Blank Check with Griffin & David - Zodiac with Leslye Headland
Episode Date: October 15, 2023This is the Zodiac speaking. I have recorded this podcast episode with Griffin, David, and the genius Leslye Headland because I am tired of the tangents on every other episode so far this Fincher seri...es. With this episode, we’re getting into the CRAFT, the OBSESSION, the MADNESS, the MINUTIAE of David Fincher’s Gordian knot of a true crime mystery. What is the scariest scene in ZODIAC? Which of the three main actors gives the best performance? Are Aqua Velvas good? Like my identity, there is no definitive answer to these questions. The untangling is the juice, baby! This episode is sponsored by: Hatch (hatch.co/check) Indeed (indeed.com/check) Stamps.com (CODE: 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I am not the podcast and if I, I certainly wouldn't tell you.
Oh, Griffin.
Gary.
Now, you don't have a Zodiac build.
So you're clear.
I don't. I'm a bit of an anti-Zodiac.
Yeah, exactly.
You're not kind of lumbering.
You're not a lumberer.
It's one relief I feel watching this movie.
That you could never be accused of Zodiac crime.
They would never call me in for questioning.
Born after they committed.
Correct.
Were committed.
Yes.
And don't really lumber.
Yeah.
Born after they're committed doesn't seem to exonerate you as much as it did in the past.
That's true.
I feel like nowadays all sorts of people get accused of being the Zodiac killer.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's spooky when he says that.
The build.
Those knives.
Scared of guns and knives.
Those knives, Griffin, that i have in my chair back there
they're covered in blood they're for killing a chicken so we should mention we're not recording
this in our office today we're recording in david's trailer it's full of squirrels filled
with squirrels yeah well there's a knife but i have two kinds of squirrels i got my freezer
squirrels i've got my living squirrels right your friend squirrels and your food squirrels
is this is the implication that eventually the the trailer squirrels are Your friend squirrels and your food squirrels. Is the implication that eventually
the trailer squirrels
are going to go in the freezer?
I think he's growing squirrels
as like
as a source of food.
Yeah.
It's like that.
Right.
So like after a while
some of them end up in the freezer.
Oh yeah.
You know I used to have rats
in my freezer, right?
What?
For what?
My roommate had a pet snake.
A learned.
Learned foot.
And my roommate's name was
learned foot. Yeah, I learned it.
Hope you're doing well. I think he just
got a new job.
And he fed the snake rats.
And you had to freeze them and then thaw them out
and then give them to the snake.
So your roommate named learned
had a pet snake. And does
he have a lumbering build?
And is he the Zodiac Killer?
No, he was tall, but not stocky.
Okay.
But I would just have these moments
where I would open the freezer.
Be like, wait, what?
You know, like once a month,
I would be like, I need my,
what is this again?
Rat.
Rat.
It's the rat.
Frozen rat.
We mentioned-
No, they have that with the squirrels.
Learned, your former roommate,
came up on a recent episode
and I got a text from a friend
that I thought was completely inscrutable.
I could not make sense
of what was being written to me.
And then I realized it was because
I read it as learned foot.
Sure.
Like I thought someone was starting a sentence with
I learned that foot. And I was like, whose foot? But his name is Learned. Yeah. Yes. I thought someone was starting a sentence with, I learned that foot, and I was like,
whose foot? His name is Learned.
Yes. I sent this text?
No, Orlando Allier.
Who was one degree away from Learned
Foot and had made some connection after you mentioned him
on the show. This is the great way to end
a start.
It was so good to be here. Thank you so much
for having me. The way to open and close
our episode on one of the best movies we've ever covered.
Yeah, definitely.
It's immediately in that tier of conversation.
I think so.
Yeah.
I think it's, yeah, I think so.
I'm legitimately honored to be here.
Because it is a masterpiece.
It was a lightning bolt from the blue.
Yeah.
We were, there was some struggle in guest booking on this episode. We had a thing set. bolt from the blue. Yeah. We were, there was, there was some struggle in guest booking
on this episode.
We had a thing set.
We arranged the schedule.
Yeah,
we had one notion
that got thrown into chaos.
Right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We had to
slot something in quickly.
Yeah.
And I was sort of
asking around friends
of the show
and no one could come up
with anything.
Yeah.
And then Alex Ross-Perry,
our mutual friend,
was like,
well, obviously.
Yeah, Leslie Hedlund.
Right.
We were like, well, why would she ever want to waste her time traveling to downtown Brooklyn?
The fucking prequel episode.
No, I mean, it is.
Zodiac is.
I have a top four.
Okay.
Sure.
Four faves.
Four faves.
And I don't like to rank them
okay
because they're all so different
but it's
you have a
it's a Mount Rushmore
yeah it's a Mount Rushmore
it's Zodiac
The Shining
Back to the Future
The Apartment
you know like that's just
that's it
okay
yeah
so we've covered
this is now the third of your Mount Rushmore
we've covered
yes
yeah that's right
we rudely didn't book you on the first
too
so rude
but Alex took one of them
yes
yeah so that's on him yeah that's his fault yeah and then I think Timothy Simmons Rudely didn't book you on the first two. So rude. But Alex took one of them. Yes. Yeah.
So that's on him.
Yeah.
That's his fault.
Yeah.
And then I think Timothy Simmons did The Shining.
He did.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
You do Wilder.
Or I'm sorry.
No, right.
You said Shining Back to the Future.
Okay.
So Alex didn't take one.
Yeah.
Alex did.
Clockwork.
Yes.
Yes.
I mean, Wilder's.
I don't know.
You would double up some of them, but you could do him. Wilder's... I don't know. You would double up some of them. You could do him.
Wilder.
Yeah.
Like 20 movies.
Buddy Buddy, one of the most famously great endings to a career.
The movie that makes Tarantino want to retire.
I just love that every interview,
they're like, why are you going to retire?
He's like, don't want to make Buddy Buddy.
Really?
He says that?
I've never seen Buddy Buddy.
I haven't heard that either.
The last Wilder I've seen is Private haven't heard that either the last Wilder
I've seen
is Private Life
of Sherlock Holmes
which is not bad
no and which
Tarantino did a video
archives episode
on him was like
this is the one
he should have ended on
right
but it's his theory
of like everyone stays
at the dance
a little too long
a little too long
yeah I'm telling you
if you google it
so many times
over the years
Buddy Buddy
is the one
introduce our show this is Blank Check with Griffin and David a searing obsessive Yeah, I'm telling you, if you Google it so many times over the years, Buddy Buddy is the one.
Introduce our show.
This is Blank Check with Griffin and David, a searing, obsessive, investigative podcast.
So this one week will turn into something of a true crime podcast, right?
Yeah, right. So we'll finally hit the charts.
Yeah. And I have my animal crackers laid out in front of me.
It's a podcast. What? What?
Sound crunch.
Ben brought animal crackers.
Did you really?
Well, I didn't even know what I was setting up.
Yep.
Ben and I exchanged a knowing glance.
Okay.
And out they came.
Reclosable snack sack of Barnum's animal crackers.
Oh, I couldn't get the damn box.
No, of course.
Why couldn't you?
Why couldn't you?
I don't know.
It was the best I could find.
Yeah.
And the reclosable snack sack is so much better for audio.
Yeah, of course, of course.
That won't make any noise at all.
Yes.
This is Blank Check with Griffin and David.
It's 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.
And sometimes their checks clear.
Those.
I fucked up.
Yeah, you messed up.
Keep going, keep going. It was one word off. You're fine, you're fine. Getting over a chest cold, Leslie. It's fucked up keep going one word off
you're fine
you're fine
getting over a chest cold
Leslie
it's fucked up my head
this goes into the canon of
movie Griffin's been waiting
to talk about
since they started the show
and he's sick on the day
of the record
yeah
Sunshine
Fury Road
sure
Spider-Man 2
sure
from Zodiac
yeah
Starship Troopers
the episode where I vomited
mid-episode.
Yeah, but you didn't know
you were sick at the start
of that episode, right?
That kind of came on you.
Yeah, but I became pretty sick.
You did.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
During.
You just threw up
during that episode, Leslie.
Give us a series of blank checks
to make whatever crazy
passion projects they want
and sometimes those checks
clear and sometimes
they bounce.
Baby.
This is a mini-series
on the films of David Fincher.
It's called
The Curious Pod
of Benjamin Buttcast.
Right.
Right.
And this is, look,
it's, I feel like
usually we have
an answer,
but across this miniseries
we keep going back and forth
on what is
the blank check
in Fincher's career.
You think it's this?
It's tough to define.
Sure, like where he had
the most unfettered.
You think it's this?
In a certain way,
and we'll get into it
but there's something about this and Button being tied as productions
yeah
are they tied as productions?
they're very close together in time
and Warner's and Paramount team up for both
and co-sign to co-finance both
I think each one taking
a different stake
Paramount had this in America
and WB had Button in America.
But it was almost like
Button was the guarantor for this,
which is wild when you watch Button
and you go, it's insane
they gave him this much money to make this.
It's absolutely insane.
But they were like,
if you make Safe Play Button for us,
we'll let you make your weird newspaper.
Your weird newspaper movie.
I saw Button in the theater
and have not seen it since.
You're like most Americans.
Don't remember it. Time to re-button, Leslie. I saw it with the theater and have not seen it since you're like most Americans don't remember it
it's like the re-button Leslie
I saw it with my
with my friend Fenry
who I also saw
this movie with
some of this movie with
right
and
he sobbed uncontrollably
at the end of it
and I felt dead inside
so
that's
never watched it again
you might feel different
now that you have a kid
I'll say that
speaking as someone who
now
recently re-watched it with a kid and was much more affected by it.
I hear this.
Yes.
I've heard that that's the case.
Today, we're talking about Zodiac.
I think all three of us agree David Fincher's masterpiece, right?
Not to like spoil anything, but it's just like undeniable.
No, absolutely.
And it's not, I'm going to just really go hard, not the social network.
Just not.
So you're saying you don't even like the social network?
I like it.
It's fine.
It is not even in the same conversation as far as I agree with that.
Yeah.
I think it came at a particular time that everybody got on board with.
Sure.
And so they got on board with a long talkie movie about,
you know,
the social network.
Whereas Zodiac, I think, suffered a
little bit just in timing. I think if Zodiac
came post us discovering,
you know, the identity
of the Golden State
Killer. Like, you know, Zodiac
comes out then, boom, everybody
agrees it's the masterpiece. This movie was
ahead of the culture, for better or
worse. In a way that... It's a tone
center for, yes. Social network was as a way that it's a tone center for you.
Social Network was as well, but it was more tapped into the movie moment.
Yes, I agree.
Yes, it's good.
I'm not saying it's not.
I can say it's not.
I just think some people list it as his masterpiece, and I couldn't agree less.
I love Social Network, and I think it is a masterpiece,
but I think Zodiac is the elite tier of American film history. You know what I think it is a masterpiece, but I think Zodiac is the elite tier of American film history.
You know what I think it might be?
I think it might be that when I think of a filmmaker's masterpiece, there has to be that little bit of personal.
Yes.
There has to be that tiny little drop of baby David Fincher in it.
Yes.
And that is Zodiac.
You know, how he grew up, what Zodiac meant to him when he was younger. His dad was a newspaper man? We'll talk about it. And that is Zodiac. You know, how he grew up, what Zodiac meant to him
when he was younger.
His dad was a newspaper man?
His time life?
We'll talk about it.
Yes, he was a newspaper man.
Absolutely.
Our guest today is Leslie Hedlund.
The great Leslie.
We have to introduce you.
We haven't introduced you properly
even though you introduced
yourself very well.
Director of,
and I need to say this
because I'm not blowing
smoke up your ass,
but there's a track record.
There's a paper trail.
I've said this on mic
many times over the course of this podcast.
I know what you're about to say.
In my opinion, inarguably, always my go-to answer, the best romantic comedy of the last
10 years.
Thank you.
When we like bemoan the death of the romantic comedy and it comes up in discussion and people
go, how do you bring it back?
And what was the last good one?
I'm like, it's sleeping with other people.
That's the model.
Yeah.
That's the one.
Thank you.
It's the one that nails it for me.
It was,
I really appreciate that.
It was extremely personal movie.
It was a movie that I
poured my entire heart and soul into
and it was a genre
that I really care about.
Right.
Which you can tell.
And I agree.
It's really gone
the way of
streaming,
I guess,
now.
You know,
like there really,
there really isn't a
market for it.
Bring it back.
Yeah.
Bring it back.
Great movie.
Thank you.
I mean, it is.
I don't, you know,
he already hyped it up.
But you're an incredible filmmaker.
Thank you so much.
Incredible writer.
Incredible playwright.
Yeah.
I saw Bachelorette, Leslie.
I didn't tell you this.
Oh, the play?
You saw it on stage.
I saw it on stage.
The second stage, Uptown.
Yes, that's right.
Yeah, in 2010.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I was not dragged to it.
That's going to sound harsh.
It does sound harsh.
Most people are dragged to theater though, I think.
Well, so my brother works in theater and he was, I think, an intern at the second stage
then or something.
Oh, interesting.
Okay.
And he was like, come see this one.
Like, you'll like it.
Like, you know, it's like, trust me, it's fun.
And, you know, I'm not dragging you to some like
eat your broccolis play or whatever.
And it was so fucking good.
Thank you so much.
You're welcome.
I love that play.
Also a very personal play.
Like also, you know, something I felt incredibly blessed
to have been featured at the second stage uptown.
Like that was just such a,
cause I don't know if they still do that series
it's gone
as far as I know
it was really
it really broke me
as a writer
you know like
that was the
that was the moment
that was the moment
you know
like that and Terriers
were like my first two
things that I did
well Terriers was great
yeah
it was like
it was Fran Kranz
right
yes Fran Kranz
Eddie K. Thomas
Eddie K. Thomas
Catherine Waterston right Tracy Waterston. Right.
Tracy Chimo, Celia Keenan-Bolger.
Celia Keenan-Bolger, right. And my friend
Carmen Hurley. Yeah. Yeah.
And it was just one of those things where like,
there's the blowjob monologue like really
early. Yeah, yeah. And the
whole audience clearly just has this whole
moment of like, okay, I guess
now we know what we're in for. I would
say that I always want to have some
moment where you just let the audience know like if you don't like this you're not gonna like you
might as well you might as well just leave right now and because it's going to be this for 90
minutes it's exactly what it felt like in the room like it was a small theater and you could
just tell everyone being like oh oh oh she, oh, she's still talking about it.
Okay.
Oh, she's not done yet.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
All right.
All right.
That's going to be what this is like.
And it's so good.
Anyway.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
But to tie in like deep blank check lore that our lunatic Zodiac Killer adjacent fans feed on.
Uh-huh. killer adjacent fans feed on. To build out the tapestry,
you were on the same trivia team
with Alex Ross Perry.
Sometimes.
That's correct.
Sometimes.
You were a guest.
I was a guest sometimes
on Love and Tura Pet Detective.
Right.
A great name.
Great name.
But the Videology Trivia League,
which looms large
in the history of the show,
is the formation
or the real cementing of our friendship,
David and I, this podcast brings out of.
And there are people in the history of this show
who we became friends with then and there at the trivia.
And then there are people like Alex,
who we didn't even really connect with until years later,
and Nia DaCosta.
But I just find it so funny the more it's like,
I think about,
Conan O'Brien talks about careers are like war movies
where at the beginning
you meet like the 15 guys
in your squadron.
And then the movie
goes on three hours
and you keep on running
into the same guys
in the battlefield
over like decades.
And it feels like that bar
is like our training grounds.
What was it called again?
Videology?
Yeah.
Sad that it's,
you know,
R.I.P.
R.I.P.
Murdered by?
The Zodiac killer?
He's back.
Yeah.
So,
yeah,
Zodiac.
I do think,
I agree,
not to spoil,
this is Fincher's best film.
Yeah.
And it's the best film of a year
that's sort of notoriously
a good year for movies.
You know,
the 2007 There Will Be Blood and No Country for Old Men and Michael Clayton and good year for movies. You know, the 2007
There Will Be Blood
and No Country for Old Men
and Michael Clayton
and a lot of big,
you know,
well-remembered movies.
Yeah.
A year that is so good
that it's hard to
make a top 10
with an unconventional pick.
Right.
You know?
Like,
well,
I have to include X.
Right.
And you're like,
there's like a pool of
30 agreed upon
fantastic movies
from that year. And if you're taking anything outside of the 30, you're like, there's like a pool of 30 agreed upon fantastic movies from that year.
And if you're taking anything outside of the 30, you're like, are you just trying to color outside the lines?
Yeah. Are you just trying to be contrarian?
Yeah. But in a year with like several incredibly valid kind of undeniable masterpieces, I do think over time this one has only kind of grown.
Oh, absolutely.
Because I feel like I
remember it coming out and it there was sort of a resounding not with film nerds, but I think with
general audiences, there was a resounding sort of yawn at this movie, you know, that it was it was
kind of long and, you know, there's no resolution and that's and it's which is sort of the point of
the whole thing. But it didn't feel like it hit in any way.
No, no.
And it gets zero Oscar nominations.
I mean, I feel like a meme at the time
was like Norbit won Oscar nom, Zodiac zero.
That's right.
Because Norbit got the makeup one
and that was always the comparison point
that they were making.
But I was looking,
like there is only one critics group
that gave this movie an award.
Yeah. Dublin Society film critics
top of the morning to them
I'm giving them credit
why do you think that's the case
because it was released in March
oh that's right it was released in March
and then by the time it was time for awards
No Country for Old Men
and There Will Be Blood had come out
and there was this kind of like
oh my god
that was such a dogfight
these big totemic movies
oh yeah
right
which side are you on
between those two
which one were you
I was a No Country guy
yeah same
so was I
these days
I'm
I kind of don't care
I like them all
I'm happy they're with us
rewatched
either and full
in so long
and I rewatched
scenes from both all the time.
Yeah.
But I think like, yeah, it gets lost in a shuffle of a year where it's like you have
movies like that that are connecting in a slightly larger way.
And then you have things that are like full on hits that are critically well regarded,
like Ratatouille, you know?
Oh, right.
And then you have things like.
Wait, do you think that it's weird that they're kind of similar to Zodiac though?
No,
the,
the,
there will be blood,
no country.
There's something in the air that year.
Yeah.
Weirdly,
you know?
And it's like,
lots of laughs,
lots of laughs.
Um,
but even like,
like these nihilistic endings where you're like,
you know,
there's just,
there's no hope.
Yeah.
And it is,
it's also kind of the peak of this. Like, I mean, Zodiac is not an indie movie.
No.
It's a studio film.
But like all the studios having their indie imprints, putting out challenging-ish movies.
Yeah.
Something like Juno can take off and make a zillion dollars or I don't know what else was sort of like big that years.
You know, like, like if you look at the Oscars, it's like a dark year.
Like,
yes.
Cause like Michael Clayton is also that has a triumphant ending in a way
like he,
but it's dark.
Like he,
he beats them,
I guess.
But then,
you know,
get in the car,
you start striving.
Nothing to do with himself.
Um,
you know,
the diving ball and the butterfly,
Sweeney Todd,
like Eastern promises.
These are like very bleak adult, you know, films that had broken through.
Jesse James.
Well, I was going to say, Jesse James, I think, weirdly comes out much later.
Yeah.
And takes the Zodiac spot of the one the critics are fighting for.
To nudge in.
Right.
Sure, yeah.
Do we have any idea why the studio released it in March?
Yes.
We do uh which essentially
is they thought it would not do very well uh the other part of this was did it have a festival life
it was it released it a can after it came out bombed in theaters because i was gonna say i was
like wasn't it a can they put it a can two months as griffin is saying after it had bombed
to even to fincher's confusion.
And lost the Palme d'Or to no country, right?
Yeah, but it also, it not only did it lose it.
No, no, no country.
No, not no country.
No, no, no.
No country was at Cannes.
Well, but that would be the year.
2007.
Wait, well, now I have to look it up.
Maybe it didn't win, but it was at Cannes.
I'm looking it up.
Okay.
Jesus God.
I'm forgetting what the
Palme d'Or would have been
in 2007
Palme d'Or in 2007
went to four months
three weeks and two days
it's a very good film
oh yes
the jury president
was Stephen Frears
that year
yeah No Country
I think did win
director maybe
or something
that sounds right
no
Country
let's see
nope didn't win nothing
well
no awards for No Country
yeah no awards for no country. Yeah.
No awards for no country.
Cet pays c'est pas pour le vieux homme.
As I always say, the French title, literally, this country is not for the old man, which
I just would see on posters and laugh.
That is good.
That is fantastic.
It's so good.
It was supposed to be Paramount's big winter, fall 2006 Oscar contender.
And they were fighting him over length.
And then they kind of just threw up their hands and went, we're just fucking releasing it in March.
Wow.
So by March, like, it went from being a hot prospect to them to sort of a shrug and a surrender.
But I do think, weirdly,
2006 was kind of a weak Oscar year.
Yeah, it could have won.
That's the Departed.
Even Paramount kind of dumped it,
but they dumped it November, December.
I think it would have at least had like an insider type Oscar run
where it's like,
the studio abandoned this,
it bombed, but critics loved this.
I love the Departed,
but it's kind of weird that it won Best Picture.
That's not the kind of movie that often wins Best Picture.
Movies where Jack Nicholson picks up someone's hand in a bag and goes,
you know, like that's not usually what they love.
It would have been the movie of 2007 or 2006.
I mean, rather.
Sorry.
It seems like a giant fuck you.
I think it was a bit of a fuck you.
But I also think at the time, as much as we lionize this movie now,
David Fincher movies always come out
and everyone's always like,
too cold.
Every single time.
It happens to this day.
It happened to Mank.
It's happening to the killer.
And then five years later,
everyone's like,
we all agree he changed cinema on that day.
And like,
I'm just like,
you didn't fucking agree about anything and i
remember when zodiac came out i was how old would i have been i was like 21 but i was like at the
time i was like it's pretty weird this is just kind of getting dropped with like the march garbage
you know just kind of like all right and i went to see it and I was like, that thing was incredible. Was this post Zack Snyder
taking over March?
It's the same March.
It's the same March.
It's the same March.
I want to say 300 comes out.
No, 300 is,
wait, wait.
Yes.
Yes.
So it's like
in the shadow of it.
No, it's a week later.
It's a week later.
Oh.
300's on the horizon.
They kick him into the pit.
Yeah, they do. They just kicked him into the pit. No, but you're right. This is like a week after oh 300's on the horizon they kick him into the pit yeah they do
they just kicked him
into the pit
no but you're right
this is like
a week after this movie
comes out
March becomes a legitimate
time to release a movie
and the week before that
it was a garbage month
a garbage month
yes
it's changed
immediately
we will talk about
the box offices
this week
yeah
because that's what we do
on this podcast obviously
but Zodiac ran into a buzzsaw.
That was the other problem that nobody
saw coming. Do you know what it is? I think I know what it is.
Well, we'll talk about it. I thought you were going to say
we will talk about 300. And I said,
I'd rather not. I don't think we will. I'm not sure
that's a good idea. I don't know.
Maybe this is the moment. Bring it
back. Start poking the Snyder Bear.
So, yeah, let me give you a little bit
of context about Zodiac
Leslie but then yes I do
want to ask about you
seeing the movie because
we were talking about
this briefly I want to
say one thing before we
go back this open just to
Leslie's point because I
think this is a thing to
pin on the on the cork
board as we start putting
a bunch of thread yeah
around building our
Zodiac map at this
episode I think that's a
reason why social network
is so lionized.
Yes.
Is it is the only movie of his
where everyone was unified
at the moment it came out.
That's right.
It is the only movie in his career
where when it came out,
it was a hit,
audiences liked it,
and critics liked it,
and it was an Oscar player.
And every other time,
he's been missing one of them,
and then everyone comes around later.
Yes, yes, yes later yes yes my argument for
that would be people appreciated the coldness because they were like because it was about a
cold we need to take this guy down and also that's 100 correct yes and also it was sort of like oh
the sorkin script did good in the fridge oh you know what i mean like oh that actually benefits
from control he was pulling something that was a little too high.
Yeah.
And so that worked really well for everyone.
I don't think there's another, I mean, Fight Club is sort of its own thing where obviously that went over poorly in a lot of ways.
But like, I don't think people were like too cold.
They were just like, I don't know what to do with this.
But mostly it's like, yeah, if only like the meticulous little techno freak David Fincher
had some blood in his veins.
Like it's always the initial reaction.
And they're always wrong, to be clear.
Oh, I think so too.
Yeah, but like that's the fucking endless read on him.
I mean, I think the flip of that, and we'll get to this in its own episode, but Gone Girl, I think people are like, well, this is just kind of popcorn.
Yeah.
People were like, this is fun, but it's not serious.
Gone Girl I've liked, but right, they were like, but we can't take this seriously.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Come on. Come on. Do you like They were like, but we can't take this seriously. Yeah. Yeah.
And come on.
Do you like Gone Girl?
I love Gone Girl. Gone Girl's the best.
Yeah.
I have the cool girl monologue framed in my office.
Is it true?
Alex was trying to get this right.
Do you have two separate David Fincher related tattoos?
I have Marla Singer.
There she is.
With slide underneath her. Oh, that's so cool. I have I Am Jackla Singer. There she is. With a slide underneath her.
Oh, that's so cool.
I have
I Am Jack's
Complete Lack of Surprise.
Hey, that's pretty good.
Yeah.
I felt like you guys
were a little harsh
on Fight Club.
May I say?
So you've listened
to the episode?
No, I did listen
to the episode.
It's not my movie.
I'll admit.
I have to admit.
I apologize
if it felt like I was being too dismissive of it.
Oh, no, I totally got what you guys were saying.
Because with the Easy Rider-ness of it,
like meaning that it's sort of like younger people now watching that film
would be like us watching Easy Rider.
Is that sort of what, am I remembering that correctly?
Yeah, I know exactly.
And I did ask my younger, for my Star Wars,
I actually did ask some younger cast members
to watch Fight Club.
And I think that they,
I think they did have that reaction.
Yeah.
But to me, Fight Club is Dr. Strangelove.
Like it's a satire that stands up
because what it's satirizing is evergreen,
which is male toxicity.
You know, like it's always going to be there.
It's always going to be happening.
It's like...
It's a good take.
You know what I mean?
That's my take.
Yeah,
that's a good one.
I also understood
that in...
Because I was texting with Alex
about it,
fighting with him about it.
And he was like,
you have to understand
it was my whole life.
Yes.
You know,
and I think that was the thing
that he was sort of
reacting against.
This is the one thing I want to say
in our defense in this episode, okay?
Defense of that episode,
because this is the one Fincher episode
we're not recording wildly far in advance,
so we can actually respond to that.
Oh, sure. Right.
I don't feel the need to respond to all the criticism,
because I understand the note.
And I'm not placing any blame on him,
but I think you need to understand
where David and I were coming from
if I can speak for David.
Alex says,
I want to do Fight Club. That was my whole personality for like 15
years. And I think David and I both think,
great, we can sit back.
He's going to come in and
deliver the dissertation on a movie
that was not either of our
movie.
And so I was just like, I maybe am a little
cooler on this than a lot of people
i have no aspiration to like note it or like create my thesis for why it's overrated or anything yeah
but i thought he was just gonna lay it all out and i'd be like interesting case right which is what
he'd done for the last couple of movies he came on for where it was like this is my whole personality
and what we could not have anticipated is he re-watched it and went like i don't know if
i like this anymore right right he was like oh maybe it is kind of in the past for me right yeah
well it is it is and i i don't think i've seen fight club as much as i've seen zodiac so i saw
zodiac when it came out i saw uh i i had some mishaps trying to see it in the theater because
i was an assistant at the time and like I slept through one of them and you know,
like it was just,
it was a really bad year for me.
And,
uh,
just personally,
it was a really horrible year.
So I,
I,
but I had to see Zodiac cause I was a massive,
massive Fincher fan.
And so I went to go see a matinee of it at that AMC.
I think it's like an AMC on Broadway and 18th.
Oh yeah.
You know that one?
Yeah.
Yeah. The AMC on 19th. You know that one? Yeah, yeah.
The AMC on 18th.
You know, and, and, you know, just sat through it.
And the second like hurdy-gurdy man came on at the end, I was like, this is a, a masterpiece.
I have, I have witnessed a masterpiece.
And then I walked out into like the brightest sunlight, you know what I mean?
Like, I'm just like, it was so trippy.
And I think that after that Zodiac, once it came out on DVD and I got the
director's cut and the commentaries, which I'm sure we'll talk about, I watched it almost every
day. So I saw it in New York when I was an assistant. I quit my job, which was very difficult
and hard to do. I moved to Los Angeles with nothing and I slept on a couch
because I had no money
and I shared
this studio apartment
with this other girl,
this roommate,
and I watched Zodiac
every day
and at one point
she had an intervention
with me
and was like,
you have to stop
watching Zodiac.
As much as I adore Zodiac,
I might worry.
She was extremely
worried about me.
She was like, I think that you have some She was extremely worried about me. She was like,
I think that you have
some mental issues
you should work out.
I mean, this is like
when I was like heartbroken
when I was 15
and I watched The Wiz
every day for four straight months.
It's really,
it got me.
You can like this movie,
but something else is going on.
Something else is going on.
It did get me through.
And I think because
it's about obsession
and it's about,
it's about a certain type of addiction. Like it get me through, and I think because it's about obsession and it's about a certain type of addiction, like, it got me through a period of my life that I don't know if I would have gotten through if I didn't have Zodiac.
Like, so it's not just like a cold movie that's investigative that has a nihilistic ending.
Like, to me, it's so rich and beautiful and gorgeous and there's all these, like, nooks and crannies in it that you can just live in.
It's like Barry Lyndon for me.
Like, you know, you just, you can live inside the movie, you know, like even more so.
I've seen this movie many times, not as many as you.
I've seen it more times than you, somehow.
I find it to weirdly be a comfort food movie, even though I find it very upsetting and disturbing.
Absolutely.
My wife will say to me,
like when I'm very stressed out,
my wife will say,
do you want to go home
and watch Zodiac?
You know, like,
do you want to go watch Zodiac?
I'm like, yes, I do.
It doesn't relax me,
but it focuses me.
Yes.
And it sort of grounds me.
Yeah.
I find it kind of relaxing
and comforting
and very funny.
And yes, of course,
it contains depictions of murder.
Yes.
That are chilling and realistic. realistic also just like the darkness
of the human soul and like that part
that's the comforting part
that actually is
my whole thing with Zodiac and
that's one of the only scary movies that Forky has
watched with me multiple times my wife
has watched Zodiac with you multiple times
oh really now I understand why your marriage
works and she watched it with me the other night Has our Zodiac with you multiple times? Oh, really? Now I understand why your marriage works.
And she watched it with me the other night. For the first time.
Is it's like after the cabbie,
you're basically done with murder.
Yes, that's right.
And because Fincher wisely is like,
I'm not depicting anything else
where it's like, who knows,
maybe this was a, you know,
it's like, no, no, no.
We are depicting confirmed Zodiac killings only.
Yeah.
And then it's like now.
Where people survive.
Because they don't show the first one.
Right.
They don't show the first one.
If we can't interview a survivor, we're not going to depict it on screen.
Right.
Well, the cabbie didn't survive, but the cabbie was, you know, witnessed and so on.
But yes, but yes, correct.
And then you're like, yeah, now we're just going to sink into obsession.
And yes, there'll be scary stuff.
you're like yeah now we're just gonna sink into obsession and yes there'll be scary stuff and then but like i we're gonna be in diners no explaining things looking through books there's gonna be
harsh sunlight coming through like uh police stations there's gonna be you know people going
to the library well that's i love that it's these different kinds of investigations it's detectives
yes newspaper and it's cold case. Puzzle boy.
I call him puzzle boy.
He is a puzzle boy. But yes,
he is what
we have now. That's
what he is as well.
Leslie, you saying this movie has nooks and
crannies that you could live in. I had
this thought verbatim re-watching
the movie for the episode. I don't think I've
ever had this exact thought before.
It's not like this is a mental exercise I've
run through before, but I thought
if I was forced
to watch only one movie for
the rest of my life, and I had to
watch that movie every day.
Oh, okay. That sounds
torturous, but yes. Right, but that's part of the exercise.
Yeah. Right?
I'm like, what's a movie I would still find compelling every day and not get tired of?
And there are movies I enjoy watching more than this,
but I think this is a movie I would never stop finding interesting.
And I would never lack in discovery of new things to sort of dig into and fixate on.
I couldn't agree more.
And I think that part of it
is that it's not a slave to the three-act structure.
It's interstitial.
It's got this sort of episodic feel to it.
And not unlike The Shining,
it has this sort of labyrinthian feeling to it.
But no matter how many times you've seen it,
you're like, wait, is this the part
where he goes to see Donald Logue?
Or is this the part where,
right.
You know,
um,
he gets in the fight with Toshi.
Like,
like you can't quite remember what scene is coming next.
I will never get to the bottom of it.
And there's no scene where you're like,
it's never going to get repetitive.
Every scene is three to four guys in a diner or an office chatting,
having the best conversation.
You're like, every scene you're like, I can't go to the bathroom for this one. I an office chatting, basically. Having the best conversation you've ever heard in your life.
And you're like, every scene,
you're like,
I can't go to the bathroom
for this one.
I have to watch.
Yeah.
I have to.
Oh, it's...
It's a fucking porker.
Logus back, yeah.
I absolutely adore this movie, too,
because I think it does
what Fincher actually does best.
You know what I mean?
Like, I think Fincher,
up until this point,
we've seen, like,
flashiness to those films.
Yeah, sure.
And actually what he is a genius at is blocking actors and staging camera.
He's actually just brilliant at doing what the greats all can do.
And when it comes down to it, you can either do that or you can't.
And there are many directors that absolutely cannot do that
who are lauded, I think,
for their inventive sort of way
that they put together a meniscon scene,
you know, like the way that they, you know,
throw a bunch of jump cuts together.
But all the greats, it's blocking and staging.
Like, it's so clear the way that he has...
I mean, all you have to do
is watch, like,
the investigation
of Paul Stein's murder,
the handheld section.
Is that the cabbie?
Yeah.
Yeah.
With Tashi and Anthony Edwards
and Mark Ruffalo.
The way that's blocked
is, like,
I could watch that scene,
you know,
25 times right now
and probably find something new
that I learn something from that scene.
It's like one of the I don't say this lightly.
One of the greatest regrets of my life is I was invited by someone to attend Soderbergh at NYU giving a lecture on Zodiac.
Right.
I'm the killer, to be clear, not the film.
Yes.
I think I know who it is.
And I'll only tell nyu students yes
um but uh he did a lecture on zodiac maybe like a year or two after it came out pretty
fresh and it was just him and i don't think this was ever recorded uh but it was just him breaking
down like scene by scene. You don't understand.
This is the guy working at the absolute top of the field right now. And just the basic fundamentals of visual storytelling.
Of everything like meat and potatoes that movie making is.
And the term I heard he used all the time was just next level visual math.
Yeah.
In a way that is...
That is exactly it.
Right?
That is exactly it.
And it's so unflashy.
But it's like,
this is Fincher doing
his most sophisticated film
where on a surface level,
it is the simplest,
it is the spirest,
you know?
Right, it's a movie
where you're like,
wait, why did it even cost money?
I don't understand.
It's mostly set in an office.
And it is so expensive.
It is expensive, yeah.
If you are a filmmaker
and you watch Zodiac,
you can appreciate
how expensive the film is.
Like, how much digital work has been done
in order to create the period,
to recreate the waterfront.
Like, you know, even the Paul Stein cab moment,
like you were saying, not a survivor there,
but that's why they use that bird's eye view of the cab.
Because they're like,
we don't know what happened inside.
We don't know what happened inside.
We know he got in.
We know they took him to Washington and Cherry
and that's all we know.
So how do we shoot it?
That's the other filmmaking.
I mean, just like his internal rules
of like what we are showing you
and when and how.
Yeah.
Based on like the movie communicating to you
the levels of reality of fact versus memory.
All the way down to like Darlene Farrin, you know, hitting the turn signal.
Like when she gets shot.
Like everything down, like every single detail was, like I love that it starts out by saying that it's based on case files.
Yeah.
Not by like, you know, this is based on a true story.
He says like this is based on the case files. Like I don't know know, this is based on a true story. He says like, this is based on
the case files. Like, I don't know why, but that always tickles me too. I love that it says that
though. Yeah. Rather than like inspired by a true story or, you know, yeah, yeah. Right. Right. True
events. I love true. I love when events are true. I love it. Zodiac. Let me give you some context
from the dossier. Obviously it's coming five years after Panic Room
although
I suppose you can think of it
as sort of being intended
as a 2006 movie
yes
because it is sort of a big gap
in his filmography
yeah
but obviously
what does he work on in between
that he never made
Rendezvous with Rama
I think we will talk about again
really wanted to make a version of that
the Arthur C. Clarke novel
with Morgan Freeman.
This gap is one of the periods
where he spends a lot more
energy on it, but he even then was sort
of like, I can see the way this movie
works and the technology's eight years
away for me doing it. Yeah, partly a
sort of digital hang-up thing. He said he wanted
to do it like John Krakauer's
Into Thin Air. Don't even know what that means,
but sounds awesome.
Like crazy sort of like
the technical details
of like space exploration stuff.
When you dig into those,
because there's one interview
that I feel like JJ
is pulling from a lot
that's from like 07 or 08.
That's him saying like,
I can almost see
us being at the place
where I could make it
the way I want to.
You wanted to do it
like IMAX 4K.
And this is in 2008.
I think he wanted to do something similar to Gravity,
but even more hard sci-fi, hard science, less pulpy.
But it just didn't exist.
He also, as I think we've mentioned,
was attached to a script called Seared
that became the TV show Kitchen Confidential.
Right.
An adaptation of Anthony Bourdain's book.
He was going to make that
as a movie with Brad Pitt.
That gets canceled.
And then eventually,
as we've mentioned,
he also gets attached to...
Later, he gets attached to Chef,
which then becomes Burnt,
also with Bradley Cooper.
So weird.
But he was going to do it
with Keanu,
which is wild.
He was also supposedly
attached to that
David Benioff movie, Stay.
Yes.
Which Mark Foster made. Famous
twist movie. Like one of the hottest
McGregor and Gosling. Yeah. The people were losing
their minds over. Who's the female lead in that?
Naomi Watts. Yeah.
And then everyone hated it. Hated it.
What's the twist in that movie?
Have you seen Stay? I haven't seen it. No one's ever seen
it. It's not a real film. I'm like vaguely
remembering it. It was one of those things that
everyone was like, just wait. This is going to be be huge and they came out everyone was like forget it we
never mentioned this didn't happen it's not real right don't speak of this film but it was like
four years of the hottest directors and stars all like clamoring to make you can't believe the twist
in this thing and they're like i won't tell you people have explained to me what the twist is and
it i it does not register i could
right right you're like and then it turned out he was from and you're like i know i don't know
what you're talking yeah um the other big thing of course is he works for a while on mission
impossible 3 that's the big one he's sort of the first choice for it basically and you know
announces cruise has selected him to think about because he was gonna do there was the world war
two movie he was gonna to do with Pitt.
Sure, we've talked about that.
I can't remember which one.
And when Pitt dropped out,
it's somewhere there in the dossier.
I forget the name of it.
When Pitt dropped out,
Cruz briefly thought about taking over.
It was sort of one of those windows
where it's like,
we'll keep your development costs going
if you can get an equivalent A-lister.
Fertig.
Great title. So Pitt was attached for a while. drops out this summer ferdig he's trying to keep it afloat he
meets with cruise cruise considers it passes but then goes you know what you passed my test i want
you on mi3 considered ferdig decided to do last samurai instead but then was like here's a robert
town script for mi3 yeah i want to make it really nasty and violent. We don't know. Fincher is the one
who said that we had
a cool,
really violent idea.
He doesn't say what it is.
I don't really know
what he means by that.
Like,
it's sort of weird
to say,
like,
our idea was violent.
I don't,
like,
but who knows?
Here's all I will say.
I would say Carnahan
is his replacement.
And then when Abrams
comes on board,
I think Abrams is sort of working with new material
he starts over from square one yes Carnahan
I don't know how much in common the Carnahan
version had with the Fincher version
Carnahan is someone you turn to for violence
correct yes this is why I'm saying it did
feel like Cruz maybe wanted to
go harder and more violent the thing
I know that Carnahan has said in interviews is that
his script was largely about drug
trafficking in human bodies
dear lord
like that they were like putting drugs in dead bodies
and that's one of the reasons everyone kind of
panicked around it was like it was really
I mean that sounds crazy
just imagine the studio execs
they were using corpses
and now we're back to like
Ethan Hunt is like you know a close up magician
slash acrobat you know a close-up magician slash
acrobat you know who does fun disguises not like acrobat moving bodies yeah stuffed with drugs or
whatever you know whatever this is yeah just wild that fincher even livers full of microchips
fincher sort of talks about it like i thought they were all kind of jazzed on the idea i had
and then over time it seemed like they maybe wanted me to take notes from them
and it's wild that he even like
David yeah
I thought you
like learned hard and fast maybe he thought
Cruz could insulate him I mean it makes sense
like why Cruz wanted him
but it doesn't make sense why
Fincher would want to do it
why he would fall for it yeah
I guess there's just sort of an allure
of wow like Cruz is the number one movie star in the world like this could be Fincher would want to do it. Why he would fall for it. Yeah. Why would he fall for that? I guess there's just sort of an allure of,
wow,
like Cruise is the number one movie star in the world.
Like this could be cool.
But yeah.
Every story I've ever heard about him,
which are all very,
very.
Finchy or crazy.
No about Cruise,
like which are all very like third person.
Very,
very far,
far removed is just that he can talk anybody into anything.
Right.
Right.
So I'm assuming he sat down and was like,
hey, Finch.
And I think he talks to him,
but it'll be hard.
It's a lot of work.
Yeah.
You're going to have to work.
Which is the number one thing that Fincher wants to do.
That sounds good, though, for some reason.
But if you think about it, yeah.
You're going to eat egg white omelette today.
That's a good first impression.
He was, he was,
ate egg whites today.
It's going to be tough work. It was, it was, it was gonna be tough work
he
it was
it was
it was De Palma
and then it was
John Woo
and then
yeah of course
he wanted another
yeah that's the other thing
there's this kind of
baton pass of like
oh these are like
huge thriller directors
right
I just think Fincher
every other point
in his career
from Alien 3 on
anytime something like this
has floated to him
is like 99 out of 100 guys
would fall for this.
Yeah.
And I know.
Right.
I went through that crucial.
I already did it.
I see the trap.
Yeah.
And this is the one time
it felt like he let himself
believe a little bit.
Yeah.
It was that cruise magic.
It's the cruise magic.
Yeah.
You're right.
Yeah.
Some other things
and I feel like we've mentioned
all these before.
Lord to Dogtown.
He was attached
sort of at one point
and then he was trying to mentor Fred Durstst into making it was durst first it was a durst developed project
yeah you're right you're right and then they were like this is too big a budget dirt right
is kicked off fincher steps in and then is like forget it and i know in a classic kind of fincher
thing the budget thing was he was like okay so i need 15 million dollars to reconstruct the pier right right right and they were like david and he was like you have to rebuild the pier at full scale
it's 1971 again like we have to do that oh my god and he was attached to the lookout which is one of
those movies that eventually gets made by scott frank with joseph gordon levitt right but like
that was a script that was attached a little bit of a state script but instead it turns out pretty well
and then Button of course
which he's pushing up the hill
for all of the 2000s
and they want him
to do and they think he's the guy who can
finally sort of solve the movie
for them so I think Zodiac
is like he's already dancing
with them on Button and then
he like brings a third into the dance.
Which is why the dumping in March seems so weird to me.
Because I'm like, because if they're so invested in him for the button of it all.
Yeah, Leslie, I don't know if you know this, but studios are often irrational and act against their own interests.
Dump, dump.
Do they?
I don't know if you've heard the news.
I don't know this.
I'm so yeah
he's got a great quote in this dossier
where he's like you talk to studios
and you like pitch them a movie and they're like
150 million dollars that's too much
and then three years later they green light the same
movie and say it's a bargain
right right right right because they've gone through
some level whatever we don't need to
and then the other thing is first
he's going write a direct
a script that was written by james elroy called the night watchman that falls apart and then he
gets attached to the black dahlia and then he's like let's make this as a massive miniseries tv
like brought you know film level miniseries he's basically pitching like what he eventually gets
to do by the way yeah because those elroy books, which I love, are all
doorstops. They're huge.
And he's like, give me
$80 million for a TV miniseries. In the mid-2000s,
that scene is ludicrous.
The limited prestige series is dead. It is never coming back.
It will not, in fact, destroy movies.
Now you're like, hey, can I have $80 million for a TV
show? They're like, for one episode,
maybe. And
then that turns into a movie that de palma makes
a flawed but interesting film yeah i would say um and so zodiac happens shane salerno
the uh writer of shaft singleton shaft yeah why were we just talking about him well he's writing
he's in the upcoming he's in the Avatar writers world.
Oh, right, he wrote Alien vs. Predator.
Oh, right. That's why we were talking.
But an incredibly bizarre career. Yeah.
A sort of like, Wunderkind
documentary, he makes a documentary
in high school that gets picked up, and then he gets
brought into the NYPD blue writers
room as the sort of
apprentice, and
then is sort of off and running
in this sort of
true crime bent.
He buys the rights
to the book
that,
you know,
the real Robert Gage
Graysmith writes.
Yeah.
He loves the book
when he's a teenager.
Zodiac.
Develops it for years,
kicks it to James Vanderbilt,
he of the Vanderbilts.
But wasn't it with Disney?
Yes.
He signs up with Touchstone.
Oh,
Touchstone.
Sells it to Touchstone
in like 99. Guys, remember Touchstone? I miss it. I miss it with Disney? Yes. He signs up with Touchstone. Oh, Touchstone. So they're going to sell it to Touchstone in like 99.
Guys, remember Touchstone?
I miss it.
I miss it.
I miss Touchstone so badly.
I want to touch the stone again.
I want to touch the stone.
God, bring me back, pretty woman.
Bring me back.
You know what's an underrated period?
Roger Rabbit.
Well, yes.
Yes.
Speaking of Roger Rabbit's in this movie.
He's in this movie.
You don't want to go in his basement.
What?
He is.
Oh, yes.
Yes.
That's him.
Yeah, that's him.
Yeah, yeah.
Speaking of Roger Rabbit, speaking of Touchstone.
Speaking of Touchstone, I loved when
Disney made their deal with
DreamWorks and just
briefly revived Touchstone to release
the DreamWorks movies. Oh, yeah, that's right.
Where Lincoln is a Touchstone film
and Bridge of Spies is a Touchstone film.
And it was like we had, like, Touchstone
had basically died and then there was like five years where that logostone film. And it was like we had, like Touchstone had basically died.
And then there was like five years where that logo came back.
And it was lovely.
Now it's gone again.
James Vanderbilt,
and I say this with all due respect
to a man who's had a long
and successful career in Hollywood,
has never written a movie
as good as Zodiac.
Oh, no.
I have a couple theories on it.
It's crazy.
Well, yeah.
I mean, the main theory, obviously,
is that, you know,
Fincher worked on this movie
and all that.
But like, it's just interesting that he i think of him as a pretty reliable blockbuster
kind of guy these days right he did spider-man he does the screen movies he does the adam sandler
murder mystery movies two murder mysteries it's like yeah okay he's sort of like a pro but he's
not like like this movie or like this screenplay is like a brilliant work of like a pro but he's not like like this movie you're like this screenplay is
like a brilliant work of like research and order and like it's so you know and it's like just funny
that he's the only credited script writer but he is this movie came out and you were like because
i mean leslie you know this better than anyone but it's like oftentimes a writer's credits do
not actually represent who they are in hollywood where're like, well, you make 20 great scripts that are
unproduced. The thing that comes out has been
rewritten to shreds or whatever.
And so he has like, his year where he hits
the map is... He wrote three movies in 2003.
Right. Darkness Falls, Basic,
and The Rundown. And as he
puts it, he says... Which is a hot year in terms
of just getting three scripts.
It's pretty impressive. But he says,
I'd had three movies made.
One was about a killer tooth fairy
that's Darkness Falls.
One was this John Travolta
Samuel L. Jackson movie
that isn't Pulp Fiction.
Good line.
That's basic.
Good line.
And the rundown I do love,
but it's The Rock's
second action movie.
Right.
You know,
it's not exactly Shakespeare.
Right.
Although now it's
maybe one of his better movies.
Definitely.
It's a fun movie.
But yes,
when this movie comes out, you're like, oh, well, this is who this guy is. And now we're dealing with like a his better movies. Definitely. It's a fun movie. But yes, when this movie comes out,
you're like,
oh,
well,
this is who this guy is.
Yes.
And now we're dealing with like a fucking powerhouse.
Yeah.
And then it is,
when he starts getting hired onto like,
Spider-Man,
because he's originally hired to write,
Spider-Man 4 or 5,
before it then turns into Amazing Spider-Man 1.
Sure.
He's writing a Raimi sequel,
that then gets rebooted and whatever.
And I was like, well, this is equivalent to them hiring Alvin Sargent,'s writing a Raimi sequel that then gets rebooted and whatever. And I was like,
well, this is equivalent
to them hiring Alvin Sargent
to write the Raimi films.
Like, I took that news
as like,
this is elevated.
It's absolutely,
like, the script reminds me
so much of L.A. Confidential.
Yeah.
Like, it reminds me
so much of that,
like, you know,
Methodical.
Methodical.
It restarts
in the middle of it.
There's like, you know, that Wheel of Fortune scene in L.A. Confidential in the middle of it there's like
you know that
Wheel of Fortune scene
in L.A. Confidential
where all of this
it's like you think
it feels like
it should be over
and then boom
the movie starts up again
and literally
each scene is like
just as the scenes
are ending
you can feel the next scene
being like
get out of the way
I'm here
you know
there's just like
there's such an
artistry to it
that I agree it's a little
incongruous with is only confidential one of your favorite movies is this one of mine i would say
it's up there for sure i i mean that was a huge movie for me i would say when i was younger i
haven't watched it in a bit but i i would put it in the in in the zodiac category of like a nook
and cranny movie that you can exist in and live in.
And it's a whole world.
And like, again, you're like, which part is coming next?
Is it this part or this part?
The interrogation is coming up.
Great.
Oh, great.
Okay, great.
No, I love this.
Every scene is my favorite scene.
Every scene is your favorite scene.
And it really does feel like it follows, Zodiac feels like it follows in the footsteps of that.
A couple important script context things.
The Salerno script
was much more of a thriller.
Yeah, well, and it has this...
The big hook.
This concept of like,
and then the Zodiac returns.
Right.
Like it's set in modern day San Francisco
and he's back.
So it's sort of like
an adaptation of
Grace Smith's nonfiction book
and a speculative sequel.
What if all of a sudden we got another letter?
We all know that Custer died at Little Bighorn.
What this book presupposes is, what if he didn't?
That's basically like Shane Salerno in 1999 being like, what's the version of this that's sellable to Disney?
And Shane Salerno seems like,
again,
the man wrote Alien vs. Predator.
He's more in the lurid space.
Yeah.
Yeah, but also,
like,
he's writing a lot of, like,
true crime stuff
at this point in time,
but I think he's like,
the whole thing
that makes this movie so great
but makes it so difficult
is that it's like,
there is no resolution
and we have to live
with the lack of resolution.
Yeah.
And he's trying to make a movie
where someone can win.
There can be some closure,
which means you need to tack on
fantastical thriller.
Vanderbilt is very much
in his pitch notes being like,
there will be no resolution.
Because he's going to Graysmith
and Graysmith's like,
I've been down this road.
And his pitch to Graysmith is,
I'm going to do the movie
that lives in the space
of what this actually was.
The frustration, the obsession, the longing.
And Fincher, when he reads Vanderbilt's script,
because Fincher is the first choice,
because he made Seven.
But I'm sure Fincher, that's the thing.
Ever since he makes Seven,
if there's some serial killer movie,
he's getting sent it and going like,
well, I don't want to do that.
But of course, the Zodiac Killer
is much more meaningful to him.
Vanderbilt says,
they told me, well, we're going to offer it to Fincher. And I went, great, letiac Killer is much more meaningful to him. Vanderbilt says, they told me,
well, we're going to offer it to Fincher.
And I went, great,
let's get that out of the way
so we can go on to the real deal.
Why would he want to do this again?
And Fincher,
obviously, yes,
he grew up in the shadow of the Zodiac,
so it's like in his brain
in a way that most,
but he's also like,
I see this as a newspaper story,
like an all the presidents
meant kind of movie.
And Vanderbilt's like,
yeah, okay okay you get it
like
not only does this guy
want to do the movie
which I wasn't expecting
but he wants to do this movie
for the reasons
I didn't think
he would want to
right
and then Fincher
says to him
great
so now
you need to go
and spend the next
18 months interviewing
every single person
he was like
anyway now
well I'll read a couple books
and then let's start production
in two weeks
yeah no
then they're like
right we're gonna interview every single survivor.
Right.
Every fucking cop and journalist we can get our hands on.
That's the thing. Like, you imagine the script.
18 months of, like, deep research.
You imagine the script was very good at the point the Fincher read it, but it was a script that was an adaptation of the book.
Yeah.
And then he was like, now you need to essentially become Robert Graysmith, do your own investigation.
Yes, exactly.
Dig into all of these people.
Yeah.
And like just deepen the script.
Yeah.
Which is just circumstances
that are kind of like
unreplicatable
in terms of why
this script stands out
in the rest of his career.
Yeah.
Like,
Graysmith is so full of praise
for him.
And my favorite thing
is that
him being like,
you know,
the attention to detail
this man had and all that
is that like,
there's no flashlight shot in the movie where you can really see the flashlight on the
road even though the zodiac killer had claimed he could he could like put a flashlight on his
gun so that you could see it and fincher went to a flashlight museum stop and said like so in 1969
were there bulbs that existed that could have done this? And they searched their bulb archive.
And they're like, no, there's no way.
And Fincher was like, then it couldn't be done.
And so the flashlight will look like this in the movie.
Like shit like that.
Where is the flashlight museum?
Great question.
I'd love to go there with David Fincher.
With David Fincher, please, dear Lord.
Patreon app.
God, that made me really excited.
I'm not gonna lie.
No, it's so good.
I'm very, very titillated by that story. Graysmith's quote is essentially, that uh god that made me really excited i'm just i'm not gonna lie it's so good very very
titillated by that story graysmith's quote is essentially he outdid the police my hat's off to
him oh my god right he came in with questions that people had not asked in 40 years of investigating
this case right well i think isn't that part of the the appeal of graysmith in general to
as well like in in writing the book was that he was just the guy that
like it didn't feel like a reporter.
It didn't feel like a cop.
He's not Department of Justice.
Right.
He's not like some, you know, monkey on their back.
He's this nerd.
Yeah.
Which, by the way, is I think the way that Fincher kind of Trojan horse is a studio into
green lighting this movie is that pitch sounds a little sticky.
Right.
Of like, and he's just some guy.
He's a cartoonist. Right. Who finds, and he's just some guy. He's a cartoonist.
Right.
Yeah.
Who finds himself in the Senate.
He's an everyman.
And it's Jake Gyllenhaal
coming off of Brokeback.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like,
couldn't be hotter,
you know?
And it's me doing
serial killers again.
Yes.
Right.
Like,
you can see them ignoring
what the actual script is.
Exactly.
They're just so excited.
Yeah.
They're just like so over the moon.
And they know how they can
sell a movie like that.
And then they get a three-hour.
Right. They're like like why is it long
why is there a three minute
sequence of them
talking on the phone
to Dermot Mulroney
literally doing
what cops have to do
of like
here are the various reasons
we deserve a warrant
getting the warrant
which is not in the
theatrical cut
like it's only on the DVD
right
because that was one of the
scenes where the studio
is like absolutely not
get the fuck out of here
yeah Fincher's like I thought it was funny you know because it was kind of the scenes where the studio is like, absolutely not. Get the fuck out of here.
Yeah.
Fincher's like,
I thought it was funny,
you know, because it was kind of like
Charlie's Angels,
you know.
That's his joke, yes.
He's like,
I thought it was a joke
and the studio's like
pulling their hair out.
They're like,
it's two hours into the movie.
Like,
we know they need a warrant.
Like,
you know,
come on.
Do you realize
Grace Smith meets Toski
at one hour
and 40 minutes
into the film?
Yeah, way into the movie.
Way into the movie.
No, of course.
And like, it's again, it's not like a movie where they're like, part one, the journalist,
part two, the cops, part three, Graysmith.
It's like baton passing back and forth.
Those three guys.
This is why it's like LA Confidential, though.
It's those three guys.
It just kind of seamlessly.
It's those three guys, but right.
Like sometimes.
The movie just kind of like passes there's different alliances exactly like we're
gonna pass we're gonna pass it off to avery now we're gonna pass it off and then avery kind of
departs like halfway two-thirds of the way into the movie like he's basically gone and like yeah
like like the kevin spacey character well he departs all right but he's also like still alive
the avery's still, but like haunting the movie
like a ghost.
Like a ghost, yeah.
Every once in a while
you see him again,
you're like,
fucking library.
He's just like
a ruined man
in the wake of this.
Great.
What are you talking about?
You don't play Pong
drinking quarts of vodka
in the morning
on your houseboat.
God, this fucking movie.
I love this movie so much.
Everyone who made the movie
basically was like,
it was like Chinese water torture.
David Fincher is a maniac.
I respect and love him,
but oh my God.
Oh yeah, the first scene
that they shot
was the scene on the steps
where he's like,
you know, stop calling my house.
It's like after he's been accused,
Toski's been accused
of writing the letter.
Right.
And they said that he shot it
56 times.
Yeah.
And they were just like,
help, help.
I would say Gyllenhaal's the biggest
on the record baby about it.
Partly, I think, because he would even say now,
like, I was immature about it a little bit.
He's 26.
He's very young.
He's 27.
And yeah, 1980.
So yeah, it'd be about 25, 26.
Downey's happy to be there
because he was uninsurable two years earlier.
For Downey, I think it's huge,
but Downey is hilarious and rueful about like,
it's a lot.
And there's the anecdote about him peeing in jars
and like bringing them around,
being like, I can't go to my fucking trailer,
so I guess I'll pee in this jar.
Yes.
There's a really good anecdote.
Gyllenhaal has the Fincher Paints with People line.
Like, it's tough to be a color.
Where I'm like, poor baby.
You happen to be in the best movie ever made.
He's also so good in it.
That's the thing that's so annoying. He's really well cast. He happened to be in the best movie ever made. He's also so good in it. That's the thing that's so annoying
is because like,
he's really well cast.
You listen to him
on the commentary
and he's such,
he is,
he's actively
complaining
in the commentary
and saying,
you know,
oh,
we had to do this
so many times
or we had to do this
and he,
but,
but he's so good in it
that it's kind of
strange to me
because also,
you know,
after this movie, doesn't he kind of
go down like a weird he goes he has a little bit of a weird run and then we get prisoners and he's
back yes make your point griffin but yes then right a note on gyllenhaal when is this film
shooting what's the the run of the shoot i want to make sure i'm not wrong before i say this
basically september 2005 to February 2006.
So this is a big part of it, I know.
And there was sort of like whispers and gossip around this and comment
section at the time. And now in later
interviews, both of them have corroborated this.
Okay. This movie is
filming during the
Brokeback campaign season.
Right, right. Got it, got it.
It starts filming basically right as the movie's premiering.
Yeah.
At the festivals,
the fall festivals,
running through the whole season.
He raps right before
he actually has to go to the Oscars.
And he's like the guy.
He's now being pushed
as like finally maybe
his moment's like coming
to escalate up
to like the A-list status.
And Fincher will not
release him to do shit.
Right.
And Fincher's like, you signed up.
You're here.
You have to be 100% focused in on this.
Right.
And the other times he's worked with like A-list actors, it's someone like Pitt who's
like, I need to like rebuild myself.
Right.
And also Pitt's like, I don't want to play that game.
I don't care.
Like, you know.
Right.
Yeah, that's true.
I'm giving myself over to you.
Break me and rebuild me.
Like when Pitt played the game to win the Oscar for Hollywood.
Yes.
That was him finally being like, oh, you guys want me to like show up and smile and like do some jokes?
I'll do that.
I'm divorced.
They were like, take the Oscar, please, Brad.
You know, like, but he had been like ignoring that for a long time.
I think Joan Hall's like, this is my moment.
Everything's being handed to me in every sense.
A, I'm not going to these like awards functions.
He's not letting me attend them, right?
B, there's all this other press I can be doing.
Fincher was like, he was constantly surrounded by like 10 people.
I'll give you the line.
Yeah, exactly.
Right.
He says Jake was in the unenviable position of being young and having a lot of people
buy for his attention while working for someone who does
not allow you to take a day off, Mr.
Fincher. He made a bunch of movies.
I don't think he'd ever been asked to concentrate on
minutiae. I think he was very distracted. He had people
whispering that Jarhead was going to be a massive movie
that put him in another league because that's
going to come out.
Every weekend, he was being pulled to go
to Santa Barbara and the Palm Springs Film Festival
and the expletive Catalina Film Festival guess catalina doesn't meet david's uh
the fucking catalina film uh and when he'd show up for work he was very scattered he had his
managers and his silly agents who were coming to his trailers at lunch to talk about the cover
of gq that's the exact thing he was being nibbled to death by ducks and not particularly smart ducks
right it was hard for him to hit the ducks and not particularly smart ducks. Right.
It was hard for him to hit the fastball.
Now, the way Fincher's talking about it, you're like, it almost sounds like, and that's why he's terrible in the movie.
And you're like, you got a very good performance out of it.
No, you did.
I don't think it was like, it was deliberate or by design, but all of that actually kind of helps the movie.
It does.
It helps latter half Gray Smith.
Him being trapped in the film
and being forced
to obsessively
do this over
and over again.
I think he's like
not just
I want to get my flowers
and fucking like
own this award season
and go to every
like banquet
and whatever
where Fincher's like
you get to go to like
5% of them.
But also people are like
strategizing.
He's at like
presidential campaign
level of like are you gonna be
a major movie star
where they want him to do everything and he probably also wants to
go out and fucking party and shit
I also think that it doesn't help that
the character is so passive
for the first half of the movie
a lot of scenes of him being a little
so many scenes are him sort of just reacting
and Ruffalo and RDJ are so cool
in this movie.
Exactly.
And it's like, right, I'm playing the Boy Scout.
And to do 60 takes of like reading a letter.
Or scribbling down a thing.
Yeah.
Or reacting to like, oh, I guess my theory is wrong.
You know, like it just, I can see that sort of also grading on him.
Like, where's my moment?
Like, when do I get to?
I think so much of it is that it was also just like...
The fact that it was the Brokeback Awards season.
No, you're right.
No, I think it's a work of art.
It's the only Oscar season he ever got to be a part of thus far.
There is an exchange on the David Pryor extensive making of documentary
that I think about all the time,
where Fincher is doing what is clearly like take 60
over the shoulder
close up of his hands
scribbling something.
Right?
Yeah.
And he's giving him
some note
and like
Joan Hall looks up to him
like a little kid
wanting the approval
of your dad
at the baseball game
and he's like
I'm good at inserts, right?
Like I think I'm like
I think I'm like
particularly good at inserts.
And Fincher
in his way
goes like no, no, no you are good at inserts. And Fincher in his way goes like,
no,
no,
no,
you are,
you are good at inserts.
You know,
it's,
it's the actual like dialogue scenes that,
that aren't usable.
Oh my God,
David.
And he's like,
and then he kind of hits me.
He's like,
I'm kidding.
I'm kidding.
And John Hall's like,
Hey,
I know,
but I am good at inserts,
right?
And Fincher's like,
yes,
yes,
you are.
And he goes,
and you know why?
Because I understand why they're important.
And he's like, so desperate to be like,. And he goes, and you know why? Because I understand why they're important. And he's like so desperate to be like,
I want you to give me the credit for acknowledging
that I understand that this isn't meaningless.
Yes, yeah.
I'm really trying to focus on like giving you what you need.
I don't think it's just my hand, it's not acting.
But it's like their whole dynamic in a nutshell.
Yeah.
You can extrapolate from that.
Yeah.
My favorite line, actually,
is Ruffalo saying,
like,
I did my first day
with 68 Takes with Jake.
It's the scene
you were talking about.
Oh, 68, yeah.
I was like,
please kill me.
And Fincher came over
walking up at some point
and I was like,
I hope he's coming here
to fire me.
The idea of, like,
one day and you're like,
I hope Fincher's gonna be like,
Mark, that's enough.
That's enough.
Thank you so much.
The actors who work best within Fincher's system, like Mark that's enough Thank you so much The actors who work
best within Fincher's system and it does
feel like Ruffalo got there
by his admission he was the one who took to it
the most. He says I finally understood
quote he's taking a stab at immortality
which I think is a really great
line from Ruffalo
like he decided good enough
is not fucking good enough. Which is a great line
as well. Yeah. Well I think Ruffalo's which is a great line as well people like Eisenberg
talk about and it's kind of surprising that it comes from
him considering how neurotic he is
but that he's like at a certain moment it actually
becomes comforting to go like
there is so little pressure
on any one take
as much as you know he's like
striving for immortality and perfection
he's giving you the space to have each take just be like, and just try stuff.
And just do it.
Because we're going to keep doing it.
We're not moving on until we have it.
So rest assured, I will not let this be done until I have the take I want.
And Gyllenhaal talks about like, for me, I like the pressure cooker of you only have five takes to get this right.
I want the pressure cooker of, you only have five takes to get this right. I want the risk.
There is something about that in my experience
where you're like, oh my God, we're running out of time
or we're going to get kicked out of this location
or whatever it is.
And it's like, okay, you know,
it's like famously Tommy Lee Jones did that,
you know, big monologue in the Fugitive twice.
You know, they had two takes that they just like,
you know, spliced together and then that was it.
And, you know, wins him an Oscar, you know,
like it's like, there is something about that.
I think that when you watch Fincher's stuff though,
it seems like it would be impossible to,
again, his staging with camera,
it would be impossible to do
unless you've done it 56 times
because the camera is moving perfectly.
The camera's not just like, sort of like tilting up
when Gyllenhaal stands up,
when he's talking about,
you know,
door to door,
you know,
I've walked it,
like that whole diner scene
at the end,
like such an incredible scene.
But even just the way
the camera moves
to capture him,
like as a director
watching that move,
you're like,
you're camera guy
and the actor
and everything,
everything has to be working at the same moment. Yeah. So that it's perfect. And're like, you're camera guy and the actor and everything. Everything has to be working at
the same moment. Yeah. So that it's perfect. And I envy the money and the time and the power that
Fincher has to do that. And yet at the same time, I'm not sure that I would be a better filmmaker
if I had that, to be quite honest. It's a specific mine. Yeah. But like, in my past experience as an actor, the most frustrating
feeling in the world is to be like,
that was the take. Yeah. And you like
hit your fucking, like, scene
made on the shoulder and you're like, but that was
it. We fucking got it. And then you hear someone
go like, sound was off on that one. Right, right, right.
And then the director yells from behind the monitor
like, okay, so we'll go with take three.
Versus Fincher being like, if sound is off, but performance
was right in that one, we're going to keep going
until the take where both are correct.
It's not just about making actors do it 80 times.
No, it's not.
I would be so bad at making movies.
That's the thing.
People lose that, I think,
in talking about him.
I agree when they talk about him.
I think they talk about,
they're thinking he's exacting on the performances.
He's exacting on every single aspect of it.
You just can't do what he does.
No.
Unless you're doing takes, you know, that are in the double digits.
I just, I think it would be impossible.
No, I agree with you.
I agree with you.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a really good Downey anecdote that he told recently in doing sort of his
really good career look back stuff in the Oppenheimer press tour.
Yeah.
Where he was like, you know, I found it so frustrating. And there was
a day, and Downey, I think,
prides himself on being like, I fucking,
I can nail it. Yeah. Like, even when I was
back down on heroin, I could get it in three takes.
I mean, yeah. Right? Like, I get results.
Home for the holidays. Yes. Yeah. Most relaxed
performance in history. I'll give you the Downey quote
now, and then we should talk about the plot of the movie. But I do
love this particular quote. This might be a different one
than the one that Doss used you sometimes it's really hard because
it might not feel collaborative but ultimately filmmaker is a director's medium i just decided
aside from several times i wanted to garrote him that i was going to give him what he wanted i
think i'm a perfect person to work for him because i understand gulags that's the great quote the one
he said on the oppenheimer press tour was that like they were doing 60 takes of some scene.
Right.
With him and Gyllenhaal.
And he was just like, David, what is the fucking hold up?
Yeah.
I guarantee you 10 of those were usable.
I know.
I know it.
Even if you're being as like discerning as you are.
Right.
And Fincher was like, OK, Robert, come back here with me.
And he made him watch all the takes on the monitor.
And he went, Robert, what do you think? Do we have the monitor and he went Robert what do you think do we have it
and he went
no you're right we don't
Robert Downey Jr. is the one who's like
he's right I hate to
admit it right and Fincher steps out from Video Village
and he went I thought it was good enough but
Downey Jr. said we don't have it
so we're delete them all
delete them all get rid of them
that's the other problem but he's like that's the moment where I
think he is right but this is also the
first movie where he's shooting digitally
obviously which is a crucial part of this movie
gorgeous it looks incredible
how a film that was shot in 1080p
1080p it looks
stunning but it
does also mean that he is literally
from video village going delete
that take yeah and I think it's crushing for people like Gyllenhaal.
Who's like,
I've made it to hear like,
yeah,
a recycling bin for that one.
Or Robert Downey Jr.
Who's like,
I have battled against the fucking tsunami of drug addiction for 20 years.
I'm here again.
And it's like,
delete.
Do you think the sound of the trash
when you
like drag it
and plays on set
yeah
Pinscher would put a microphone
up to the
yeah
so uh
yeah
like that must have been
demoralizing
but you know what
they made one of the great
they made one of the great movies
it's the Ruffalo thing
it's the stab at immortality
and they did it
right
yeah
Paris Savita shot this movie
maybe like the best cinematographer
of my lifetime
yeah
gone far too soon.
Yes, and I do think that's part of why it looks so
goddamn good. It's just
like, it doesn't make any sense.
It doesn't make, I mean,
as somebody that only shoots on digital and was only
given the opportunity to shoot on digital, never
was I, there was never a conversation
that I've ever had about film versus
digital. It was just like, if you want to make this, you're shooting
on the red,
you're shooting on the Alexa,
you're shooting.
That's another reason. This is one of my favorite movies because it's like,
it can look gorgeous.
It gives you hope.
It gives me hope.
I'm just like,
it can look absolutely stunning.
The Thompson Viper.
The Viper.
Yes.
That's right.
Yeah.
It feels like Fincher is,
man,
use that on Miami Vice as well.
Sure.
Did he use it on Collateral?
I'm not sure.
I think no.
I think on Collateral,
he was using...
Because Collateral looks like shit.
My cell phone.
I'm going on record.
I was going to say,
yeah, my cell phone from the time.
He was using my Nokia 3300.
Sorry.
No, Fincher is just so good.
To be clear,
I love how Collateral looks,
but it's of its moment.
But it looks like shit.
It owns looking like shit. Park Chan-wook also used the Viper phone, the Thompson Viper on... Oh, I love how Collateral looks, but it's of its moment. But it looks like shit. It owns looking like shit.
Park Chan-wook also used the Viper film, the Thompson Viper on I'm a Cyborg.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So we recently talked about that.
No, Fincher just knows how to like, this is a period where people are still like, how do we make video look exactly like film?
Yes, yeah.
And he's like, no, you need to like push up the things that only video can do.
need to like push up the things that only video can do. Yes. And this
is to an off use
Sims term a Simsian
phrase that I think about a lot.
This is a movie where the look of it makes
your teeth hurt. Oh yeah. In a good
way where there's something about like there's something
a little too clinical.
Too clear. I can
see too much I guess. Even though it's
a lower resolution than we're now used to
this film feels clearer.
I watched my Blu-ray.
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know if it looks worse on streaming or something.
I watched Blu-ray.
Yeah.
The other thing with video,
he just says it was less about him liking digital cameras more
and more about workflow.
That's what he always says.
He's like, I like to work in low light.
It's perfect for that. I like to be able to look at takes and sort through
that's more representative real time of what it looks like all that stuff he talks like it's
easier to adjust the image he knew he was going to do all and then it's just critics who are like
he can see across america's digital horizon he's like if you say so it plugs into my mac that's
what i like about it basically Basically, it was like,
I'm tired.
Right.
There's a quote in the dossier
of like,
I just never again
wanted to sit around
and watch someone
take $1,000
of film out of a camera,
get a black bag,
put $1,000 worth of film
into the bag,
back into the camera,
and just like sit on my ass
while that happens.
Okay,
can we talk about the movie?
Zodiac begins with the Lover's Lane
and Vallejo killing, right?
That's the first sequence.
You don't see the first killing
because it had no survivors
and thus...
And also, it's sort of like,
it's how people discovered
the Zodiac murder was
a murder happened
and this guy was like,
I did this and also,
by the way, I did that other one.
Which I think is great.
By the way, yeah, yeah.
Right, so you have to get back to it. This is the beginning and then immediately be told, no did this, and also, by the way, I did that other one. Which I think is great. By the way, yeah, yeah. Right, so you have to get back to it. But it's so great to start it and be like,
this is the beginning,
and then immediately be told,
no, this is now basically the start of a pattern
that's being linked back to a thing you didn't see.
I just remember sitting in the theater
and hearing like, goodbye,
and just being like,
I've never been so scared in my life.
Something that I think the first scene captures
is like the real
randomness of the violence. Of course, once you finish the movie, everything, like any good cold
open, everything you need to know is actually in the beginning. You know, like, like you,
you understand who Darlene is. You understand that she's married, but she's with Mike. You
understand that she is scared of somebody like all of those
things that get revealed later right when you're watching it the first time you're like she clearly
just wants to like make out with this guy and he's being kind of nervy and she's annoyed about it and
then there's like a creepy car okay okay great you know but the but the idea of like a random
act of violence that's seemingly motiveless. Right. Is not on their mind.
Not on their mind.
And I think it's not on our minds, you know, normally.
Well, it's on my mind because the film's called,
my stub says Zodiac, so I am worried about it.
No, I'm like so tense in the fucking theater.
Yeah.
But yes, of course, right.
It's not, that's not what they're thinking
when they're going to Lover's Lane.
Like, what if we got shot though by the Zodiac Killer?
Are we going to talk about the dolly shot at the beginning?
Yes.
What the hell?
Okay.
What the hell?
Back we go.
Sorry, sorry, sorry.
No, no, it's fine.
But what the fuck?
Like, that's the type,
that's the type of thing that as a filmmaker,
you're just like, if I pitched that,
you know, I would be laughed out of the room. Like people would say, I'm so sorry. Please, you're just like if i pitched that you know i would be laughed out of the room like
people would say i'm so sorry please you're excused thank you so much for being here but we
we are thanks for playing thanks for playing but we we never want to see you again attach it to the
attach the camera to the car and shut the fuck up like everybody else you know like and and he
builds what 40 miles of track 40 it's like 40 yards of fucking dolly track.
And it is that panic room kind of thing as well,
of just, like, the camera kind of perfectly moving.
Gliding.
Gliding seamlessly to, like, bring you into this, like, you know,
here's this suburban tableau of Americana.
This coming after panic room, it's like he's really just strengthened
that sense of like
camera as a character.
Yes.
Where there's this
unerring quality to
like this camera
that seems to be moving
with a mind of its own.
Is he Hitchcock's successor?
In certain ways?
Yeah.
I think no.
I think he would,
I mean,
he obviously cites Hitchcock
so massively,
but like so many people,
but like I think Hitchcock would watch something like Zodiac like zodiac and be like oh don't why is it so fucking
long yeah you know fair enough fair enough right like yeah yeah like hitchcock would be like this
is not really obeying my kind of taught you know storytelling sensibilities it's like he inherited
a lot of the equipment yeah um yeah do you know the thing about the clothes
the clothes
I mean this is
the clothes
what about the clothes
the clothing
this is such a like
Fincher being vindicated
by the obsessiveness
of like
getting the details right
he said like
people always ask me
when I was gonna make
my Amacord
and this is it
yeah
and he's not a character
in it
but he is
because he's growing up
in this era
and also because
it's a movie about, like, the movie
about the pursuit of... Yes.
The kid... What's his name?
The, uh... Mike Mageau? Yes.
Yeah, Lee Norris is the young Mike Mageau.
So it's Fourth of July. In real life, the real
Mike Mageau was wearing three
pairs of pants, three
sweaters, and a shirt over it.
Because he was cold or because he was trying to look beefy?
No one fucking knows.
But it's a hard fact.
The conspiracy theorists are like,
he like bulked up, which is why he
survived. Sure. Because he had a
feeling he was going to be in danger.
Even if it wasn't the Zodiac,
there's the feeling of her husband or something.
Right. And he was sort of
insulated in this way with body armor. It makes sense that that's part of why he survived.
Because why else would he be wearing five layers?
To look bigger than he was because he was a teenager.
Which is the second part of it.
You're like, well, that's just this weird human little emotional nugget that you would never think to write.
But he's there and isn't unpacked or explained.
He's this, look, I mean, they talk about it in the movie, but he's this interesting thing of like, there was a survivor, but they could never talk to him.
Yes.
Because he just left.
He was just like, I don't want to talk about it i'm done yeah and like they're like no we really are trying to
figure out who shot you though yeah and he was like i don't care i'm going off the grid like
and it's the 70s so you won't find me like and and so he did and then when he resurfaced years
later she was like john carroll lynch guy kind of looks like the guy anyway. How are you doing? Great.
Jimmy Simpson.
Amazing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay. So we have that.
And is that the real 911 call or is it can't be right?
I think it can't be right.
That would be crazy.
Yeah.
But that's that call.
Like the goodbye is so freaky.
It haunts me.
But then after that,
okay,
we're in the,
we're in the credits. I'm now
actually just watching Zodiac. I just have it on.
Because then you're sort of doing
the mail cart through the Chronicle
office. It was establishing the space, but also
giving you the vibe, the energy.
You get the recreation
of the newsroom,
but also the
port of San Francisco.
Yeah. The Transamerica building
isn't built yet
the
the highway that collapsed
in the earthquake
he's rebuilt
like you know
he wants to start
with that
you know
like he wants to start with like
it's San Francisco
right
like full-time machine
we're not going for
pastiche or kitsch
or
yes
the great John Getz
as the editor-in-chief
as good as it gets uh doing
looking at his cartoons which do look really bad horrid horrid slightly less horrid what is it not
so horrid not so horrid let's go with not so horrid yeah do you think gray smith was good
because you're like you don't give me incisive political cartoonist vibes right like when you're
like seeing him in this movie not in the movie yeah Do you think he was a good cartoonist? I think he was like a skilled
draftsman with no voice. Right, well he could draw.
Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah.
I should look that up, like Robert Grace Smith's cartoons.
Yeah. It's like sort of telling
where he ended up. Not only just
like in this, but then he just continued writing
like through crime books.
Yeah. Right. Because he wrote
Autofocus as well, right? He sure did. Yeah.
Oh, that's right yeah yeah just like
stayed in this zone good at sifting through source materials yes and like human darkness yes
yeah i'm looking at some of his cartoons now and they're not very good it looks like uh yeah nope
that one's bad too okay uh i've only got i could only find three but they were all really bad.
Okay.
Okay, so let's keep it going, guys.
What else is happening in Zodiac?
The letters arrive.
John Terry as well.
I love John Terry with the glasses on his nose.
This movie is obviously just like, you know,
50-something male character actor porn.
I also love that in the scene when they get the letter,
you don't really have that. The only thing I can think of is like character actor porn. I also love that in the scene when they get the letter,
you don't really have that.
The only thing I can think of is like the basic version
of the scene
is like they read the letter
and everyone's like,
oh my God.
You know,
like literally everyone's
just trying to figure it out.
It's like,
do we know
if this Vallejo story is true?
And he's like,
I cover crime in Vallejo.
You know,
like it's,
you know,
it just, it's a bunch of,
it's a bunch of newsmen doing their jobs.
Like they don't really grasp...
The debate is, more than anything,
it's what page do we put this on?
Yeah, exactly.
And what do our competitors do?
Yeah, and what are our competitors doing?
That's the, that is the only debate to them.
Yeah.
They are still like,
is this basically crankpot, you know, shit,
but they're kind of like,
will we look stupid or get scooped if we don't put it on or if we do put it on?
The guy who brings up, is it your responsible to publish him is like ignored immediately.
Ignored immediately.
Yeah.
And like they, I mean, you know, I've heard many tales of journalism.
They do the weird sort of thing where they're like, well, we'll put it on page four.
And it's like, that's, it's cover or not, but whatever.
Fine. You split the difference, that's, it's cover or not, but whatever. Fine.
You split the difference.
Good job, guys.
And then Robert Downey Jr.
as Paul Avery, you immediately get the generational divide thing.
Like all these guys in their white collar shirts.
Oh, yes.
And he's wearing that beautiful vest.
Yeah.
The only guy who's like influenced by Haight-Ashbury.
Yeah.
He's clearly just younger and a little more plugged in than these guys, which is fine.
I mean, these would be guys who were born like pre-World War I.
These, you know, 50-something newspaper editors.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
At the Chronicle.
I think the Fincher take method bearing out.
Like, Downey Jr. could do this in his sleep.
Even at this point in his career where he really has something to prove.
He absolutely could.
But the magic of Downey Jr. is that it almost always seems
like he's doing it in his sleep.
Totally.
Right.
Yeah.
But like there's something
about not using his hottest take.
Yeah.
And using the take
where he's a little burnt out
and he almost is like
doesn't have the energy
to like throw the asides
out to the room.
Right.
Right, right, right.
He's kind of like
throwing them away
as he walks away.
Like there is something
performative about Paul Avery. Yes. And I think that's kind of what you're getting at. You know, but you're right. He's kind of like throwing them away as he walks away. Like there is something performative about Paul Avery.
And I think that's kind of what you're getting at, you know, but you're right.
He doesn't pick the takes where he's performative.
No, and no one else reacts to it.
Yeah.
With anything other than frustration that he's doing his bits, his routine.
Really quickly, I love the little shot of when it's before they get the letter when
Grace Smith walks by Paul Avery's desk and there's a bunch of people around him
and they're all talking
and you immediately get this little moment of like,
oh, this guy's a nerd.
Nobody likes him.
Yes.
I think it's also, again,
a simplified version of this movie.
Gray Smith sees the code,
works on it and cracks it.
Right.
You cut out.
Instead, he's just interested in it.
Yeah.
And no one even notices or cares except for Avery.
And Avery isn't like, what do you got?
He's just kind of like, I'm going to file away that the little nerd over there is kind of plugged into this.
At the very least, so I can mock him about it.
Right.
And knew that he would not actually reveal his name in this code.
But right.
Of course, who solved the code?
Some very cute, God bless them, married freaks who love puzzles.
You know,
out in wherever. Most versions of this movie
would go,
consolidate it.
Have him crack the first one.
And going back to the
Gyllenhaal performance thing,
have your hero
do something heroic.
Yes.
Have him solve
the first puzzle,
which he doesn't do.
No.
And instead,
he's going to circle around
this movie
kind of,
you know,
unnecessarily for half of it. Like a lost dog.
Which is Fincher's line about him where like
unsurprisingly Fincher liked Donnie Darko
and was like I'd sort of pegged him for
a while and he had the
balance of being this sort of like wide-eyed kid
and also playing obsessive really well.
Which you need both in this part. I guess
when I'm seeing this movie
I love Robert Downey Jr. to death and I've
seen Kiss Kiss Bang Bang
and I'm kind of all in on like,
he's back.
Well, that's the thing.
The three of those guys.
I mean, that's the thing.
It's like, it was such,
that's why it not hitting feels so weird
because it's like,
all three of them were about to be huge.
It was a little bit of like past, present, future,
but three guys who all deserved more
than they had at that moment.
Ruffalo was one of those guys where I had, as a little Oscar nerd, like adored him and you can count on me.
Adored him.
And then watched him being like, wind talkers, you know, in the cut, obviously I liked, but was a flop.
We've talked about this too.
He had like health problems.
He was supposed to be in science.
And then it sort of felt like, wasn't that guy supposed to be the dude? But then he had had Eternal Sunshine and Collateral where you're like, oh, well, he's supporting but interesting in those.
Then he did just like having Rumor has it and you're like, he looks like he has guns trained on him at all times.
Poor guy.
And so, but like still with Ruffalo, you were like, I'm not letting go of Ruffalo.
Like that's someone.
But the main two reasons he was cast in this movie,
I know we're getting
a little ahead of his character,
right?
One,
Fincher really liked him
in Collateral.
He's good in Collateral.
And he kind of seems
more like a normal person
in that movie
than any other character.
Well,
it also,
he just seems like someone
who talked,
clearly talked to cops
and was like,
cops act this way
because he's sort of,
you know.
But he's also not playing
like a movie cop.
No,
but he's,
you know,
he's got the goatee
and like the slicked back hair
and yeah,
but yeah.
Look aside,
right?
Right.
And he was like,
I pitched him
and the studio was like,
Ruffalo does not look like a cop,
sound like a cop,
move like a cop.
And he's like,
that's kind of what you want
in this part.
Right.
Which I think is the genius
of the casting.
You need to hire an actor
to play the guy that
other actors are riffing on when
they play movie cops.
He has to play the boring version
of a movie star cop.
The real world version.
But the other thing is, I assume
just because of his closeness with Pitt,
he said he asked Jennifer
Aniston, who are your favorite actors?
And she said Gyllenhaal and Ruffalo.
Who are the guys you've worked with
that you think are really good?
I got a bunch of dudes to cast in this movie.
And she did Rumor Has It with Ruffalo.
So Rumor Has It kind of helps him get this.
Wow, thank you, Ryan.
How much it's a mailman performance.
And like,
I was so in on,
I think I've talked about this before,
Gyllenhaal because of seeing him on stage
in This Is Our Youth in the West End.
Oh, sure.
Which was one of those things
where it was with Hayden Christensen
and Anna Paquin.
Which Ruffalo was originally in.
He was.
He sure was.
He was the...
The first performer.
The Gyllenhaal, right?
Yeah, he was Warren, yeah.
And that was one of those performances
where we were all kind of there
for Christensen and Paquin.
And we were like,
oh yeah,
and like the October Sky kid's in it.
Right.
And then you watch it and you're like, jesus that kid is like so fucking sensitive and interesting
and like and then donnie darko came out like around then and he was we were definitely like
he is gonna be like you know whatever the big star of the next group of kids the moment with
the moment where we are in the movie too or i think we're about to get to is sort of the moment
where i fall in love with graysmith which you know, when he's trying to remember the most dangerous game, you know, like where he gets sort of stuck on something.
Right.
And I think just as somebody, for me personally, that was when I really felt, I was like, I relate with that.
Yes.
I absolutely relate with that.
And he's like ruffling papers.
Ruffling papers and like just not being able to like.
He doesn't remember until four scenes later that's what i love yeah and then he
runs off i mean we have to talk about lake barryessa but like he runs off and he comes back
like you know it just there is a type of person that will get something into their head and it
will just jump around in there and be in there until until it comes out. And he nails it. He just absolutely nails how
sad that is, but also how invigorating it is for the person it's happening to.
The other thing I love that I think he nails and nails early on that helps sort of pin him when
he's going to float around the movie for the first hour or so is like his hyper literal processing of things.
Yes.
Yeah.
Where there's like someone makes the quip of like,
what are you?
Some kind of boy scout.
He goes like,
Eagle Scout.
Eagle Scout.
That's later.
And he doesn't even treat it as like,
this is an important correction.
He's just like,
Oh yeah,
of course.
Right.
I mean,
I was an Eagle Scout.
Do you smoke?
Yes.
One time in high school.
An incredible one.
Yeah.
He improvised that.
That is so fucking funny. Right. Uh, one that. That is such a fucking funny line.
One other thing early on that I really want to know is that Venture, God bless him, shows us them taking a picture of the codex.
Oh, God.
Because he's like, hey, man, back in the day, this is what you had to do.
Go take it down to the studio and we're going to line it up and we're going to put it under the big and we're going to you know um because i almost in the movie i'm like how is everyone even getting a copy of it you know
what i mean we're now whatever we're so used to just like yeah you can take a picture of it
well you know iphone ipad i don't know anymore um anyway all right so when is the
lake barry s yeah that's right after. Yeah, here we are.
Yeah.
And they actually went there to shoot it.
Yes, they did.
Another reason this movie costs a lot is Fincher was like, we're going to each of the real places.
And they were like, pick one side of California.
Yeah, exactly.
And he was like, North and South are different.
They're different.
If the cities exist, we're going to those cities for those departments and those precincts.
Right.
But then he's like, we're going to shoot in San Francisco.
And San Francisco's like, you're not shooting a zodiac movie here yeah and
he was like well guess i have to recreate it using fabulous digital technology then
the studio's like god that's also expensive god damn it my favorite thing about lake barriessa
which i assume no one's ever been to including me yeah is that it has a gigantic uh artificial
hole in it oh wow wow to deal with like sluicing
and it looks like a portal to hell
to deal with what?
like sluicing the water out if it overflows
or something
sluicing?
yeah leave me alone
I don't know anything about lakes
I'm just learning a new word
it's called a spillway
so if there's like heavy rains
they open the spillway and they
get it out i guess loose and someone loose sims they they someone like someone got uh shut up uh
be quiet someone someone got sucked into this spillway once really yeah which is an unfortunate
but anyway it truly looks like a portal to hell yes so this sequence at the lake
much like the the lover's lane sequence is scary obviously but that's more like you're like yeah
he shot them pretty gertie man's playing yes it's like there's there's a time yeah there's something
almost like kind of i would say i would venture to say entertaining about that particular sequence
what you would imagine from a Fincher studio.
There's the frightening details such as like he randomly walked right back and shot them another couple times and the phone call.
Yeah.
But like the Lake Barias sequence is so weird.
Yes.
And no one would ever make anything look like this except that this is how this happened, which only makes it scarier.
This is the first scene where I go, oh, I think I'm watching a masterpiece.
Right. This is the moment in the theater go, oh, I think I'm watching a masterpiece. Right.
This is the moment in the theater where I go, this just leveled up.
When he stabs the guy first, the sound.
Yes, yes.
When she turns over, I almost screamed in the theater.
Like, and I've never screamed at a scary movie.
Like, and I was, I could feel it coming up in my throat of just like, I might start screaming.
I've never been so terrified.
There's something about the dullness of the sound of the knife going in where you're like, well, of course, right.
It just sounds like a butcher working.
Yeah.
And you're like, I've never seen a movie where this isn't accentuated by.
It doesn't sound like a knife going into a melon or whatever.
There's no score.
There's no like, there's nothing.
It's just so pedestrian.
You're just hearing like nature sounds
and this really...
And the weird conversation too.
And because like...
That's what's weird too.
It's like he has a gun.
Why doesn't he just shoot them?
He stands there weirdly for a while.
He's in this get up.
I escaped from jail.
I'm taking your car.
It's motiveless.
It doesn't...
He doesn't have a connection to these two.
He designed a supervillain costume for himself.
He never used it again.
No.
Shit like that where you're like, why'd he do that?
That shot, that sort of like Western shot of his belt where you see his utility belt of all his different things.
It's absolutely bizarre.
And bizarre in only the way that real life could be bizarre.
And even just the fact that they see him without the mask. He's
coming. He turns back around behind the tree
then puts the rest of his costume on.
Then comes back out. I mean, you're just like this
fucking loser. Do you know what I mean?
Like is about to. Yeah, he's kind of a loser.
Commit this heinous
bizarre act of violence
against these two unsuspecting
people.
Yes.
The Fincher thing he says about this movie
so much is like,
I wanted to make a movie
that serial killers
couldn't masturbate to.
Right.
Yes.
Yeah.
The challenge was,
can you make something
that somehow doesn't
glamorize them at all?
It is really the anti-seven.
It makes them seem so dorky.
It's like,
you have no plan, bro.
Yes.
Like, it's not like this artful like and I'm making art projects out of my victims and I'm following this like seven deadly sins.
It's like the opposite of that.
It's like I am randomly shooting people for no reason except that I want to be famous.
And part of what's so scary and upsetting is like the clumsiness of it.
Oh, God.
And that he's using such extreme technical precision and like using CGI to augment, replicating things in the least cinematic way, in the way that makes them feel kind of dull and meaningless.
That's more upsetting. in that scene is that in the back of your mind, not when you're watching the movie, but when you're just walking around in life, way, way in the back of your mind is this, is that little fight or
flight, like somebody, somebody could hurt me. You know, I'm just walking to the subway. Someone
could hurt me. There's no stimuli for it. It's just way in the back there. And, and that, whatever,
whatever that little part of your brain is is it's so hyper activated watching this
movie that i was aware of it for weeks afterwards like weeks for weeks i was just like someone is
going to stab jump out of nowhere and stab me for no reason especially because the victim is talking
through all these excuses right he keeps he lists off like probably six different things which is
something you would do yeah Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm not even saying him trying to get out of it.
I'm saying even like, she's like,
uh, that guy's kind of weird.
It's a public place.
Yeah, well, that part first, right?
The buildup, right.
But there's just something frightening
about how he then keeps trying to be like,
I'll give you my money.
I could write you a check.
I could probably help you out.
And the guy's just saying nothing to him.
It's shot perfectly.
You have no, like, matching coverage.
Like, everything is from the victim's POV
all the way up to that extreme close-up of,
you know, was that gun even loaded?
And he shows him the...
Oh, my God.
It's just, like, absolutely bone-chilling to this day.
There's this thing about it being...
I mean, when he is being stabbed in the back,
right,
and you cut to the shot
of her just kind of
watching it
so close to his face,
looking at his reaction
while she hears this sound.
And then when it finally
cuts out to the wide shot
and she turns over,
the moment you're talking about,
the fact that the blood
is digital.
Yeah.
And for him,
it's like,
I don't want to have to deal
with resets and costume changes
and all of that.
All of the violence is digitally done. I still think most digital blood looks fake
and somehow this still looks better
than anything else
15 years earlier
I don't know how he did it
when she turns over
and you're watching new wounds be created
but also the old wounds are growing
and expanding
and you're like
this is actually what it looks like
I'm used to seeing squibs in a way that is like, I accept this is the language of it.
Yeah.
But I feel like for the first time I'm watching what would actually happen if you're three inches away from someone being stabbed to death, which is the most upsetting shit in the world.
Yeah.
You're really kind of in Brian.
What's his last name?
Hartnell?
The victim?
Brian.
But you're like, you're watching his pov of her like because he's he's
on that side of her it's almost as if he turned and that shot is what he's seeing and it's just
like the ultimate powerlessness they're fucking hogtied oof yeah i mean it's again i'm like
shaking right now talking about it so then we should be right like
I do think it's then
reason this movie works
we're cutting back to
newspapers
and it is such a relief
you're just so glad
and Avery
is such a relief
now cause
Grace Smith's a little freak
and he's immediately
drawing a picture
of the Zodiac
in his weird bag costume
and he
Avery has the perfect
like you know
where he's like
what is he doing
out of a layhood
sweet Jesus what are you drawing like yes and like i love the the combo of them because avery is like
i am fundamentally i'm a crime reporter like i know how to do this like yes this is going to be
the case that defines his career yeah but he's like i you know i know how to write about this
yeah and then graysmith is like the shadow on the horizon of like you don't understand
the freakish obsession with this kind of stuff that's dawning yeah like as we enter this like
tragic american age right it's the 60s end and fucking you know the nasty 70s arrive and all
that and graysmith is like i'm just compelled by this right yeah i mean like that's why this movie
is so fucking influential to this day because i don't know mean, that's why this movie's so fucking
influential to this day
because I don't know
if you've heard about this,
but a lot of people
are really interested
in true crime to this day
in this kind of obsessive way.
It is the part of the movie
where you're like,
social network,
you can give them credit
for like,
you can kind of see
where things are going.
And that movie seemed
to predict a lot of things correctly
or have a good,
clear vision
of where we were heading.
But like, no one making this film could have anticipated
that like Reddit would become
basically a million Robert Graysmiths
interfacing with each other
and all being like,
I'm the one person who can solve this
despite not having the qualifications.
So right after all that,
bird's eye view shot of a cab
going through san francisco
turning cameras like fixed on the cab and then we see the cab murder like that's 25 minutes into
the movie we're done with zodiac killings yeah there's one more sequence with ioni sky you know
which is not a murder kathleen johns yeah but like but that's it yes then we have two plus hours of
movie left right and this is it's only after this sequence that you finally introduce.
Meet the cops.
Yeah.
Because there's a San Francisco crime that went down.
Yeah.
But that,
that car shot is another one where you're like,
why,
why did that just.
What is this?
Why does it look like Grand Theft Auto 1?
And he's just like,
it is,
it is a shot that is technically impossible.
Yes.
Right.
To have this bird's eye view that like hairpin turns perfectly.
The way the camera turns.
Again, it's like that dolly shot at the beginning.
Like it's like this can't exist.
But it's also not like stupid Zemeckis mocap impossible flying camera shit.
No, no.
It's like he's treating it like there is a real camera there, but then training it to do a thing that it wouldn't actually do. Yeah. We talk about this in Star, like in working, working on Star Wars that,
that like when you go into space and you're, you're shooting the, the, the ships, it's like,
there's definitely this feeling of like when the VFX people turn it in that they want to kind of
give you a sense that there's a cameraman. Yeah. And I'm like, no, there's no cameraman in space. You know what I mean?
Like the camera,
the camera should be almost documentary style.
Like it just,
it,
it only can pan and move.
Right.
In this way that,
that,
um,
George wanted to,
to do his like cycling documentary or whatever it was,
you know,
like there's no,
there's no shaky,
like,
oh,
I didn't realize that was coming,
you know,
like,
you know,
or the faked mistakes.
Or the faked mistakes or any of those things.
And I think like Fincher is always doing that.
It's not the camera can go anywhere.
I mean, it can, and it can defy certain rules, but only the rules that would tell the story in the best way.
Well, it's like a visual omniscient narrator.
Yes. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Where it's like a visual omniscient narrator. Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Where it's like,
it knows the exact move to make
at the exact right time.
Yeah, it's like,
oh, the cab's moving.
Boom.
Yeah.
Just to be clear,
yeah, Star Wars doesn't have that,
but it does have a Toski station.
It does?
Yes.
Named after Dave Toski.
Of course.
And Luke wants to go there
to pick up some power converters.
Yeah, yeah.
He never gets them.
He never gets them.
But soon, of course,
Disney Plus will have a new show
in which Luke got the power converters. Yes. Right them he never gets them but soon of course disney plus will have a new show in which luke got the power converters yes right it'll be 10 episodes of him going back
to get them yes that would be good absolutely fill in some gaps no that's like i want like
the workplace sort of like auto parts sitcom toski yeah uh the introduction of mark ruffalo
as dave toski uh i do love the line about where he's like,
you owe me a new lamp.
I'm going to like describe this lamp to you.
June Diane Rayfield, her first film appearance.
I always forget she's in this.
Yeah.
I didn't know it was her first film.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I get why he cast her though,
because June Diane Rayfield does look like
someone from a different time.
Like she looks like a 60s gal in a way.
You know, like you just give her a hairstyle.
I love that they never say her name.
Yeah, they don't.
Carol.
Carol Toski.
I got it.
But and then, I mean,
we haven't mentioned him yet.
Anthony Edwards.
You know, Jesus Among Us,
the greatest man who ever lived.
Dr. Green.
I don't remember what profile it was i guess it
must have been some piece when he was making this movie but i just remember reading a description
of fincher behind the monitor watching anthony edwards work and like going like that's an actor
yeah like yelling to the crew he's like look at that every fucking take is different he seems so
fincherian yeah whatever that is seemed happier with him. He loved him.
Any other actor he's ever worked with.
He's so good in this movie.
So good.
Because he never wants to steal a scene, right?
Like, you know, because he truly feels consummate, you know, the guy that he's playing.
But also he's like, this movie can only exist because of how thorough this guy's notes were, right?
So he's like, this guy's the secret hero of the movie.
That's exactly right and the tragedy of the film the thing that makes the film so kind of bleak
is that halfway through he's like i shouldn't be in this movie i can't do this anymore right
right this is going in a bad direction like you immediately understand they're in the car together
toski's obviously this like interesting odd guy and there's fucking you know what's his name
armstrong and you know toski's like do? Armstrong. And, you know, Toski's like,
do you have any,
like, crackers?
You know,
handing him the crackers.
Like, they're this unit.
Grows him a reclosable snack sack.
The way this scene looks,
like, the low light.
Like, this is where
the digital is, like,
a triumphant thing.
An absolute triumph, yeah.
Right?
Like, the fact that
there's so much clarity,
but it's, like,
the middle of the fucking night.
And this is the sequence
that's, like,
entirely built in CGI.
And it doesn't seem like there are floodlights everywhere or whatever you would have to do normally.
And Fincher so rarely does handheld.
Exactly.
I was going to say.
You almost feel like he's doing it to ground the sequence around the fact that he's building a fake environment.
Yes.
Yes.
I think that's actually so right on because he doesn't do, like you said, he doesn't do handheld unless it's, you know, deeply, deeply called for.
And I think it is because he's trying not to mask the digitalness of it, but it's almost
like a flex because then you have to go shoot like the plates for all of that.
You know what I mean?
So I don't know.
It just seems wild to me that the scene should not look as good as it does.
No.
And it's absolutely stunning.
It's perfect.
As you said,
they're dynamic
of just like this
very casual like
working at the like,
well, then why does he
go to the front?
You know, like where
you're sort of like,
but you're not an idiot.
I love that.
You're cheating.
It's too easy
to think this guy's an idiot.
This feels punchy
in a way,
but you're like,
I guess this is sort of the building blocks of them
just trying to figure out basic motivations.
Once again, this thing,
I don't understand how this movie depicts this well.
It's so good.
I'm like, you are showing us the real versions
of the people who usually get turned into movie characters.
That's right.
And I feel like I'm watching like,
well, this is the documentary on who,
the guy who the movie character was based on and yet i'm still watching movie stars play out
scripted scenes right and obviously this is why the wire had felt so revolutionary which is around
the same time things like that where it's like yeah this is like boring and methodical and hunchy
in a way that feels like we expect more of a Sherlock Holmes, like the handle, you know, it clearly
this killer was five foot 10 or whatever.
Where you're like, what?
Anyone who turns their banter of talking through the crime into like a superpower.
That's exactly right.
Yes.
And instead what you get is, is just competency.
And process.
You know, and process and just like, okay, these guys are competent.
They're going through the process.
This is not the first shot cabbie
that they've dealt with before.
Yeah.
And we, with the dramatic irony
of knowing who's done this.
Yes.
You know what I mean?
Like, we're the ones that are like,
oh, man, they have no idea
what they're about to step in.
Here's the other thing with this movie.
The next scene is the letter.
Yeah.
It's like, Bim at the newspaper.
You know, we just went from, you know,
routine cabbie shooting
to mass murderer targets kids.
Like, it's almost this beautiful little dance that you get to watch with them and see who they were before they get destroyed.
Yes.
The other thing with this movie is, like, one of the scariest clouds hanging over it is just time, right?
Yeah.
That we know the movie we bought a ticket to.
Yeah.
And we're like, this stretches on forever.
I don't know how they're going to end this movie, but I know in real
life we never got clear answers. And so
when like minute four of the movie
we're jumping like four days later,
two weeks later, you're like, this film
is going fast. That's the other thing
I love about the little chyrons
is that it's like, it's, is that
they denote time not as like,
I mean, sometimes it'll be like 1977
or whatever, you know what I mean?
Like, but they'll be like this much time later.
Little increments.
Like here's a net.
Yeah.
Here's the next increment of time that has gone by.
Because the movie is being methodical,
but it's also like time is getting skipped over.
Yeah.
And you have to sort of fill in the blanks
every time there's one of those and go like,
so then for two weeks, nothing happened.
Right.
Or two weeks they all went about their day.
But you're like,
ah, they're losing it.
Right.
Like, you know,
whatever immediacy
there is to this,
like, it's going to leave them.
Right.
Like, the longer it takes.
And like,
they're immediately distracted
by like,
oh, he says he's going to
shoot kids in school buses.
Right.
Now we have to deal with that.
Like, then later
he's going to make a bomb.
Now we have to figure out
if that's real.
Like, if he can do that.
There were two things that hit very differently
for me watching this movie,
again, for the first time in maybe a couple years.
I don't know if I've watched it since 2020.
Like one is obviously just the rise of true crime
and amateur online murder solvers, right?
And these people who show up unannounced
at victims' families' doors
and want to grill them about...
A particular obsession with serial killers.
Yeah, correct.
Really, really like...
Right.
But this sort of like citizen crime stopper shit.
And then the other part of it is like the pandemic and just being like living in a world with like several years of this invisible threat hanging over us.
And it's sort of like waxes and wanes, right?
And this feeling of being like cases are down.
Maybe we're getting out of this.
And you're like surge,
new variant,
whatever.
This feeling of like anytime they cut ahead,
whatever amount of time you're like,
okay,
that was a period of time where there wasn't another killing or there wasn't a
new discovery.
There wasn't a letter.
Right.
Yeah.
And even still,
it's like things were a little calmer,
but also it's not resolved. Right. Yeah. And even still, it's like things were a little calmer, but also it's not
resolved. People are still wondering at any
moment, am I going to get the bad
news? And in this day and age,
you're not getting it on your phone. You're
waking up the next morning in the newspaper and finding
out something horrible happened last night.
But what I like to think about rewatching
this movie is that
half an hour into the movie, all the murders have been
depicted and basically all the letters have come in apart from the later crackpot ones now that the earlier ones weren't
crackpot um and you're like oh 99 of the evidence is now available to us and they're the rest of
this movie is them going back to it and none of it over and over again like so much of what
graysmith did was just open up the fucking files from like 1966 again.
Yes.
You know, now it's when like if Anthony Edwards, you know,
Armstrong and Toski are on it.
Okay.
Call, you know, Elias Kodias, you know, over in Vallejo.
Call Donald in where's Napa, right?
He's in Napa.
He's Berryessa.
And they're all like, by the way, why the fuck haven't you sent us this?
And they're, we're sorry.
We're sorry.
You know, it's like so much of that.
We really should have been in on the handwriting.
Right. You know, yeah. You philip baker hall who's phenomenal the opening credits of this movie when you go i know it's it's like the three cars
it is and it's like the vince mcmahon just you wait this guy to him too are you kidding me
because you have it's the staggered like towering inferno dylan hall ruffalo we haven't gotten to brian
cox i know well we'll get to it well then edward cox is a split card and you're like that's good
and then it gives you a series of three cards that are vince mcmahon me yeah right like i'm
forgetting what the permutations are but everyone i can probably find them for you um but uh yeah i
philip baker hall i think so well cast because he's doing something that is, and I apologize to handwriting analysis, but, you know, pseudoscience.
Yeah.
And he's just Philip Baker Hall.
So you're like, well, he has to be right.
Yes.
He's like, oh, the K's here.
And you're like, the fucking K's.
He knows.
Right.
And like a lot of this like boils down to some people like, well, the handwriting.
And it's like, well, we don't like, is that actually't like is that actually definitive and it's like these things are like opinions right it's that Ruffalo line where like no I get the line of like figured out and he's like all circumstantial right I love the Ruffalo line of like in court yes this cannot be enough right yeah but we're right that's different from we definitely know who did it. But so many times in this movie,
you're like all of this fits together
and then you go to Philip Baker Hall
and it's the K.
Right.
And you're back to square one
and you either go,
I discredit this guy
or I discredit my conclusion.
Charles Fleischer,
Zach Grenier,
Philip Baker Hall.
That's the first three.
Okay.
You know,
Roger Rabbit,
Zach Grenier,
who's a plus Fincher freak.
Yeah.
Although in this one, he's playing a fairly normal guy.
Usually if you bring him in to play a freak.
Elias Koteas, James LeGrosse, Donald Logue.
I mean, come on.
I mean, I love James LeGrosse.
I think that guy is the best.
Yeah.
He barely in.
John Carroll Lynch, Germaine Mulroney, Chloe Sevigny.
You're like, whoa, they allowed a woman to be in this movie?
Are we sure?
But no, another three amazing. Yeah. Well, you should talk, whoa, they allowed a woman to be in this movie? Are we sure? But no, another three amazing.
Yeah.
We should talk about Chloe,
but like,
she just too,
just has the look.
That's it.
Oh,
wow.
And then casting by
Laurie Mayfield,
the legend.
But there's a million other
rank,
you know,
fucking Adam Goldberg
for one scene.
Jimmy Simpson for one scene.
Yeah.
John Ennis.
Like we said,
Gets.
Mr. Show.
Yeah. As the rival handwriting. I was going to say, is that John? That's John Ennis. That's John En scene. Yeah. John Ennis. Like we said, Gets. From Mr. Show. Yeah.
As the rival
handwriting.
I was going to say,
is that John?
That's John Ennis.
That's John Ennis.
Yeah.
Clay Duvall is really good
in that one scene
where Gray Smith
is basically just like,
say it,
say that name.
And she's like,
no.
It was Rick.
Yeah.
And what's the first thing,
jumping way ahead,
but what's the first thing
she says to him
when he walks in?
You got the look.
And he goes,
what look?
And she just goes,
never mind,
just do your fucking thing.
Do your thing.
I've met with you guys a bunch.
Right.
All right.
Now we don't need to go quite
as scene by scene at this point,
but you know,
most of the first chunk of the film
is, you know,
Ruffalo and Edwards.
Yes.
At this point,
Avery is, you know,
important,
but, you know, the cops kind of take over Yes. At this point, Avery is, you know, important, but,
you know,
the cops kind of take over for a bit.
And Gyllenhaal is still
just kind of circling around.
Then we have the whole
Brian Cox sequence.
Okay,
I just want to make sure
we're not skipping over.
Melvin Belly.
Yes.
Who was basically like a famous,
he was sort of like a
Johnny Cochran of the day,
right?
Like a famous attorney.
He was the one who got,
what's his name jack ruby acquitted
who shot lee harvey oswald well jack ruby died in prison i'm not sure he was the attorney yes
yes uh he also was famously in a star trek as a character called gorgon which they mention
in the guy i mean i saw your track and he's like, oh, I should probably just be an actor.
He's so fucking funny.
But the Jack Ruby thing's important of why
the Zodiac would
want to talk to him.
He's the kind of celebrity
lawyer to the criminal stars.
And I gotta call out
the coverage there
of him whenever
he's talking
and he's just looking
like essentially
straight into the camera.
The fucking sounds
the lambs cam.
It's so good.
It's so good.
Take care of yourself, Sam.
Like, it just,
I don't know
why he chose to do that,
but the eeriness of feeling
personally implicated
by the call. He does it
in the first Arthur
Lee Allen interrogation scene as well.
Yes, he does. Which is from being, like,
outside the conversation, over the
shoulder, to being, like, directly inside it.
Like John and Demi. You are the other side of this.
Yeah.
And it does feel like
it is when people know
they are somewhat cornered
or at least directly engaged.
You know,
you're sort of like
in the crosshairs.
You know what it might be
is that even though
it's a misdirect,
it's like when you're
talking to Zodiac,
then you get to look
right into the camera.
Yeah.
Do you know what I mean?
It sounds like you're in a great deal of pain.
Yeah.
That was my headache.
Do you know that he wanted Gary Oldman to do this?
I mean, he wanted Gary Oldman to do everything.
He always asked Gary Oldman, but he put him in a bunch of prosthetics and was like, this looks silly.
We should just hire Brian Cox.
Yeah.
And Gary Oldman is like, and I'll never wear prosthetics again.
Never.
Certainly never to play a world leader.
Never to plump up.
And Cox looks perfect.
You know,
the big mane of hair,
the thick tie,
the tie as thick as his neck,
the tie knot.
Oh,
it's so good.
And that sequence,
I think is so crucial one because Cox is such a hilarious showman.
Yeah.
This is the only character who thinks he's in a movie.
Yes. Yeah. He's like, I'm acting out this scene for the only character who thinks he's in a movie. Right.
Who's like, I'm acting out this scene
for the ultimate film made about this event.
We're watching total bullshit.
Like, useless.
Some crazy guy called in and was like,
I'm crazy!
You know, like,
and everyone was hanging on every word.
Because it's such good television
and it's such good movie watching.
In the same way that the letters are good news.
Like, it just,
the whole thing becomes this,
like, red herring of a,
of a nonsense.
The whole thing with the fucking, you know,
codex,
what do you call them?
The puzzle letters,
you know,
is it's like the great mystery of like,
there's two unsolved and then one of them gets solved.
And it's like more nonsense.
Yeah.
More just like,
I hope you saw me on the TV.
You know,
I'm going to shoot some little kid,
you know,
it's just more like crap.
It's not him being like, by the way, three, nine, five main street. Like, look hope you saw me on the TV. You know, I'm going to shoot some little kid. You know, it's just more like crap. It's not him being like, by the way, 395 Main Street.
Like, look me up.
Fincher and Graysmith both.
I'm Arthur Lee Allen.
I got the name from the watch.
All right.
See you later.
You know, confirmed.
Fincher and Graysmith, I think both personally lean towards Arthur Lee Allen.
Right.
It is apparent.
It's obviously the most obvious candidate.
Right.
And I think Fincher is very convinced by Toski being like that's the one guy where i was like the minute he walked in i was like
i like this guy for it like but even that that language is what's so fascinating there's the
later part where uh jill and hall finally gets through to donald loge right donald loge the
other guy right rick marshall sorry and he's like you just named my favorite he says potentially
potentially you're talking about my favorite suspect right where it's like tusky's like i'm a born to run guy and you know
like i'm a nebraska guy myself my analogy i thought of not to like throw out like a simsian
metaphor i was like they're talking about it like it's starter pokemon right yeah yeah i i always
go yeah definitely which right and there's this weird degree to which like in the second half
of this movie
where Gyllenhaal is basically
going back to all these guys
that he's been kept from.
Yeah.
And going like,
I'm now the guy
who's really into Zodiac
and all of them are like,
I dated her.
I don't want to go back.
Yeah, yeah.
I did six years
on that treadmill, baby.
I don't want to do it again.
And then all of them
like get caught up
in the thing again.
Yeah.
Where it's like,
there's this weird like sport to it for them
of like
it's fun to have your guy
and think you can make it fit.
He's like
I can't allow you to help.
I especially can't tell you
to go talk to Ken Narlow
in Napa.
N-A-R-L-O-W.
You know like
it's just like
you can see
three ways to go about it.
Get a warrant
which you won't.
Yeah.
Or get creative.
Right.
I mean they're encouraging him in this way that betrays their own obsession with the case.
The thing I was going to say is that it would be very easy for Fincher to put his thumb on the scales and say,
well, the movie we're making is the movie that argues that Arthur Lee Allen links everything together the best.
movie that argues that Arthur Lee Allen links everything together the best.
So I'll just have John Carroll Lynch play all embodiments of the Zodiac, which he doesn't.
No.
Like sometimes it is his body in those scenes and sometimes it is his voice, but he has multiple guys doing it at different times.
I think also I really appreciate how many red herrings he has in the second half
of the movie
the Rick Marshalls
the Sherry Jo Bates
the fact that
you go on the
again these are like
the nooks and crannies
like going into all these scenes
where they're like
we just don't think this is him
and it was like
well then why did you tell
Paul Avery
like what
you know
and you start to realize
that like
it could be
Arthur Lee Allen
and in a regular
Hollywood movie
that's what would
that's what it would be about.
You know, it would be about one guy.
And you would be able to feel okay with it being that guy.
But I think it's so important
that the movie spends so much time
on the red herrings,
on the people that it probably isn't.
We never see Rick Marshall.
We never see him.
We never, no one, I know.
I kept trying to find,
you Google Rick Marshall,
he looks like the Zodiac Killer.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Part of what's frustrating is you're like, it's, I know, I kept trying to find, you Google Rick Marshall, he looks like the Zodiac Killer. Really? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Part of what's frustrating is you're like,
it's, you almost wonder, are these not red herrings?
Like, part of what's so frustrating about this reality is like,
it's that scene, the Paul Avery scene,
where he's like, you almost seem disappointed,
where he breaks down to him.
He's like, what do we actually verifiably know
that this one guy did?
Yeah.
And already,
they've lost control
of the narrative
and you're like,
we basically created
a template where
any crazy person
can stand up
and do something.
Yeah.
So, are all these
killings connected?
Are all the letters
connected?
You know?
Like, Arthur Lee Allen
might be the Zodiac Killer,
but also 30%
of what we ascribe
to the Zodiac Killer
might have been copycat.
Right.
Which is why the whole taste falls Right. That's where it becomes
a ball of yarn that you can't write.
We have to talk about the bar scene,
maybe the greatest line reading in
the history of Robert Downey Jr.
This can no longer be ignored.
Which I love that he's not immediately
like, but he's like, okay.
So you think he sent the second code
because he found the first one too easy.
This can no longer be ignored.
And then maybe the best cut in the history of movies
is him trying it and then cut to six of them.
Demolished.
And shot through the other side of an aqua velvet.
It's vodka, gin, basically like Sprite,
like a lemon, lime, and then blue curacao.
Right, which I've never liked.
I don't like the taste of blue curacao.
I mean, yeah, it's not. It's kind of nasty. It's kind of nasty. And drinking. Surprised't like the taste of blue curacao. I mean, yeah.
It's kind of nasty.
It's kind of nasty.
And drinking a Windexy color is also just unpleasant.
Well, it's electric blue.
Like, it's not a natural color.
I know it's like an orange sort of look.
But not even Gatorade has that brightness to it.
Yeah, sure.
Are you an Aquavelva drinker yourself? I don't drink. Fair enough. Yeah, smart. it's like natural color and has that brightness to it yeah sure are you like wind aqua velva
drinker yourself i don't drink uh fair enough yeah well maybe i can make get you a virgin
aqua velvet yeah i would absolutely have a virgin water with uh food coloring and uh you know an
orange peel and spray it's right yeah sugar with sugar and sugar and water yeah that sounds good
graysmith is gonna still hang back in this movie, but in that bar scene,
you do have them explaining like how to crack the code,
right?
Where it's like,
you're looking for kill.
Yeah.
You're looking for the double L's.
Yeah.
And Avery,
again,
I feel like this is a sequence where Avery is like,
I'm smart.
He's not saying this,
but he's like,
I'm smart.
And I'm an investigative reporter.
I know how to do this.
I don't have the kind of sick brain that looks at one of those squares of
codes and is like, where's kill?
Yeah. And Gyllenhaal is
like, well, it's a serial killer, so we wrote kill. So
let's find where kill is. It's another perfect
Downey Jr. line delivery of how does one
do that?
And that is said with such disdain.
Like, clearly
Downey Jr. Avery just wants
to go to parties where, you know,
everyone gets naked at the end of the night, right?
Like on a houseboat.
Like that's really what he wants to do.
Yes.
He doesn't want to solve the Zodiac murders.
Right.
Then what do we have?
We have, well, then it's Irony Sky.
Then it's...
Kathleen Johns.
Yeah.
Maybe this, I mean, I think,
I don't know what you guys think.
I think the scariest sequence in Zodiac
is probably the basement sequence
with Fleischer
I remember in the theater
feeling the most
afraid then
yes
but this is so
like
sharply frightening
yeah
you know
the way it's drawn out
and then the final thing
of like
I'm gonna throw your baby
out of the car
like
but this is one where
I swear
that's John Carroll Lynch's voice
right
like this is a scene
where it feels like that.
Oh, I think that is him.
Yeah.
But it's not always him.
Well, he had different people play Zodiac in different times.
Bob Stevenson is him at some point.
John Lacey.
He would cast people to match the physical description from every...
Of that incident.
Yes.
Which is cool.
It's great.
It's cool.
But yeah, the Kathleen Johns thing is so scary. And it feels like a ghost story you're being told in a sleepover.
Absolutely. Yeah. No, it has that feeling of like, you know, or a My Favorite Murder episode or something. It's just absolutely...
The opening to a slasher movie, you know, right?
I survived, you know, like it's just absolutely terrifying.
Well, and that feeling
of her standing
on the side of the road
as the other cars come up,
like that cut is terrifying,
right?
Yeah.
Oh, it's so bad.
I'm going to throw your baby
out the moving,
yeah, right vehicle.
And then it's like,
okay, you feel the relief of
you see a car pulling up.
She's alive.
She's alive.
She survives alive.
We don't know how.
But her hands are covered in blood.
Yeah.
Where's the baby? Where's the baby? And you're so terrified. You're going to hear something awful happen to the baby's alive. We don't know how. She hid the baby. But her hands are covered in blood. Yeah. Where's the baby?
Where's the baby?
And you're so terrified.
You're going to hear something awful happen to the baby.
Yeah.
And there's something more upsetting,
although there is a relief, obviously.
There is, yeah.
Of them being like,
you hid the baby on the side of the road?
Right.
She's like, I thought he was going to come back.
Oh, my God.
And then you get to Avery
taking Grace Smith to the basement
and being like,
my theory is that might not have been Zodiac.
Yeah.
And my theory is this one wasn't either because he only wrote the letters that we got after the crime.
You almost look disappointed.
Which is already, all these guys are starting to have an unhealthy relationship.
You guys may know this.
I forget the trivia here.
The guy, the coffee guy at the Chronicle with the glasses.
Who is that?
That obviously was a real guy, right?
But who's the actor?
Yeah, is that like the real guy or something?
I just love that he keeps popping up and he has...
Oh, I don't know.
The mean lines or whatever.
He's really cool.
Yeah.
And then what do we got?
You know, then Avery getting the bloody...
The bloody shirt.
...shirt and freaking out.
And you're kind of like, that's about an hour plus into the movie and you're like, oh, he's lost.
Yeah. That's when he gets the gun I want a gun yeah
but he's also now getting
really into being like one
of the main characters of this narrative he
goes to fuck you know that that's where
Ray Smith goes on the first date with
Chloe Sevigny and is like
yeah he's going to Riverside
or something I forget what that is and she's like
it's like near LA and he's like oh I don't something i forget what that is and she's like it's like near la
and he's like oh i don't think he knows he's that far away
and she's like uh-huh and he's like i guess i should call him and like there's no cell phones
her line reading of like is this some skeezy ploy to get me back to your house i love that
and he's clearly like huh like like it's like, you're like, this man is somehow had children,
but he's never fucked.
I don't know.
Like he reproduced or whatever,
you know,
someone was just like,
just sit there and we're going to kiss and don't worry.
It'll all,
it'll all work itself out.
And he was like,
oh,
okay.
Like,
cause it's almost crazy that he has a kid.
Yes.
And the others,
do they have,
does Tosca have children?
Like,
we don't see them. Yeah. Right. He, we don't see them, but he's like, I, I, he's like, I know boss, does Tosca have children? Yeah. We don't see them.
Yeah.
Right.
We don't see them,
but he's like,
I,
he's like,
I know boss,
I've got three daughters of my own.
Right.
He does.
That's right.
They tell him at some point,
like go on vacation.
Right.
Go to Candlestick.
Yeah.
Go to Candlestick.
See a movie.
Yeah.
I mean,
you should fucking go to Candlestick.
There's the moment where they all get on the plane.
Like everyone from every city. Right. You know, Zach Grenier's there. Who's the moment where they all get on the plane, like everyone from every city, right?
You know, Zach Grenier's there,
who's the justice guy.
And they go to Riverside.
Who's that guy who plays the old cop?
He is incredible.
I love that.
I mean, he's one of those guys.
He's just one of those guys,
but he's incredible.
Who's basically like,
John Mayen is that guy.
Okay.
And he's,
I think he's also in la confidential
yes yeah he's in that he's the he's like the commissioner in that he's like gentlemen
and he's like yeah zodiac zodiac zodiac but like i actually like this other guy
for it and isn't that how they get arthur lee allen right like he's the one who leads into Arthur Lee Allen. No, Arthur Lee Allen, they get on
him because Armstrong
interviews the old
roommate of... Right, the guy with the glasses.
Yeah, the guy with the glasses. Right, right, right, right.
Yeah. Like, the roommate of
Arthur's brother, I want to say?
Something like that. Something like that. And he goes
fishing with him, and he's like, I'm gonna call
myself Zodiac, and I'm gonna, you know,
I'm gonna do all these things on January 1st.
Because it's that thing, it's that sequence where
they're like, now we're opening up the floodgates to all
the nuts. And you have that sequence of all these people
that are interviewing. The lady who's like, could be Paul
Avery. Right. And he's like, okay, yeah,
we're looking into that one. Yeah. My ex-boyfriend
used to cut people's hands off. He has to be
the Zodiac. And they say he didn't cut anyone's
hands off. But then there's like the four months
later, seven months later, whatever he is.
This has been fruitless. And then the last interview
is him throwing out the thing about
the fishing and telling the story
and they're like, this is the first thing we've heard in months
that sounds like it might be something. He leads
them to that. But it's the open call basically
that gets them to Arthur. As an audience member
you're like, you're still,
especially the first time, you're still in this mode of like,
yes, we're gathering evidence. I'll all of this yeah yeah and later you realize you know
we're being shown dead end after dead end for a reason because that is what this became
but yes then the arthur lee allen scene is so well acted one because john carroll lynch is like
fucking oscar worthy in this movie oh my god he's incredible and to the way that ruffalo edwards and
uh codeus play
the sort of like
holy shit
this guy's basically
admitting to being
a Zodiac killer
yes
right
yeah
where he's like
no I would never
kill kids
anyway this is my
Zodiac launch
and the way
and the way he like
crosses his leg
and we see the boot
you know
and then you see him
see the boot
yeah
and then you see him
see that he saw the boot
right
it's like
yeah
and his weird like gentleness like the weird way he see and then you see him see that he saw the boots right it's like yeah and
his weird like gentleness like the weird way he talks and fincher said in the commentary that he
asked him to do it one way where you where you just are totally innocent yeah right like you
you can't believe they're even asking you that's morbid like you know that kind of exactly and
fincher said he was like the more innocent he played it, the more he looked guilty.
Right.
The more he looked like he absolutely was the Zodiac Killer.
My only question I ask this, because I know you have landed on an answer for this, David.
Okay.
Do you put Ruffalo in lead or supporting?
Do you have this movie with two supporting nominations?
I have the three boys are the three leads, I think.
You have to do it that way.
Gyllenhaal, Ruffalo, Downey all have to just be considered leads. Okay. Because the supporting
cast is so massive in this movie. So then you give John Carroll Lynch the supporting. I do,
but I'm willing to hear basically any argument for any performance in this movie.
I think they're all good. He and Ruffalo are the two I like jam on all day and all night.
I mean, Ruffalo is an incredibly rewarding actor. Like returning to a Ruffalo or the two I like jam on all day and all night. I mean, Ruffalo is an incredibly rewarding actor.
Like, returning to a
Ruffalo performance is usually really rewarding.
Yeah. Like, there's a lot
of depth to his work. And
that's why I watch Avengers
Age of Ultron all the time. I had some.
It was obvious. I had to make a joke like that.
Um, no. We have to
move into the final act of the movie,
which is the Gyllenhaal act uh and just
shout out any scenes from that that we like basically the fleischer scene yes i but like
and the diner scene in the fleischer scene the i walked it scene and the fleischer scene are the
sort of crucial and the paul the avery boat scene yeah as the toad for Avery. As we said, he's haunting the movie at that point. He's haunting the movie
at that point.
He's very the dude
in that scene as well.
Is he naked?
Do you think he's
kind of like balls out
and we're sort of
not seeing that?
Yes,
absolutely.
There's that one
quick cutaway to him
watching the news
at the bar
with the emphysema tank
still smoking.
Yes,
where he's
the library line or whatever is there.. Yes. So good. The library line
or whatever is there.
Yes, yes, yes.
I think that the
Gyllenhaal part,
what I love about it
is that he goes down
the Rick Marshall
rabbit hole.
Yes.
Like, I just love
and that the culmination
is the Charles Fleischer scene.
Yes.
Like, the culmination of that
is that I'm in a dark cellar
in the middle of nowhere.
But like, what I love about that scene
is nothing might be happening.
No, Fincher is using
full Hitchcock
to do a scene
that is entirely
subjective in his head.
This might just be
a weird guy.
Yeah.
This guy's paranoia
has become so out of control
that he thinks he's
in a horror movie all the time.
He's definitely a weird guy.
Well, he's definitely
a weird guy.
He's a silent film projectionist
and he saved all of his records
from fucking 30 years ago.
But like,
when Gyllenhaal's like,
doors locked, you know,
and you're like, oh my God.
And like Fleischer's reaction is kind of like,
yeah, you know, that's okay.
I got it.
Yeah.
And you're like,
is he enjoying that he made him feel bad
or is he just kind of realizing
that this guy is freaking out
because he thinks about the Zodiac all day?
Any man wearing a toupee that obvious
is a fucking freak.
Yes, but yes,
we need to start wrapping up Griffin.
So is there anything else we have to talk about with the Zodiac movie?
Well, Cleo Duvall brings him back to Arthur Lee Allen after basically spending years in like cul-de-sacs.
Right, because she's the one who's like, the name Lee is who I remember of this weirdo at this party.
He's begging her to connect his previous theories.
But Chloe Sevigny has that heartbreaking final line.
And he has the birthday,
the same birthday.
That's the other Lee Allen thing.
Right.
Oh, yes.
It was his birthday.
It was her birthday
to Brian Cox's house.
Which is sort of like
the first totally proprietary
piece of information
that Graysmith gets.
Yeah.
When he's starting to realize
someone needs to write this book.
Yeah.
It might as well be me.
That's the thing that sets him off
is that he almost gets there.
Like,
like,
um,
Belai's,
uh,
maid gives him the information about,
I have to kill today.
Today is my birthday.
He gets that information.
He goes to Zach Grenier
and he goes,
I just need to check a date.
And he's the one that goes,
it's,
it's fingerprints and handwriting.
Yeah.
Stick to the evidence. Right. You know, and then the next thing you know, What do you actually have? He's, he's the one that goes, it's fingerprints and handwriting. Stick to the evidence.
And then the next thing you know.
What do you actually have?
He's in all those cul-de-sacs.
Because he can't prove it.
He's so close to Arthur Lee Allen right there.
But he doesn't go down it because he's like, oh, I can't prove it.
And all these other guys are like, I gave it up.
It doesn't fit together.
This way lies madness.
And then he comes knocking on that door.
They say, please don't. And then he comes knocking on that door. They say,
please don't.
And then once he gives them the one new piece of info,
they're like,
I will tell you a thing.
I've always found it.
That was in the,
that was in the,
the Vallejo files,
you know,
like you can see in Ruffalo's face,
just that like frustration.
It's like the flicker of like,
no,
I can't,
I can't,
I can't do this anymore.
And the scene they first meet
is after the Dirty Harry premiere.
Ruffalo walking out
and then Graceman
finally tracking him down
and being like,
we're the two characters
who are supposed to be
working together.
That's right.
This whole movie.
And Ruffalo's line is,
it's over.
They're already making movies about it.
Right.
Oh my God.
Which is so good.
And then you have like
the longest time cut,
I feel.
Well,
then that's when there's the montage
that also was cut out of the original movie,
where it's just a black screen
for two minutes while music plays.
Which is great.
It's amazing.
It's so good.
And it feels like,
Fincher's like,
I'm telling you the time is moving,
but it's also like the 60s have died.
Yeah.
That's how I feel about that musical montage.
That's very,
very spot on.
He's like,
we're moving out of the,
and like, this is a time of innocence dying in America as well.
And it feels strange how quickly you're moving,
even with the audio clips from news broadcasts,
but you're like, that's what happened.
The production design of the Chronicle changes.
The typewriters change.
Yeah, the typewriters.
No, oh God.
Fincher changes the kind of typewriter they use
because he realized by the mids, mid-70s,
they were using a different kind of Skelectric
or whatever.
What about Sevigny?
The scene where she basically calls quits
on their marriage
and you haven't been checking in on them a ton.
Yeah.
And you're sort of like,
this is such a disastrous first date,
but she's kind of charmed by his guilelessness.
Yeah.
And he's like a cutie pie.
And you assume at some point it got better
and she got to engage with him as a real person. And then's like a cutie pie and you assume like at some point it got better and she like got to engage
with him as a real person.
And then her scene
where she's just like,
we've just,
our first date never ended.
Yeah.
This has just been
one long first date
of me basically waiting
for you to like
solve the Zodiac crimes.
Right.
And like engage with me
as a human being
and it's never going to happen.
And also weekly,
someone,
the Zodiac,
calls in the middle of the night
and just breathes into the phone.
And you're just accepted this because you're so obsessed.
Like, that's not going to dissuade you from stopping.
Right.
Whereas when he's a single father, he's got his kid on the couch and they're watching the Brian Cox interview.
And he's like, change the channel.
This is like too upsetting for you.
Well, he sticks with it for a bit.
And then when it gets really gnarly, he's like, okay.
He's got that.
A little bit of a bit versus now.
Kill those kids. They're like at the dinner tablely he's like okay. He's got a little bit of a fear versus now. Kill those kids.
They're like at the dinner table and he's like Zodiac
calling again. Like he's not
even really processing how much this
is interfering with his true psyche.
He looks like you say trapped in the movie as well.
He just looks like he's asleep. I've just got to see him.
I gotta look him in his eyes. And then he does that.
I've got to know that it's him. Yeah, it's so true.
Gyllenhaal's performance gets into this
space where it's like those eyes, man.
Those Donnie Darko eyes.
My God.
He's really good.
I mean, he's really good.
It's so...
I just think that the climax of the movie
is he looks Arthur Lee Allen in the eyes.
And does he get something out of that?
We don't really know.
We don't really know.
It's crucial for us.
Yeah.
And then Jimmy Simpson's like,
this guy.
It's this guy.
And then the movie's like,
Arthur Lee Allen died
before they could really figure anything out. The DNA never matched and uh you know you're you're trapped in hell forever
goodbye roll the credits like credits are like yes no no yes kind of maybe goodbye
they're like they keep but fucking pulling you in both directions i have to say though i think
you gotta hand it to him that when he plays hurdy Gurdy Man again, you know what I mean? He is giving you an emotional catharsis.
Yes, yes.
And I think, I don't know if I was saying this before
when we were actually taping or not,
but it's like, if it makes emotional sense,
then the logic starts to fall away.
Like, you can say that this movie doesn't have, you know,
like a resolution or any of those kinds of things,
and it doesn't, but it has one shining moment at the end yeah where majeau identifies
arthur lee allen yes and most definitive thing the most definitive thing that can happen can
happens and that music plays and it just says like the answer could still be out there you know like it's like it could still happen
and then like you said
it also like the first
time Hardy Gertie man is played you're like
oh that's like a good usage of this song
clever that's like carrying
over to the scene yeah and then
when he uses it the second time I'm like you have
forever transformed this song
I will never now not listen to this
song and think about like the
frustration of being like we're never going to fucking
catch Arthur Lee Allen. We didn't even talk about
David Shire's music. David
Shire, one of the great composers
of all time. All time. Did one of my
favorite film scores for the Taking Film 123.
He would do these jazz scores.
He wanted no score.
He was like only pop music, just
set it in the time. That's right, yeah.
And they were cutting it and they were like, a couple of these sequences, you kind of need mood setting.
And they used the conversation score as temp score.
Oh, they did.
Another great David Shire score.
And then they went to him and he wrote 40 minutes of stuff.
Oh, yeah.
Which is incredible.
Because he was probably in his 70s at that point.
He's still alive.
David Shire is still with us.
86 years old now. The fact that there is so much
pop music used
so well and recontextualized in a way
that makes it feel so ominous. Oh, yeah.
That when he switches to the
score, you're like, this is telling
me to pay attention in a different way. Yeah.
There's some shift here
of what's happening in this scene.
And sometimes it's emotional and sometimes it's
tension. Sometimes it's just underlining information.
Sometimes it's scoring squirrels.
I rewatched that scene so good.
Obviously the trailer.
It's just freaky.
Yeah.
But I rewatch,
I like rewound and rewatch
the John Carroll Lynch reaction
to Gyllenhaal clocking him
in the hardware store.
Yeah, sure.
And I swear to God,
you go by it frame by frame
and it's like,
it actually doesn't look like
his face is moving at all.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Somehow his expression
changes entirely.
He turns to a statue, yeah.
And you cannot clock, like,
where muscles are shifting.
Yeah.
And it's just inscrutable
and it's like,
for this guy in that moment,
on one hand,
a man I associate with being
like a Cuddle bear actor from Fargo.
Yeah.
Drew Carey show.
Yes.
But you're like,
if you're a gray Smith and that's another moment where he basically cuts to,
he's looking straight at you through the lens.
Yeah.
You're like,
well,
at first you're like,
well,
that face he's giving me is the resolution I want.
Yeah.
Even if I can't prove it,
he's acknowledging it.
And then the longer you look at him and you're like,
am I projecting something onto him?
Yeah, right.
You're going to the cycle.
A hundred percent.
Right.
Yeah.
Like, actually, is this all coming from me?
Blah, blah, blah.
Griffin, let's just play the box office game.
Come on.
Let's just do it.
March 2nd, 2007.
Movies body by wild hogs at the box office.
It just fucking ran the table March 2007.
Remember wild hogs?
I do not remember wild hogs.
Tim Allen, William H. Macy,
Martin Lawrence,
John Travolta,
the big four.
Yeah.
They're on motorcycles.
We don't need to get into that.
$175 million.
$40 million.
It was a huge hit.
I don't ever remember this movie.
It annihilated Zodiac.
Zodiac was humiliated
just eating its garbage.
And then fucking Leonidas
comes in a week later
and kicks all of them.
What does?
300.
300.
300, right.
A weirdly robust march.
Number three at the box office is a movie
that would probably never get dumped in February.
Now, it's a comic book film.
One of your favorite
actors. Oh, it's Ghost Rider.
Nicolas Cage's Ghost Rider. Oh, Ghost Rider.
With Pete Fonda. Yeah, that was
dumped and still ended up making a lot of money.
Made a lot of money. Better than Zodiac.
Again,
made well over
$100 million.
Pretty bad.
You think better?
Oh, no.
Okay, you thought
it was bad.
Than Zodiac, yeah, yeah.
Fun trash,
but objectively bad.
Number four,
it's just funny to think
this is what's up
against Zodiac.
Number four,
kids book adaptation.
Bridget Terabithia.
What?
Yeah.
Anna Safiya Robb.
He's a freak. I'm a freak. I can't believe you guys know this. Hutcherson. I? Yeah. Anna Safiya Robb. He's a freak.
I'm a freak.
I can't believe you guys know this.
Hutcherson.
I'm the rapper
Grace Smith of Box Office.
Number five.
It's ruined every relationship
in my life.
About obsession,
but a bad one.
Number 12 is another.
Number five.
Oh, is it number 23?
The number 23.
With James Carrey.
I nailed all of those
on first guess.
Did I not?
You sure did.
My God. Have you seen the number 23? Did I not? You sure did. My God.
Have you seen the number 23?
I have not.
Not very good.
It's funny to think of that movie
existing in theaters
at the same time.
Zodiac is like,
let's think about this true crime
and Jim Carrey is like,
I can't stop thinking
about that dang number 23.
I'm going to write it on my chest.
It's so weird
how it keeps popping up.
I'm going to play the saxophone
while I'm not sleeping.
You also have Norbit.
Yep.
The movie that cost Eddie Murphy an Oscar this Oscar season.
Like, you know.
Music and lyrics, underrated Hugh Jackman, Ron and Tom, very cute film.
Yeah.
Opening new this week and completely bombing.
The sort of comedy drama Black Snake Moan.
Oh, yeah.
With Christina Ricci.
Wait, that opened the same weekend?
It sure did. That's another blank check movie. Yeah. And Timberlake Christina Ricci. Wait, that opened the same weekend? It sure did.
That's another
blank check movie.
Yeah, and Timberlake
and Samuel Jackson.
Who was that again?
That's Craig Brewer.
Craig Brewer.
It's his follow-up
to Hustle and Flow.
Right, of course.
Paramount buys it
and guarantees his next movie.
Right.
And number nine
is Reno 911 Miami.
And his next movie is
I'm Gonna Chain a Woman to...
Yes.
Got it.
Okay.
Yeah.
No, but that was the deal.
It was like,
we want your movie so badly,
also anything you want next.
Sucker punch, yeah.
It's just like,
you know,
so we're going to
stick needles in the eyes
of young women.
Right.
Whatever the...
Jesus Christ.
What do you have to say
about 9-1-1 Miami?
God, I love this industry,
you guys.
I love it.
It's so good.
It's rewarding.
We're doing great things.
Always find success
and rewards.
Never been better.
I think Reno 9-1 Reno 911 Miami is underrated.
One of the funniest movie titles of all time.
That it's another city.
That's funny.
It is funny.
It's not like an overbearing, annoying joke.
Yeah, it's good.
It's funny.
And number 10, the completely forgotten,
but perfectly watchable political thriller, Breach.
Which?
Billy Ray movie.
Good movie.
Low key.
He fucks all day and all night.
It's his follow,
his follow up to Shattered Glass,
speaking of Hayden.
Chris Cooper is unbelievable
in that movie.
What?
I gave it another spin recently
because I hadn't watched it
in 15 years.
What's crazy about that list
is that I don't know
any of those movies.
And you were like a grown up
at this time.
You were seeing films.
Black Sigmund I remember.
Just because I was like,
what's happening?
But I, you know, do you know what I mean? Like, I did watch it. You were seeing films. Black Snake Moan, I remember. Just because I was like, what's happening? But I, you know,
I did watch it.
I saw it, but I was just out of morbid curiosity.
100%.
But I don't know any of those movies
and yet they all beat... Zodiac
opened to number four or whatever.
No, it opened to number two.
Does Black Snake Moan ultimately outgrow Zodiac?
I think maybe not
just because Black Snake Moan
didn't do well at all.
Sure.
Yeah.
But, uh...
Zodiac opens to 12.
Yeah.
How do you know that?
I mean, I know you do this
on the show all the time,
but seeing it in person
is pretty cool.
It opened to 13.
It made 33 domestic.
It made 84 total.
You know, basically made its budget back worldwide, so it made 33 domestic. It made 84 total. Whoa.
Basically made its budget back worldwide.
So it was a loser.
But then I think it did quite well on video as well. Leslie, I get
some satisfaction out of the fact that I think people who
listen to this show sometimes think
that I'm on my devices
during this. No, I can say he's not.
And anytime anyone's in the room.
Say what you say,
which is,
it looks weird
watching you do it.
Well, then I'm like,
kids movie,
and you're like,
bitch of Terramithia.
I'm just like,
I've never made a movie
of that.
Oh my God.
It's just like coming out of me.
My God.
Wild hogs.
I'm just like,
what?
America was for a moment
captured by the idea
of middle-aged men
riding motorcycles
into the heartland
and having comic things happen to them.
I want to see that movie.
Yes, we've told that story on the podcast before.
Have you guys watched the commentary with James Ellroy for this movie?
No.
No.
Whoa.
It's unbelievable.
Wait, is it just Ellroy?
It's Ellroy.
It'd be funny if it was just him being like, I love this movie.
Here we go.
There's the one that's Gyllenhaal and a bunch of the crew.
There's the one that's Fincher solo. I've listened
to both of those. So he's on
the one with the crew and Gyllenhaal
and Downey. And he
introduces himself as like,
he's like,
I'm James Elroy,
king of American crime fiction.
It's so good.
He also says he's hung like a mule.
Oh, does that mean himself. Oh, about himself.
Yeah.
About himself.
Yeah.
James Elroy,
who by the way,
looks like if Mr.
Clean,
like joined the nation of Islam,
but it was white.
Like,
it's not like you see James Elroy and you're like,
that guy fucks,
you know,
with a bull moose penis.
Like here is James Elroy.
Exactly.
Yeah.
He's always talking.
He's very obsessed with,
with Ruffalo's hair as well. You know, he's got a great hair, but it is. Cause you think Elroy is Exactly. Yeah. He's always talking. He's very obsessed with Ruffalo's hair as well.
He's got great hair.
Because you think Elroy's like, God, if only I had that
mop on my head. Exactly.
I have six extra wives on my Wikipedia
page. It's so great to see.
It's really interesting because
of, you know,
obviously everything he's written, but also
what happened with his mother
and hearing his take on the Zodiac
and just what an absolute narcissistic loser.
Zodiac was.
Zodiac was.
You know, like that this is just
like the banality of evil.
Yeah.
You know.
That's the thing about Zodiac.
It's like he's a weird nerd.
Yeah.
He's not even good at this.
No.
He invented the template for so many things in
fucking serial killing yeah but like by being a weird freak and who would mostly write and be
like i saw the exorcist hilarious comedy or what you know like shit like that yeah you know like
he's a troll he's a poster yeah right yeah he's a fucking troll and he killed five people or maybe
35 like you know probably just five, but who knows?
Yes.
Like,
Leslie, thank you for coming.
Thank you so much. Thank you for having me.
This was amazing.
I feel like we could,
honestly, could have talked
15 more episodes.
The problem with Zodiac is
we could talk about it.
It's an endless while.
But we have to cut ourselves off
so we don't fall prey
into the trap
that destroyed these men.
Absolutely.
We've also been talking
for a very, you know,
very healthy amount of time,
which is good.
Exactly two hours and 30 minutes. Leslie, I said to you, and I've said been talking for a very, you know, very healthy amount of time, which is good. Exactly two hours and 30 minutes.
Leslie, I said to you, and I've said it on mic many times, but it's what I want out of Star Wars, the promise of your show.
Thank you.
You were the one doing it, but the idea of the newness and unexplored territory in the Star Wars sandbox.
And as you guys know, you know, before the prequels, which I know you guys…
Have covered.
Have covered.
I was kind of hoping… You unfortunately know we have covered. You I know you guys have covered. Have covered. I was kind of hoping.
You unfortunately know
we have covered it.
You unfortunately know
that we have covered it.
I want you guys
to go back and do it again.
You want us to start it over?
Wow.
That would really make
a lot of people unhappy.
Burn it down.
But it is,
we were saying before,
it is the ultimate
blank check movie.
It is.
The Phantom Menace.
The ultimate blank check project,
especially those three movies.
No check blanker than that.
No,
no,
no,
especially the idea of him releasing them and everyone being like,
we're horrified by this.
And he's like,
I'm getting,
I'll get to work on the sequel.
I just love him so much.
I'll see you later.
I love him too.
So George,
are you listening to the fans complaints?
A little bit.
Maybe the weirdest amount I could listen.
Very tiny amount.
Yeah, right.
I wish we had more time to talk about George Lucas because I...
Well, come on back sometime.
I would love to come back and do that.
We'll think of something else for you to come on and talk about.
But thank you for joining us.
But no, thank you for having me.
I love this movie so much.
You did amazing.
Okay, good.
You did amazing.
Jesus. Take us out. I have to me. I love this movie so much. You did amazing. Okay, good. You did amazing. Jesus.
Take us out.
I have to pee.
Okay, I need to poop,
so it's going to be
a race against time.
Can I finish this
before David finishes peeing?
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.
Thank you to Alex Barron
and AJ McKeon
for our editing.
JJ Birch for our research.
Lane Montgomery and the Great American Owl for our theme song,
Pat Reynolds, Joe Bowen for our artwork.
I have to go to the bathroom so badly.
You can go to blankcheckpod.com for links to some real nerdy shit.
I don't want to say shit.
It's a little triggering to me at this moment,
including our Patreon Blank Check special features
where we do commentaries on film series.
Right now we're doing the Pierce Brosnan Bond movies.
We also just have the
fucking Fincher music video episode
that just came out.
Tune in next week
for Curious Case of Benjamin Button
with Richard Lawson.
And as always,
I did it.
I fucking,
I did it.
I finished it
and David's still in there.
This is like
physically painful.
Okay, I'm going to read a thing
while David's still in there.
My former roommate,
Chris Wilmot, who grew up in the Bay Area, sent this to me,
and I think this is relevant. He said, I know you all have probably already recorded your Zodiac app,
but had to share this ink review I saw while working at an art supply store that's too weirdly specific to not be written by the real Robert Graysmith.
I've been drawing in pen and ink since I was a child and for 15 years was a political cartoonist and for the last 30 years, a best-selling author of books, illustrating them all with
Gillette pen points and UltraDraw ink. It is permanent, lightfast, and if you had to,
you could draw in glass with it if you could. It is so much denser and richer than other
inks on the market that the day they stop making UltraDraw ink,
which I use with a dip pen
and radiograph pens,
I will switch to another media.
Other inks thin out.
When you erase your pencil lines,
this ink is eternal.
Love it.
Robert Graysmith,
author of Zodiac
and other nonfiction books.
Thank you, Robert.
Robert, are you okay?
No.