Newcomers: Sports, with Nicole Byer and Lauren Lapkus - The Last Waltz (w/ Stephanie Allynne)
Episode Date: April 23, 2024Turn up the volume, because it’s time for what's hailed as "one of the greatest documentary concert films ever made": Scorsese’s The Last Waltz! While The Band was joined by folks such as... Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Eric Clapton, Neil Diamond and Neil Young, Lauren and Nicole are so excited to round out this episode's band with very special guest Stephanie Allynne (Tig Notaro: Hello Again, One Mississippi, The L Word: Generation Q)! Together, they chat about the power of live music (And, of course, The Eras Tour), the differing cultural impacts of The Voice and American Idol, and why it’s so important to label who everyone is in a documentary. Follow Stephanie: InstagramNext week tune in for our next episode covering Raging Bull (1980)! Like the show? Rate Newcomers 5 stars on Spotify and Apple Podcasts and leave a review for Nicole and Lauren to read on the pod!Follow the podcast on Letterboxd.Advertise on Newcomers via Gumball.fmSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is a HeadGum Original.
Object is to keep your balls on the table and knock everybody else's eye.
The band has been together 16 years.
The band has been together 16 years.
It's a f***ing impossible way of life.
I couldn't live with 20 years on the road.
I don't think I could even discuss it
We gave our final concert the band's final concert we called it the last waltz
Why'd you have to get so drunk and lead me on that way
you just picked up a hitcher
prisoner of the white
lines on the freeway
hand it up
hand it up
little behalf
radio
hand it up
that's enough
so you know it's got soul radio
sing it long and sing it loud and come dry your eyes I'm up to reach. I buy you a wedding gown.
Well, I'd do anything in this catamount world if you'd just let me follow you down.
The road has taken a lot of the great ones.
Hank Williams, Buddy Holly, Otis Redding,
Janice, Jimi Hendrix, Elvis.
It's a damn impossible way of life.
The Last Walls, a film by Martin Scorsese. Newcomers Martin Scorsese. Also, we have producer Allie and producer Anya here.
And this season's going to be 10 episodes,
so we've picked all the essential movies of Scorsese's super long and prolific career.
But of course, we can't get to everything, and we've seen The Wolf of Wall Street.
We've seen Wolf of Wall Street.
Today, we're going to be discussing what is considered
one of the greatest music documentary films ever made 1978's the last waltz yep and the last waltz is available for free
on tubi and freebie with a subscription on prime and you know you can get it for a fee if you want
to pay for it on on other streamers i am i'm honestly so surprised that all of his movies are on Tubi.
I'm just like, I'm finding this
I'm just flabbergasted.
I love it. Tubi Originals and
Marty Scorsese. Those are the two
options you have.
And we're going to spoil this music documentary
for you. We're going to tell you
who sings in it and why.
We're going to tell it like it is.
But honestly, I would say watching this makes more sense than hearing us talk about without watching it because you want to hear the music.
But we're so excited for our guest today.
We have with us Stephanie Allen, who is an actor, writer, and comedian who you know from The L Word, Generation Q, One Mississippi, and In a World.
And you also may have seen her perform with Mae Martin and Alana Johnston in their show
Ask Us Anything.
And you can watch Tig Notaro's new special Hello Again, which Stephanie directed, streaming
on Amazon Prime now.
Stephanie!
Hi!
Stephanie!
Thanks for being here!
Guys!
Thanks for having me.
We're so excited to sit down with you and talk about this.
I know you love movies.
Do you feel a deep connection with Scorsese movies or where are you yeah i like and then watching
this i'm like he's so good yeah what's your favorite oh i like casino oh are we gonna watch
that are we watching that okay great i think i don't know have you guys seen that no we
don't know sure haven't but we're excited i was so surprised that this was a documentary i wasn't
expecting it me either and then and well in our previous episode um the action boys were telling
us that scorsese's made like a lot of great documentaries that are amazing. And I'm like, OK, I didn't know. I didn't know that at all. And I.
Had you heard of this movie?
No. And I like the band. I actually like totally listen to this kind of music in high school.
This is like my this is my wheelhouse. Yeah. For a special period of my life.
So, like, I'm shocked.
I hadn't seen this because it is so the kind of thing I would have watched in
high school.
I'm like,
this is the coolest thing I've ever seen.
Um,
Nicole,
I already got a glimpse into your personal opinion.
I'd love to hear just a little bit.
I didn't know anything about the band.
I didn't really know anything about any of these people.
I didn't really like the music. I thought the shots were interesting. But this this was for me,
not for me. Yeah, yeah, that's fair. I mean, honestly, if I didn't have a history with
listening to like classic rock, I don't think I would, I don't know
what I would be thinking watching like I this, this was the kind of music my friends and I would
drive around and listen to in high school, like all the time. So I felt very like, but at the same
time, I didn't know anything about the band. And I never seen any of the people in it. I don't know
any of their names. And I knew some of the singers who came out to join them, but I didn't know everyone.
And actually at the beginning,
there was one person like,
and obviously no introduction needed.
I was like, gonna have to put a name on the screen.
I do need an introduction.
Like it made me think like we should have names on things
like even like any like current pop star documentary,
put every single person's name.
We don't, you're gonna,
you don't know who's
gonna be watching this or when like we need the facts and I feel like now I noticed that watching
it too that now you would totally have a name what they're like what they play what they're from
and everyone that came on is just like and here they are I know I know well I saw it was kind of
great though because it's like that thing of like, when I always think about music, that like in the 70s,
there was much less music than there is now.
You kind of could know all of it.
Yeah.
You could like hear all of it.
And you would in your life.
Yeah.
You would just be in the know because you're like, okay, there's 10 artists.
Great.
I know all 10 of them.
Now there's just so fucking many know all 10 of them now there's
just so fucking many too many and my tiktok singers who i love so much can't keep up with
all of them oh this is i but okay so we have this new segment called spotted where we look into the
movies and see if we see any of the following celebrity sightings. So is one of Marty's boys there,
which would be Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel,
Joe Pesci, or Leonardo DiCaprio?
Do we get Marty's mom, Catherine Scorsese,
or do we get Marty himself?
I think it's only Marty.
Yeah, just Marty.
I wanted more, actually.
More Marty or more of his friends?
Well, yeah, I would love to see Leo.
I wanted to see Leo.
A baby.
And he's like, he's going to be a star.
I wanted more Marty because I was kind of like,
I think maybe it's just kind of how documentaries are now
where people are, they explain a lot more.
And that was cool that it wasn't like that but i kind of
wanted more information just and i thought maybe he would talk to us about why he's making this or
who these people are like even though i know that they're a very famous band we didn't get a ton in
the interviews even explaining like why this is so crucial that we document this and like
i just yet they had i feel like robbie robertson had such a vibe which so many people then did of
like this is important and what we're doing is important and we established culture and we must
and like now if somebody was doing that, you'd be like, you are a loser.
It's totally true.
He was so he was so sure of their position in culture.
Well, and the fact that they named their band The Band.
The Band.
Yeah.
Like you're just going like that's it was hard to Google them.
Yeah.
Like you're just going like that's it was hard to Google them.
Well, there's another band named Da Band that was created by Sean P. Diddy Combs on Making Da Band.
Yes.
And now I know that's not an original name. They stole it from The Band.
This was Making The Band and then he did Making Da Band.
Because The Band was taken the band was taken but not the band um do you guys want to know why they are called the band yeah yeah actually they talk about it
in the movie a little bit where they're like they do everyone just call it because they were bob
dylan's backing band and everyone called them the band. Well, and they had horrible ideas for their name. Otherwise, they were like,
they were like, we were thinking about honkies or crackers.
Yeah. And I was like, that's bad. I'm glad nobody went with that.
Like, you're not going to be lasting. Like, it is important to have a decent name for your band.
Like it's that will get in the way. But you have to like say it out loud like welcome to the
stage the crackers oh no the honkies and then the drummer the drummer looked like he was on my two
dads did anyone else feel this his hair was like feathered so beautifully but then when you saw him
in the interviews it was like a stark contrast like he was sort of like he had like what davis sidaris calls party teeth party oh yeah party teeth which i love what is that like
when they're like chipped and look wooden i think they're just doing their own thing having a little
party everyone's having a nice time in that mouth mingling one's going to the bar one's in the back dancing
this felt more or less like a documentary and more like a concert film with a couple of interviews
yeah because they really did play the entire song every song or yeah like even as someone who
enjoys it and i was actually like tapping my toes and moving my
i was like i was having a good time i literally i was like sitting at my kitchen table like
i was like yes but it also kind of took me all day to watch because i was like
yes pause move do something like it was like, okay, I'm going to watch full performances.
But I wanted to actually see every moment because it felt like it was shot specifically
a certain way.
I didn't want to just let it wash over me and miss something.
But yeah.
Okay.
Well, let's take a quick break.
We'll come back and we'll get into the whole, the whole doc.
We're back.
This documentary was released April 26, 1978.
Now, The Last Waltz documents the farewell performance by the influential Canadian American rock band, The Band.
Also didn't know they were Canadian.
They're so country.
They're so Southern.
At the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco on Thanksgiving 1976.
Did anyone else really want to see more
of San Francisco outside of that venue?
Yes.
I was like, this is the craziest place.
San Francisco still can feel wild when you go there,
but it's of course been like
you know very cleaned up in many ways and like it's all like a lot there's a lot of areas that
are just like high-end shopping but like this was like fully cracked out like I was like what
what is this line I think it was the line to go to the concert but it like looked insane I was like
zoom in on these people I want to see who they are and then i feel like it's like there were some people too like this woman had on like a little bow tie and
a jacket and i was like oh right annie hall would have just come out the year before and you can
like just that whole little vibe you know that's so funny what would that be now like i guess dressing 90s yeah whatever whatever is going
on on tiktok like uh flared leggings are a thing which i'm like these are just yoga pants
wow flared leggings i had some of those in eighth grade i thought they made me look amazing
yep those are my little steve madden stompers yes the platforms that you can slide into oh my god yeah they're back they're back i actually
almost bought some from target that were like the steve madden ones and i was like
can i just buy these and i was like i don't need this shoe like for many reasons a lb63
b i just don't need it it's like it It's like maybe not a good look.
For me at my age, you know.
I don't know.
I think you should get them.
Okay, I'll do it.
Okay, I actually have them.
I have mine.
This is what I was tapping my toe in.
The band was made up of musicians Robbie Robertson, Rick Danko, Garth Hudson, Richard Manuel, and Levon Helm.
And they started as a backing band for the rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins, but gained recognition as Bob Dylan's first electric rock backing band in 1966.
Where do you all stand on Bob Dylan?
I don't really know Bob Dylan.
I truly knew nothing about this going in and didn't learn that much I feel like
I just was like oh okay I'm watching I'm watching performances yeah you were you were just being
susceptible to like a Woodstock moment yeah well that's because I love Bob Dylan so much and I love
Joni Mitchell I love all those performers And then when just watching it again,
I'm like,
are they all just so weird?
Like,
like,
and just like glaringly unhealthy,
which I know is what they were saying,
but I'm like,
they're 30.
They're like in their early thirties in that.
They look so much older.
Everyone looks so much older.
I feel like everyone looks older
in like the 80s and 90s and maybe like the the late 2000s people started looking a little younger
does that I know no I think I think that's true like I think 50 kind of became like youthful in
a new way now and I just saw this funny video on Instagram that was like JLo and like Blanche from Golden Girls like switching hair
and how it makes them look they were the same age and how it makes them look so different.
So funny. And it is so much of what it is like we have a style now for as you get older the
at least what's trendy now is more youthful looking i think but i wonder if that was the
perception then that like the bigger hair or the shorter hair or whatever was youthful i don't know
but yeah i mean i do think hair plays such a role but they but like a lot of their hair
like joni mitchell was like kind of the same her whole entire life like her style
look she's so amazing and she was the only woman which i really noticed i was like what's
that like and i kind of assumed she wasn't part of those sort of rock and roll lifestyle just based
on who she is but maybe she was do you know stephanie if she was like partying and being i
think so yeah i don't know if as hard as all of them, though. I don't. They just seemed like really fucked up.
I know.
Which they say, like Martin Scorsese says in that time period, like he was just doing cocaine 24-7.
And I know even on this movie, they in post like removed coke from a lot of their noses.
Oh, that sucks.
That's very funny. Don't you. They should have left that in.
That's very funny.
Don't you think they should have left that?
Get that little white ring.
But I feel like that's sort of the thing
that this movie is missing is, like, the reality.
Because, like, there's a point where I think it's Robbie
who's, like, or one of them is, like,
you said we weren't going to talk about the women
or something and we're going to leave that part out.
But it's, like, so otherwise you're just sitting around chatting like that's
not what's happening really boring story so boring and so slow like i was like speed it up like what
happened what happened who did what okay okay like i think they were like let's focus on the music
and not the salaciousness of it but i'm like but that's a part of the music that influences the music that
to me is interesting and it's also like I think maybe but maybe that's just from our experience
of like seeing where life goes from then to now like where it's like oh that is actually the
interesting part but like when you're making that and there aren't that many documentaries like this
you think that's gonna make it look bad or something I don't know or yeah or that makes
you look bad but then it almost makes them seem worse so something. I don't know. Or yeah. Or that makes you look bad,
but then it almost makes them seem worse. So they're like, don't talk about all the pussy
we're getting. And then to like say pussy, I was like, you got like, it's so odd. I was just
trying to think of one person today. If they were like at the height of their career, like smoking,
one person today, if they were like at the height of their career, like smoking, drinking, being like, God,
get off the road and all the girls, like you'd just be like, yikes.
Yeah. And they were, so they were doing it for 16 years, like touring,
which I'm like, that's a long time.
And especially if that's what you're doing the whole time is it's mainly that.
And then you
mix in a banjo or two or whatever you mix in a banjo or two well they went on to release several
influential albums on their own played woodstock and charted with hits like the weight which i
had never heard and up on cripple creek which i had never heard but after 16 years of playing
music and touring,
Robbie Robertson was worried that drugs,
alcohol,
and the rock and roll lifestyle out on the road
would be harmful to himself and his bandmates.
So he asked the band to call it quits.
It's funny that it took 16 years for someone to go,
this isn't good for me.
I know.
And also like,
it is weird though,
because they're not showing any of that,
that you're like,
is it that bad? Like, I don't know. Like there not showing any of that that you're like is it
that bad like i don't know like there's a part of me that was going like i mean it sounds bad just
to do that for 16 years um but you're not seeing we weren't seeing any of the like actual behind
the scenes and like it literally looks like they just sit around and they were like they told that
story about someone who was like spitting into a bucket and then he thought it was like tobacco or something.
Then it was all blood.
And I was like, what's this story?
And I was like, who are they talking about?
And then the guy died.
And then he died.
It was like why he was going to be in the band,
but then wasn't?
Or was it just a random story of like,
yeah, and then we found out he died.
So that's what the blood must have been about.
And I was like, but what is this?
What are you talking about?
It's just a fun memory.
It's the part where they're talking about
Sonny Boy Williamson.
Okay, who is that?
Because I missed the name.
Like an old blues musician.
I think they're just talking about like
crazy times on the road
meeting crazy other musicians.
And then, yeah. And then he was dead. think they're just talking about like crazy times in the road meeting crazy other positions and then yeah and then yeah so robertson wanted to do one final show and he planned a gig at the venue where
they had their first show as the band in 1969 robertson had met scorsese at the premiere of
his movie mean streets and could tell from the way the director used music in that film that he
had a deep connection to it and in his memoir robertson wrote marty was the right man for this he had music
under his skin what a funny thing to say about someone not music in his bones not music in every
fiber of his being it was under his skin like the bugs crawling in me when i'm on the coat
um oh wait was it joni mitchell who had that thing where she thought she had bugs on her?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
This is like a, it's like a, I don't know what you call it, but it's like a sort of like mental, like.
Is it a psychosis?
Yeah.
I don't know how permanent it is, but I feel like she had it for like a good amount of time.
Where you feel like you have bugs on you.
Oh, my God. So scary. permanent it is but i feel like she had it for like a good amount of time where you feel like you have bugs on you oh my god so scary i don't want that johnny mitchell like kind of in her later years has sort of been like i never got my due i should have been like because she was a
woman she's like i feel like nobody studies my lyrics like they do bob dylan like he's a genius
but i'm not.
That's interesting.
I didn't know that people perceive her that way
because I feel like she's really revered.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
But I don't think she ever got the money or the like.
Yeah, or the accolades.
I don't know, all of, yeah.
Well, now she's having this moment with Brandi Carlile
where it feels like she's really being like put on a pedestal.
I don't know if you know about this, Nicole,
but like this singer Brandi Carlile who's like she kind of to me kind of came
out of nowhere but became like really huge um she's been like touring with Joni and like singing
her songs with her and and Joni's probably in her 80s now I would assume and is so she you know
needs extra help and all this stuff but then like they have these
big epic moments on stage so it feels like she's getting like some of that now yeah and she can't
stand so she like i saw brandi carlisle at perform with her and and then the whole hollywood bowl
saying happy birthday to joni mitchell while she like sat in her chair like a throne. And it kind of seemed insane.
I mean, yeah, that is wild.
I was like, what are we doing?
The whole Hollywood Bowl singing happy birthday.
This woman who can sing is being shouted out by people on the wrong key.
And she's like, I'm a legend.
She's like, this is one of the worst songs ever written.
Thanks for shouting at me.
That's so crazy.
That's cool.
You got to see that.
Were you up close?
Yeah,
it was pretty close.
But it just also felt,
yeah,
yeah,
I guess it was great.
But now she's doing this.
It just kind of feel like,
oh, and we're bringing her out and everybody just goes you know yeah i mean i i love tony mitchell no me too they had a good
performance on um the grammys that was really cool oh yeah oh yes i saw that she was in her
chair she had a little stick i said she cast in a spell yeah she's gonna do a spell
uh let's see where are we okay at first robertson just wanted to have ronnie hawkins and bob dylan
join them for the farewell show since they were such a big part of the band's success but soon
a long list of their fellow musicians and musical mentors signed on and the set list grew to over 42 songs
which is too long in the end the show lasted for over five hours i would be so mad if i went to a
show and it lasted for five hours uh show promoter bill graham even managed to serve a turkey dinner
to all 5 000 attendees before the music began wow that's too much dinner that's like such
a specific oh because it was thanksgiving i was like why are you just deciding everyone why turkey
i see okay i'm curious where you guys both stand on this what do you feel about concerts in general
i like concerts i think they're nice i don't think they should be five
hours long i think two two maybe three i think beyonce was three and i enjoyed every moment of
that yeah yeah i mean i'm always surprised when people say like they hate live music
but they're definitely i think it's weird when people say that because i'm like have you ever
been to a concert have you been to a good one?
No.
And that's why, because I connect to these songs, there were a lot of moments I was watching
that I was like, oh, my God, it would've been so cool to be in the audience for this.
Like, this would have been a really amazing five hours.
I don't know.
But maybe in the 70s, I would think that was good.
I don't know.
What else would I have to do?
Yeah.
I can't look at my phone.
What else would I have to do?
Yeah.
I can't look at my phone.
I feel like when you, like, really like someone,
there's nothing better than seeing them live.
But then if you're, like, not into it,
it's just pure torture.
Yeah. And it feels even, like, I don't know,
if I don't like the music, I'm like,
God, hurry, oh my God, you're doing another song?
I've been to concerts where I wasn't super into the artist but I had a good time because other people were having a fun time yeah so then I was like oh I guess I could for now you know get into
it a little bit yeah yeah my friend who had never been to a Taylor didn't know anything about Taylor
Swift went to Taylor Swift concert by herself to like see what was up.
And she was immediately a Swift fan.
Research.
Yeah.
She was like,
she's getting to the bottom of it.
Instantaneously,
she was like,
the crowd was insane
and I got it.
Like it was like,
I'm so,
I mean,
so I totally think you can be influenced by that too.
Like the excitement of everyone around you.
I love this friend who said,
I'm going to get to the bottom of Taylor Swift swift alone and then immediately was like my lover i get it it was honestly the best instagram
stories of the night for me and this person didn't know any taylor swift songs she didn't really she
was she kind of just didn't know what the whole thing was. But it was like when that big Eros tour was happening and she was like,
I just want to know what this...
That big Eros tour.
She got last minute tickets and went alone.
I know how I'm talking about it.
I'm newcomer's Taylor Swift.
But yeah, I was totally like, oh, that looks so fun.
So production for Scorsese and his crew was intense.
He hired seven cinematographers, which seems like so many.
Yeah, that's a lot.
All heavy hitters that had worked on some of the most iconic movies of the time,
like Easy Rider and Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
He storyboarded each song in the set list for certain angles,
shots, and light cues to line up with the song lyrics.
However, when it came to the day of the show,
it was impossible to keep up with Scorsese's plans in the live concert setting, and not all
songs were captured as they had to take breaks to reload film and change batteries. They weren't
even sure the 35 millimeter film cameras they were using would hold up to that many hours of
constant shooting. It had never been done before. At one point, Scorsese had instructed all the
camera operators to shut down and reload,
but one cinematographer had taken off his headset because he was so annoyed
with Scorsese's constant instructions and his running camera ended up being
the only reason they captured the performance with blues legend,
muddy waters.
No offense to anyone involved.
Why would you have everyone stop at the same time?
Yeah.
If you have seven cinematographers,
you probably have more than seven cameras just keep keep three going yeah two down you know that but you know who am I I'm I'm
I'm not Martin Scorsese I don't know anything about him I know nothing about filmmaking that's
just you know a little thought that you know popped in he he hears this and he's
like i should have done that yeah he's never thought about it he's never understood why
i will say like i didn't love the music it was not for me but i could tell that there was
thought behind how it was shot and it did draw me in at times and i was like oh okay
i i think i like this and i was like i don't know i spent a lot of time being like do i like this
yeah i mean i even felt that way as someone who likes the songs there were points where i was like
okay i don't like i never listened to the band all in a row. The band comes on the radio and you like that song.
I don't feel like I'm like, let me put on the band album.
So it was kind of the most the band I've ever gotten at one time.
But I loved the cameos.
And we're going to get into the songs, but the Van Morrison, I cried, actually.
Really?
I love Van Morrison, but I've never seen him sing.
And I just don't really seek out like the videos of old singers.
I just don't really do that.
But I will listen to the music and love the music.
But like, he's amazing. Like watching him live. I was like, this is amazing. And I would have been
floored if I was there. And like, he also made me think about because he's like this kind of like,
looks like just like a your average drunk white dude, honestly. And I was like, again,
a lot of things connect back to improv for me. was like this is what improvisers in Chicago feel like on stage like I'm a rock star
and it's like there's like I knew guys who like were just like that guy and I but then I'm like
but then you're Van Morrison you're like your voice is like this amazing iconic voice that just
like can stir so much emotion. And I was just,
I was like,
I really loved that part.
It made me want to seek out more old footage.
He does really,
especially in that,
he really has that like guy at church,
like,
yeah,
it gets drunk.
He probably was church that gets drunk.
Oh,
that guy loves the lord and a little alcohol
the final film starts out with the band performing their encore song a cover of marvin gaye's don't
do it then flashes back to the start of the night and follows the rest of the set more or less
chronologically now i also wanted a history i wanted like old photos or like some
things to be put in like because when i thought of them doing it for 16 years and they they looked
like they'd been through it but they also looked young that i'm like well how tiny were they when
they started their little babies when they started a little baby being i would have liked to have
seen like some footage of like their first shows and like i don't know because i just really i really i feel like we don't also get a lot of in the
culture we don't get a lot of like random bands doing that you get like the beatles like there's
like a lot of like you see those things over and over again but i'm like i have no idea what this
would have looked like i don't know what kind of audience they would have and like it's this very
specific genre of compared to like you
know the 60s other 60s stuff and i feel like now we're so well versed in documentary that the
expectations of what you need or it's like so high and then with that it's just like oh wow so they
just like like got martin scorsese when he wasn't even he hadn't done like all his huge movies like he was just
getting going and and he's just like they're all just fucking around yeah like that's what I kind
of liked about it where it was like wow you have for hearing like all of his planned shots it almost
seemed like they had no plan that it was just like when they're walking around it's like so
okay walk through here show me what what's in this like you know when they're walking around, it's like, so, OK, walk through here. Show me what's in this.
You know, when they show the studio.
Yeah.
He's like, you lead the way.
Yeah.
And there's like a random guy sitting in a room and there's like a guy in the bathroom.
I know.
I was like, what's that guy doing?
But there's no it's not like, hey, get out of the shot or or oh, we might we need to include you now that you're in it.
It's just sort of like maybe no one noticed.
Yeah.
Like we don't
care who that guy was yeah have you seen the Bee Gees documentary yeah I did not think I would care
and it I was wrecked by that document I'm like that I forgot about and then I got into their
music like hard because you kind of think Bee bgs are disco and there's so much more
and then they have and they have such a bad time with disco they're like so torn down everyone's
like disco sucks and they would like burn their records and like tell them to eat shit
really and then they also have all this crazy stuff that goes on like in their lives it's just
it's actually a really really good documentary but the whole disco sucks movement like what was that about why were people so mad
about this and homophobic yeah okay yeah's why that um but weren't the bgs white
they were definitely appropriating it from like black it started in like black
gay disco stuff and but they like brought it to the mainstream and then everyone's like actually
it's rock and roll is the only thing and let's make have white people make it
yeah fun it's really interesting great documentary
yeah um and you and like i just didn't ever think i would care and i did um but then i think that's
your point stephanie that like the way what we expected of a documentary now where i'm like that
gives me this like huge retrospective on like the way things were and the way they became and
blah blah and this is just capturing a moment in time. It's a very different thing.
And they're all fucking around.
And that's what I was like,
whenever they would tell those stories and you could tell they were,
like even when Robbie Robertson's like,
oh, ask me that again.
And then he like asks him again.
And then he kind of says it, but it's not,
it's like, oh, he wanted to get that just right
in the way in which he was telling it.
But it's so funny to leave in the,
like,
say it again.
Cause it's like,
obviously you're supposed to cut around that.
But showing how much he cared,
I think like,
and the same,
like,
we weren't going to talk about that.
Like they just what they were going for.
I guess.
Yeah.
I think I agree.
It was like not polished.
It was just like a moment in time like just encapsulated but at the same time I feel like what they were saying they were trying to
make it very specific like here's what I will share about this like it's like you're capturing
it but like it's controlled right yeah was there any song that that really worked for you, Nicole, or that you were like into?
Yes.
Wait, which one was it?
It was there was a lady singing on it.
Oh, maybe it was the weight with the.
Oh, yeah.
Singers.
Yeah.
That was awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was I really enjoyed that one and then coyote with joni mitchell
when she i love that and she was like but it kind of felt like she was like a featured extra like
it didn't seem like they were like it really to that point actually stephanie i really feel like
they didn't even i thought she was almost backstage part of it like i'm like get her out there like i don't know um and then she's
there at the end and then they have emmy lou harris who i actually i'm not that familiar with
but i i associate with like later music and what was that part where they were like on a different
stage i know how they were like throughout?
Yeah, I think there was like two songs that they recorded separately that weren't part, just weren't part of this that night.
And then they added it in?
Like with the Staples Singers and I think, yeah, with Emmylou.
It was like very clearly suddenly on a soundstage.
Yeah.
Then there's the ending when they sing I Shall Be Released.
And it's Bob Dylan, Ronnie Wood from the the Rolling Stones Ringo Starr from the Beatles and many and Joni and like many other people
from the from the show already and Van Morrison and it was almost like I was like you can't have
20 people with distinct voices and styles sing the same song I'm like I just want to hear one of them. I liked it. It's not like We Are The World.
It was like that.
Ooh, okay.
But it's like you have Van Morrison
doing his thing and I'm like,
you got to blend in there, little
buddy. And you want to know something shocking
about this movie that
I read was that
it got financing
because Bob Dylan said he'd do it.
And because he did it, which I'm like, wow,
even in the seventies, it came down to like,
you could have all those people and it wouldn't have financing.
And then Bob Dylan.
He had the most Instagram followers.
That's so weird.
There's some interesting stuff in the production where during the show he said
he didn't want to be filmed as much as they wanted to film him and they almost like in the middle of
the show they almost like had this whole thing and they knew that they were only getting the money
if bob was in it and so like he almost it was like this big panic backstage and
then do you feel like he was trying to not take the spotlight or what what did you read
this stephanie do you want to yeah yeah go for it well i would i i he he basically had something
coming out right he had a movie coming out that he was like well i don't want this to sort of
overshadow my movie and they were like so he's like i'll still perform at the concert but you
can't film me and then they were like freaking out because they only got the money for the movie.
And so right leading up to the show, he was like, I'm not doing it.
And they sent in, I think, one of the producers to talk to him.
And he agreed to let them do to film him for two songs, which, again, is so crazy that
they were making a documentary and didn't film any of that.
Like that's like if you were making a documentary now didn't film any of that like that's like if
you're making a documentary now you'd be like oh my god shit's hitting the fan right day of like
that would be like gold in your documentary that's so true and like completely not even included
do you feel like that's because of reality tv like why do we yeah like we want we want some
drama it's like i want the juice i want to know what's happening behind closed doors i want to You feel like that's because of reality TV? Like, why do we? Yeah, we want some drama.
I want the juice.
I want to know what's happening behind closed doors.
I want to know about the drama, how it almost didn't happen.
Like in J-Lo's documentary where nobody wanted to do her movie.
Oh, my God.
Have you seen those clips?
I haven't seen the documentary.
No, I haven't seen either of the things.
Well, there's a bunch of people who are like unavailable.
And J-Lo literally is like, I say that when I don't like the script. What do you mean they're of the things well there's a bunch of people who are like unavailable and jlo literally is like i say that when i don't like the script what do you mean they're unavailable it's just
for half a day and it's like oh this is well don't tell everyone you say that when you don't
like the script because then it makes it look like it's bad unavailable oh no but i also think
there's like culturally you don't protect people anymore.
It's like, oh, well, they fucking did that.
And I want people to know what this person's really like.
Whereas they wanted him, they wanted to like preserve him for the sake of like the movie.
Because it makes it look cooler that it went well with him.
That he didn't want to do something that they wanted.
Right. Yeah. I think you're right there is a lack of privacy now in a way where like back in the day it was
like oh we'll just preserve this person's private life we're not going to put everything out there
you know right which is kind of nice it is i think we should in that sense alone. Everything else, like, I feel like now though it is like you expose everyone for everything they do.
Like the second it happens, like so-and-so stormed off the set of whatever.
Like we know about it like right when it happened or, you know, it's just, it is like not our business.
And you can't live with that duality.
It's like I can't stand that anybody loves this person if only they saw on a day-to-day basis the hell they cause
and you can't it's like people can't it's like that truth it's like oh you must know yeah we're
like i think it's kind of that thing where like when we were growing up i mean i've heard like
movie people who are like movie stars then like kind of say there are no movie stars now like i
was reading something about this but like that like we would see it as like a sort
of separate entity and be like they're a movie star and then like we'd get tabloids but that
was like all we got and you kind of wonder if they're fake and then that's it and then you don't
you don't have the instagram of them showing their real life which feels so accessible and
like too accessible with a lot of people we were like wow i can see inside so-and-so's home right now this is like i this is great it's cool but then it's takes away that
mystery that we like so much about people and makes movies more fun yeah um so this movie
was considered one of the greatest music documentaries and concert films ever made
but drummer leave on helm wasn't happy with the final version he felt like the entire thing was driven by robertson and
scorsese and that the film makes the rest of the band seem like robertson's backing band
kind of true because there are i was actually surprised by how much the drummer was singing
and i was like what's this drummer doing?
He's a big part of these songs.
But we didn't talk too much.
We got a good amount out of him, though, honestly.
I did feel like he spoke up.
He was the one talking about Pussy, wasn't he?
Was he?
Yeah.
Mmm, Pussy.
Robertson loved the movie,
and he was proud of what he accomplished with Scorsese
I can't say that man's name Scorsese
we gotta work on it I need like
Scorsese say it Stephanie
well I always wondered
if it's because I've heard people say Scorsese
which is what I say and then Scorsese
yes and I
I say Scorsese
but then I'm always going like,
somehow I feel wrong.
I do feel wrong.
Someone will tell us,
you know,
we'll find out when we're done recording this.
And then they tell us in months,
he went on to collaborate with Scorsese for decades,
working on the music for his films,
Raging Bull,
The King of Comedy,
The Color of Money,
Casino,
Gangs of New York,
Shutter Island,
The Wolf of Wall Street,
The Irishman,
and Killers of the Flower Moon.
Are we watching all of those?
Not all, but many.
We're going to see Raging Bull,
Casino, Gangs of New York,
Irishman, and Killers of the Flower Moon.
Oh, man.
You sound excited.
You're so good.
No, I'm excited.
I am excited.
So he made music for the films? You sound excited. You're so good. You're so good. No, I'm excited. I am excited.
But he, so he made like music for the films?
He was like a music supervisor and yeah, like helped with the soundtracks for all of those films.
Oh, interesting.
That's, I mean, that's crazy.
That's like a very long relationship.
I feel like he really like made this movie and then was done. Like that's what blows my mind about him is that he was really,
he really did it.
It's like he didn't perform again and he just went and did movie stuff
and studio stuff with him.
Yeah.
Cause it does feel like one of those things that you see people say,
like we're going to stop and then they just keep going and it's fine.
But like they actually did.
Yeah.
I think the band went on without Robertson.
Cher had a farewell tour for years and then landed in vegas she'll never stop i love share
same every interview with her i'm like this is the best interview that's ever been
um much of the no this i don't know how i feel about this. Much of the music we hear was actually overdubbed later in a studio. Oh.
Okay.
The band's producer, John Simon, later said,
Richard wasn't singing well, Rick's bass was out of tune,
and Robbie wanted to improve his guitar solos.
The great thing was that Levon Helm didn't need to do it over.
He got it right the first time.
Wow.
In a film, Helm came to loathe.
He looked and sounded the best during the band's live performances.
They all were like, plink, plonk, plonk.
Can we do that later?
They did five hours and they were like,
we sounded like shit.
Everyone there is like, it was the worst concert ever.
We hated it.
It was five hours long.
Nothing was in tune.
Everyone was off key. but I got some turkey.
I had cranberry sauce.
That's so crazy.
All right, we're back.
And this is the new Academy Awards, a new segment.
Despite his films having been nominated for over 100 combined Academy Awards,
Marty himself has only won one.
But so far, he has won four new Academy Awards,
the Newcomers Franchise Prestigious Annual Awards
and Excellent in Scorsese Movies.
Scorsese.
Just going to get wilder and wilder as it goes on.
Scorsese.
So, Anya and Allie and or will read off the nominees to us
and we will all vote on what we think
should win. Okay. All right, here we go. Best line delivery. The nominees are
it's a goddamn impossible way of life. That was Robbie Robertson or the greatest priest on 52nd
street and on the streets of New York where the musicians, they were the, they were doing the
greatest healing work. They know how to punch punch through music which would cure and make people feel good and that was garth hudson i mean i think
it's a goddamn impossible way of life i like that it's very curmudgeoning and it felt like his whole
mood the whole time there's no way we could do it again okay beautiful he also could be like i feel
like he was just like if we keep going we'll die
and then he names all those people that like the road got when he was like jimmy hendrix
that's it's not really a thing now everyone's like i could keep doing it
yeah now yeah i think they have people being like yeah you're on a private jet don't do
too much cocaine just drink a little less yeah everyone's doing fine okay our next award is for
best dressed we have the nominees are bob dylan neil young joni mitchell and leave on helm
leave on helm okay so there's a scene where he has like a trucker hat that's like sitting atop
his head and it looks like it was filmed yesterday like i literally was like it does look very
current and it literally he didn't say oh i better put this hat on so it doesn't fly away with a gust
of wind just truly sitting the only time i thought he was attractive it helped a lot with just the
the shape of everything going on um neil young no it's a no it's not attractive
it's he he's very sloppy i he i mean his voice is iconic but he's... I don't enjoy exactly the...
He looks like a murderer.
There we go.
A little.
And Bob Dylan, I'm really not attracted to.
Like, point blank.
I have no interest.
Joni Mitchell, I thought, looked beautiful.
I'm gonna go with Joni Mitchell.
I think she looks stunning.
She has on, like, a leotard, like a skirt
and like beautiful layered beaded necklaces.
And her hair is just, she's so simple.
She's so like just classic beauty.
Elegance.
Yeah.
I think she wins.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Okay, great.
And then we kind of did this, but best soundtrack song.
Helpless with Neil Young, The Wait with the Staple Singers, The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down, okay great and then we kind of did this but best soundtrack song um helpless with neil young the
weight with the staple singers the night they drove old dixie down or the finale i shall be
released i really like the weight i did too i thought that was great i really like oh go ahead
no please no no please no please you well you didn't say this one did you say it makes no
difference no that's not nominated you
can write them in you can write it i'm writing that one in i want to write in the van morrison
song i don't remember they sang radio but is that caravan i think okay because maybe he blended two
songs together or maybe that's what that's called but i really liked it um but i would vote for the
weight too because i thought that was great and i've never
heard i don't think they're ever on that in like a typical release of that right the
statement singers and it really added like a great layer well congratulations to all the nominees
now it's time for a score sazy where we read reviews and we give a score to this film.
So we read reviews from Letterboxd and then we'll each give a one sentence review ourselves and a star rating for the movie.
And if you don't know by now, you better fucking know that Letterboxd is a social platform where people can write in their reviews of their own films. And we have our own letterbox at Newcomers, which we learned a couple days ago that all of our reviews are listed on because that makes so much sense.
It makes a lot of sense.
And I can't believe I didn't put two and two together like a little idiot.
So you can follow us and see what we've thought of every movie we've ever watched.
And there are so many, as you know.
And this review is from Logan Kenny, who said, who cares if it's real? every movie we've ever watched. And there are so many, as you know.
And this review is from Logan Kenny, who said,
who cares if it's real?
It's beautiful anyway.
Perfect movie.
Stephanie, do you want to give your star in one sentence review?
Okay.
Oh, I see.
Of the movie. I thought it was just something of what he said.
What do you think of that review? Yeah. What do you think about Logan Kenny?
We should just make it like an, like an inception of like,
like it doesn't make no sense. Okay. Um, I'm going to give this movie.
What's the top four, five, five. Um,
I'm going to give it a three and my review is um
they were cool then but losers today
oh my god i love it okay our alley do you have a review for us? Yeah, I'm going to also go three stars.
And I'm going to say it made me consider growing my hair long and having a middle part.
And that's about it.
That's good stuff to bring into your life.
Yeah.
I'm going to give it four stars.
And I say that it's the original celebrity self-made documentary.
Yes.
I feel like you can tell that Robbie Robertson was like, include this. say that it's the original celebrity self-made documentary. Ooh, okay.
I feel like you can tell that
Robbie Robertson was like, include this, don't
include this. And now everybody's like, that's the
Beyonce documentary and the Lady Gaga documentary.
Yeah, that's crazy. Interesting.
Yeah, I think I'm gonna give it
three and a half for
capture. It captures a moment in time
very beautifully and
also captures a lot of my favorite songs from high school and gives context to them.
And it's fun to see all these people come together in this way.
It is very like we are the world, like you're like mixing in all these people.
Also, aren't they?
This is unrelated to my review, but aren't they doing this again?
Like there's like a reunion of this or something or that already happened? Or this happened like years ago review but aren't they um doing this again like there's like a reunion of
this or something or that already the band or this happened like years ago i don't know i i
saw something most of them have died okay oh no i saw something let me see but nicole uh tell us
what you think of the movie so my my star rating is i think a three maybe three and a half even
though the music was not for me i did feel transported and i did enjoy it at some times
and i thought the cinematography i thought all seven cinematographers did an excellent job
all seven of you crushed it um they did do a last waltz tour in 2022 um but it looks like it might be something
complete no it is this it is this epic tour continues the tradition of capturing the
excitement of the band's historic 1976 thanksgiving concert uh hailed as the greatest concert of all
time and then there's just but there's pictures of people i just don't know who they are and i'm
like they must be people from something
i don't know but it's a lot of big bands probably are musicians but this is right what are you
seeing this on you i'm seeing this i just don't know who any of these people are me neither i'm
so confused and no offense to them no no i mean either i mean like i don't mean to offend anyone
i'm literally just going like they don't look old enough to have been there the first time and maybe they're just doing tributes or something
um it happened and it was amazing so
I don't know it was amazing they're like famous musicians you know but not they weren't obviously
not any of the original members but maybe like in other iterations and they're maybe doing a tribute that's like what's his name and queen adam lambert
that's right i loved when he when he jumped into queen i was like that's amazing he's got a great
it's so cool it's one of those things where you're, he grew up listening to this and then he's the lead singer. Like, that's insane.
Yeah.
All because of American Idol.
One of the best shows ever.
I love American Idol.
Has The Voice produced any singers that we know?
We're never talking.
No one is ever talking about people from The Voice.
It's always American Idol.
Yeah.
That is interesting.
But they're all amazing singers obviously everyone's
slapping their buttons and spinning around to see them slapping their buttons
yeah that's the premise of the show slap them buttons
i mean say how you love the voice in american idol and then this movie it's like meh our true taste always comes out it's always shocking
even ourselves but like just american idol by the way used to be like the meanest show ever i mean
like when do you think back they would bring in people where
like they clearly couldn't sing and they're like get in there go go get in there do it and then
they're gonna love you they're so confident and then everyone's like you're a piece of shit
and like we're at home like lol-ing and we're in eighth grade you said this like a few years ago
and it makes me laugh so fucking hard about what is the woman's name who was like
uh she's saying like from les mis susan boyle susan boyle that you were talking about how
mean that setup was where they like she comes out and then they like they do like audience shots of
like ew it's insane they're like there mean. They're like, there's no way
this could be good.
This old lady.
Yeah, they're literally,
their faces are like, ugh.
And then she sings and then they're all
like, oh, oh.
And then they literally say like,
all of us in this room
thought otherwise. Like, we all
thought it was just like the weirdest like
terrible ugly person and she's just like thank you i know it's so messed up and it makes no
sense that you would assume someone can't sing because of how they look it makes no sense but
like that's also like so much of our culture is like all singers are hot
basically and it's like that's not actually how life is but like we only put them up if they're
like we like to look at them too it's it's awful what an awful awful poor susan boyle she's doing
great right didn't she what where is she now i don't know she must have made tons of money singing oh she looks good let's see she got every nice haircut
oh she got some wing liner on okay though she did you know what because she didn't
she they i don't know what's going on her hair does look really nice
all right it is funny she looks like a like a nice a nice
40 year old woman and everyone said ew which is so mean so crazy and then she's like i dreamed
a dream and everyone's like oh my god she dreams but she's so ugly how could she ever
you've taught us all a lesson that really was like part of it yeah and now i think it's much
nicer though i think it's much more like we just send in people who are good and then
they get cheers and then we just see how far they go and but i'm also looking at susan boyle
she wasn't ugly she just wasn't wearing makeup and she didn't know what to do with her hair
and everyone said we hate that
that you can't figure out your look which is so i mean it's like that it's not she didn't care
probably she was like i'm just i love singing and like like right she really has a full life
and she's like i don't really you know care about styling my hair a certain way and then everyone's
like and that's your biggest flaw make fun of her dreams too like she's like i want to be like eileen page everyone's like oh my god you and your good
luck i bet they probably too like they she probably thought they were gonna put makeup on
her before they sent her out on tv they were like no no no no sorry you gotta get out there just like that yeah I was
listening to Kelly Clarkson on smart list and she was talking about how she doesn't care about like
hair and makeup she like kind of hates having it done like she appreciates it but she's just like
I it's not my typical like day-to-day thing and that was like an issue when she was filming
American Idol that like when they would shoot her documentary style like when it wasn't like on
stage she never
had hair makeup done and they were always like don't you want to do that and she's like no i
don't just this is my life you're gonna come to my house and see my thing and whatever but like
it is such an issue for you know productions wow hey it's hard to be a woman she's one of the best
singers we've got i think so she's my american idol she is mine
too first one best one first one back well that's obviously why we came here to gather today
do you have anything you'd like to plug um you uh no you can just catch me at Largo in Los Angeles
and Dynasty Typewriter and The Elysian
with Ask Us Anything and May Martin Show.
So fun.
Everyone should do that if you're in town.
Yes, very funny.
And thank you so much for being here
and talking about this with us.
Your opinions are so funny.
And we encourage everyone out there
to write a review for Newcomers on Apple Podcasts
and rate the podcast on Spotify. Just click
five stars because you love it.
You love it. And we'll be back
next week with Raging
Bull, which honestly, I don't know
anything about. I don't know what that means.
Me either. I don't know what that means at all.
I don't know what that means at all. We don't know.
Is there going to be bulls?
Is it set in Spain?
It could be any of the orestes Wolf of Wall Street
came later, but.
All right, we'll see.
We'll see you then.
Please watch the film
and we'll check in
with you next week.
Bye.
Bye.
Newcomers is a HeadGum
original hosted by us,
Nicole Byer
and Lauren Lapkus.
Our executive producer
is Anya Kenofskaya.
And our producer is Ali Khan.
Our theme music, editing, sound mixing, and mastering is done by Ferris Manchi.
Listen to new episodes wherever you get your podcasts every Tuesday. Thank you. That was a Hiddem Original.