Sarah Polly won an Oscar that year? It was so great.
Yeah.
I was so happy.
Me too.
I was so happy.
Yeah.
I almost fucking had to play the fax machine for the fifth time while Quiet on the Western Front was going to get on stage again.
It was going to be so bad.
When they would play that fucking fax machine score.
It was like,
It's what it sounds like.
I didn't know what you meant by play the fax machine.
Because that fucking movie has that score that sounds like a dial-up modem.
Or like a dot maker's printer.
Yeah, exactly.
And they had to, you know, oh, it won again.
Play the fucking fax machine.
So annoying.
And then it was like, wait, we're talking.
And then you had Francis McDormand's big head.
Sorry.
It's also, that was the only major award that A24 didn't win.
Yeah, whale or everything.
A24 won picture, director, original screenplay, all four acting categories.
All four acting categories.
That's wild.
Going back to Daisy, when you zoom out back to the hospital room
and you find out the daughter never knew about
her dancing career that yeah i've never seen this yeah destroyed me because i have great parents
but who are are people that are very deeply private and they're they're now getting you know
later into their lives and they just will sometimes just...
They'll let something slip.
They'll just throw a little fact out,
and you're like, what the fuck?
How had you never shared this with me before?
This shapes my view of you in such a...
Like, I see you in a completely different way now.
Overshare with your children is what we're saying.
But I think that in this movie's psychology, and maybe it's more grandiose for daisy than it is for your parents ben is that
like it hurts to talk about a little bit it's sad to talk no but i also there it gave me perspective
too because i do understand this is like one of the like most tragic parts of her life on my read
doesn't want to talk about it yes she can't think about it no it's too. It's too hurtful. No, and I'll, like,
I feel like,
what I was talking about,
how memory becomes myth and then you tell the stories
to other people,
it becomes abstracted
even more,
right?
Yeah.
When people ask you
in small talk,
like,
so what are your parents like?
What do they do?
You know?
You give,
like,
this bullet point version
of your parents' life
consolidated into,
like,
six sentences.
Sure.
And you've more greatly
condensed what they've condensed in
telling to you leaving out these large swaths and then when you find out one of these things which
has happened with my parents as well over the last couple years my grandmother who's much much older
and i've been trying to pull stuff out of while she's still here you like hear these anecdotes
and you go like my entire notion of you is completely disrupted yeah i don't know how to
slot that in between these two points
in the six sentences I used to have about you.
Like the story that I have created for you
is now you've distorted that.
You created a story in your life
and then I created it even further
and I don't know how to fit it in here.
It's missing episodes, a season of a show
that I never got to see and whatever.
And there's also that moment julia roman
plays so well where it's because they only cut back to them like five times maybe um yeah but
she's reading the book and she looks up and she says like you must have met dad pretty shortly
after and she's doing the math yeah and she's doing the math of just like at this point
there's a 50 50 shot that this button dude is my biological father yeah i know when i was born i
know when dad would have and where's the button money right all of this it's getting it's getting
like uncomfortably close and it's not a thing she can yell at her mother about her mother can barely
breathe she chastises her mother though she's like i'm finding out this way this is you know
she does have that moment there's only a degree to which.
Yeah, she can't relitigate.
She can't open it all up.
Speaking of Armand, I also love,
it's one line that they never revisit again,
where she's saying, well, you know,
I haven't made much of my life.
Like, Julia Armand's saying that.
And it's like, see, everyone feels like,
it's just, it's not just.
Her character's an astronaut.
Right, yeah.
She lived in Wyoming with Braditt for a while yeah um yeah no no no that's that's very true yes that she she's afflicted with benjamin button disease which we all are which is you know that's
the thing i have done more we actually all have it look fincher someone who's had a a great career
right and was was something of like a a wonder kind and everything right but could he have called himself to finch
man earlier could he have had all his movies called it's embarrassing that it took the dough
boys to come up with the name he should have been assigning himself from the very beginning
no but also like certainly a director who had a serious case of the attaches over years
you know in projects that you would fall apart that he drops out of that
he gets fired off of
all these things you
know you're just like
he must be overridden
with a sense of like
if I had made this
movie at this point
does my career go
this way instead of
that way he and
del toro should you
go get drinks and
talk about exactly
that and just try to
work through some
some things is our
new phrase that JJ
coined it's good it's
good well it's good
and it describes a
very particular kind
of director. You have to be a pretty
big director because it means lots of people
want you to make their move. And those two guys
even are like, but let's not invite Romantic.
But he's also...
He's got chronic attaches.
He's addicted. He never gets the mace.
He's too much of a bummer.
He just got hit by a car
in Paris.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just like, what if it said
like directed...
You got Orson Fee.
How about this?
How about this?
Directed by David Fincher.
Okay.
Pay to Black.
Next credit comes up.
From Da Desk of Da Finch Man.
That'd be his writing.
That should be his version
of Spike Lee Joint.
There you go.
But it's said in... I know they have a voice for it, but I think it should be his version of Spike Lee joint. There you go. But it's said in, I know they have a voice for it,
but I think it should be said in your Verhoeven voice.
Yeah.
From the desk of Da Vinci Man.
How about sprung from the twisted bean of Da Vinci Man?
There you go.
Part two of this film yeah is the the settling part you know benjamin returns to new orleans
so does daisy they reunite queenie dies they fall in love they have a kid she opens a ballet studio
well you're breezing through a lot of stuff i'm not this is the movie starts to breeze
what i know it does what i want to say is when he comes to visit her in the hospital i think that's
the first time she says you're perfect right which basically says variations of that
three times like every time she sees him again he looks even better and she's more out of mostly
envy yes not it there is attraction there exactly but it's mostly the kind of thing of like
me you know stand to be like hey i was a fucking old man for four years. I had a pretty bad run of things.
Let me enjoy this.
I was seven, but I looked a lot older.
What if he still had the voice?
I wish.
But her career is in some part about vanity.
It's about physical ability as well.
She can't be a star anymore.
And every time she's like,
my sister has this obsession.'s one and one and a
half years older than me that i don't have any wrinkles and she does i don't really think she
has wrinkles but she always like will be i'll be like saying something pertinent about my life and
she'll just kind of be like you don't have any wrinkles well i like you know it's that kind of
thing i always i always i don't i disagree with her but i always feel terrible how i about how i
look and if you show me a picture of me from three years earlier
I'm like Jesus fucking had it
this is the most common syndrome
it's always
everyone has this
it's so true where I'm looking at a young picture of myself
and I'm like damn I look great
and also I'm like I know I didn't like this
I was miserable
I know I thought this looked bad
I know I thought I didn't have it
it's the myth of the button thing
duh juice I didn't have it. And it's the myth of the button thing of you're like.
Duh juice.
Right.
I didn't have duh juice.
Does button, like, is he in the right mindset at the moment he's in his peak condition where he would know how to use it for whatever that means, right?
Where he would appreciate it.
And you're like, no, he doesn't.
And she looks at him with spite every time.
You know, there's this brief moment in the middle where they sort of actually, like, are able to be with each other.
And it's so funny to think about.
They've known each other at that point for 15, 20 years?
Yeah, longer.
30 years.
And you're like, this is the first time they're actually really spending extended time together.
They don't actually know each other that well.
It's like a day here,
a day there, spread out by years.
I kind of love when they do finally sleep together because I feel
like the way it goes down, it's
very much like, do you want to sleep together?
Yeah, let's do it.
This has been building up for a
really long time. It's not like,
let's lie to Cam.
She's like, make love to me. He's like, mm-hmm.
He's like, yeah, ripping his shirt off
as he's answering.
And there's a timeline on it.
They land on her.
She doesn't mind.
But there's like, yes,
the timeline is more loud for them
because it's like,
we've been in opposite directions.
This one moment,
we're right here at the center.
And then she's going to be
possibly too vain to want to sleep
with, like,
beautiful 22-year-old-esque Benjamin.
You know, like...
Johnny Suede Benjamin,
we call him.
Right, there you go.
Cool world, perhaps?
Cool world Benjamin.
Yeah.
I think another part of that, too,
is that, like,
you said earlier in this episode,
like, we all know dying is inevitable.
We're going towards that.
We know what happens.
It's scary.
For you guys, yeah.
Yeah, of course.
You have no ring to use.
No, no, no, I'm fine.
But, like, you know, if you're lucky enough to have the privilege to grow old, you look forward to all these things that are kind of scary and depressing.
And that's if you get to live a long life, right?
Benjamin Button is this one guy where everyone's like like i actually don't know what happens the last
20 years of his life i think everyone around him's wondering including himself do i turn to a giant
baby do i stay this way forever do i like turn into dust like what happens so like she's overcome
with the like my life is on the decline i'm past my physical peak i'll never get to
fulfill my greatest passion all this sort of stuff and he this is what he's been looking forward to
his entire life is basically him and daisy being equals yeah being able to be together which only
satisfies him so briefly before he starts to go yeah but what else can i do in my life and also
what can't i do because like obviously
the idea is i would settle down with a child right and like but i he's in a way to also too
prideful to let that happen or to worry you know like i think about my dad like it's a different
sort of story but like choosing to have children you know let's say 10 years later than most people
do like knowing like okay when my son's 40, I'll be 89, like, you know.
But, like, I think this movie,
you're like,
he should have stayed at least for some time.
Absolutely.
No, and Fincher has said...
It's the most selfish decision.
Yes.
It doesn't make any sense.
Because they would have figured it out.
But, you know...
100%.
He also doesn't turn into, like,
a teenager who doesn't know anything
for years.
Yeah.
Fincher has said that this was,
unsurprisingly,
his single biggest fight with Paramount.
And it was like a point he refused to move on,
which is he doesn't say anything.
He just like leaves in the middle of the night.
It really upset both of us when we were watching it.
Because now it feels so crazy.
And he's just like, I think that's the character we built.
Like this guy is so bottled in his emotions you know and he
is just operating out of fear and it's just like that's kind of and it is a point of cruelty that
is hard for the audience to get past especially when it's kind of inexplicable where he can't
even verbalize it to himself right it just it does make it it hits flatter for me when he's like
brushing his teeth on the mountain
or whatever and i'm like oh great you had all your experiences buddy yeah i mean i think the
other thing about like brad pitt getting nominated which is interesting i get why he did but like
he's good in it but also like we you finished this movie being like wow we've benjamin has
expressed himself so much and it's like no only a voiceover yes yeah you're getting a lot of
narration it's all in his and i mean i love there's that moment where he's torn a bunch of pages out of the book
yeah and she's like i don't know what this is and it's like we'll never fucking know because
we're only reading his version of his tale lullabalooza uh yeah too curious too curious
like this tale could be curious well he did he spent some time in new mexico working on some kind of science project
with some people yeah uh-huh yeah but also like i you know comparing it to meet joe black like
it's kind of a similar performance like yeah like in the present tense of of the movie like kind of
blank curious but cold like yeah you know orson joe black it's orson beaned yeah well that's not
joe black okay yeah that's right other right that's the body that scene is absolutely
hysterical still it is i watched it last night it was like maybe one it can never be deleted no
but it is maybe the one scene where if martin breast was like i actually i needed to digitally
alter it i need to do a special edition i don't know what we were thinking yeah i would be like
i fully understand my friend Let's also admit that
Joe Black, by his very profession,
is basically an Orson
Bean-er.
He can choose to Orson Bean you if he
says so. He exists to Orson Bean.
He Orson Beans us out of this plane and
onto the next one. So we're just now using Orson Bean
to mean leaving this mortal
coil. RIP to
Breitbart contributor Orsonson bean did you know he became
a bright contributor late in life oh yeah he's so good in equalizer too he's so good at fucking
being john malkovich yeah he was he was on carson 200 times did you know that no he was like one of
those guys like it was just like now orson bean i just remember And he got hit by a car on Carson?
It's horrible.
What are we doing?
The criterion commentary for being John Malkovich.
I think it might be Jones and Gondry together.
Gondry?
You mean Kaufman.
No, I think it might be Gondry.
It's Jones and another filmmaker.
Okay, fine.
Sure.
Gondry's just like, this part's crazy.
No, at one point they start talking about Orson Bean. And they're like, he was such a great actor it's really like you're talking like he's dead yeah and then
someone googles him in the middle of it and they were like he's still alive and spike jones is like
what he is so fucking funny and being john malkovich that like where he's just being normal
and introducing the job and then he talks about like how this woman's like breasts are divine
ambrosia and she's so funny yes it's like my favorite bit
he also does all the exposition in that movie yes of how it works no he's great yeah he's great i
just like the spike jones was sort of talking with the knowledge of like and i went to visit
him in his dying days and then he's basically just like i assumed we shot this movie 20 years ago
that guy's still no he's apparently he's apparently lining up a Denzel sequel.
As long as he never tries to cross the road,
he'll live forever.
I apologize to the friends and family of Orson Bean.
So, yes, he abandons his family.
He Johnny Suede's himself.
He Cool World's himself.
He Thelma and Louisa's all the way right back to the ballet studio.
California's mostly in shadow.
The de-aging does work, but it's all done very carefully where it's like we do not see too much of him.
No.
To keep it from feeling waxy.
Yeah.
Interesting thing Fincher said is because the de-aging on Cate Blanchett is so good.
Yeah.
And for this being pretty early in that technology when it often looks so bad, I was like, why is this better?
She's got a smooth face.
Smooth face.
She and I have that in common.
Yep.
And some of the younger scenes
that he actually had to age her up.
But no, the other thing he said is
her face is so sculpted
that all we really did
was fill in her cheekbones.
Right, yeah.
That we weren't removing wrinkles.
All we did was we gave her baby fat.
We added cheeks and that was it.
Yeah, that's interesting.
Because, yeah, she obviously has become more pinched,
as all people do.
And then, yeah, Benny turns into...
They do have sex once when he's like Thelma and Louise.
Yeah, and she seems really insecure during it.
It's a really good scene.
Like, that shot of her getting dressed
is such a clever thing for Fincher to include.
Like that, like vulnerability she has.
And obviously he's, you know, quote unquote perfect or whatever.
Yeah.
And like how she feels perceived by him.
Yeah.
No, it's kind of, there's a little bit of an interesting like baton pass.
Yeah.
At this point, he's not a character really no and you're really staying
with blanchett more in in the present of the journals even though yeah yeah um no it really
becomes her movie for the last 20 minutes yes maybe yeah it's you know then he's a teenager and
he's right he's basically a demented old man in the body of a child for the rest of the movie
it's upsetting it's. It's really upsetting.
Yeah. Because you do...
I mean, it's such a long movie, and you do
get caught up. You are kind of like, okay.
You get caught up in the same kind of delusion that
the people who know him are, which is like, he's eternal.
Something magical is going to happen.
And yet it's like, no, no, no,
we found him sleeping
under a fucking bridge or whatever it is,
because he doesn't have anyone.
He's left his life, you know.
Yeah.
Which is also like how a lot of old people end up, you know.
Sure.
Yes, if they don't have someone to, you know, help them.
Look, I mean, I think we've all made a – I'm glad we are all on the same page of vouching for this movie's right to respect, right?
Yeah. I still think think inarguably
it's in the bottom half of his filmography i have it yeah but he has a he has an exceptional
filmography he does i think this movie gets a bad rap but i also like could never argue it's
one of his five best films no i have a little below but it's interesting i think it's it's
more worthy than it has a reputation for being yes and i think it's of a piece with his filmography rather than people seeing it as like, that's the one weird time he tried to make someone else's kind of movie.
It's as sentimental as he's going to get.
It's as sentimental as he's going to get, but I think Griffin is right that it's got way more Fincher in him than you might think or that he gets credit for.
Once again, as sentimental as he can possibly get.
In the movie, the guy abandons his daughter
without even leaving a note.
Yeah, but I don't like that part.
Yeah, that's my point, though.
That's in line with Fincher's worldview.
I guess it is.
And he gets to do a pretty,
I think, effective
and creepy World War II scene.
Yeah, it's a good scene.
No, that scene's really good.
A little action for people
who've been dragged to the theater.
Right, yeah.
It turns out that was U-571
and it's McConaughey on the other end. Jack Noseworthy is somewhere in there. You finish the book. action for people who've you know been dragged to right yeah it turns out that was u571 and
mcconaughey on the other end right then jack noseworthy is somewhere in there you finish the
book at the moment as your mother breaks her last breaths as they evacuate the hospital and as you
see the clock get drowned it's just like all of this just fucking goes away yeah that's it that's
it and then the clock metaphor.
Yeah, I mean, it doesn't perfectly line up with Benjamin's situation, but it, yeah, it's evocative.
Yeah.
And then you get why it's during Katrina.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Good movie.
I think it's a good movie.
I do too.
If you don't like it, I don't care.
It got 13 Oscar nominations.
Two, two. Here comes the Orsonmobile. It wins visual it, I don't care. It got 13 Oscar nominations. Two, two.
Here comes the Orsonmobile.
It wins visual effects, I assume.
It wins art direction?
No.
Yes, art direction.
Yes.
And the third one would have been costumes?
Makeup.
Makeup.
Oh, of course.
Lost costumes.
I'm not sure to who.
Let's find out.
2008.
There's an obvious.
Lost costumes, of course, to the Duchess.
Yeah.
Just a couple of final thoughts here.
Did I mention I was struck by lightning seven times?
Did that come up on this?
Who's that guy?
You should have meted it out.
Maybe one reveal every 10 minutes of the podcast.
If you're interested in the commentary,
director notorious for doing multiple takes uh in a movie
like this that's so technically precise with needing to line up head replacement whatever
i think that was even more of an extreme thing yeah and he would do so many takes of this guy
and they'd be like i think we have it don't you want to move on he's like i just really like
washing him act oh that's he was like i do the takes because i just i thought this guy was so
good on camera he is roy. Roy Sullivan is the actor.
A lot of the, especially the...
Oh, no, I'm sorry.
Roy Sullivan is the real person that he's based on who was struck by lightning seven times.
Oh, wow.
The character is called Mr. Dawes in the movie.
He's very recognizable to me.
I just want to find who plays Mr. Dawes.
This is where fucking AI should be doing this.
AI should be doing this for you?
I'm joking.
No, not fucking, not Dick Van Dyke.
Wait a second.
What?
Because that's the character in Mary Poppins as well, Mr. Dawes.
Ted Manson.
Okay.
Didn't you recognize that guy?
He's the grandfather in Talladega Nights.
That's what I know him from.
Great.
He's so funny in that He's also of course
I'm gonna come at you like a spider monkey
Sad Joe in Elizabethtown
Oh god, I'm out
Well technically every character in that movie has sad before their name
He feels like one of those guys
Who just was biding his time
Until he turned 75
And suddenly Hollywood was like we need an old guy and it's you
A classic Patrick Crenshaw.
Right.
Yeah.
That's who he is though.
He's fucking talented and nice.
He's Chip.
He's Chip.
Did you know that
June Squibb and
Mary Ellen Burke
are both in
Meek Joe Black?
Is it Mary Beth Burke
who plays the mom in
whatever?
I'm rambling.
But like,
but June Squibb is in
Meek Joe Black
and has many lines.
That's wild. Yeah. No, she was around. Yeah. Yeah. I'm notambling. But like June Squibb is in Mutual Black and has many lines. That's wild. Yeah, she was around. Yeah.
Not sure who you mean, though. It's not Mary
Burke. We can think about it.
Yes, this film was nominated for various Oscars.
She plays the guy's mom in Sideways.
What? Oh, so, right.
No, you're right. June Squibb is not the mom in Sideways.
No, no, no. She's the wife and a
wife and a mouth Schmidt who did very well in their
old age. She's in Mary Louise Burke.
Mary Louise Burke.
There we go.
Okay, quick.
I just have a couple more.
Please.
Okay, go ahead.
I'm sorry.
So we were talking
about the logic, right?
Of how this, like,
could work.
Sure.
Wouldn't he,
could he
come out as a ghost
initially?
Then, go on. Turn into a slash. That's a ghost initially then go on turn into some sort of funky phantom you should be born as a funky fan that's what i'm saying and then like it's like dr manhattan like
you see a skeleton walking around yes that's what i'm saying that's what i'm saying he could have
been a little bone oh he should recompose you just want a bone man this is just a roundabout way wait a
second you're getting a bone man on screen and then he starts getting hair and his nails and
flesh yeah no no it's good it's a good pitch it's a good pitch because then he could also come out
as a full grown thing if he was a ghost i like i know what you mean but when you keep on phrasing
it has come out i keep thinking you're saying, like, announce his
identity as.
Mom, Dad, I'm a little bone man.
A little bone man.
This film. Do you have further notes,
Ben? Yeah, just last thing is
hey,
listeners, look both
ways when you're crossing the street.
Don't twirl. Don't get beamed.
Don't get beamed.
Don't get blacked. Well, don't say that don't get beamed don't get beamed don't get
blacked well don't say that well sorry you can cut it out keep it in black um the weird thing
about this movie is yes it didn't win best picture even though it's a big movie right
that's not surprising who did it like lose to the slumdog buzzsaw that's the weirdest thing
about slumdog is you're like
the most unexpected where it's like well what were you supposed to do slumdog had it
one and this i think this would have won had slumdog not yeah possibly because it's a very
weak year obviously it's the year that they don't night nominate the dark knight and wally
right like that's the scene is missing out on... And Gran Torino to a lesser extent. Right. Yeah.
Is missing out on these popular films.
And yes,
like I do think of
Button, Frost Nixon,
The Reader, and Milk.
Right.
Button probably is the front runner.
I think Milk is
maybe the better liked movie
and actually wins
two big Oscars.
But somehow never had
that heat behind it
even though I think it's...
No, because it's a biopic,
I guess.
And it was gay.
Yeah.
What?
It's so good.
Did you know that...
Did you not pick that up?
Is he gay?
Milk?
I thought he was made of milk.
Milk man.
No, Josh Brolin's gay.
Yes.
No.
No, because he's gay.
There's definitely one actor in screenplay.
Yeah.
Milk.
Yeah.
A little bit of controversy around screenplay, Wynn, but we can talk about that off air.
Uh-huh.
He's still working today.
Oh, yeah.
Oh.
Okay.
I'm seeing here he wrote a movie this year.
He wrote Rustin, right?
Rustin Lance Black?
I don't know what you're talking about.
I'm just saying, imagine if as a director you went from August Wilson to Dustin Lance Black as your screenwriter.
How that would go.
But it is, yeah, it's just funny.
It's like, yeah, well, what were you supposed to do though?
The Slumdog Millionaire train.
There's no fighting.
Chucked all the way through.
Right.
Like Fincher sitting there losing, just being.
And that, that was apparent at what point in this, I know you guys probably talked about
this during.
In like the Oscar race.
I don't even know.
I think.
Like how far did they see it coming?
My, my, my perception of memory is that like from the moment Slumdog plays a tiff and it is the front
runner right button screens late doesn't come out until christmas and i think from the time
buttons like the one waiting to be the last movie the critics see the last hope to knock it off they
were like well if this thing's undeniable it pushes slumdog off the mantle and i think the
reaction was very well done yes but a lot of critics were like,
eh, this is a sap fest.
You know, it got dismissed
by a lot of critics.
And, you know,
then it gets put into the,
yeah, it'll win
some technical Oscars.
What I find so fascinating is
it's a sap fest
and also it didn't make me
cry enough.
Like, I feel like it was
getting hit from both sides.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, that's true.
Right.
Yeah, but Fincher the Iceman
is still behind the camera.
I'm going to feel and he won't give me the release yeah sure yeah because it's a little too
in its head you know in an interesting way but it's a big hit it is a big hit i it made 127
domestic 329 worldwide it's a good hit it's a good hit but it's not a you know much bigger
overseas bigger overseas but like you know what i mean like it's not good hit it's a good hit but it's not a you know much bigger overseas bigger overseas but
like you know what i mean like it's not quite the phenomenon you maybe want it to know it's not
making a slumdog it's like micho black like yeah it like made i probably it was an expensive even
maybe but like yeah i mean this did much better than micho black domestically yeah um but yeah
so it's the thing is like Forrest Gump is that weird
on paper. This does not seem commercial
and yet it was a fucking triple crown winner.
Right. And they would just keep
on going, like, every once in a while
you have to pick an odd piece of
material, stack it full of
top-tier talent, and maybe
this thing just hits the zeitgeist just right.
There better be a southern accent. Yes.
But it made less domestically than the film it opened against on Christmas 2008.
You were starting to talk about this right before we started recording.
About now, basically Christmas, you get a classic standard blockbuster, maybe one kids movie counter-programming.
And one Oscar-y movie probably.
It used to be like six big studio films.
Six fucking things that have nothing to do with each other.
Just fed to the bloodbath.
And often five of them will succeed.
Yeah.
The biggest weekend.
It's a fertile time.
Yes.
Benjamin Button's opening number three out of four new openings on the top five.
The one that I believe won the bloodbath, surprisingly, embarrassingly for Brad. Was Jennifer Aniston's Marley?
Correct. Marley had the killer instinct.
Marley? Also about death.
Also about death. Also about death.
Marley and Me makes 36
domestic and... It's an ordinary dog.
Have you made this dog?
Makes 36 opening
week and 143 domestic.
It doesn't do as well worldwide.
Worldwide, people didn't care about Marley.
But America loved Marley.
America liked Marley.
Loved Marley.
Loved Marley.
We love Marley.
I have tremendous dog.
So Marley and me is number one.
I'm seven, but I look a lot older.
He's seven and dog years.
He could be buttoned.
He could have buttoned.
He could have buttoned.
Owen?
Yeah.
Hey, you want a button?
Number two at the box office is not The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.
No.
It is a family comedy with a big star.
Is it an opener or is it a...
Opening this week to 27 mil on its way to a domestic take of 110.
I feel like this is the one that people thought was going to be number one.
And Marley and Me was kind of the surprise.
I mean, this movie stars a big comedy star.
In 2008.
But I would say it's regarded as one of his lesser.
It's not Gulliver's Travels, is it?
No.
But am I kind of in the right ballpark?
Sort of.
It's not a Farrell.
No.
It's not a Stiller.
No.
It's a big comedy star.
It's not a Carey?
No. Or is it? No Stiller. No. It's a big comedy star. It's not a Carrie? No.
Or is it?
No.
Fuck.
Okay.
Who are the other comedy A-listers of this moment?
And Owen Wilson's already there.
Is it not a Vince Vaughn?
No.
Who's bigger than him?
Big comedy star of the 2000s.
Sandler.
Adam Sandler.
Bedtime stories.
Bedtime stories.
Which is not good.
His one dalliance with Disney, I feel.
And this is only Disney. Benjamin Button, also
sort of a bedtime story. Yeah. That's true.
It is. Parallels everywhere.
Never seen Bedtime Stories.
Not good. Is that with
Keri Russell or is that Click? That's Keri Russell.
Oh, it is. Click is who? Theresa Palmer. Guy
Pierce is the villain. Click is
Beckinsale.
Beckinsale. Yeah. I think I've now seen all Guy Pearce is the villain. Click is back in sales. Back in sale. Back in sale.
Yeah.
I think I've now seen all the Sandler vehicles.
I think I finally filled in all my final gaps.
But this one I saw in theaters.
And didn't like.
No, not good.
Number three, Benjamin, but number four is another new opener. I think a film that one time had Oscar hopes, but didn't really pan out.
Kind of a flop
By the standards of this star
And a director
Who's had some stories in the news
Recently?
You know
The last few years
It's not a Gibson
No
Worse
Is it Valkyrie?
It's like James Woodson Bryan Singer's Valkyrie? It's like James Woodson
Bryan Singer's Valkyrie
Benjamin Button also killed some Nazis
He did
Whereas Tom Cruise tried his fucking best
But blew it
Weirdly the movie that then sets up
Tom Cruise's redemption arc
By finally teaming him up with McQuarrie
And then
They build a relationship
That is true rebuilt him
um that is one of those movies where i was so hyped at the time because i was sort of like
superman returns underrated like tom cruise doing a prestige movie love that and it is
a weirdly flat movie it is there's the one thing in that movie i think is really impressive that i
that i think about a lot that they wanted to kill hitler which I think is really impressive that I think about a lot. That they wanted to kill Hitler?
Which I think is good.
Yeah.
I think that actually stands up well.
What's impressive?
I mean, I was also just pumped because it's like Bill Nye, Kenneth Branagh, Tom Wilkinson.
You know, they've got all these guys.
But they're doing BYOA.
Yeah.
Bring your own accent.
They're also doing like NAR.
No acting required.
No acting required.
Yes.
I just sit here in this uniform and read the lines.
It'll be fine, right?
Yes.
I was listening to the Mission Impossible Dead Reckoning
spoiler special podcast that Empire put out,
which are really good.
A quick 18 hours across six episodes.
Yeah, that's why I haven't gotten to it yet.
But he was saying he gave Cruise full credit for this,
that in his script, it was like,
they make the
assassination attempt the bomb goes off Hitler survives it you immediately cut to Hitler and
is like they tried to assassinate me and Cruz said don't cut back to Hitler right and he's like what
are you talking about he's like live in it where they think they've succeeded right and stay in
the tension of that for 30 or 40 minutes and of course like that won't work people know Hitler
didn't die and Cruz was like the audience won't care and I remember sitting there in the tension of that for 30 or 40 minutes. And of course, like, that won't work. People know Hitler didn't die.
And Cruise was like, the audience won't care.
And I remember sitting there in the theater in the 30 minutes where they're proceeding as if they've succeeded and feeling genuine tension, even though I knew where it was going and how it ended.
And it is this kind of like power of movies thing where there's this chunk of the movie where you're just like, yeah.
Not a good movie.
Number five.
That opened on Christmas?
I don't know what anyone was thinking.
What on earth?
It's an insane decision.
That was only 15 years ago
and that's like talking about a different planet.
It's just literally like people in theaters
like Tom Cruise in an American accent
in a Nazi uniform saying like
Hitler has seen his last sunrise
and people are like,
we could see that at Christmas.
Hey,
babe,
do you want to see bedtime stories or the movie where Tom Cruise plays a
Nazi?
Not only that,
both are opening on Christmas with an eye patch.
Yeah.
With an eye patch.
Not only that,
but that's Cruise being like,
I need to convince audiences that I'm normal.
People think I'm crazy.
No,
let's actually,
you know what?
Let's,
let's,
let's compromise.
We'll see the movie where Brad Pitt plays Sling Blade as a wizened old baby.
That's the truth.
The family had to agree on Button as the most normal.
It's like, I don't want to watch a dog die.
That's what my family would have done.
Yeah, yeah.
Let's go to, and I saw this film with my girlfriend at the time and her parents.
And it was truly a, like, gotta do something on christmas you know uh at the amc lincoln square
i remember very clearly um number uh five at the box office is uh a jim carrey comedy falling to
number five from number one the week before it is yes man yes man jim carrey's basically last
swing at just like doing a jim carrey. Mr. Proper's Penguins, but then...
That doesn't count.
Yeah, then yes, you're right.
Right? Because that's a kid's movie.
Yeah.
This is just him being like,
it's a high concept movie with me.
Let's just do Liar Liar, but different.
This was, you know,
it's been litigated many times
what caused the death of the studio comedy
over the course of like 15 years.
That's a thing I bring my hands about.
Yes, we litigated it on this podcast.
But this, Yes Man, was an
interesting case study where
they were like, these movies are getting too expensive,
they don't do as well overseas,
the stars cost too much money,
and you price yourself out of good scripts.
And Carrie was like, I'll take no
upfront salary, only back end. That's a way to keep
the budget down. I'm betting on myself.
And people pointed at it as like, this is a model
going forward, and basically no one tried that
ever again. Yeah, well, you know.
And that's for a mediocre
movie. And it still made money.
It made money. Yeah, he made more
than the 20 he would have made up front had he
stuck to his quote. Right.
Number six of the box office is
seven pounds. Do not touch the jellyfish.
Normal. Like Diana Nyad?
This is the thing. People are like,
where did...
Where did Marvel come from?
I'm like, Hollywood was
a little bit out of ideas.
Yeah, but also, look at...
They were rummaging into the junk drawer, be like,
will this work? Is this the movie?
Jellyfish? What is fascinating
though is you look at this 10 and a lot
of people are a little bit off their game
But it's like stars
It's like Owen Wilson, Jennifer Aniston
Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett
Will Smith, Tom Cruise, Adam Sandler
Jim Carrey
All A-listers, Jellyfish
Desperow
And his tail
Number 7 at the box office
Number 8, Keanu Reeves
And the day of the earth should still A big star And his tail? The tail. Number seven at the box office. Number eight, Keanu Reeves.
And The Day the Earth Shows Still.
A big star?
Big star.
Not a big hit. That's his last hit before he goes into another fallacy.
Can you imagine a multiplex now where all of those people are in movies that you could go see?
No.
At once.
I mean, that's what I mean.
And not one of those films is a sequel.
No. There's a remake. There are book adaptations. No. I mean, that's why. And not one of those films is a sequel. No.
There's a remake.
There are book adaptations.
No, I mean, Seven Pounds.
Well, Benjamin Bunn's a sequel to Clifford.
But other than that, yeah.
Yes, no, it is wild to think about.
And you know what?
We're going to keep it going because number nine is not a sequel.
It's The Spirit, which is sort of, which is a huge flop.
Oh, a humongous flop.
Disaster.
Opening this weekend.
Again, Christmas.
Yeah.
Christmas for this?
That's also a moment where people are like,
maybe superhero movies
are finally dead.
Yeah, right.
That's a good point.
But, you know, obviously...
We did it.
The Spirit is sort of
a sequel to Sin City.
Yes.
Like, it's being presented
that way, but, you know.
And then 10 is Doubt.
Yeah.
Which is, I don't think,
a sequel.
David, look it up.
I'm afraid we're
checking his phone.
No, I'm saying
we have to send a family photo to daycare okay
Just being right
You have to send one?
They want one
Is a family there?
They're doing some kind of family photo thing
I don't know
Your daughter's photo at school is very funny
She's really into for whatever reason
Closing one eye when she smiles
She's doing a goofball thing
So it looks like she's like a Shirley Temple
You should never have shown her valentine
Can I Can I say it, David?
Daddy, I want one eye.
She's giving a little stinker.
Yeah, a little bit.
Yeah, she can be a little stinker sometimes.
It's very cute when she's a little stinker.
The other fascinating thing, Richard,
you saying this feels like a million years ago.
This is a thing I feel like people are talking about a lot now.
I had to go to number 17
to find a sequel,
and it's Quantum of Solace.
Wow.
The first true sequel is...
Which had been out for like six weeks.
And also,
James Bond doesn't really count.
No.
The first true sequel is
Madagascar Escape to Africa.
Which had also been out
for like six weeks.
Yeah.
Eight, in fact.
Jeez.
Undershot it.
No, not only is it like,
can you imagine going to a multiplex and all those stars
having new movies out and wide release but also that list is still largely our biggest stars
like some people have waxed and waned a little bit yeah or they've shifted or whatever but a lot
of our favorite stars you're right yeah it's this thing that people talk about where it's like there
was whatever uh survey that came out of america's top movie star not the q score but there was one of those sort of showcom things or whatever and it was like the
top 20 living movie stars and the only guy who cracked it who was under 40 was chris hemsworth
was the only guy who was not already a movie star by 1999 right i hear you but i think we have great
new stars i love them it just feels like we're not letting them elevate.
Because Hitman is going to Netflix.
That's the fucking problem.
Look.
We're not giving them.
I understand why it is.
We'll say things off mic about that.
But Glenn Powell's not young.
He's no spring chicken.
He's 34.
But he's aging in reverse.
He's not aging in reverse.
He's just not aging.
How do I know how old Glenn Powell is?
You don't think I look that up every two days?
Every minute of every day.
Come on.
Give me some credit.
Yeah, no, I mean, you know, we have our young stars.
I love our young stars.
I'm just saying.
Can you say that like Trump, though?
We love our young stars.
We've got Zendaya.
You're going to love it.
You're going to love it.
Oh, Glenn Powell.
Glenn Powell is the future
Doesn't get to carry a movie at the box office
Hangman they called him
He's supporting if he's the lead
It goes to streamers
They call him Zank ladies and gentlemen I don't know
They call him Zank
I like that we're all of us are Trump sounds
Like a Borscht Belt comic
I don't know how to do Trump
And I said to him I said take my life
Hey Melania, he says.
Anatomy of a fall, was he pushed?
It's like I'm now doing the whole festival season.
That zone, there's a lot of interest in that zone.
Very bad things happening in that zone.
Somewhere between Trump and Zoidberg.
He has three daughters, what can I say?
Oh, boy. He has three daughters What can I say? Oh boy
So that's enough on Benjamin Button
That's enough on Benjamin Button
Says David Sims
I think it's the truth
The truth that I say that
Now that we're all newborn babies
I think it's time to wrap up
Yeah merchandise
There's nothing
Well I know the criterion thing
Is kind of interesting
I have the criterion Which is a fake criterion essentially what do you mean well there
would be think because criterion you know part of their thing is like their their curation art
what do they allow in right and there are people like wes anderson who have a pre-existing deal
his early films uh touchstone disney would be like yeah we'll let criterion release it
and having a bigger,
more commercial film would help finance the restorations of smaller, foreign, older films,
whatever. Now he puts in his contract whenever he makes a new movie after four or five years,
the rights revert to Criterion. It goes to them. What have you, right? Fincher basically,
Paramount, like, prepped the Blu-ray, did all the special features. And then he was like,
I would like for this to be a Criterion movie.
And Paramount basically paid to license Criterion as branding.
Yep.
And they threw the C on it, but they physically made the thing.
It's basically their Blu-ray in a Criterion sleeve is all it really is. But even the sleeve, it's like, this isn't what the Criterion art would look like.
They took the poster, they put the Criterion.
It's like the one time
people bought the Honorific.
And Fincher has,
like,
legit,
I mean,
game,
I guess this is only
other Criterion movie.
Yeah,
I think that's right.
Well,
we're waiting on Mank.
No,
Mank,
is there a Mank disc?
No,
it was a false report.
It still might happen.
There's no Mank disc.
I'm sure it'll happen.
The whole problem with him
is it's not,
people are like,
people are like, why won't anyone make this?
A blue rank?
There you go.
A blank?
Brank?
A blue rank.
Why won't people make this?
It's like, because Fincher has to sign off on it,
and he's going to take forever to sign off on it.
That's what's been holding up the 7-4K.
100%.
You need to inspect every single fucking pixel of the thing.
Yes, you know.
But yeah, no, Benjamin Button's the one where it's like no that was by all intents
and purposes for all intents and purposes uh a a paramount blu-ray that just had this little
criterion c on it it's interesting it is it's certain forms on the internet people are still
they're still mad about it that fake c that crooked c You hit it The very end
Oh my
Okay
It's
Time to end the episode
Time to end the episode
I can't believe we have to record
Meet Joe Black right after this
I know
You have to watch
Meet Joe Black right after this
So we'll be done at midnight
We're doing every one
Of our Fincher records
Paired as a back-to-back
With a breast record
And then we're gonna sit
On the breast service
For four years
I mean I know you guys have,
this has been said so many times, and you guys
have talked about yourselves. Martin Breast
is a perfect season. No, we'll do.
It's a fascinating season.
And if we don't do them, it's to piss you off.
You who's listening, who cares about us.
And not the royal you, not all of you,
the one person right now where you're thinking,
is it me specifically?
Yes, it's you.
I'll say that we did, the other day,
we finally locked in an early 24 miniseries.
That's one of the people we've been talking about forever
who's always just been a like,
we'll do them at some point, we'll do them at some point.
We just finally went, let's just do it.
We've gotten to a certain point,
not that the show has an end in sight,
but we've been doing this for eight years.
Some of those people on the inevitable list
were like starting to pull them off and be like,
let's just fucking do it.
Yep.
It's time.
You know,
we,
uh,
we're all going to die someday.
Yeah.
And hopefully we'll die as little wrinkle list babies or giant ones in my,
in my case.
Yeah.
Uh,
Richard,
thank you for being here as always.
Thank you for having me.
This was very fun.
13.
Is this lucky number 13?
uh,
me,
I don't know. Maybe with the bonus episode. All right, here we go. David, look it me. This was very fun. 13? Is this lucky number 13? Oh, I don't know. Maybe with
the bonus episode.
David, look it up as we're wrapping up.
Anything you want to plug, Richard?
Little Gold Man, my podcast
at VF and my writing at VF.com.
If you are in the mood
for a five-year-old YA novel, you could read
All We Can Do Is Wait.
It's called All We Can Do Is Wait.
Written by me.
Yeah.
It's your 12th.
Lady. Vanilla.
Ryan. Widowmaker.
Spanglish.
Home. Big.
Eyes. Big guys.
Big guys. Philly.
Witches.
Dog.
Spartacus.
Yeah.
And then Troll trolls makes 13 but that's and then trolls make 13 and of course a troll's does your your your trolls are coming back to
theaters they're banding together yeah um i mentioned you didn't plug that well my trolls
and i've had a falling out unfortunately because uh they are upset about my labor practices and residuals.
So they're striking with their little signs, little bastards.
But we'll see.
Branch.
I will welcome them back with open arms.
The Trolls United will never be defeated.
Poppy.
They should be happy with what they're getting.
Well.
Yeah.
Well, well, well.
Thank you all for listening.
Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe.
Thank you to Marie Barty for our
social media and helping to produce the show.
Lane Montgomery and the Great American Novel
for our theme song. Joe Bowen
and Pat Reynolds for our artwork.
J.J. Birch for our research.
A.J. McKee and Alex Barron
for our editing.
You can go to blankcheckpod.com for links to some
real nerdy shit, including
our Patreon, Blank Check Special Features, where we do commentaries on film series and other stuff.
We're doing the Pierce Brosnan Bonds right about now.
Right?
Yeah.
And we'll have done the Fincher music video episode, some fun stuff over there.
We also unlock every 10 days an old episode from three years ago for free if you want to sign up
for that.
That episode is Aliens.
Well, look at that timing.
With a dollar sign.
Look at that timing.
And coming up soon will be
the previous Alien 3 episode.
Yes.
No, that's not the one
where Ben falls asleep.
That's Resurrection.
But something to look forward to.
Yep.
Tune in next week for the
social network a movie that made some cultural impact uh yeah bit of a big movie kind of an
anti-benjamin button yeah and that's a movie that people will never stop talking about it feels like
ever no they should just make a sequel because there's so much has changed but yeah yeah yeah
uh tune in for that uh and as always uh this episode how long has it been
uh shorter than two hours and 38 minutes but it feels a lot longer i forgot that was coming