Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Patton Oswalt Rerelease
Episode Date: September 7, 2020Originally aired April 29, 2018 Comedian, actor, writer and GGACP fan Patton Oswalt drops by the studio (finally!) to discuss the films of Sidney Lumet and Billy Wilder, the "unnatural" art of... sitcom acting, the disappearance of grindhouse theaters and the influence of "Richard Pryor: Live in Concert." Also, Larry Cohen deconstructs Superman, Gilbert imagines "Titanic, Part II," the Karate Kid opens a car dealership and Patton stages "The Day the Clown Cried." PLUS: Praising "Ratatouille"! Remembering John Cazale! The artistry of Rick Baker! "Francis Ford Coppola's Dr. Strange"! And the shocking climax in the case of the Golden State Killer! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Baseball is finally back.
Get in on Major League action and swing for the fences with BetMGM,
the king of sportsbooks.
Log in or sign up to play along as BetMGM brings the real-time action.
Embrace a season's worth of swings with BetMGM,
your one-stop shop for all things baseball.
BetMGM.com for Ts and Cs.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Gambling problem?
Call Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600.
BetMGM operates pursuant
to an operating agreement
with iGaming Ontario.
If they hear you,
they want you.
Run.
A Quiet Place,
day one, June 28th.
Get tickets now.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried,
and I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Gil, we're doing it again.
What?
Last week, we took our first week off in 330-something weeks.
Yeah.
And we put up a best of Gilbert, like the old best of Johnny.
Yeah, and Charo will be making charo's coming on yeah joan embry's bringing on a toucan uh monty rock the
third sir monty rock best of carson this is the best of gil We're going to run an episode from 2018 with the great actor-comedian Patton Oswalt.
Yes.
This one is memorable because it was recorded the same day.
If you remember, Gilbert, we did this at Nutmeg with Frank Fodorosa.
Yes.
This was recorded the same day that authorities captured the Golden State Killer.
Fascinating.
Yes.
Fascinating. Yes. Fascinating.
Even though Patton was having an insane day, a chaotic day, he still kept the appointment with us.
Yeah. Because his wife was doing that in-depth book about the killer.
His late wife, Michelle McNamara.
Yeah.
And then after she died, he took over the book.
Correct.
And that day, they caught the killer and he did
this show yeah he was he's a stand-up guy you should pardon the expression and he uh he kept
his commitment to us even though he had a million reasons to to bail and reschedule and gave a very
fun entertaining interview yeah we even spent the first 15 minutes of this show talking about the pursuit of the Golden State Killer, the capture,
and his late wife Michelle's dogged determination and how she spent years devoting her life to this.
There's also some fun stuff about Ratatouille.
You talk about sequels to movies that you wanted to see, like a sequel to Titanic.
Yes.
We talked about B-movies and Revival Houses and The New Beverly and Blackula and Sidney Lumet and all kinds of things.
And even a mention of Gloria Swanson and Chimplove.
Yes. Oh, my God. Yes.
So Gilbert and I and Dara are doing something again here for the second week
that we haven't done in many many years and let's take a little time for ourselves so
uh we're going to take a much needed rest and break these are hilarious episodes gaffigan
last week pat and this week from 2018 we hope you guys enjoy it uh one of my and we hope you enjoy our talk about the cunnilingus chimps.
Yes.
It's required listening.
So from 2018, here's a best of show with the great Patton Oswalt.
Enjoy.
Yes. Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
I'm here with my co-host Frank Santopadre and once again we're a Connecticut nutmeg with our
engineer Frank Furtarosa. Our guest this week is an actor, screen and television writer,
Emmy and Grammy winning performer and one of the most popular, admired, and prolific stand-up comedians of his generation.
As an actor, you've seen him in hit TV shows like The King of Queens, The Simpsons,
Veep, Archer, Justified, Mystery Science Theater 3,000
Mystery Science Theater
3,000
It's Mystery Science Theater
It's going to be one of those shows
3,000
The Return Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
The Goldbergs and A.P. Bio.
You also know him from movies such as Magnolia, Zoolander, Blade, Blade Trinity.
Blade Trinity.
Trinity.
Trinity.
Blade Trinity.
Trinity.
Where did you get Trinity from?
Blade Trinity. Trinity. Wait, Trinity. Where did you get Trinity from? Wait, Trinity.
Big fan, the informant, young adult, and of course, the brilliant Chef Remy in Pixar's
Oscar-winning comedy Ratatouille.
Ratatouille. Ratatouille.
Literally the one word you actually should be saying like Jerry Lewis and you struggle with it.
Ratatouille.
Ramen.
Ramen noodle.
Ramen shrivel.
He's also a film scholar and the author of the New York Times bestsellers,
Zombie Spaceship Wasteland, Silver Screen Fiend,
and his new crime book on which he completed the work of his late wife,
Michelle McNamara.
I'll be gone in the dark.
I didn't write that one.
I just, I got it finished.
Yes.
Okay.
My God.
Okay, don't interrupt me.
My new crime book.
Okay, sorry about that.
Yes, stop it.
I'm doing a very professional job.
Oh, yeah.
Great pacing.
And you're interrupting me.
One, so it's, I'll Be Gone in the Dark,
one woman's obsessive search for the Golden State Killer.
Welcome to the show, a sought-after comedian, actor, and writer
who somehow finds time to listen to this podcast.
And a man who actually fantasizes about seeing a movie called
Billy Jack vs. Blackula.
You all know him from science fiction 3000.
And Rasaguli.
Rasagul.
Rasagul.
Rasagul. Rasagul. Rasaguli.
Our pal, Patton Oswald.
Oh, Gilbert and Frank, thank you so much.
Pat, so happy to be here.
You are here.
I am actually here, finally.
Three and a half years.
I could have done this way earlier.
I hate calling into shows.
I will hold out until I can be there live. We're so glad you're here. Yeah, it's so much more done this way earlier. I hate calling into shows. Oh, yeah. I will hold out until I can be there live.
We're so glad you're here. Yeah, it's so much more fun this way.
And you got a lot going on.
This has been one of the most surreal.
It is so strange how my late wife's book, I'll Be Gone in the Dark, which this morning,
she was about this serial killer that she was trying to solve this case, worked six years on it, and did not live to see it completed.
But this morning I woke up.
There were pings on the cell phone and all these news alerts.
They caught the guy.
He's in jail.
The Golden State killer was caught and is now in prison.
Incredible.
Yeah, and that's how I began the day, and I'm ending it with Gilbert Gottfried.
So if this could not be, this is going to be one of the weirder days of my life.
No more surreal than that?
Begin the day with a serial killer and end with Gilbert Gottfried.
What more could you ask for out of life?
Really, I mean, that has seized the day, hasn't it?
That's living your best life.
You could just talk a little bit about the book and what happened,
and I mean, because this is such –
Yeah, she was a true crime writer and investigative journalist.
But what she would do is she was kind of perfecting this new sort of method where she would use a lot of online resources and searching because everything is being digitized now.
because everything's being digitized now.
So there's stuff that normally would be hidden in police files that she was suddenly using Google Maps and DNA searches
and familial DNA and geographic profiling to figure out.
This guy was the worst uncaught serial killer in California history.
And one of the reasons he wasn't caught,
and this is going to sound very creepy,
was they didn't give him a good name.
He was called Eerons.
Eerons was in the 70s.
He started in Sacramento, East Area Rapist.
Then he stopped for a while, shows up down in Southern California as the original Night Stalker.
They didn't know these two guys were the same guy for years.
DNA comes along in the 90s.
You realize, oh, it's the same guy.
They called him Eerons. It takes you 10 minutes to explain what that
means. Of course. And it doesn't catch on. So she, and when she came up
with Golden State Killer, a lot of these cops were like, yeah, that actually is helpful because
he didn't have a name that landed like Zodiac or
Night Stalker. Marketing. It is marketing. In a case like that,
it's true.'s advertising it is truly
advertised you cannot keep people's attention unless you give them a cool name like like uh
son of sam son of sam great name yeah and i'm not saying that like oh yay he's killing people but
if you want to catch him take a deep breath and give them a really good name.
You know, don't call him the third left up after the barn killer.
Like, wait, what?
And then don't let Gilbert try to pronounce it. Don't let Gilbert try to take it.
It's funny.
You sell a serial killer like a breakfast cereal or a dishwashing liquid.
And give it a cool name that rings in people's heads.
Did you see this coming at all?
Did this take you completely by storm?
I thought it would be.
It was weird because the night before I was in Chicago doing a book event with the journalist who helped finish the book and Michelle's researcher.
And we ended the evening.
Paul Haynes and Billy Jensen.
Billy Jensen and Paul Haynes. And we ended the evening. This is in Chicago and um billy jensen and paul haynes and
we ended the evening uh this is in chicago where my wife was from her whole family's there and
someone was asking do you think he'll ever be caught and we think and i think i in the evening
by basically saying i think time is running out for him in my mind thinking five maybe 10 more
years down the road with because he was so uncaught for so long wake up that i mean we went to bed at 11 30 i get started getting pings at like four in the morning he's caught
he's in jail they're gonna have a press conference today they had a huge press conference and
it was crazy it's been a very very surreal day and now there's like you know that he's been
convicted of two of these murders clearly if he's this dna if he's the east area rapist he's also the original
night stalker and he's killed 12 people and raped 50 unbelievable and and also more that we probably
don't know about and former policeman right right right right probably flashing a badge and the
reason he had to quit the police force and this sounds like something out of a bad laughing sketch. But in the 70s, he was caught shoplifting a hammer and dog repellent.
He would invade homes.
And he was shoplifting a hammer and dog repellent.
And then they were going to like usually – and the force will usually help cover that.
And he immediately quit like, don't dig any further.
I'm done.
I'm out.
Which should have been very suspicious. He was shop he doesn't didn't want any record of him
buying these items you know so uh again it's just the levels of the story can't end here i mean there
has to be a no no this is part two of the story has ended he's in jail there's gonna be a whole
other that's what i mean there has to be a documentary or something or well hbo is doing
a multi-part documentary about
Michelle and the writing of the book. Wonderful. But now
this morning, the documentary is like
it's a different movie now. I don't know
what's going to happen. Now they're all trying to figure out
what's this whole movie going to be now because they're going to do a big
like they're going to do it like The Jinx
or, you know, Making
a Murderer, a big long series.
So they already
had him under two names. two names in the 70s he
was the east area rapist ear and he vanished um because because a guy one of the guys he was
trying to attack and he was die like he would attack couples he would tie the the husband up
make him lie face down in the kitchen stack plates and cups on his back and go if i hear
any of these hit the floor while i'm in the other room with your wife i'll kill both of you like
it's just this great like these he would he would break into houses early and leave stuff like hide
stuff like handcuffs and ligatures that he could use later like he would prep the scene and um he
was held at gunpoint at one point at one time and got away
he would vault fences it was just it was really and um uh he uh and then then he vanished for a
little bit because that the one he almost got caught spooked him then he shows up they didn't
realize it was him down in golita and irvine as the original night stalker and that's when he
started murdering people. It's incredible.
The whole thing is insane.
And you must be numb.
I mean, we've caught you on the day that this has just
broken.
Let's talk about
our favorite Buddy Hackett movie.
Can we segue?
That's a good segue.
God's Little Laker.
How do we segue
to Lord Love and Duck?
Lord Love and Duck.
Which I remember it was quite disappointing. Well, because they were. Which I remember when they were trying to.
It was quite disappointing.
Well, because they were trying.
Yeah.
Because.
God, I wanted to love it.
They had that little subplot in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad World, and the studio went, there's
our new comedy team, and ooh, no.
Well, George Axelrod was somebody to be reckoned with, but the movie's just kind of a mess.
Yeah.
And I love McDowell.
Yeah.
And Roddy McDowell, it's funny.
It's kind of like that movie was the original Ferris Bueller.
You could say that.
Like this obnoxious kid who's getting it over on everybody.
Horrible.
Except you're not rooting for him.
You immediately hate him.
But I wasn't rooting for Ferris Bueller.
And that's the first thing I said.
Did you hear the Broderick episode where he trashed Ferris Bueller
five minutes into the show?
No.
What?
I think I opened with it.
I told Matthew Broderick
who's a very nice guy.
He's a fine actor.
The guy was nice enough
to show up here
between plays
at a break.
He had like a two hour break.
Terrific.
To get his ass handed to him.
Gilbert reams him out.
I had to open up
the interview
saying I fucking hated Ferris Bueller.
And what was his response?
Yeah, well, he was very nice about it.
He's a nice person.
What?
Well, you know, it's weird how you look back on some of these 80s movies where I liked Ferris Bueller when I saw it,
but I can't not look at it with my eyes down and go, this is a movie about a sociopath.
Yes, he's a sociopath.
And then there's, of course, you know, the other theory about
Ferris Bueller, of course, is that
Ferris Bueller doesn't exist. It's all in Cameron's
mind. I've heard this. It's a fight club
situation where he's imagining
who he wants to be. That would have been a good movie.
If he hadn't
existed. But it's weird.
Tomorrow, I fly back to L.A., and I'm going to go to the premiere of a new YouTube red show called Cobra Kai.
And remember the movie Karate Kid?
Yes.
Okay, and the blonde villain, Johnny Lawrence, who is in Cobra Kai.
This TV show, it's 10 episodes.
I've seen all 10 episodes, but I'm going tomorrow.
It's Johnny Lawrence, his age now in his 40s.
Love it.
Total loser.
He's never gotten over losing the thing.
And now he and Daniel LaRusso is like this successful auto dealership guy in the valley.
And Johnny Lawrence decides to bring Cobra Kai back and try to get revenge.
And it is so funny.
What a smart idea.
And they found the same actors.
And getting back to Ferris Bueller. and getting back to ferris bueller i also thought okay so the principal you felt sorry for rooney yeah the principal's a
villain because he's got a kid who's constantly missing school and he goes after him as a principal should do and so the kid's missing school
lying to his parents yes yes he's a scumbag right although it is weird now also watching
the movie knowing what you know about jeffrey jones and seeing him obsessed with a teen boy
and and like like oh that's not gonna well. Yeah, you're chasing after a boy.
And it's a shame
because he's such a good actor.
He was so great in Amadeus.
Beetlejuice.
Beetlejuice, he's great.
Devil's Advocate, he was great in.
He was the only funny part
of Howard the Duck
when he gets possessed by that demon.
Remember that the alien monster possesses him?
And all his lines are hilarious.
I think you and I are the two guys that saw Howard the Duck.
Did anybody see Howard the Duck?
I saw it when it came out because I was like, oh, maybe this will be good.
But he has a great, she took my eggs when they're in the diner.
He went underground, the poor guy.
Well, yeah.
What's he going to do?
Show up at auditions?
And it's one of those things.
Like, you know, it's weird to say you feel bad for a guy.
But I feel bad for him.
Well, I feel bad for the fact that, you know, he did have all this talent.
And why couldn't he have, you know,
if you're that talented and clearly that intelligent,
why don't you go seek help
or be self-aware enough to,
you know what I mean?
But I don't,
it's tragic.
And also, ultimately,
the people that he messed with
is awful, you know,
because they were probably
excited to meet him,
like, hey, I like you
in all those movies.
And then, oh boy, oh creepy you know from this show
from listening to this show that we jump around and there's no rhyme or reason to anything wait
no there's no sequence i didn't know we got we this has made perfect sense we've gone from
a caught serial killer to buddy hackett to to pedophilia and then and now we go to
and you know you were talking about that movie that's made from...
He brings his own segues.
I know.
I like that about him.
With the villain from Karate Kid.
Yes.
I always wanted to do sequels to movies where, like, Titanic.
Uh-huh. Sequels to movies. We're like Titanic. I wanted to make a sequel where the Leonardo DiCaprio character does live.
And the two of them get married.
And then she's going, wait a minute.
We're in a rat infested apartment.
Right, exactly.
What if comic books?
Who's going to be cooking my meals?
Right.
And why am I wearing these rags for?
Yeah, and also that thing of like, oh, wait a minute.
No, you were my slumming side snack, but I shouldn't be married to you.
This is awful.
Like, you're fun to spend a crazy night with, but a life, oh, no, this is a,
and he's going to grow up to become a temperamental alcoholic artist.
Yes. You know, who's just like, up to become a temperamental alcoholic artist. Yes.
You know, who's just like, oh.
It's like, wait a minute.
Her choices were this very handsome, stable, violent psychopath and this fun, but also
clearly someday very destructive, like she just had no real options.
It was good that she got away from the music guy and the artist.
She just, she nailed him and then
let him die.
Like, good.
Best of all possible worlds.
As long as we're talking about fantasy scenarios, before we lose this because it's in the intro,
Billy Jack versus Blackula.
Oh.
Maybe my favorite from your book.
Yes.
Your wonderful book, Silver Screen Fiend.
And in the back of the book, one of the last sections of the book, is you imagine fantasy films with fantasy directors.
I imagine a month of films at this place called the New Beverly in L.A.
The owner died, Sherman Torgan, and I go, I want to program one month of movies
that people either dreamed of making or should have been made.
Some of those are based on movies that were being developed at one point.
Yeah.
Like Francis Ford Coppola's Doctor Strange.
He was doing that back in the early 70s,
which is like, wait, what?
Can you imagine?
No, I actually can't.
You put Christopher Walken in yours.
Yes, I did.
He would have been a great Doctor Strange.
Young Christopher Walken?
Yeah.
Would have been an amazing Doctor Strange.
What about Sam Peckinpah's Superman starring Steve McQueen?
He was developing that at one point.
Can you imagine?
He was one of the...
They had him on as director for a little bit, and he wanted...
Wow.
And my dream scene in that would be someone blasts a machine gun at Superman's chest,
and the bullets deflect off and just go into other people, and it's a bloodbath.
All these people die.
And he does it in slow motion.
Yes, yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Falling back with the arms in the air.
And William Holden is Lex Luthor.
I don't know who he is.
You even put the Dreamcast together in each one of these.
Well, Steve McQueen is Superman.
I think you said in the book, fuck it, Hackman will play Luthor again.
Still Hackman. Yeah, he was great. Right, right, right. Yeah, Superman. I think you said, fuck it, Hackman will play Luther again. Fuck it, still Hackman.
Yeah, he was great.
Right, right, right.
Yeah, yeah.
Right.
Come on.
What about Billy Jack versus Blackula?
Because those are two movies that have been discussed on this show.
Yes.
Well, I mean, the first Billy Jack movie, if you've seen it recently, is so insanely slow.
Yeah.
Everyone remembers the ass kicking in the park scene.
Yeah.
And what they forget is it's literally 90 minutes of talking with
three minutes of ass kicking.
It's so bad.
And then, actually, the original Blackula is kind of fun.
It is.
Yeah.
See, now when they talk about Blackula.
Sorry for jumping in.
When they talk about Blackula.
I was a little schizophrenic.
Talk about Dracula. I was a little schizophrenic.
They always review it and they say, and the great William Marshall.
And I'm going, well, what?
Where do we know William Marshall from other than Black Girl?
Pee Wee.
Yeah.
He was on Pee Wee's show.
But he was also, he was a huge Shakespearean actor.
Yeah, wasn't he the king of cartoons or something?
Yeah, on the Pee Wee Herman show.
Who was the other black actor?
Pee Wee's Playhouse.
Lawrence Fishburne.
Lawrence Fishburne.
As the cowboy.
Yes.
Right, right.
Black people on Pee Wee's Playhouse.
That's a whole other.
How is that not some little hipster band's name?
Black people on Pee Wee's Playhouse.
Also, you imagined a biopic, this was sweet, with your friend Sherman,
played by the late great John Cazale.
Yes.
Yeah, the moviegoer.
Yeah.
Michael Percy's the moviegoer.
Yeah, yeah.
And, yeah, that would be a good Sherman biopic.
Yeah, just, I mean, because John Cazale only got to do those five movies
and that one episode of Street Stammerers is gone.
Five big movies.
It's so insane.
He does five movies, but five iconic movies.
Yeah, two best pictures.
Three.
Three best pictures.
Three.
Godfather 2.
And was insanely memorable in all of them.
Yeah.
And playing characters that normally would fade into the background
with the last actor, but he made them so real.
The conversation.
Incredible.
Deer Hunter.
Let's see.
Dog Day Afternoon.
Dog Day.
Oh, Dog Day Afternoon.
Of course.
Yes.
That haircut in Dog Day.
He was great in no looks.
He's so good.
It was really weird because I did a movie, a little movie called Big Fan,
and my mom is played by Marcia Jean Kurtz,
who's one of the bank tellers in Dog Day Afternoon.
There's a Spike Lee film called The Inside Man.
I like that picture.
She also plays a bank teller with the exact same name as her character in Dog Day. And she says, while they're
questioning her, I've been held up before. And it's supposed to be the same
character. Oh, it's like an in-joke. A little in-joke. Oh, I love that.
We talk a lot about Lumet on this show. Oh, Sidney Lumet.
I was just talking about it the other day. Talk about that guy, he does,
didn't he do Dog Day Afternoon, Serpico, and then Murder on the Orient?
Yes.
The craziest shift.
To get away from, to change.
Change it up.
But Murder on the Orient Express is so weirdly violent and dark.
It's G-rated, but that murder scene at the end in the blue light where they're all stabbing the guy is nightmarish.
It's great.
It's one of your
favorite movie moments too.
I saw the Poirot.
And he did another movie
that's a favorite of mine
even though it's not
a perfect film
and he himself
thought it wasn't perfect.
The Wiz?
No.
Oh, God.
That's where
there's no scene
that's passable in that one.
But bye-bye Braverman.
You were talking about this on the show, and when you mentioned that Sorrel Brooke was in it,
I'm like, now I got to go.
I went and downloaded it to watch it.
Sorrel Brooke plays this kind of effeminate, swishy writer.
Yes.
This big red electric typewriter, and it's kind of just a day in the life.
It's really good. Joseph Wiseman shows up in it, too. Dr. Yes. And this big red electric typewriter and it's kind of just a day in the life. It's really good. Joseph Wiseman
shows up in it too. Yeah. Dr. No.
And Jack Warden.
I mean, great actors. Yeah.
But it has the pacing and the stakes
of these little precious indie
films. Yeah. That you would see at Sundance
now, but they were making this in the early
70s. The stakes are so low.
But you care.
When you look at his body of work and you look at things
and then you look at things like Prince of the City
and 12 Angry
Men and Pawnbroker
and it's a wonderful
output. And the verdict.
And the verdict and
Q&A. And Q&A, right.
And then, what is it before? The Devil Knows
You're Dead? Yes. That's a great one. Yes.
Very powerful. That's the last one. Yes. Very powerful.
That's the last one, I think.
Yeah, but I think he was like in his 70s, and it looks like it was made by a 23-year-old on Adderall.
Yeah.
Like it sends so much crazy energy to it.
And that was one of those movies, those rarities, when you got those movies that grab you in the first minute.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
That was one of those ones.
I mean, also, it's Sidney Lumet just going with his life from his skull.
And then that cast.
Yeah.
Philip Seymour Hoffman.
Yeah, it's a wonderful picture.
So, of course, you're into it.
Yeah.
He wrote a book called Making Movies that is so kind of squirmingly honest about what he goes.
I've done a couple of movies where you realize halfway through,
well, this movie is going to suck.
We didn't do it, but I got to finish it.
And then you watch previews going, yep, this is it.
And he never says what the movies are, but you can kind of guess.
Matthew Broderick was sitting in that chair talking about family business.
Oh, was he?
And saying he didn't understand it and he still doesn't.
Yeah.
I think that's the one where in the book he all but says, because he goes,
I got all these huge stars.
It was one of those things like you can't miss, and we're watching the early cuts,
and I'm like, this is, no one's going to go see this.
Such a bummer.
And it was weird.
I guess Sean Connery was supposed to be Irish in that,
even though he's doing a Scottish accent.
But he never doesn't do it.
He's always a Scottish guy.
And so he's got this strong Scottish accent,
but he's Irish,
and his son is Italian,
and his grandson is Jewish.
His son is Dustin Hoffman.
Right.
Yeah.
His son is Italian, but he converts for his wife, and that's how Matthew Broderick is Jewish. His son is Dustin Hoffman. Right. Yeah. His son is Italian, but
he converts for his wife,
and that's how Matthew Broderick is Jewish.
Oh, yes! Yes, yes.
Right. So an Irish
guy's playing a Jew,
the Jew's playing an Italian guy,
and the Scotsman's playing an Irishman.
Yes. You got it. This is like the setup
to the shittiest joke. But it also wasn't the cast.
It was one of those movies where, you know, De Niro was supposed to be in it. Oh, he was? to the shittiest joke. But it also wasn't the cast. It was one of those movies where De Niro was supposed to be.
Oh, he was?
It was a totally different cast.
Wow.
And they just cobbled it together with...
And they're pulling off this criminal operation because of some Chinese guy.
B.D. Wong.
I cannot even remember this.
Oh, my God.
I can't even remember this movie.
Yeah, that's a head scratch.
It's one of those movies that you watch and you immediately forget.
There's nothing to cling to.
No.
Nothing stays with you.
No.
And they all must have been so, oh, my God.
Because that was probably right after Connery won his Oscar.
Also for playing an Irish guy with a Scottish accent.
Correct.
Still won an Oscar.
Well, Broderick's father's in Dog Day, so he wanted to work with Lumet.
James Broderick is the cop.
Oh, at the end.
At the end.
Could you put your gun down?
Correct.
And then he shoots a arrow in the head.
So he was on the Dog Day set as a kid, and he knew Lumet.
No kidding.
And they'd never worked together, and this was their chance to work together.
I didn't.
Okay.
Yeah, but it just didn't happen.
Wow, that makes so much sense, but I still don't care.
It was terrible.
And I always like Prince of the City because unlike Serpico, which is a great movie,
Prince of the City really makes it more, you know, Serpico is black and white.
Yeah.
And Prince of the City, you go, you know,
you're not sure
who to side with.
Right.
And even the main guy,
Treat Williams,
clearly at the end
doesn't even know
am I good or bad.
Like,
he's just so adrift
and he shoots it so well
where he starts off
with all those big wide shots
and the shots keep getting
tighter and tighter
until at the end
you're just stuck.
It's so claustrophobic
watching that film. And it was also the
first time that anyone looked at Jerry Orbach and went,
that's a cop! Because up to that point
he was a fun song and dance man.
They're like, no! Cop!
And that face, and that was it.
We love character actors like you love
character actors. We had Tony Robertson here as
in Serpico. No, that's right. We love to get
these guys in here. And we had
Bruce Stern,
and we had Tony LoBianco.
I know you like... Oh, Honeymoon Killers?
Oh, yeah, the Cohen picture, too.
The one with Andy Kaufman.
Oh, I thought you said the Cohen brothers.
No, the Larry Cohen picture.
God told me to.
Yeah, we had Larry Cohen in here, too,
which was surreal.
I think you already told the story in the show when he was at Cannes with Q, the winged serpent.
Correct.
And Roger Ebert went and saw it, and he comes out.
So you know the story.
Yeah.
He sees Larry and Arkoff.
Right.
He's like, God, you have the most amazing method acting job I've ever seen in the middle of all this shit.
And then Arkoff goes, this shit was my idea.
That's a great story.
And like proud of himself.
Yeah, of course.
The great thing about when Larry Cohen was on this show, it's like you're listening to
him and you're going, I think 99% of this is bullshit.
But he's so much fun.
It's like that nobody had a rifle in the opening scene when the guy's on the tower,
when the sniper's on the tower in God Told Me To.
And the prop guy doesn't bring a gun.
And he's got something like 600 extras down in the street and no gun.
And he got on a bullhorn.
He said, does anybody have a rifle?
Yes.
My God.
And some woman in the crowd said, what we do, and ran home and got a rifle.
And that was the rifle that they used in the movie.
But you hope these stories are true.
I hope they are.
I do know that he told a story about how when the scene where Andy Kaufman is the cop who goes on the shooting spree,
I guess they just went in guerrilla style in an actual parade kind of,
and Kaufman started taunting the parade goers and they
were going to like kill him like they were going to start a fight and then get the scene done
quickly that I believe I could see Andy Coffman just fucking with these people but yeah it was um
I don't know he gave a really Larry Cohen gave this really cool interview years ago where he said
you know Superman Superman never made sense to me because he comes down to Earth in a spaceship in the 50s.
And mom and pa can't find him.
It's in Kansas, in America in the 50s.
So they're going to take him to church every Sunday.
And little baby Clark Kent's going to be sitting there.
Little kid Clark Kent.
And they're talking about this guy named Jesus who comes out of the sky, who has powers and abilities that no one else has.
And he's going to start going, I think I'm Jesus.
I think that's what they're talking about.
And he wouldn't have become a reporter.
He would have started a religion or something.
That was such an interesting take.
He's in L.A.
You should look him up.
You should take him to lunch and hang out with him.
He's a lot of fun.
Yeah, I would imagine.
I think he'd support you.
I've met him at a couple of things,
and I think I got a card from him once and I lost it.
But someday, hopefully, I'll get to hang with him.
But he just seems like a really – he's made some very weird or I just, but someday, hopefully, I'll get to hang with that.
But he just seems like a really, he's made some very weird moves.
The stuff.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, God.
So good.
Oh, and those black exploitation pictures are crazy.
Oh, yeah.
Black Caesar.
Black Caesar.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And he'll up in Harlem.
Really?
Yeah.
And he's got, yeah, listen to that episode for just, you know, they never got permits.
I just didn't.
I mean, real guerrilla filmmaking.
Yeah. And there's one called Bone with Joyce Van Patten. What?, real guerrilla filmmaking. Yeah.
And there's one called Bone with Joyce Van Patten and Yafit Kodo.
That's very disturbing that he shot in his own house.
Oh, Lord.
And the whole movie's on YouTube.
If you got nothing to do one night for two hours.
Okay.
It's a weird fever dream.
But talk about the stuff in the book.
And it's kind of touching, you know, your relationship with Sherman and your five dollar a night film school yeah i used to the beloved new beverly i used to
go to the new beverly uh now you know it's being renovated quentin tarantino bought it and he's
totally refurbishing it but back in the day you could see a double feature every night for five
bucks and i just got a cheap film education but i I remember I would talk to Torgum.
He was always in the ticket booth.
He was just this little face in the ticket booth,
like this little Yoda figure.
And I remember I went there the first time in May of 1995
to see Ace in the Hole and Sunset Boulevard.
That was my first double feature there.
And then I went back.
I mean, I kept going every night.
But then I remember four years into it,
they were showing that double feature again,
and I went to buy my ticket, and Sherman was like,
oh, hey, Pat, and he goes,
I thought you'd be showing me a screenplay by now.
Like, it was his way of going, you need to go and do some stuff.
Like, you've seen enough movies, go make a movie.
That's cool.
Go write a movie.
So it was that little, like, he just kept track of, like,
he saw the world through that screen,
but he remembered everyone that came in and out.
And it was back in the day when you'd go, a couple times I was there, Lawrence Tierney
would show up.
And I was watching, I was there watching Citizen Kane one day for that 900th time.
And I'm half an hour into the movie, enjoying it,
and someone sits down behind me.
I can hear the guy.
And then he just starts, whoever this is, starts talking to the screen and about the movie.
Like, look at the fat ass on that bitch.
That guy.
Oh, you're kissing her, but everyone knows you're a fag.
And I was going to, like, turn around and go, like, would you shut the fuck up?
And it's Lawrence Tierney
just rattling off like
I knew that asshole that fucking
asshole this time
and then it became great like this is
the best DVD commentary I've ever heard
and now I'm really like kind of
digging it and I get like half an hour of him
just dishing on everyone
and when I say dishing it was just like
and that motherfucker right there
that other fucking
asshole. And then his
little handler came in, some kid, and was like,
oh, Larry, there you are. Come on, we gotta go,
man. And then Lawrence
Tierney stands up
and says, I ain't never seen this
cocksucker before. It ain't bad.
And then he let, like, he just saw half
an hour of Citizen Kane out of context.
That's not bad.
Even though, according to him, that's all full of fags and bitches.
That ass is out of there.
Okay, just when the show was starting to get good,
we're going to throw a monkey wrench into the works with this commercial word.
Baseball is finally back. the works with BetMGM. Your one-stop shop for all things baseball. BetMGM.com for Ts and Cs.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Gambling problem?
Call Conax Ontario at 1-866-531-2600.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
That's the sound of fried chicken with a spicy history.
Thornton Prince was a ladies' man. To get revenge, his girlfriend
hid spices in his fried chicken. He loved it so much, he opened Prince's Hot Chicken.
Hot chicken in the window. This is one of many sounds in Tennessee with a story to tell.
To hear them in person, plan your trip at tnvacation.com. Tennessee sounds perfect.
Gil and Frank went out to pee.
Now they're back so they can be on their amazing Colossal Podcast.
Kids, time to get back to Gilbert and Frank's amazing Colossal Podcast.
So let's go.
You, you.
Of course, a very important topic.
You brought up Sunset Boulevard.
Oh, boy.
Now, I got into a talk with, of all people, Jackie the Joke Man about this.
Oh, it was Jackie.
That's right.
And, you know, in the beginning of the movie, she's holding a funeral for her beloved pet chimp.
Right.
And story has it.
I bet you don't know where he's going here, Patton.
No, I don't.
Story has it that rich women back then, like especially in Hollywood where this depravity was going on, chimps were trained to perform cunnilingus.
So these women would buy trained chimps to perform cunnilingus on them.
This is according to Jackie Martling.
Jackie Martling.
But then I looked it up on the internet.
Why did you look that up?
So you went to the verifiable source, the internet, to get the solid information.
Let's back up.
This could be bullshit.
Let's go to the internet where there's no bullshit.
Let's go to the internet.
You so wanted it to be true.
Where they're reporting John Travolta died today.
Yeah, exactly.
Let's go check that out.
The old gray lady, the internet. Okay, exactly. Let's go check that out. The old gray lady
of the internet.
Okay, but hang on.
Let's say that is true.
Let's say they were training chimps
to perform. I don't want you to say it's true.
Okay, but when chimps get older,
don't they go crazy and get feral?
They'll break people's jaws and eat their faces
off. Why
did we never hear about some actress getting killed by her pussy-eating chimp?
Gil?
Well, the studio.
With the fixers.
Eddie Maddox.
They would set fire to the house she was in, and her corpse would be destroyed.
Well, part of that story was that Wilder goes up to Gloria Swanson and gives her that piece of direction at the beginning.
Oh, yes. Yes. Wilder
said, remember,
you're fucking the chimp.
It gets better.
Remember, you're fucking the chimp.
All right. We're losing the light.
Quickly.
And you mentioned Ace in the Hole, which was Remember, you're fucking the chimp. All right, we're losing the light. Quickly. We're fucking it.
And you mentioned Ace in the Hole, which was also the great, the big carnival.
Yeah, big carnival.
And also, you know, the slang term for that movie was.
Why?
Because it failed so horribly because he was riding such a high.
Right.
He's like, this is the movie I want to do.
I've got control now.
And they called it Ass in the Ringer because it lost so much goddamn money.
It was such a bomb.
It became like such a respected.
Pretty ballsy movie.
Oh, God, it was so ballsy for its day.
And because it really is ahead of the time on talking about the media and how false.
And fake news and how the news is whatever you decide to make it.
We will just keep changing the story.
It was really, I think it was just, but he delivers the message with such a fucking sledgehammer
because Kirk Douglas is such an asshole with no garlic pickles.
He's just.
Hulk Hest is great.
Yeah.
Oh, that Hulk.
Yeah.
The guy from, that played Animal in Starlight 17, who's just dying slowly in this goddamn
mine.
Yes.
Leo, we're waiting for you, Leo.
Whatever they, remember they're singing to him.
And they're changing it where they have a way to rescue him earlier.
Way quicker. And he, yeah.
And Kirk Douglas and the sheriff bury it
because they want him in the mine longer
because they're making so much money.
And when he slaps the wife to make her cry for the news.
Kirk Douglas was not afraid to play an asshole.
No.
Look at the bad and the beautiful.
Oh, my God.
And some of those performances.
I think Mad City.
I think that Travolta Hoffman movie
is an Ace in the Hole remake.
Yeah, it was an Ace in the Hole remake.
Yeah.
And not very good.
No.
Yeah.
Yeah, Travolta and Hoffman.
Tell the story, too,
and it's a sweet story.
Can you tell that Casablanca story
about the new Beverly?
Oh, this is going to make me so sad.
Oh, you don't have to tell it.
But it's sweet.
It's in the book.
It is sweet.
Okay, yeah. One night, the new new beverly was friday night raining go see casablanca for my
20th time um with all the other weirdos who again you know i look back on it now i'm like i was in
my 20s i was i wasn't bad looking i could have been but i was like no i want to be in the dark
with these 80 year old um film freaks with their, you know, just seeing this movie
for a hundred times and watching Casablanca and right near, it's literally like in a comedy
sketch, it's right as they're saying goodbye at the airport, he goes, I mean, listen, sweetheart,
I promise you, and then the film broke at that moment, which is, everyone's like, oh
God, but it was so bad for it to break at that moment.
It was also funny.
So we kind of started laughing.
And then you could hear them fixing the projector,
and they didn't turn the lights on.
We're just sitting there.
And everyone just started whistling as time goes by in the dark
while they fixed it, the whole theater.
I love that.
On a rainy Friday night, there were maybe 30 of us in this theater.
So just like if you could have done one of those montage scenes of like, it's 1996 in L.A., let's cut to this dance club, this bar, this movie premiere, this restaurant, and then these 30 people just alone in this little theater in the rain whistling and then just cut to the next thing.
Like that was going on somewhere in the city that night.
There's just that image to me.
That's the picture you paint in the book.
It's vivid.
It's vivid.
Now, it's funny because you talk about your childhood there or your teenage and 20s.
And I remember during my teens, they used to have revival houses all over Manhattan.
Oh, gone.
Wait a minute.
What year was this?
Like in the 70s or 60s? 60s and 70s. Well, there was the biograph. There, wait a minute. What year was this? Like in the 70s or
60s and 70s? Well, there was the Biograph.
There was the Regency. Yeah.
The late 60s, early 70s was
the heyday of
revival theaters in New York. It was non-stop.
St. Mark's Cinema. The
Waverly. Waverly. Gone.
I would go to them a lot.
I would catch old
movies.
You know, old Marx Brothers movies or obscure films.
And the funny thing is now when I look back on it and picture myself going to those theaters, it makes me very sad. It kind of makes me sad, too. Like what was drawing me
into the darkness during the years when I should have been out in the sun?
me into the darkness during the years when I should have been out in the sun.
Like my wife now, I've remarried and she was one of those people that, and she's an actress and she's amazing.
Her name is Meredith Salinger.
She was in Dream a Little Dream.
Yes, of course.
We met backstage.
Yes, you met backstage.
I met her in the green room.
She was quite a hottie as I remember.
Still is.
Yeah.
In fact, I'm sure I must have jerked off to one of her movies.
She'll be so pleased.
Yeah, that's a J.D. Salinger.
Next time you're having sex with your wife.
Oh, I'll make sure to mention that.
Picture me jerking off, sitting in a movie theater with my dick in my hands jerking off to your wife while you're...
As a matter of fact, next time you're having sex with your wife, imagine you're fucking me.
You got Dave on that one.
Yes, yes.
Oh, my God.
You got Dave on that one. Yes, yes.
For the rest of your life,
any time you have sex with your wife,
you'll picture that you really fucking made.
Wow, thanks.
See you in 10 years, erections.
10.
Oh, God.
But, you know, she was,
she didn't see a lot of movies because,
no, are you kidding?
She's making movies.
I was making movies, but I was also at the beach, and I was, you know, going out with hot guys and enjoying life, and I was just in the dark.
But I just – but I love those little moments, these weird pockets of time. the village back in the early 70s that – I forget what it was called. But during the day, Richard Pryor and George Carlin, before they were who they were –
Oh, was that Hanson's or something?
Might have been.
But they would like do handoffs just doing stand-up to whoever was sitting there.
And it was like eight people.
And then they would like – and people would just ignore them like,
the fuck is this shit?
Because they were kind of going through their transformation.
So again, you could do that montage of late 60s, early 70s New York City
where this amazing thing is going on on Broadway,
and there's a thing at the Met and this restaurant and this scene,
and then you cut to this little coffee shop,
and these two guys who are going to be giants someday.
That's right.
Are eight people are just like, oh, God, shut the hell up.
You know, like, I just love those little moments.
That's what this show is about.
Stuff we missed.
It really is.
Yeah.
Errors we missed out on and things we didn't we didn't actually get to experience.
Why weren't you there for that?
Yeah.
Someone pointed out that the hotel that I'm staying at, there's a little bodega next door.
We were pulling up today and they're like, see that bodega? I'm like, hey, that used to be Max's Kansas hotel that I'm staying at, there's a little bodega next door.
We were pulling up today, and they're like, see that bodega?
I'm like, yeah, that used to be Max's Kansas City.
I'm like, what?
Yep.
Literally Max.
And now it's a little bodega.
New York's changed, my friend.
Oh, and it will always, every 10 years you'll come back and half of it's gone.
Are you worried about the demise of movie theaters?
I'm worried now more about, I'm not as worried about the demise of movie theaters as i'm worried now more about i'm not as worried about the demise of movie theaters i'm worried about the demise of just a basic knowledge of of just a basic outline of film
history because it's going to let a lot of people that are audacious but not talented get away
with rewarming stuff and being hailed as geniuses or being you know what i mean like there's it'll
be less i mean there will always be originality but originality is going to fight harder and harder
for air but the thing that's really scaring me right now in la are all these weird little uh
small business uh stores that are run by people that aren't necessarily in it for the profit it's
almost like they have their collection of stuff on display.
So there's like a weird little bookstore like Dark Delicacies
or a little place like Secret Headquarters or House of Secrets
or a little vintage store like Bearded Lady all along Magnolia.
And what happened, like I was driving through Silver Lake
where Silver Lake has all these great little vinyl record stores
and eateries and little clothing stores and knick-knack stores.
And right near Rosemont and Sunset now, there's a giant, one of those three plexes with a Starbucks, a Chipotle, and a hamburger habit right smack in the middle of Silverlake now in L.A. and East L.A.
And I'm like, that's the beginning of the end of all the small businesses.
Oh, yeah.
Once that thing lands, think of that as like – that movie the monolith monsters yeah those rocks and they would land and they
would just start taking over the landscape that's what that is and then mom and pop businesses just
because the the the uh landlords go oh wait a minute but here's what sucks i have nothing
against chipotle and starbucks great but they're they are accessible everywhere but the two blocks of Magnolia that
have those weird little stores that's the only place you can go there and every week no they
don't make crazy money during the week but on the weekend they do great because that's the only place
you can go get them and then people go shopping then they go to a Starbucks and they want to
gut all those stores and drop Starbucks in there they want to drop a Starbucks half a mile from the Starbucks you were going to go to
when you were done antiquing.
Same thing's happening here on the Upper East Side.
Oh, it is?
Yeah, sure, sure.
Yorkville, I mean, it was, you know, it was a German neighborhood
and it was all mom and pop shops for years.
I mean, until recently.
And it's being driven out by that kind of stuff.
And you see the, you know, so the bakery that's been there since 1919 closes.
It just is. and they don't and it bothers me like that again i have no problem with capitalism and profit but it's like what starbucks makes 20 billion a year but someone
in the world goes but what if we made 21 how does that how does 21 change anything from 20 at that point? You've made it. You should actually relax.
That's like that part in Chinatown.
Yeah.
How much richer can you be?
How much better can you eat?
Yeah.
How much better can you eat?
What can you buy that you can't already afford?
The future, Mr. Gates.
Are those cool stores still there,
like Larry Edmonds Bookshop in Hollywood
and Script City and those places still hanging on?
Hanging on by their fingertips.
I'm sure.
I remember, too, like when I was in my teens and 20s,
I would walk around in the street
and there were junk stores that you'd go in, you could kill your entire day in one of those stores.
Roll bookstores where you could go and kill an entire day.
Oh, well, like, right, Strands is still there, but there used to be about a hundred of these tiny bookstores around.
But the thing that was great about those stores was not only were they selling books, they were also selling The Hunt.
Of course.
Part of filling yourself with endorphins is The Hunt.
Yeah.
And we're getting rid of The Hunt.
Record stores too.
Yeah.
And that's why I did a lot of stuff on Record Store Day, the whole vinyl thing.
Oh, that's great.
Talk about that.
Because they're all holding on.
Amoeba Records might be going away or might shrink and all these other places.
So it really, I don't know.
It gives me the heebie-jeebies a little bit because it makes me look at Noah Cross.
At least Noah Cross was trying to build a future of water and whatever it was he was trying to build.
These people, they don't even want to own the future.
They want to – there is no future if everything is just Chipotle, Starbucks, hamburger habit.
Chipotle, Starbucks, it's just boom, boom, that's it.
And I can easily see a day very nearby where there are no movie theaters.
Absolutely.
I can see that.
We're heading there and that's really, really scaring me.
I moved back to New York
in 2003 from LA
and I think at least
15 theaters have disappeared
in the 13 years,
14 years
that I've been back.
I mean,
and none of those
revival houses exist anymore
and then the goddamn
Ziegfeld went away.
Wait,
what?
It's gone.
Yeah,
Ziegfeld's gone.
It's gone.
Oh,
shit.
It's heartbreaking. Yeah, andiegfeld's gone. It's gone. Oh, shit. It's heartbreaking.
Yeah.
And nothing to replace it, believe me.
I remember the Waverly would make the – when they had El Topo, the legendary distributor Ben Barinholtz.
Yes.
And –
We worked with the Coens.
Yeah.
But he famously – he took out newspaper ads the size of a postage stamp, just said El Topo at midnight.
And then in the window of the – no poster, just a piece of cardboard, El Topo at midnight.
No one knew what that meant.
And word of mouth just – that's how – because I remember there was a Simpsons writer named George Meyer that was like, you know, things that are just inherently good and interesting will catch on without like that's why when they have these gigantic ad campaigns for milk or the family.
Well, something's kind of weird about those.
But something like yoga or some weird little – there's no giant – there's no yoga council.
It's just people do it and go, look, I know it's going to sound really weird.
It really works.
It's great.
Go do it.
It doesn't need the – it's the do it. It doesn't need the giant.
It's the stuff that is inherently shitty that needs the giant push because it's not all that good.
And I've noticed, too, in newspapers, which saying the word newspaper sounds ancient.
Oh, my God, yeah.
There used to be a whole big section of ads for movies.
I got some fans have been sending those to me.
They've been sending me old newspapers from the 70s and 60s with the full-page ads where there's like 20.
I'll share them with you.
You don't see those.
There's no big movie section in newspapers anymore.
No, no.
And there won't be newspapers anymore.
Well, like you said, everybody, you know, soon everybody will have a theater in their house.
The TVs are getting bigger and bigger.
Or even worse, but then the home theater is going to go away because what's going to happen is.
That too.
They're doing the VR thing where you can put a headset on and it creates the experience of being.
And you'll watch, you know, you'll plug in something the size of a cigarette pack,
but it'll feel like you're sitting in the Arclight or the Cinerama Dome.
That's how big the screen will seem to you.
And you'll have on noise canceling headphones, you'll have this great sound.
Now, look, fine, I'm not against anyone's amusement,
but a movie, you will see a movie different,
you'll see different things about it when you watch it with a bunch of people.
Of course, there's nothing like it.
You'll see it all differently with a bunch of people.
That's the thing, that experience.
Well, number one, putting your shoes on and going to a movie theater.
Yeah, exactly.
And then being in a movie theater where everyone laughs at the same time,
screams at the same time.
Or even when you're in a movie that's not working is so fascinating.
When there's a comedy and they've clearly landed what they thought was going to be a joke
and the audience is like, ah. Yeah, yes. That, to me, I love. It's a comedy and they've clearly landed what they thought was going to be a joke and the audience is like ah
yeah yes
like that to me
I love
it's a group thing
it really is a group thing
and then
especially
the other thing
I miss about Revival
and I'm so jealous of you
you were
because not only
did you have access
to all these
rep theaters
but you had access
to Times Square
and all those grindhouses
where you never knew
what was playing
some weird thing
that would
there's a guy one of my favorite filmmakers a guy named Andy Milligan and all those grindhouses where you never knew what was playing. Some weird thing that would,
there's a guy,
one of my favorite filmmakers,
a guy named Andy Milligan.
Andy Milligan made Torture Garden
and The Rats Are Coming,
The Werewolves Are Here
and Dr. Jekyll's Sister Hyde.
He was the ghastly ones.
He was the,
he was,
he made like Ed Wood
look like Wes Anderson.
His shit was so awful
and half of his filmography is gone because he would make films He made Ed Wood look like Wes Anderson. His shit was so awful.
And half of his filmography is gone because he would make films for these grindhouse theaters.
They would show them for the weekend, and then they would call the distributor going,
where do we mail this back?
And they're like, oh, we don't fucking toss it.
We don't want it.
We're not paying the postage for that shit.
Just send us the money you made, and we're done.
I don't care.
And he would just – but there was no such thing as previewing it, a poster, nothing.
You walked in and the ghastly ones, the fuck is this?
Those days are gone too. Times Square.
Well, they would have porn and kung fu movies.
But slasher movies like Maniac or you could see Abel Ferrara pictures like Driller Killer or stuff like that.
I saw in Times Square.
News 45.
In Times Square I saw.
It's all gone.
Make Them Die Slowly.
Yes.
Wait a minute.
And Catch Them and Kill Them.
Make Them Die Slowly is the jungle one, like the cannibals?
Yes.
Both of them.
Both of them.
Yeah. Jungle one, like the cannibals? Yes, both of them. Both of them would have like a half a minute scene in Manhattan,
and then they'd go to the jungle with actual tribes.
Yeah, yeah.
And I basically, I think the correct term is fucking guineas.
He's obsessed with these Italian directors
who are working in the States under pseudonyms.
Well, I mean, initially they made...
Dr. Butcher.
They made Sergio Leone work under a pseudonym.
They let him use his own name.
But there was this guy that was the...
He was the asylum films of his time.
He did The Visitor and Tentacles
and where he would see a movie that was coming out and he would very quickly crank out an imitation.
And this movie called The Visitor that was his – it's The Exorcist but also Close Encounters.
He slapped together three fucking movies.
I don't even know this picture.
And the goddamn cast.
It's like Glenn Ford and John Huston.
It is the nuttiest goddamn movie.
It's called The Visitor.
Oh, you have to go see it.
I know a movie called The Night Visitor.
Do you know this picture with Max Ancito?
No.
About a guy who escapes from a mental hospital at night and commits killings
and then sneaks back into the mental hospital?
That sounds familiar.
Do you know this picture?
Sounds great.
Also worth seeing. Now, a more recent film that's one of these, like, low budget,
but let's see what movies work and slap them together.
There's one movie.
It has to do with finding lost footage,
and it's after the Blair Witch project came out.
Well, there were a ton of those
so they found lost footage so it's all very shaky cheap camera work and where they're stuck in a
place with dinosaurs so it's a it's a hybrid of Blair Witch and Jurassic Park. Holy shit. Yeah. This isn't
Roger Corman's
Carnosaur, is it?
No.
Carnosaur was the movie
with...
I think Clint Howard's
in Carnosaur, isn't he?
And he probably is.
I think he is.
I know you got
a Clint Howard thing.
What's her name?
Laura Dern.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We had Corman here too,
which was...
Oh, that must have been
amazing.
Surreal.
Just to have Corman
and Larry Cohen
and Dick Miller wait a minute Laura Dern wasn't in Carnosaur was she well wait wait no because
which one's the Jurassic Park that's Laura Dern and Sam Neill is it Diane what's her name Diane
Ladd her mother yeah maybe your mom in Carnosaur yeah I think she's the mad scientist. I've got to go look that up right now. Paul, research.
Yeah, well, okay.
Sometime in this next decade, Paul will come up with that.
But, you know, again, there were these little –
I remember there was this movie I was obsessed with for years
to the point where I did a bit about it called Deathbed,
the bed that eats.
And it's about a bed that indeed is possessed by a demon
and when people fuck on the bed, the bed eats them.
It was a way to get like soft core
and then people would just get dissolved by the bed.
And it was this legendary like lost film.
But then someone found a picture of Times Square,
one of these with Deathbed on the marquee,
which probably played for a day and then vanished.
And then eventually it showed up again like 10 years,
showed up like five or six years ago on DVD,
and I did a screening of it at the Alamo Drafthouse
just so that I could see it.
Like I should see this movie.
It's so fucking bad.
There was some movie, believe it or not, low budget,
believe it or not low budget
and
and it had to do
with
a deadly
a girl
with this deadly
vagina
that had teeth
it was called teeth
yeah oh teeth
the movie was called teeth
and her vagina grew teeth
yes
vagina dentata
what do they call that
vagina dentata
vagina dentata
right
thanks uh
Sigmund Freud
right
sounds like the Lion King song
like the sci King song.
Like the sci-fi channel, Vagina.
Diane Ladd, we have a...
Diane Ladd.
Yes, thank you. Oh my lord.
Thank you, crack research team.
But yeah, places like the asylum,
and then also just people that are doing direct-to-video stuff,
that's the new grindhouse now.
And also, like, there's stuff – Netflix has this sort of hidden basement now.
When you go searching for horror and sci-fi, there's suddenly – if you go, like, to row eight or nine, it's suddenly these movies.
You're like, where the fuck did this come from?
And you give it a check out.
It's pretty cool.
I remember being in Times Square.
And they still still the idea of
double features that's an god also gone but there was a i wish to christ i had brought a camera
with me yeah because there was a double feature of ford fairlane and problem oh my god wow gilbert gotford extravaganza wow that's
disturbing there's there are some moments in in fort fair lane my brother was pointing out to me
that the movie fort fair lane doesn't work but there are these individual moments that are so
goddamn funny when he after he comes and sees you and i remember because the exterior is shot in
front of the director's guild building on sunset it's like it's like if the camera panned over he'd be across
from the laugh factory and you've just said i'll give you like a thousand dollars but you only give
me you go no no dessert till after you finish you only give him a hundred and then he walks out and
it's his voice where he goes money money money money oh yeah and he does this weird little kind of Dutch kick dance.
It's the weirdest moment, and it makes me laugh so hard every time.
It's out of nowhere.
I saw you and Karen, your friend Karen, grabbing the Blast of Silence
where they turned you loose in the Academy's film archive.
Got to go to the Academy archives and go watch Blast of Silence.
Yeah, they're going to let me start doing that again.
TCM is doing their big film festival.
They're opening their vault.
And the thing that they're showing this Saturday,
but I don't think I can see it because it's at midnight and I have a very early Sunday,
is one of my favorite movies.
It's a Timothy Carey film.
Oh, I know this picture.
You know it?
Oh, God.
John Cassavetes' favorite comedy.
Yes, yes, yes.
The World's Greatest Sinner.
Right. World's Greatest Sinner is this movie. Gilbert, you have to see this goddamn movie. it oh god what john cassavetes favorite comedy yes yes yes the world's greatest sinner right
world's greatest sinner is this movie gilbert you have to see this goddamn movie timothy carey
um who is a fucking lunatic and he wrote produced shot starred in directed edited
this movie it took him five years to make he would make it piecemeal he would shoot some
and he would kind of, so he kind of.
It's legendary.
It's legendary,
and it's this black and white movie
about a guy who decides
he's got an insurance salesman,
who decides he's got
and forms a rock and roll band
and forms a religion,
and the soundtrack was done
by a then 18-year-old.
I used to know this.
Give me a hint.
I can't really think of a hint.
I'm just going to tell you.
Okay.
Frank Zappa.
Yes.
And it is so goddamn bonkers,
but really, really funny.
Okay, we'll watch that one.
It's called The World's Greatest Sinner.
You'll love it.
See, now this is something
also that gets me.
It's like years ago,
they could make these weird films
that are totally out there.
Like Spider Baby.
Yeah. Oh, God,. Like Spider Baby. Yeah.
Oh, God, I love Spider Baby so much.
You're going to get them on the show, Sid Higgins.
You did?
We're going to.
Oh, God.
We're going to get them.
And it's like now when they make a movie that looks like it's going to be weird and out there,
you know they made it totally conscious.
Right.
No, like The World's Greatest greatest sinner timothy carey thinks he is
making a serious statement on our times and he just he's a he's a goddamn lunatic like but but
he does not think he's making a crazy movie he does he's not tongue-in-cheek he's not trying to
be funny and that's what makes it so amazing that's like a spider baby a subgenre of crackpot
movies yeah movies made by by guys who think they're visionaries.
Deadly serious.
Yes.
Yeah.
Like, well, obviously The Room.
Oh, God.
The Room.
Maybe The Granddaddy.
All of Neil Breen stuff is amazing.
Neil Breen.
I can't think of a title.
Look up Neil Breen.
Okay, not familiar, but I'm writing it down.
He is the Tommy Wiseau of, oh, boy.
Writing it down.
Another star and director.
And then there's a guy, oh, what the hell is his name?
He made a movie called, it's either called Road to Revenge,
but it's also called Get Even, but the spacing on the title,
he squashes it together so the title card says Get-a-vin.
And he is, oh my God, you have to, they're amazing.
Classic.
Total vanity projects, but also I'm bringing the masses something that will change the world.
Yes.
And you watch and go, what the fuck is wrong with this person? By the way, both you guys did TCM Essentials.
What did you pick for your Essentials?
Late great Robert Osborne.
Yeah, I did it with the great Robert Osborne.
He was terrific.
Oh, man.
He was so cool.
Lovely guy.
So cool.
And my movies were The Conversation.
There you go.
Freaks.
Well, because you're such a huge Shields and Yarnell fan.
More Yarnell than Shields.
Yeah, they're the mimes in the beginning.
Yeah.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah.
With Cindy Williams.
Yeah. With Cindy Williams. Yeah.
With Cindy Williams.
Very good.
The conversation.
Forgotten that.
Freaks.
By the way,
Freaks was one of the,
it was the only time
in a movie,
because I've been to
a lot of movies
where I've seen parents
just bring a kid
and then you want to go,
I don't want to be
the asshole that goes,
don't have your
fucking kid in here.
I went to see Maniac
at midnight and there was a guy holding a baby.
William Lustig.
And William Lustig introduced the film.
He goes, thank you all for coming out.
We made this movie back in 1979 on a wing and a prayer.
Joe Spinell.
And then someone went, Joe Spinell fucking rules.
God bless you.
He's dead now.
So after the movie, I'll be in the lobby.
I might be in the lobby. I might be in the lobby.
Hang on.
Now I'm leaving.
All right.
Enjoy the movie.
That was his introduction for the film.
Anyway.
The other ones, the original of Mice and Men.
With Lon Chaney.
With Chaney Jr.
And the swimmer.
And talk about strange films.
The swimmer with Clint Lancashire.
And a very young Joan Rivers.
And it's based on a John Cheever short story or a John Updike short story?
Yes, yes, yes.
John Cheever.
That movie is incredible.
And that was one of those movies.
It's weird, but not with that self-conscious sense of weirdness.
It's one of those that it's so different.
It draws you in.
Yeah.
You can't turn it off.
And it's got that actor in it from when we do a whole show talking about Chuck
McCann in the Right Guard commercials.
Oh, that guy whose name I don't know.
Bill Fiore.
Bill Fiore.
Very good. A terrific character actor. My God, you impress me. And he's in that. Yeah. commercials that oh that guy whose name i don't know uh bill fiori bill fiori very good a terrific
character my god and he's in that yeah i cannot picture him he's chuck mccann did these commercials
for right guard a million years ago hi guy he would open his medicine chest and he was and
the the neighbor was on the other side of the medicine chest and that was this guy bill fiori
it's like a gino conforti type oh, okay. Oh, when you were talking about Tierney.
Oh, boy.
I once met Alice Cooper, who became friends with Groucho Marx.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, sure.
And he said the two of them would watch the late show together.
Oh, wow.
And Groucho would be sitting there, he said, going, you see that actor over in that scene?
He was a big fag.
You doing old Groucho with poor Dick Cavett hanging on every word like please get to a joke.
And the guy,
how do you describe him?
My favorite description was
he's skinny,
but he somehow still has a pot belly.
Yes, yes.
And Rydie,
oh God.
Oh, but the other,
you mentioned Freaks.
That was the only,
that was the one time
where there was a guy behind me
with a kid.
It was at the old silent movie theater before it became Cinefamilie. It was one time when there was a guy behind me with a kid. It was at the old
silent movie theater
before it became Center Family.
It was one time
when I was like,
and I wasn't being mean about it,
I'm like,
the kid was like eight.
I'm like,
you should take your kid home.
He shouldn't watch this.
And he's like,
oh, it's an old movie.
I'm like,
this is not what you think it is
and it's really going to mess him up.
I'm just telling you.
And I think they stayed
for about 15 minutes
and the kid was like,
I want to go.
The whole movie,
you're freaks.
Even when it's not
a scary scene,
it's still scary.
Oh, it's disturbing.
The long shot
of the woman
out in the woods with him
and they're just kind of
frolicking around
is so disturbing.
Oh, my God.
So disturbing.
Oh, God.
What were the movies
you picked
before we lose track of it?
Oh, really quickly,
310 to Yuma. Oh, it's a good the movies you picked before we lose track of it? Oh, really quickly, 310 to Yuma.
Oh, it's a good one. The Glenn Ford original.
Glenn Ford and Van Heflin, which basically the whole
movie is about an older
gay dude who
is sick of his young rough trade
and he wants to settle down
with another rugged old bear
and he tries to seduce
Van Heflin. If you watch it, I mean, he's lying in the bridal suite up in the bed just going,
why don't you just join me and my gang?
And his Glenn Ford's attendant is this guy, skinny blonde guy all in black leather.
And it looks like this little like rent boy.
It's the weirdest.
And it's an Elmore Leonard script.
That's right.
Yeah.
They remade it not too well with Russell Crowe.
Actually, they remade it really well,
but it was more like, you know,
just rugged, manly, violent,
but the original for the 50s.
And then it had the great song sung by
the guy that sang Blazing Saddles.
Judge Frankie Lane.
Frankie Lane.
Yeah.
So I showed that.
I showed the, oh God god why am i blanking um
kind hearts and cornets oh that's wonderful which is alec guinness uh playing seven different
assholes being killed off by an even bigger asshole and then i uh showed these this columbian
film called the wind journeys worst title for a great It's made in the early aughts about a guy who's convinced
he has the devil's accordion
and must travel to the edge of the world
and throw it off.
Jesus.
And he just,
it's the low budget shot in Columbia
as he travels through the landscape
and it's so beautiful
and he's got this accordion.
He believes it's the devil's accordion
and it makes him do weird stuff.
It's brilliant.
And then this Belgian comedy called ultra about these two douchebags one of them is a stoner that drives
a tractor combine the other one is a professor at some shitty college and they hate each other
they get into this huge fight out in this field and the combine like malfunctions and crushes
both of them and makes them both quadriplegics. And then they travel across Belgium in these little motorized wheelchairs
to go to the company Altra that built the pharmacopoeia to sue them.
And you follow these two, and they become even,
they're paralyzed and they're even bigger assholes now.
And it's so, it's like this classic Laurel and Hardy comedy,
but they're in these little, and you see these long shots
of them just buzzing along.
I'm not doing it justice, but it's so funny.
Where do you find these offbeat pictures?
I mean, there's this subscription service called Film Movement where every month they go to film festivals.
And they find really cool films that get all this attention.
You've seen this.
You go to a film festival.
Film gets all these awards.
It doesn't get any distribution.
So every month they send you a new film.
And they send you really interesting stuff.
They sent me Ultra.
I'm writing these down.
Wind Journey sounds like.
They should have called it The Devil's Accordion.
That sounds like a Herzog thing.
Yeah.
It's amazing.
Pretty out there.
Yeah.
And then Ultra.
A-A-L-T-R-A.
Let me ask you real quick a couple of questions.
Yes.
From listeners.
Oh, God. We're dying to ask you questions. I couple of questions from listeners. Oh, God.
We're dying to ask you questions.
I'll go quick.
Chris Hankinson, how is production on MST3000 going?
We are starting next week, and that's all I can say.
We don't want to talk about the movies that we're doing.
Conniff was here.
Oh, he was.
Right in that seat.
Okay, but we're doing some pretty interesting films this time around.
The last season we did, season 11, there's a film in there called Carnival Magic.
My brother was a writer on that show, and he was like, I'm going to commit suicide if I have to watch this movie.
Because he was writing the jokes.
I came in one day, and he was like, I'm going to kill myself.
This is the worst movie I've ever seen.
Your brother Matt.
My brother Matt.
Funny guy and a great Twitter feed.
Funny guy, great Twitter account.
This is quick from Big Daddy.
Pat and welcome to the GGACP universe.
You poor man.
You said Repo Man was a
game-changing inspiration.
Yes. Can you talk
a little bit about either Repo Man, Barbarossa,
or Richard Pryor live in
concert? Well, Richard Pryor live
in concert just goes without saying. It was what
made me go, oh, you can... A comedian is like watching a movie movie, a really good one, is just as good as seeing a movie because of all the little images.
I saw it in the theater.
Yeah, of course.
Now, when you saw that film, were you aware that Marlon Brando fucked Richard Pryor in the ass?
You know what?
It was weird.
I saw that movie when I was 11, and as little as I knew, I could sense.
I was like, you know what?
This is going to sound really weird coming out of an 11-year-old.
Pretty sure that guy was fucked by Marlon Brando.
He has a fucked by Marlon Brando vibe coming off of him.
You're a hip 11-year-old.
When you were a little kid, you said, is that Marlon Brando's cum
dripping down
Richard Pryor's leg?
Is that Kurt's cum
on Pryor?
He's got Kurt's cum on him.
Repo Man was just that thing of
it hit me right at the right time I'm a teenager
I'm in the suburbs
I'm bored
I discovered punk way too late
and just that movie about
having a job
where you get to be an asshole
to other people
that was where my head was
you just take stuff from people
they can't do anything about it
and then somehow there's aliens
and it also was like
it was
it's shot in the shittiest parts of LA
but it makes them look so beautiful you just want to go live i don't know that movie is just i i want to live
in that movie as grimy and horrible as it is and and harry dean stanton is non-stop we love harry
dean stanton oh my god he's so wish we'd gotten him here but i heard him on benson's podcast and
he basically just he was on doug loves movies at a live episode you know about this no oh you can
track it down and he basically sat there and and gave monosyllabic responses yeah for about an hour so i could
totally see we didn't pursue it no this isn't gonna go anywhere we will return to gilbert
godfrey's amazing colossal Podcast after this. Now playing under the big top at Toronto Lakeshore Boulevard West. The world is yours to create.
Tickets at Cirque du Soleil.com.
Echo thanks its presenting partners Sun Life and its official partners Air Canada and MasterCard.
Treats for every celebration, big or small.
Make it easy and breezy with our legendary lineup of summer must-tries from the PC Insider's Report Summer Edition. Like our new flake-outs, there are delicious twists on the croissant donut
with 24 layers of croissant flakiness twisted with fancy donut fun.
Get ready to go all out for less.
I just got to ask you quick about Ratatouille.
Oh, boy.
And Mike Giacchino's coming here, by the way, too, in a couple of weeks.
I'll just yeah
the rat is anti-semitic
and there's none
let Gilbert
yeah
let Gilbert
well that show
it'll appeal
to the masses
now I can't say
anything sentimental
oh god
go ahead
or talk about
how god damn good it is and how well it holds up.
I mean, it's just...
It is so goddamn good.
I mean...
Not a false move.
Not a false moment.
No, not a false moment.
None of the stakes are ever false.
Brad Bird is just so...
They're rats, and you're rooting
for these goddamn rats and he went out
of his way to make them look and
act like rats. Didn't they study rats?
Weren't they studying?
The animators were? Studied rats,
studied kitchens, they studied, they went
and they built a separate computer program so that
the tiles in the kitchen would all be
uneven because they would go to these great kitchens
all the tiles were uneven and they made sure that it wasn't this nice grid.
I had a friend who was a chef.
He was like, oh, my God, in the background, there's always a pot of potatoes and water,
which every restaurant, they always have potatoes soaked in the water, ready to go.
That's what restaurants have.
It's a great—
They've got all these little—they're just little throwaway background details.
It's a great movie about creativity.
And, yeah, and how— how and individuality you can't decide
where creativity is going to land and when if it lands someplace weird help it out help it out if
it lands someplace weird it's then that whole cast i have to say i'm just watching it again
last night in home and you and janine christ and brad and peter o'toole they the animators would
have fights they would draw lots to see who got to animate Peter O'Toole's lines
because they played me his dialogue years before they animated it.
I spent two years on that.
Were you always alone, by the way?
Because I know Gilbert was in the booth
because Gilbert didn't interact with Robin Williams.
No, I was always alone.
Most of what I would do it alone.
Most voiceover you are alone.
Yeah.
And sometimes I would do it alone. Most voiceover you are alone. Yeah. And sometimes I would do it with Jonathan Freeman, who was Jafar.
Oh.
Oh, because you're going back and forth.
Yeah.
But even then, when you're with someone, they don't want you overlapping your dialogue.
No.
You're still very much doing it by yourself.
That's what always gets me when I hear these stories.
That's what always gets me when I hear these stories.
Oh, God, when Robin and Gilbert were together in that sound booth, that would be crazy.
And I thought I never ran into him once during the break.
No, no.
Most voiceovers, I do a lot of voiceover, and I'm always alone.
But I heard the Simpsons, or at least they used to, do it like an old radio show.
Maybe they did at the beginning, but – and also think of when they were starting out.
I mean digital technology, recording technology, you can record shows anywhere.
There's a show that I do for SyFy called Happy where I do it over Skype with direct – so it all keeps changing.
You can do it so that – and I think a good actor can, even out of even out of context, can figure out how the line should be and how it should land.
And I had Brad Bird directing me.
So he really knew exactly what he wanted.
He had the whole movie in his head, and he knew what the other performances would be like and how they'd bounce off of each other.
You show a lot of range.
I mean, I'm watching the scene last night in the sewer.
Oh, man. When you're turning the page and Gusteau is coming alive off of the cookbook.
And it's heartbreaking.
Yeah.
It's really.
And also the scene where he is kind of breaking off with his family.
He thinks it's one or the other.
And that's really, really sad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The world we live in belongs to the enemy.
We must live carefully.
We look out for our own kind, Remy.
When all is said and done, we're all we've got.
No. What? No.
What?
No.
Dad, I don't believe it.
You're telling me that the future is... Can only be more of this?
This is the way things are.
You can't change nature.
Change is nature, Dad.
The part that we can influence.
And it starts when we decide.
Where are you going?
With luck.
Forward.
Terrific performance.
How did he heard you in a...
He was driving around.
In his car?
In his car.
They were having trouble casting the lead.
I didn't know they brought me in for the lead,
but I was driving around.
He was driving in his car.
They played a bit of mine for my first album.
I'm talking about Steakhouses.
It's very filthy.
I talk about a gravy pipe going up your ass.
And it's all...
It's horrible.
So he says...
But he was like, that's the voice I want.
And he did,
and I've never seen it,
but he apparently,
he said he made a pencil test
of Remy doing that routine.
And he showed it to the Disney people
and they were like,
is he going to curse?
I was like, no,
he's not going to,
he's going to,
it'll be his voice doing the dialogue.
And then they brought me in
for a couple of reads.
And I thought I was just coming in
to read for a rat.
I did not know I was coming in for the lead.
And then after a couple weeks, they're like, okay, you're Remy.
And I go, and who's Remy?
And they're like, the rat that's cooking.
I'm like, wait, what?
And it went from, you know, I pop up on shows to I'm going to be the lead in a Pixar movie.
You referenced in the book when you went to see Toy Story that you had no idea.
You say 12 years into the future if I had any idea that I was going to be starring in a Pixar movie.
Wouldn't have believed it.
Also, I was just like,
I thought Toy Story was this brilliant one-off,
and I didn't know that they would build this empire of brilliant films.
You know what I mean?
Like, you see it.
They're all so good.
And Toy Story 2 has the scene that always, you know, the.
John Cusack scene.
Oh, God.
I can't even think about that.
Me neither.
It makes me cry so hard.
Yeah.
You know.
They're all good.
I always think like when I did Aladdin, it's like had that been done like maybe a year later, it would have been like Tom Cruise would have been the parrot.
And Leonardo DiCaprio would be Jafar.
Right.
Yeah, that's the one thing about really good animation
is they don't necessarily go for a celebrity
because a celebrity voice doesn't really give you any value
unless they're good.
I'm not saying never use a celebrity.
It's not like Eddie Murphy is worth his weight in diamonds
as a voiceover actor.
My God.
He's amazing.
Antonio Banderas is an amazing voiceover actor.
But there's other huge stars that they brought in to do voiceover.
And you spent too much money and you didn't, you wanted the name, but then they can't actually
sustain a character.
And it's like kids watching the movie don't know who these actors are. They don't care. And they can bring
in, look, what's weird is
voiceover is very, very, just like live
acting is, sometimes a brilliant live
actor ends up being a terrible voiceover actor.
It has nothing to do with their skills
as an actor. It's just a different,
I don't want to name names, but
there's been some, because I did a lot of punch up on animated
movies, there's been a couple where they brought in some
pretty big, brilliant actors.
You know, like, oh, boy, did you guys waste your money?
This person did not deliver.
This was not, you know.
Whereas then there's other times where you're like, again, going back to Eddie Murphy is just amazing as a voiceover actor.
Can't believe you.
I can't believe.
What has he done?
He did Mulan and he did the Shrek movies.
Is that it?
That's insane.
And then he did the PJs
for Fox.
Right.
I think that's it.
Why isn't he constantly
doing voiceover?
He's so good.
Maybe we need
an Iago Remy movie.
In the time we have left
Are we done?
Mr. Oswalt
Would you like to
Listeners, I'm so sorry
you've gone on this journey
with us. I think this is actually a good show. Ohwalt. Would you like to? Listeners, I'm so sorry you've gone on this journey with us.
I really went nowhere, did I?
I think this is actually a good show.
Oh, my God.
Do you want to talk about, you can talk about, I'm going to give you your choice.
You can tell those funny Blade stories.
The stuff about Wesley Snipes is fucking hilarious.
I'm going to lay off of those.
Now I feel bad.
He was going through such a bad time.
Okay, let's not do that.
I feel like in the future I'm going to be doing some movie where I have some kind of crazy meltdown.
There's going to be some guy going, just write it all down. For all I know, he was having a horrible week.
You want to tell us about... So tell us that one.
Instead, would you like to talk about working with the great Jerry Stiller?
Oh, Jesus. Well, I mean, Jerry Stiller was
great, although sometimes,
and I don't think he meant to do this,
but his way of reading lines was so inherently funny
that sometimes he would get a laugh on lines
that he kind of needed to not get a laugh on
because it would hurt the joke after it.
The way he would come in and go,
Hello, children, but it was always so weird.
That would get a laugh. He'd be like're like no that's to just set the scene yeah he would get a lap because and he did
he did he did a read one time on a line about he was with a bunch of because i remember i was
hanging out with a bunch of bikers in the 60s but that didn't it was the line was but that didn't
last long because they treated me very badly but the way he read it goes but that didn't last long because they treated me very badly. But the way he read it, he goes, but that didn't last long because they treated me very badly.
He put his head back, and you see him live this whole,
which is, it was so disturbing that they went,
let's do that again, and don't take that,
because that pause made the line not funny.
It made it creepy.
It was hilarious to me, but the audience was like,
oh, wait a minute. What is he referencing? So it was hilarious to me, but the audience was like, I, Oh,
wait,
wait a minute.
What is he referencing?
So it was just that weird.
And then he also just like,
he was in so many movies that I loved,
like,
you know,
uh,
was,
was he was in lovers and other strangers.
He's got a partner.
He's in taking a pill.
Which all of his dialogue,
he improvised.
Oh man.
That was a script.
Yeah.
That's cool.
And,
and the reason he improvised,
he says,
because at one time he blew a line.
It's when Matho comes in and goes,
this is Rico Patron on the weekends.
He works for the mafia.
Rico, tell these gentlemen the exciting things
that are happening in the transit authority.
And then he kind of looked up at it from his, he goes,
he goes, well, last week on 9th Street Station,
we thought we had a bomb.
It turned out to be a cantaloupe.
And then he goes, all right, thanks, Rico. And he just walks away. And that was all. And then the director was like, just We thought we had a bomb. It turned out to be a cantaloupe. And then he goes,
all right, thanks, Rico.
And he just walks away.
And that was all.
And then the director was like,
say whatever the hell you want.
So then he just kept riffing that whole thing about even great men have to pee.
I like how you said you learned to act on that show
because you kept waiting to get the axe.
Oh, my God.
Well, the first two seasons,
I was so bad.
I was so bad.
And the two things that saved me
were I really started honing in on Kevin James,
who is a brilliant TV actor. And I don't say that to diminish him, especially sitcom acting is so
fucking hard to do because it's so unnatural. It's hard to make it seem natural. And he could,
he had that Jackie Gleason, Danny DeVito kind of thing where he could make it, you know,
make bigness seem like very real.
Yeah.
And so I had that going for me.
And then I also had, I had this amazing weed connection.
I had this guy, I was friends with this guy that grew this legendary weed out in the Midwest and he had moved to LA.
And one of the show creators was a huge pothead and I would bring this weed in.
I would always bring him a little bit of the weed,
and he was like, oh.
So I feel like partially he kept me around
because I had this really good weed,
and it gave me the time to learn how to act.
Before I jump off voiceovers,
I just wanted to go back to it
because there was something I lost on one of my cards.
This is kind of interesting.
You both played DC Comics villains.
Did we?
In voiceover, you played the Toymaker
in a Batman cartoon.
And Gilbert?
I was, okay,
I was two.
You were two?
Yeah.
In the Superboy series.
Let me guess,
Mr. Mixleplex.
How'd you know?
I played Mr.
I just had to be.
That voice, come on.
I've been that
in a bunch of Superman.
No kidding.
Tim Daly.
The Tim Daly Superman.
Yeah, the Tim Daly one.
And I was also in the Superboy series.
I did two episodes where I was Nick Nack, Master of Toys.
What?
Yeah.
So you both played evil toy makers.
Oh, my God.
On DC Comics properties.
Yes.
Well, I played the toy.
What did I play again?
Oh, my God.
Toy maker?
Toy maker.
But then I also, in a college humor short, I played the penguin.
Did you?
In a live action short, I played the penguin.
And it was this really cool series called Bad Man.
And it's, oh, my, why am I blanking on his name?
Pete Holmes played Batman, but Batman is basically like, yeah, basically, he's basically like brain damage.
He's like the dumbest human being on the planet.
But he does that voice.
Oh, my God.
You know, he does the Christian Bale voice.
And they do, and I would say like a Christopher Nolan version of what the Penguin would look like if he had used him in the movie.
So it's a funny scene, but the makeup is so like, holy shit, someone should actually do this.
Oh, wow.
It's really cool.
You can look it up online.
It's a very funny sketch.
One of my happiest moments, we had on Adam West.
Oh, man.
we had on Adam West.
Oh, man.
And he said to me, he goes,
you know, you would have made a great penguin.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I thought, wow.
And maybe a great Riddler.
Yeah.
Maybe a great Riddler.
Well, there's a rumor.
Very strange Riddler.
Harlan Ellison pitched an outline for an episode of Batman that would have had Two-Face in it.
Yes.
But it was apparently they thought it was too gruesome, and they didn't do it.
And the rumor was they were going to, at the time, a very young Clint Eastwood was going to play Two-Face.
He was going to play Harvey Dent.
Yeah.
That was the rumor.
Do you know Harlan?
Yes.
Yeah.
I'm going to go visit him next week.
Isn't he interesting?
How's he doing?
His mind is so goddamn sharp.
interesting how's he doing uh his his mind is so goddamn sharp he's his you know he's doing some physical therapy his body's kind of frail but he he just does not lose a goddamn beat yeah and it's
i think it's just from pure orneriness he just stays sharp because he's so angry all the time
but he's so hilarious well i asked for selfish reasons because we thought about having him on
here oh boy that'd be great to talk to him i mean the god the stories that guy has yes well and he was also a crooner he was a lounge singer yes i
know he was a trumpet player i know he sang he sang he'll tell you about it i know he used to
also ghost write stuff for lenny bruce back in the day yes yes we should get harlan ellison on
here oh yeah one of the great great storytellers. One of the guys who told me so many stories, but he did a, when he wrote City on the Edge of Forever for Star Trek,
he had to get approval, script approval from William Shatner.
And he claims William Shatner rode over to his house on a motorcycle, parked in the driveway,
read the script in the driveway, but counted that he had more lines than Leonard Nimoy.
Done.
Great.
Got his motorcycle.
Which makes, if that is
A, I don't even think that's true. A, I
want it to be true, and if it is true,
it makes me love him even more. I spent a
Thanksgiving with Harlan Ellison and Len Wein.
Oh, really?
At Ellison Wonderland or at Len's house?
No, at Len's house. I'll tell you about it.
I'll tell you about it.
Have you been to Ellison Wonderland?
I have not had the pleasure.
Dude.
With the secret rooms and the hidden passageways.
Oh, my God.
The weird, yeah.
I never had that.
I moved out of L.A.
Yeah.
But I love the guy.
Mick Jagger used to crash there.
I know.
Back in the day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And they, oh, you guys will love this.
There's a Bill Rossler softcore nudie flick called The Godson with Ushi Dagard,
one of my favorite Russ Meyer actresses,
that was shot almost entirely inside Ellison Wonderland back in the 60s.
No shit.
So if you want to see what his house looks like, go watch The Godson by William Rossler.
I'm writing all this down.
Yeah.
And you have to see Larry Cohen's bone.
And goddamn Harlan Ellison gets to bury his face between Ushi Degard's breasts.
For which I will forever hate him.
I remember asking him why he wanted to write for The Flying Nun back in the day.
And he said, well, obviously I wanted to fuck Sally Field.
Just the right answer.
Yeah, you have to.
And it's getting late and Dave's here.
All right. You're wonderful. Do you want to quickly tell it's getting late, and Dave's here. All right.
You're wonderful.
Do you want to quickly tell the Day of the Clown Cried story?
Because I know Gilbert will appreciate it.
Oh, God.
Okay, very, very quickly.
I came in possession of this shooting script for the Day of the Clown Cried,
which I sat down and read the script.
This was way back in 1995, 1996.
And it's a goddamn bonkers script because it was Joan O'Brien and someone Denton.
Oh, yes.
And they wrote a very serious script.
And then he kind of, you know, John Glazer.
Stephen Colbert narrated it one time.
We did them in New York and L.A.
And then I got busted because the L.A. Weekly caught wind of it and did a whole like pick of the week.
You know, the day the clown cried.
And then we were served with seize and desist papers at this theater we were going to do it at in Santa Monica.
I thought they were from Jerry Lewis, but it turns out it's from this producer who had the right to the original script, who wanted to do it.
And at the time, he was like, I have got – I'm not going to let a bunch of goddamn nobodies read this thing in some shit-ass theater in santa monica
i've got chevy chase interested in this and and and that night you know um he was screaming at
me and then i told and bob odenkirk was in the cast and then so we did a whole show about being
shut down and bob and dave did a sketch about the guy finding out about it my favorite line was
chevy chase was born to play a clown who marches children into
an oven and we are not gonna let it was like so goddamn hilarious so yeah just all so it had all
these like you know it was just i don't know it was one of those very surreal and then you got to
meet jerry for that well yeah while i was doing these that the year that henny youngman died
they brought in um
jerry lewis wanted to bring in all these young comedians to go up and read one of henny youngman's
jokes like in a line like oh yes as a tribute which i was i i love henny youngman i have you
listened to one of his albums recently i'd forgotten how fast the pace. It is a machine gun of jokes. I remember.
There's no breathing room.
I once went out to lunch with Henny Youngman.
Really?
And it was great because he, that's who he was.
But it's such a, people keep forgetting, like they hear his jokes isolated.
Yeah.
And they go, okay, that's a funny joke.
I don't see why this guy.
But it's not, that's a funny joke. I don't see why this guy... But it's not the... It's... The pacing
is so relentless.
After a while, you can't keep up
with the... It's like the
death by a thousand cuts.
Where after a while, it just becomes almost excruciating
how funny it is because it's these little
laughs that just keep building and building. And it's amazing.
Let's do this. And they were trying this out
and then they ended up cutting the sketch.
Jerry's sitting there and he's always wearing shorts. his and his zip-up jacket but he but on his desk
he had that the rumor was he had that big silver briefcase the bulletproof briefcase that that had
the reels for the day the clown cried in it that was the room that he would always carry it around
and i'm like i should fucking grab that and just run.
I should grab it and run and then I
will be chased around the city. There'll be helicopters
but I'm like, if I could just get this through a
thing, I could transfer it to videotape and
just get it out there virally.
I'd be in jail but I would be
this weird folk hero.
Yeah, exactly. Like a noir film where
I have the day the clown cried
and the city's trying to get me.
Well, wasn't the rumor that he would go into a room with a suitcase and he would secretly record conversations?
He would pretend to leave it in the room so that he would record what people said about him when he left?
Yeah, they even made a Seinfeld episode based on that.
Yeah, that was the rumor.
Really?
He would leave it and then come back for it and say, oh, I left my suitcase.
But it was recording what people said about him when you think about it first you go oh god what an asshole
and then you think god what are people saying about it really it's an ingenious idea yeah
well i heard that brian uh grazier i don't know if it's true i i there's another thing that
i i've heard i've actually heard this confirmed, which makes me love him.
He apparently, when he goes and gets invited to someone's party,
he'll have hidden in his pocket a little framed photo of himself,
a rose, and a couple of candles.
And he'll go into one of the other rooms when everyone's looking,
and he'll set up this little, like, altar to himself.
And then people are all like,
why do they have candles and a flower in front of a picture of Brian?
Like, which I think is the funniest thing I've ever heard.
Again,
I want it to be true.
And I also want to steal that,
like go to a friend's house and then just lay it on the lake.
Why do we,
is there an altar to Pat?
What is it like?
Oh man.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
And before we jump,
I just,
I want to mention that you also liked the documentary.
You tweeted about it.
Oh my God.
I,
that documentary.
So we give Neil Berkeley his props. Is Oh, my God. That documentary is so...
Because it's structured so brilliantly
where you open up on the life of Gilbert Gottfried,
and they show him doing sketches and stand-up,
and, oh, my God, he's such a weirdo.
And then you reveal the wife, who's so sweet.
Like, it's the opposite of, like, the monster reveal. It's the shark in J's the opposite of the monster reveal.
It's the shark in Jaws coming out of the water,
but what the shark is is a quiet, normal life,
and it's the last thing you expect to see coming in this documentary,
and it's genuinely shocking.
Like, oh, wait, his wife and kids are awesome.
Wait a minute.
What the fuck was that first 10 minutes?
I thought you were in there, too.
I thought you were in the bus station or something. Yeah, exactly. You show up in there. Yeah, for a minute. What the fuck was that first 10 minutes? I thought – Yes. I literally thought he lived – Well, you're in there too. I thought he lived in a bus station or something.
Yeah, exactly.
You show up in there.
Yeah, for a second.
But the way the opening is structured is so brilliant.
Yeah.
Because you just don't see that coming.
Yeah.
And it's funny because I didn't want to do it at all.
But boy, what – yeah, Neil Berkeley.
Yeah.
I have to give Neil his props.
Anyway, it's called Gilbert.
Yeah.
It's so good.
The first 15 minutes are structured so brilliantly.
Great reveal of your delightful normal life with your beautiful apartment.
Really well.
Again, I thought it would be one.
Actually, you know what?
I mean this respectfully.
I thought you'd be living one of those classic Manhattan kind of misanthrope small apartment like crammed with.
Oh, yes.
Because you see guys like that.
Sure.
Like Ratso Sloman.
Yes, yes.
Like Joe Franklin's office?
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
A weird like rat pack kind of thing.
But there's something kind of beautiful about that too.
Like, yeah, obviously that's how he lives.
You're like, oh, my God, that is the most beautiful apartment I've ever lived in.
What a wonderful life he's living.
He doesn't deserve either.
You have your nice, comfortable robe.
I'm like, how the?
It's so great.
And then you're brought back down to Earth watching him wash his socks in a hotel sink.
And then also when they, oh, well, you're brought back down to Earth when he drags out from under his bed the gigantic post-apocalyptic Tupperware things full of soaps and shampoos.
Soaps, conditioners, skin lotions.
That is the scene like in the 90s serial killer movie when the person realizes her husband's nuts.
When she finds the weird scrapbook or the weird box.
Oh, yes.
Oh, my God.
He collects children's shoes.
You know, like that kind of.
That was a weird trope of the 90s.
They always had, I called it the hanging scrapbook, where the killer would keep a shoebox or scrapbook full of incriminating things.
Yes.
But like out just like, I hope no one opens this drawer and finds enough stuff to put me in the gas chamber.
I think they go in the apartment at 7.
But everything's all over the walls.
But they do that almost as it like I'm talking about in movies like Misery and Single White Female and Fatal Attraction.
There are these like things of like, hey, I hope no one opens that up and sees that I'm a massive criminal.
But yeah, they would have these movies where the walls were completely covered.
Yes.
Yeah, where you're like, if anyone comes in here, you know you're going to jail.
Yes.
Yeah, so.
My favorite moment in the movie is Bill Burr saying, what the fuck is he riding the bus?
Do you think anybody's going to, is somebody going to see him and go, is it Gilbert Gottfried?
And at that moment, Neil cuts to this black woman doing a complete 380.
And she goes, is that Gilbert?
So wonderful.
Yeah.
This was fun, sir.
I'm so glad I got to do this.
And this is what's so insane about this is this is the first time we've met.
The first time I've ever gotten to meet you.
Yeah.
And I've heard so many, literally when I was-
Is that true?
First time ever.
Unbelievable.
And yes, I'm taking a picture and I'm saying,
think of how my day started.
This is how it ended.
I'm going to put that on tape.
How is it possible you're such fans of one another?
Yeah.
It's weird.
Well, because you work,
when you get to a certain level in comedy
and this isn't a brag you don't get to see your friends as much because because you're now you're
working you're not doing the hang no you're all hanging out like you know there was time with
i i would see blank a patch and brian posain and greg baron every day of my life because we had
all day and then when you start getting busy and working i don't
get to see brian that much and we're still like best friends but and i'm i'm not upset i'm happy
he's working yeah i don't want us to be hanging out for five hours a day because that means
something's gone horribly wrong in our lives well so the next time gilbert's in la yes yes you have
one of two invitations you can drive down to uh san die because Tippi Hedren invited us to come to the Lion Reserve. Oh, really?
Yes, you can take them up on that.
And a little more downscale, you can
go to Bob Burns' house. I've already been.
I live like three
blocks from him and I would go to his
Halloween party.
Oh, you went to those? Any of the best?
I have an invitation to go to
Guillermo del Toro's house. I don't know if you've seen pictures of the interior. No. Oh, you went to those. Any of the best. I have an invitation to go to Guillermo del Toro's house.
Oh.
Which is, I don't know if you've seen pictures of the interior.
No.
Oh, Gilbert, go look up, right, Guillermo del Toro's house and look how he decorates the inside of his house.
You'll lose your mind.
And, and.
It's, it's, it's the stuff you love.
I, I, I did like a weekend at a club in Pittsburgh and I was bored out of my wits during
the day, as you always are.
And
what's his name? Savini.
Savini. Tom Savini.
And he's got a big
house with all this monster
stuff. I got to tour Rick
Baker's house, and I have an open invitation.
Oh my God! His basement
alone is insane. Oh my God. His basement alone is insane.
Is he in LA?
Oh my God.
He's right in Toluca Lake.
You guys will have to do.
When you guys come out, let me know.
Rick will love to have you over.
Oh, I'd love.
And he is a fast.
He worked on Star Wars, for God's sakes.
I know.
He did the cantina scene and he has all the original masks on the wall.
And then can we go to Rosenthal's house for the pizza?
Oh, absolutely.
Every Sunday.
Are you kidding?
Yeah.
I'll bring you over i'm in he actually created a lot of the stuff that was in the howling
oh i mean he not only did he create it wasn't even that he created makeups he created techniques
and um uh bits of hardware that are now just standard issue that he had to build from the
ground up they didn't exist until he built them.
Right, brilliant.
He's a genius.
And there's a movie that he did the makeup for where if when you watch it now, you think if someone said this guy's going to be a legendary makeup artist.
Right, right.
He'd go, go fuck yourself.
And Octoman.
He did Octoman?
Yes.
Is that a Corman thing?
Yeah,
he's half octopus,
half man.
I need to look,
because I thought
one of his early ones
was this one they did
on Mystery Science Theater
called Squirm.
Oh, that's the
Jeff Lieberman movie.
Yeah, with the worms
and this guy has like,
look at worm face
or some weird kind of, yeah. But he's a, look at worm face or some weird kind of.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But he's a genius.
He is a genius.
Oh, brilliant.
My God, yeah.
Now, is he retired now?
I think he's retired, but he does like, I mean, he does lectures and books.
But his, you know, he's, of course he's retired.
There's nothing left for him to invent at this point, you know.
But the one good thing that's weird is now that he's retired. There's nothing left for him to invent at this point. But the one good thing that's weird is now that he's retired,
there's a generation of filmmakers coming up that have kind of rejected CGI
and are trying to go back to practical effects because CGI just doesn't stun anyone anymore.
They're just like, well, yeah, it's fake.
But if you can find a way to do it practically, it freaks people out.
Let this man go home.
He's got to get up at 7 o'clock and be on television.
Yeah, I got to go.
Yeah.
Oh. So, but. All right, field trip in L.A. out let this man go home he's got to get up at seven o'clock and be on television yeah oh so
but all right feel like let me yeah if you're coming let me know oh i want to watch i want to
watch you react to rick baker's house that would be fascinating and his every year for his halloween
cards the makeup he does for his family oh wow i'll bet what bet. Just one more thing with computerization.
I think Roger Ebert said CGI looks real but feels fake.
Stop action looks fake but feels real.
Because there's a sense of wonder and magic
to it that you connect
with, whereas
the most you can do with CGI
is go, well, that's technically very
solid, but it doesn't
thrill you. Because I think with stop motion
like, Jesus, he had to do that with clay.
How did they pull that off?
The guy fighting five different skeletons and then your brain goes, they had to do that with clay. How did they pull that off? Yeah. The guy fighting five different skeletons,
and then your brain goes,
they had to coordinate that actor.
Then they had to make sure to get the...
It's incredible.
Exhausting.
Thanks for doing this, man.
It's great to have you.
I'm being told to wrap up.
Only about 40 minutes ago.
Yes.
Why split hairs?
So, this has been Gilbert and Frank's...
Nope, it's the other show.
Oh, this...
Well... Wow. Yes! You other show. Oh, this Oh, yes. You're consistent.
Oh my God. This has been
Gilbert Gottfried's amazing
colossal podcast
with my co-host
Frank Santopadre
and we've been talking
to a man who's going to
go home, have sex
with his wife, and imagine that I'm fucking him in the ass like he's Ned Beatty.
Meredith, please, if Meredith Salinger is listening to this,
please, I'm going to make sure she does not listen to this podcast.
Patton Hussle.
We'll see you in L.A.
Thank you, guys. I'm just Patton Hodge. We'll see you in LA.
Thank you, guys.
Thanks, Patton. Legenda Adriana Zanotto