Stuff You Should Know - Selects: Some Movies That Changed Filmmaking
Episode Date: July 30, 2022An estimated 50,000 films were made worldwide in 2009 alone. Many are surely clunkers, but in this episode Chuck and Josh talk about the ones that emerged throughout cinema history to change the cours...e of all movies that followed. Get your popcorn and lean back while you enjoy this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
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Hey everybody, it's me Josh and since it's summertime. It's movie time. I am oh, so I've chosen our super interesting
2015 movie talk episode some movies that changed film making you don't have to be a cinema file to enjoy this episode
So don't be scared off and there's a part right around the beginning of listener mail
Where we talk about making a movie podcast that I now wonder was possibly the seed that Chuck's movie crush podcast sprouted from maybe
Which if you like this go listen to the extensive movie crush catalog anywhere you get your podcasts in the meantime
I hope you enjoy
Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant a.k.a
Siskel and Ebert save a C. I'll see and Jerry's over there. I guess she's Jean shallot
That's the stuff you should know try
I don't know why that tickled me so much because Jean sell it's a funny looking I guess yeah, Jerry's not
I'm just picturing her with a big afro and a moustache and like a tweed jacket and bad opinions about movies
Jean shallot had a look for sure still that he's around right?
Oh, yeah, I think so. Yeah, RIP both Siskel and Ebert so sad. I know
Um, have you seen the Roger Ebert documentary? No, I've heard nothing but good things really really good very touching. Yeah
What is it?
Something life
life
Like mine life with me life on top life itself life with thumbs life itself life itself
It was really great and I watched it on it made the mistake of watching on a plane and I was just like my allergies are acting up
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, I was I was watering because of your allergies. No because it was sad
It was crying. Do you want me to say it? Oh, yeah crying on a plane? I was confused there for a second
That's better than when I watch other movies that are on my laptop that are like
If like bad violence or or nudity or something
I'm always just like oh and I kind of lower the laptop and it's like I didn't realize this was in here and the lady next to me
He's just like oh
You disgust me. Yeah, cuz I don't you don't want to be sensitive to people around me
You know, I'm not one of those jerks. It's like just lives in my own bubble. It's like watching some sex scene on a plane
You're like elbowing the lady. So yeah
No, I hated it. It was so embarrassed that happened to me a couple of times
I'm like I needed to start going PG on movies. Yeah, you just like airplanes Judd Apatow. Huh?
Am I right? He's unpredictable. Yeah
All right, so Chuck this is your episode to shine man. Is it?
Yes, you're a movie guy too though. I like movies, but I've I almost consciously don't let myself
Watch movies on a like a film aficionado level. Oh, right. You're just pure enjoyment. Yeah
I don't ever want to see the individual shots and just be like oh well that could have been better
Whatever. Yeah, and just miss the movie as a whole. Yeah, I fall somewhere in the middle of that
I try to let go but um like our our video producer director Casey is pretty bad about that and our buddy Scotty
Who shot our TV show? Uh-huh. Oh, he's the worst. Yeah, he's just uh
Camera working that lighting in that scene
Scott's awesome. Hey Scott. Hey Casey
They're all in here with this in spirit and hey, this is the last show in this studio
Yeah, last episode in the old office. Yep murder room couldn't feel more neutral about it
I actually feel less than neutral less than zero. It's it's weird. That was a good movie. Thank you great shots
Yeah, I say thank you as if I directed it. Well, right. I not only directed it. I also played Andrew McCarthy
Yeah, I'm ready to get the heck out of here man can't wait to get in that new office and that yeah, it's gonna be good
Tiny little dedicated studio whole new world. All right
Let's do this. Okay, so Chuck films. You've seen one or two of them in your time. Sure
Have you seen any of the ones in this list? I know you've seen a few of them
But have you seen like some of the early ones? I've seen well
We'll just go piece by piece because I have not seen battleship Potamkin. Okay
But I do love Mandy Potamkin
It's a little different. Yes in spelling pronunciation
Meaning the whole thing. Uh-huh
But it's close I guess
But we're talking of course about films that change filmmaking
In some way or another and the first one on the list is from 1925 battleship Potamkin
That's hard for me to say which is not the first movie by the way
The first screen movie was workers leaving the Lumiere factory, which is 47 seconds long
I'm the most boring piece of celluloid anyone's ever put together, but it was the first that's right
This was many years. That was a full 30 years before battleship Potamkin by the time 30 years had passed
Like we were doing like narratives and there was banning and all sorts of great stuff. Yeah and battleship Potamkin fell under
Both of those umbrellas. It was a narrative story. It was a silent movie
That's right, but it told a pretty clear story, and it was a bit of Russian propaganda as well
Yeah, it tells the story of a 1905 uprising and where there were Russian sailors
Basically, there was a mutiny aboard a ship and then the bad guys the Cossacks came in looking for
Revenge, yeah 1905 that would have been rising up against tyranny would have been rising up against the Roman off
Monarchy, I guess nice, but it was made in 1925. So this is a time when you know
Lenin and Chotsky and all those dudes were running around trying to do the great experiment. Yeah, and
It ends up turns out that the battleship Potamkin
Was banned in some countries some countries are like we don't want this Rusky propaganda, right?
But Russia itself later on banned it when Stalin came to power because he was a self-aware dictator
Was that the deal? Yeah, okay. He knew this could be a
A metaphor for rising up against my dictatorship. So I'm gonna just ban this movie. Oh, yeah, even though it's Russian propaganda
Well
Filmatically, I need to bring the history by the way
Filmatically speaking it was a landmark film because of the montage
most notably the Russian or Soviet theory of montage, which is basically that
Your impact is gonna come from juxtaposition of shots and not necessarily a smooth sequence of shots, right?
and it should be rhythmic instead of necessarily being tied to the story it was like a
Rhythmic series of shots and
This one is popular. It was the Odessa step sequence as one of the five acts and
It is huge because it has been aped and
and
mimicked and mocked and
Homaged probably more than I don't know about more but a lot of times in film history. Well, yeah, the montage. It's like a go-to
Editing technique, right? Oh, yeah. Well the montage in general, but specifically the Odessa steps. Oh, okay
There are two notable parts in that sequence. One is the
You know, it's basically a big charge on these these grand steps leading up to a building in a big battle, you know, death
Odessa Odessa Texas and
There's a part of it where there's the old the old baby carriage
Going down the steps, you know, what's gonna happen to the baby? And it sounds tired because we've seen that in
You know the untouchables. Yeah, notably I did not find it tiresome
Naked gun 33 and a third
Yeah, everything is illuminated the great movie by Leo Schreiber
That was from directly from the Odessa step sequence in Battleship Potamkin the baby carriage. Yeah, and the old
Shot through the shot in the eye through the glasses. Oh, cool. That comes from this movie, too
They were the first ones to do it. Yeah, and you've seen that in Woody Allen's Love and Death and Bananas
And of course the godfather
Oh, yeah sequence where Mo greens getting the massage and he looks up and puts on his glasses during a montage
Yeah, that's a whole sequence destination montage. Yeah, because there was an assassination on the steps as well
Oh, yeah, so that was definitely a double who was that that was Francis Ford Coppola
Oh, yeah, he was clearly aware of Battleship Potamkin clearly
I was trying to think of other examples of montages and the only thing I could come up with was the a team
Building something but that counts as a montage, right? Yeah
Yeah, it's like a some related in some way related shots that are kind of put together that a little bit transcend
Like until a story in itself. Yeah, like Rocky training for a fight. Yeah, that's another good lot of times is set to music
Yeah, I love that that's the only one you can think of yeah
And in the great movie Brazil too has the shot through the glasses bit as I like to call it
So that's Battleship Potamkin doesn't one of the Nazis and Raiders of the Lost Ark gets shot through the glasses
Maybe
That wouldn't surprise me
It's been it's been oft homage
Yeah, yeah, so Battleship Potamkin was a it made a pretty big splash in 1925 in 1926 the following year
The next movie on the list
It wasn't his first but it really solidified I think is stardom Buster Keaton stardom. Yeah, the general rightfully so too
Yeah, he was one of the great
Well, some people call him the greatest stuntman to ever live it he's done some stuff that I think earns him that yeah
I mean this is back in the day too where he was
Legitimately risking his life, right? You know like that the very famously where he's standing on the street in front of a house
And then the whole front of the house falls over him and the window just goes right around him
Yeah, I watched that again today. Yeah, it is I
I can't believe he did that you in there's actually a half of a second where his arm jerks up because he startled as the house
Finally makes its way like into his peripheral vision. Yeah, and it has to be one of the most dangerous things that human beings ever done on film
Oh, yeah, I'm sure the whole time
Before that was like we did the math right you did the math do the math again do the math again
Show me the math right show me the math. Yeah, because that's all it was it was math and measurements, right?
But yeah, he could have been squashed and killed very easily and he had a lot of faith in
Everybody who was pulling off the stunt with him, you know, he had to just stand there
That was his whole thing was he had to just stand there and his bit was that he was he played it straight constantly
He was a stone-faced actor. Yeah, deadpan. Yeah, he kind of started that whole thing because his big
I was about to say rival, but I guess
Just contemporary Charlie Chaplin while similar in some ways was completely different because Chaplin
Was constantly mugging for the camera and like asking for the audience's
sympathy right raising his eyebrows or yeah, like look what's happening to me
Come on come on whereas Buster Keaton was just he had that deadpan look the whole time
Yeah, he would go from like a house falling around him to jumping on a train or something like that with just the same blank facial expression
Yeah, and the reason this is a highly influential film the general is because it kind of showcases the best of both
The the amazing stunts that would be mimicked and throughout the years and built upon and then the deadpan
Style that influenced everyone from obviously Bill Murray is one of the great deadpan actors of all time
Yeah, like you can count the number of time Bill Murray even smiles in a movie on like two hands
Sure much less like apes or laughs or anything Michael Sarah's mentioned in here
And I'm like he I think he might have Bill Murray beat as far as deadpan actor goes. Yeah
Well, Zach Galifianakis is on the list. He's super deadpan
Leslie Nielsen, of course Amy Poehler. I think is a woman that's a very deadpan. Yeah has a deadpan style Jason Swartzman
Yes, but people say this is this all is a direct descendant of Buster Keaton's work
Yeah, and if you think we're overstating this go watch any Buster Keaton movie
Yeah, you will be thrilled and delighted and if your attention span has been shredded to ribbons by the internet
Just go on to YouTube and type in Buster Keaton and it'll bring up all sorts of
Clips of his awesome stunts pretty great. You will be thrilled and amazed. I promise
Yeah, and I think I made a note here by the way that we have a fatty arbuckle retraction to make
Remember when we we called him out as the rapist to murderer. I didn't say murder
Well, we said rapist at least right, but we were taken in task by a fan
He was he had he was acquitted of all that stuff and apparently didn't do
either act and
His career and life and family name were ruined forever
Huh, so he was evidently done a grave misjustice and we sort of cavalierly just
Still called him that today. Yeah, I need to look into it more
All right, so next up we have the jazz singer the 1927 edition not the Neil Diamond one
No, and there was one in between two with Danny Thomas. Oh, yeah, I believe
I like Neil diamonds
It's good. I never saw it. You ever see it. No, no, it's not bad
But this is the original from Alan Crossland and it is notable because it was
the first feature-length
Movie that was
At least 25% spoken dialogue, right?
Does that make sense? Yeah, it's totally new
Yeah, it wasn't it wasn't the first talky because they had short films that were talkies right and there was a movie the next year
I'm sorry yet in 1928 called lights of New York that had 100% full spoken dialogue
But the jazz singer had a mix of music and spoken dialogue, right?
The first big big daddy feature-length film to do so right with substantial dialogue, right? Yeah, and they they
Did it in the most roundabout difficult way that you could possibly do it
Which is to record
The audio and the the soundtrack both the dialogue and the music on do vinyl records
Yeah, probably wax records really and then the projectionist had to sync the record up with the film strip
So everything was in sync. Yeah, it was a device called a vitaphone that Warner Brothers sunk about half a million into
This company called Western Electric who invented it and it was actually physically connected to
the projectors motor
So they did while they did have to sync it. It was it was a physical connection between the phonograph player and the projection
Real I guess yeah, and it went on to gross three and a half million bucks for 1927 man lot of dough
That's a ton of dough. That's like five six million dollars today at least. Yeah
but
Was ineligible for the best picture because they were just like you can't compete with the rest. That's not fair
Oh, wow because everything else is silent and everyone's gonna vote for you. Yeah, so that changed the whole game for sure
We will continue on with our awesome and in grossing list right after this
Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb
You might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lisa in Manitoba who got the idea to Airbnb the backyard guest house over childhood home now
The extra income helps pay her mortgage. So yeah, you might not realize it
But you might have an Airbnb to find out what your place could be earning at air bnb.ca
Slash host hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new iHeart podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass the hardest thing can be knowing who to
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So Chuck if you'll notice the first three
Movies in our list the first three films that changed everything
Happened in 1925 26 and 27 things are changing fast. They really were I mean like we buy leaps and bounds
Sure, but you can also make the case that there was a lot of new ground to cover
So just about anybody who did anything new that was noteworthy
Innovation. Yeah, it was a big innovation. Yeah. Yeah harder to innovate these days
It is and if you'll notice on the list
So the the earliest ones were like technical editing innovations
Now starting with Citizen Kane from 1941. We start to get into innovations in storytelling
Which is a lot more nuanced than you know
doing your own stunts or
using a montage or something it's it's
Figuring out how to tell a story in a much less linear
Narrative fashion. Yeah, and Citizen Kane was one of the early ones to pioneer a non linear narrative. Yeah, did you you saw this?
Yeah, yeah, okay. I didn't see it till I mean it was probably like
Probably about 15 years ago
But like way later than you would think I would have seen this yeah as a big film buff
I saw it in college at a
In a film class. Yeah, sure. Yeah often. Yeah, if you sign up for a film class
You're gonna study Citizen Kane. Exactly pretty much. I finally found out where Rosebud was
Don't ruin it. I won't
But it is a landmark film in every way and it is often been top of best films of all-time lists for great reasons
One of which like you said the non linear narrative was a really unique thing at the time
Although flashback wasn't
Brand new it was the first time it had been this extensive. Yeah and effective in the story
Yeah, cuz I mean it's substantial enough that it really cuts up the flow. Oh, yeah
You know, it's not like a quick flashback and they come back and the actors like staring off into space to
Transition back into the present again. I mean like it was all over the place. Yeah, you know
Some of the more concrete cinematic landmarks
One was using deep focus
Director of photography Greg Toland legend used he had used deep focus before on a movie called long voyage home, but
It's all over the place in Citizen Kane and that basically means if you see a shot where
Something very far away is in focus in the shot
Basically where everything's in focus with the background in the foreground in focus
So you can press pause and look around exactly like you're sticking your head into a box. Yeah, that's called deep focus
Yeah, and it was brand new as far as Citizen Kane goes. That's how extensive it used it
Yeah, one of the other things was off-center framing. It was a big, you know, pretty common thing to just center whatever
the main action was either the the character or the object and
Citizen Kane had a lot of things where the main focus of the scene the character may be even off-screen
Which was really weird at the time people didn't know what to think of it, right?
Expressionistic lighting
Back then everything they just lit it. They're like make sure everything's well lit. Yeah
But there's an auto-preminger also like a big pioneer with that. Yeah, I think so with them
Dial him for murder. I think he directed that was a Hitchcock. I think that was Hitchcock
Was it okay? Well auto-preminger directed stuff like that though, right?
He was very he used moody lighting and shadows and stuff a lot
I probably messed that up people are gonna be dialing for murder. I think it was a premature. Okay
But
Orson Welles, of course, I don't think we even mentioned that too
Wrote directed and started and produced and I think even edited it Citizen Kane. Yeah, I just assumed everybody knew that you know
Yeah, he came from the theater where you create a mood with lighting only certain parts of the stage
so he brought that into the movies and
it was very
Evocative and set the mood well and people are like man
Why are we lighting everything all bright all the time? Look at Citizen Kane. It's really worked. Yeah
Couple of other things one of which I know you will appreciate sir is that he pretty much invented the wipe. Oh
The Star White not the Star White
But it followed. Yeah, the Star White followed. Okay, which I know is your favorite
Transition in cinema. Yeah. Oh, it's all Star White because it almost makes a
sound, you know
And one of the way I want to say you're right down for murder was Hitchcock. Oh, was it? Yeah, okay
What was premature? Did you look that up? He did one called Laura the man with the golden arm
It's not who I'm thinking of I'm thinking of a director named Otto who directed in like the 20s or 30s
And he directed like moody
Like like moody
Movies like yeah murder movies. Yeah, I feel more. Yes film noir. That's exactly what I was going for and I don't remember who it was
Maybe his name was Otto film noir
He's French
And then one final thing of course that you could study Citizen Kane for a week in a film class. Mm-hmm
So this is an overview, but um
the low-angle shots
People didn't use a lot of lower high-angle shots back then it was kind of just shot from straight on and
Orson Welles even dug out cut out the floor a lot of times to get the camera lower
Well, and for the first time we saw ceilings in view
In a movie because quite often things were shot on a soundstage where you don't have ceilings and
He wanted those low-angle shots. So they used
fabric most times to act as a ceiling but very effective shots of from below of
Orson Welles as I mean it wasn't exactly William Randolph-Hurst, but it was an approximation of William Randolph-Hurst
Right. It's a very effective low-angle stuff that now. I mean we take for granted all these things
But you know there would be no pulp fiction and that
Nonlinear storytelling if there was no well, maybe somebody would have done it, but maybe eventually but you know he did the first and
That's why it was innovative exactly. It's Fritz Lang that I was yeah, there you go. Yeah Fritz Lang
Metropolis and M just M. That's okay. Yeah, it's all making sense now get confused. Yeah, but you were right on you were right there
Fritz and Otto are not close. I mean they're both German, but that's about it. Yeah, but you know the difference between M and dial M
Just a telephone
What's up next Chuck breathless one of my faves
So I am going to rely on you mostly for this one because I looked up
What the French new wave really did what did it count it for yeah, and like all of the essays I found were
Hard to they were dense. Yeah, and I didn't really understand
I understood that the French new wave like changed everything yeah, and that a lot of the movies that I know and love today are
The offspring of the French new wave, but I still didn't get exactly
Specifically what the French new wave did
So you weren't gonna rely on me to summarize this. Yeah, no brush. No
Well for me the French new wave basically ushered in an era of
What now I think most people might associate with indie filmmaking. Okay, okay like
Handheld camera work and what some people at the time considered amateurish camera work
Movies where maybe not a lot seemingly happens, you know, nothing grand happens
Which was the case in breathless a lot of people didn't like it at the time because it was like, you know, not much happens
You know that the the two leads in the movie
Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg weren't really like
Didn't show express a whole lot of deep love and you know there weren't these big moments of love and affection and
These huge action sequences and it was described as flat by a lot of people
And I think a lot of indie movies do that just kind of show life as it happens
Yeah, so without breathless, we wouldn't have like bottle rocket
Maybe what's Anderson's definitely a big French new wave guy. Yeah for sure
But
Godard John Luke Godard who directed it and Truffaut and some other French new wave
Forefathers were film critics at first. Oh, yeah. Yeah, and they decided as a group like we want to look at cinema in a new way
and
Do something different so they went and started making their own movies. That's like James Fenimore Cooper
Yeah, the guy who wrote last of the Mohicans. Oh, really?
Yeah, he apparently used to complain that like nobody wrote good books anymore
And so I think his wife or something said well
Why don't you do it big shot and he did and the books he wrote really weren't so great
But he went and wrote them and he wrote a bunch of them, too
One of my favorite far sides ever is the second to the last of the Mohicans
It's just a line of Native Americans in the second to the last one. They're online facing away
Uh-huh, you just sort of turning around and waving it
I guess the camera at Gary Larson's hand
So breathless is notable for those reasons it kind of kicked off the French new wave
But the use of jump cut editing which we see so much now
It was the first movie and it was very jarring at the time to see jump cuts in a movie
Yeah, but and that's when you're showing like I
I guess the best way to describe it is
multiple shots of the same
Subject or thing from different angles, right?
It's like you
Indicate the progression of time or movement or something by just cutting quickly rather than
Focusing on somebody walking down the street for five minutes
Yeah
You cut a couple of times and all of a sudden they're just closer to the camera and then closer and closer and then they're past the camera
So jump cut yeah, or even a simple something as simple as like you're going to leave the house
So you go and pick up your keys and you put on your coat instead of showing all that you come out of the bedroom boom
You're putting on your coat boom you're putting the keys in the door, right?
Exactly, you're just showing the high highlights of this progression of stuff where that would otherwise be boring to watch the whole thing
Yeah, but it also is
Used to create tension to yeah because it's it's jarring
Yeah, I guess is probably why it creates tension and Scorsese famously used it in Goodfellas
Oh, yes at the end when Henry Hill is like like trying to sell some guns the cocaine sequence
Nero yeah
He's cooked to the gills right and he's like trying to sell some guns that Nero
But they don't fit the silencers and like he's the helicopters following him
He's got the sauce going and all this stuff is being represented and compressed in a very short amount of time by
The use of jump cuts. Yeah, very effective and for budding filmmakers. It's a great way to
hide mistakes
Oh, yeah things you may not have gotten that you thought you got
Jump cutting is a really easy way to just sort of
Yeah to hide your errors. Yeah, I did a lot in other words when I was making those shorts. I
Was I realized in my head I was referencing the
shot in SoulTaker, you know, have you ever seen that Mr. Science 3000 with it's
His last name is Estevez is Martin Sheen's brother and he is a soul taker and he's next to this guy
Who's a soul taker?
You just have to see this but anyway, they're they're walking down the road and this jump cut like has this progression of them, right?
It's so unnecessary, but it's like a great use of jump cut. You could tell the director was like
I can't wait to use a jump cut and that's what she did. She used it on but go
Watch that msc3k. It's a good one, man. You did you see every single one of those episodes? No, it's still I
Still run across ones that I haven't seen. Yeah, nice
Hey and a shout out to Bill Corbett who I know is a listener. Oh, yeah, he is isn't yeah
I don't know if he's gonna hear this one, but I'm the great Bill Corbett soul
taker
Next we are gonna move on to
Federico
Fellini's
Eight and a half you ever seen this one. No, I haven't it's good now. I understand why it's called that though
yeah, it was one of the first although not the first movies about moviemaking and
starting the great Marcello, Mastriani, Mastro Iani
from La Dolce Vida
Amuse of Fellini's over the years too and this one
This one really kicked off the surrealist filmmaking and sort of saying you can play around and
Shoot a dream sequence where the the guys in traffic and then he leaves his car and floats up in the air and is
You know being pulled down to the ground on the beach from a rope tied around his ankle just like go nuts
Yeah, and successive filmmakers did go nuts like Gondry did
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind. Oh, yeah, he's hugely influenced
Um Darren Aronofsky. Mm-hmm. Did some weird stuff here or there? Yeah, David Lynch and Terry Gilliam, of course
Yeah, just basically surrealism is what I'm taking Fellini introduced into this. Yeah for real and
besides the surrealism
That opening sequence of eight and a half where the director of he's the director in the movie
Guido is stuck in traffic. It's really
claustrophobic feeling and that's why he floats away and escapes, you know that that traffic jam
But that was directly mimicked in like REM's everybody hurts video. Oh, yeah
And the beginning of the movie falling down. Do you remember that? Uh-huh. That started with the traffic jam
Yeah, Michael Douglas just left. He doesn't float. He gets like an oozy. I saw that again the other day most of it hold up
It's weird it alternately felt way ahead of its time and also very dated
Yeah, because the stuff that Michael Douglas is doing felt way ahead of its time
But then there was I just forgot about that whole
weird
Subplots with Robert Duvall retiring and he had this wife that was henpecking them and like this retirement party
They were trying to throw on forgot about that too. Yeah, it was just so unnecessary and felt really weird and out of place the other day
Yeah, when I was watching it
Was there like a jump cut montage where he's putting on his watch this gold retirement watch?
No
But then to the Barbara Hershey
You know is it in Venice at home with the daughter and he spends a whole day coming there to
Grab them basically and the whole time she just keeps calling the cops like I know he's coming I know he's coming
And I was watching the other day. It's like freaking leave. Oh, yeah, what are you doing there? Yeah?
That's a movie character thing
Yeah, you know, that's just bad writing bad directing when you just walk right past the ability to leave
There's you you missed a huge step. Where were we falling down? Yeah, I think that pretty much sums up eight and a half
I think so too falling down boom. So Chuck we got a little more left. We got more films. Is this making you want to watch films?
Yeah, me too. I feel like eating
Ice cream watching a film and scratching from poison ivy lately. Yeah and burning this office down
You know if that happens now suspicions gonna fall on you for saying that. That's all right
We'll be right back after this
Hey everybody when you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could
What could it earn? So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lauren and Nova Scotia who realized she could Airbnb her cozy backyard tree house
And the extra income helps cover her bills and pays for her travel
So, yeah, you might not realize it, but you might have an Airbnb too find out what your place could be earning at air bnb.ca
Slash host hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place?
Because I'm here to help this I promise you. Oh god. Seriously. I swear and you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so my husband Michael
Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life
Step by step not another one kids relationships life in general can get messy
You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so tell everybody
Yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen
So we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye
Listen to frosted tips with the Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
I'm Mangeh Shatikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology
But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India
It's like smoking you might not smoke
But you're gonna get second-hand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you it got weird fast
Tantric curses major league baseball teams canceled marriages kpop
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crashing down
Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are gonna change too
Listen to skyline drive and the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
All right, so we're back with our awesome jingles, which by the way, we we have to thank John
Beggin yeah John begin
Begin to begin he even emailed with the pronunciation name, but he the original guy who did our jingle the first jingle ever rusty
Mattias or Mattias
Man not good with the pronunciation. Well, anyway rusty who's banned the sheepdogs are on tour right now
Yeah
Just because his work was so original we contacted him and said hey
We've got this other guy who's done like covers of your work. Can we use these?
It's like totally mash it up. Yeah, and John's been making awesome like versions of it ever since yeah, they're both great and talented
Thanks to you both and go check out. I think that would you say they're on tour, right? Yeah, the sheepdogs. Yeah, go check out the sheepdogs
Yeah
And in town near you. Yeah. All right, let's finish with these two in reverse order
Okay, toy story was a big one hugely innovative
Huge oh, yeah, and again, it's one of those things where now almost everything about it seems pedestrian sure or what it did
Yeah, yeah, it's still a great movie. I'm sure oh, yeah
But the the innovations that it undertook are just seem pedestrian
But at the time it was totally groundbreaking. Yeah game changer
It was the first um the first CGI movie all CGI movie ever. Yeah, that was enormous
Well, yeah, and I remember at the time seeing it and just being like wow
This is the future of animated films. What's the best all CGI animated film you've ever seen visually?
Uh, well, I haven't seen a lot of them these days because Emily doesn't like those
So I probably wouldn't be the best person to ask Holly from stuff mom or a mist in history class
Yeah, she probably the one to ask for my money. Have you seen the Adventures of Tintin? Oh, yeah, that was amazing mind
Blowing yeah, I saw that on your recommendation really really liked it
Yeah, the story was great. The action was great. The characters were great, but the CGI the computer animation is
But I think possibly the best ever done. Yeah, and that's a bit of a different style than say like up or the Incredibles
It's not nearly as cartoons. It's like the what I think it's the motion capture. Yeah, I think that's what they did for that
Oh, yeah with up it would strictly be totally just animation, right? Yeah, but I mean they're both animation, right?
Um, but yeah, man Tintin that was really good. It was good. I was surprised how much I like that
But up was good too and Toy Story was good too
And but all of these things came as a result of the ground that Toy Story broke absolutely in 1995
Like you said what seems like a common thing today. I mean, you don't see cell animation anymore. It's almost I know
I kind of miss it. I totally miss like the new
Mickey Mouse is all weird and CG like stuff from our generation should have just been discontinued
Yeah, and then you just come up with all new stuff that CGI strawberry shortcake not supposed to be CGI
It just all looks weird now. Yeah, I wish there would have
People would have done a little bit of both still
Because I think cell animation like I think the Iron Giant came out after Toy Story and they did cell animation
Yeah, and that was great. Yeah, great movie. I haven't seen that. Oh, it's really good. You'd like it
Like it was a movie for grown-ups and Toy Story sort of laid the way for that because
It was one of the first movies. I guess get cartoony kids movies
To really have a lot of dialogue that flew over kids heads that adults got a little nod in the wink what toy story
Yeah, yeah, not like dirty humor, but it's not like fritz the cat
No, no, no, but a little entendre here and there that adults might appreciate the kids won't understand, right?
Those are the best jokes
And
Now we have you know best animated
Feature in the Oscars which definitely came straight out of the original toy story because
Movie started being considered before they created its own category
Up in Toy Story 3 were actually nominated for a regular best picture
Yeah, and I think everyone's like who we need to get them their own category because you can't have an animated movie when best picture
Can't well up would have come after
The the best animated picture category came out
Oh, really so that kind of goes as a testament to just how amazing that movie is. Yeah, that's right
That it was still up for best picture. Oh, it was both
I don't know if it was up for it probably was up for best animated as well
But it was definitely also up for best picture. Oh, wow while there was an animated category. Yeah, I never considered that
Bam, that was a good movie. Yeah
It was sweet. Um, so I got nothing else on Toy Story. Well, then what about the last one?
Yeah
2001 a space Odyssey
Quite a film you sent this essay on
Criterion I think criterion calm, but you know the criterion collection. Yeah, it was written. I guess in 1988
Even though it says posted in 1988
It's like there wasn't an internet to post it on in 1988. Maybe it means posted it like in the mail. Maybe
But I realized like I can read
Film essays about Stanley Kubrick's work all day long. Yeah, me too. Like I love that documentary room 227
E was it 227 237 246 237 247
You know the one about the shining conspiracy theories. Yeah, the number of the room is amazing
I can't remember though. Um, I I read a bunch of articles is I think 237
Um, I read a bunch of articles around the release of that documentary
Yeah, which were basically like film essays on the shining. I read this one amazing one
From several years ago about eyes wide shut. Oh, yeah, how it's like a masterpiece of sociology. I love that movie
A lot of people hate that movie. Yeah
Um, and then now this like 2001. I'm sure there's tons out there to consume
But I can just read that stuff all day long because that guy was so
Just amazingly detailed as a director. Yeah, I agree. I can read more about his
Work critical essays on his work than any other director. Right. It's just unbelievable. It's almost like it's its own genre
It is, you know, Kubrick Ian. Yeah, it's got a word named after it. Yeah, and well it should
um
So 2001 a space odyssey 1968, um
Blue minds back then blows minds today one for its
Just the amazing look and the technical achievement
Um, it ages really well. I mean if you see a movie from 1968 about outer space, it still looks like the future
Yeah, he don't expect it to hold up well, but it totally does
Um, so much so that a lot of the, you know, George Lucas and Ridley Scott were just like it's done
Right, like we might as well give up. Yeah, George Lucas when Star Wars came out said Star Wars is
Technically comparable, but for my money 2001 is by far the better movie
Yeah, everyone was sort of intimidated. I think by how talented Kubrick was. Well plus also, um
You have to take into account that he made this movie at a time when other sci-fi movies were just pure schlock
Oh, yeah
So not only to to make the movie in this way this visually amazing and
Amazing with an audio soundtrack and just totally innovative
It also took like that mindset
It's just completely going a different direction that everybody else has as well
Yeah, of course, I think about Ridley Scott saying that and then he goes on to make alien and bladerunner after that so
I mean he he helped
Prometheus man
Yeah, I people don't like Prometheus. I don't care. It's a cool movie. No, I like the two
I thought okay one flaw the big flaw to me was
And I'm sure it's like part of the subtext or the context or one of the texts
but um
The the the engineer
Coming back to life or coming out of heart hibernation after however long and just immediately like inflicting violence on these
P-brained humans who are showing him no threat whatsoever. Yeah, I just thought it was a little
It wasn't explained well enough, I think for my taste. Yeah, I think I agree with you
But when I'm watching a Ridley Scott movie, I just assume if I'm missing something
He has an explanation for it. I'm just not catching it. Yeah. I know what you mean
I'd like I think I read some stuff
about how it tied into the
alien
Canon and realized I need to go see it again with all this
Knowledge that I wasn't really thinking about. Yeah, and maybe I'd like it more. Yeah, but I haven't done that yet
So back to 2001. Oh, yeah, it was also notable for
Being bookended basically with 30 minutes of silence on both ends of the movie
The first 30 minutes are and when I say silent, I mean no dialogue right and the last 30 minutes have no dialogue
Yeah, the last line comes like a full 30 minutes before the end
Yeah, and over the 146 minutes. There are only 40 minutes of dialogue and the whole thing
and um
That's why I just when people compare something like interstellar
And call it Kubrickian. I just want to smash
Did you not like interstellar?
Not really. Oh, I liked it. I was super let down despite
McConaughey doing Wooderson
in the future
I still liked it. I even liked him in it. I liked a lot of the parts of it, but um
To me it's anti Kubrickian because
Every 10 minutes they're explaining everything that's going on. Oh, yeah, that was another thing just like inception
Ellen Page's entire character was written in to explain what was going on every 10 minutes. Yeah, and I felt like interstellar was the same way
It's like Christopher Nolan needs to just trust his audience a little bit like Kubrick did and say figure it out or don't
Yeah, no, that's that's I'm not gonna
Stop every 10 minutes just to explain everything. Yeah, here's what's going on. Remember?
If you didn't get it right here's what's going on again
Well, I think if they are labeling something like interstellar is Kubrickian, right?
One of the ways that you can interpret that is that he was
He rooted his
2001
In
Science fact. Yeah, right?
So like the stuff that the the astronauts are like dealing with and the things that are going on and the the conditions of space
It was all factual
Whereas with interstellar same thing
They went to really great lengths to do what they could to make
Everything scientifically factual aside from the fact that
The idea that you could go into a black hole and then come back out or something like that
Drifting in space that's not gonna happen. But for the most part interstellar was
Because scientifically accurate. So maybe that's what they meant when they called it Kubrickian because you're absolutely right
Like they did explain a lot
And went to great lengths to explain a lot whereas with with 2001
You just watch it the first five times like what just happened. Yeah, and apparently carry grant had that same reaction as well
That was rock Hudson rock Hudson. That's right. Yeah, the original screening that Roger Ebert was at in LA
Rock Hudson just left and said can somebody tell me what the hell that was about
Yeah, and it wasn't even over yet. Yeah, yeah
um
Well, the reason it
It uh
Has science fact and not science fiction is because
Kubrick and Arthur C. Clark who oh, yeah, it wasn't actually a book that was made into a movie
It was a movie a book made after a movie. Yeah, and they collaborated on both and um
Um, they went to Carl Sagan, um, of course of cosmos and said he said you're gonna make billions and billions of dollars
That was pretty good. Was it? Yeah, I don't send a lot like them. Um, they went to Carl Sagan said, hey, we want to portray these
extraterrestrials
Are they maybe the star child is uh
Or they turn Dave into the star child, right? Are they humanoids? What are they gonna look like and Sagan was like
They were very unlikely to be humanoid. So Kubrick did the smart thing and was just like well
We just won't show him right at all instead of making a fool of myself
Like signs and making some dumb-looking. Oh man
man
Let me just not show the aliens very smart move. Yeah
um
Getting back to the story of uh 2001
Although I think the village is underrated
Yeah
Yeah, I can stomach that one. What about uh, well you like the sixth sense, right? Everybody like the sixth sense. Sure
Uh, I guess that was it for him. I loved unbreakable. Unbreakable. Yeah, that was one where like
Yeah, I think it was maybe even better the second time. Yeah, I still like that movie
Uh, but he also made that lady in the water movie and the the one with marky mark, uh
The people were jumping off four brothers
No
Three kings
Is it the one in the elevator?
No, he just produced. Oh, I know what you're talking about the one where people like jumping off of buildings and stuff
Inexplicably. Yeah, I didn't even I didn't see that. I couldn't get through 10 minutes of that movie. So, um
2001 back to good movies
Was uh, I had a three x three part structure
But not a conventional three x structure that you might be used to in movies
Which is why it confounded people like rock Hudson. Uh, the first they called the movements
The first movement was the uh, the dawn of man sequence with the
The the apes with the monolith. Mm-hmm
And uh, he has that great part where he throws his little bone tool up in the air, right? And then it morphs into well not morphs, but it
Maybe it's a dissolve into the um
spinning
In outer space it's called a match cut. Yeah match cut and um
Of the rotation of what we now know was a nuclear warhead
Uh, because I read that little article 20 things you didn't know about 2001. I didn't know those were nuclear warheads necessarily in outer space
They made it a little more vague and initially it was going to be
More explicit and they were going to explode it in outer space, right? But he said no, it's a little too close to uh,
The ending of um strange love strange love. Yeah, so let's not do that. Yeah, probably good choice
Yeah, but some as a result some people have taken it to mean that like it was a
That match cut was supposed to show how far humans have come right from using a bone to murder somebody to
Satellites in space
But if you know that the satellite is actually loaded down with nuclear warheads
That match cut demonstrates how little humans have changed. Oh, yeah from using a bone to murder somebody to
Using satellites to murder somebody the motif is still the same and it's murder
Yeah
He was going for some deep things. Oh, yeah a lot of metaphor happening
Yeah
I mean supposedly in every single shot because he started out as a still photographer, right?
Yeah, yeah supposedly every frame of a Kubrick movie you there is nothing that isn't
Unintentional in place there by him. He did a lot of his own set decorating
Yeah, like the the pencil holder on the desk in the office of the guy at the shining hotel
Right was where it's supposed to be right and if like it if it has like a picture of a goat head inscribed on it
That means something right. It's not accidental
Yeah, although I will say room 237, which I think may have been the point
Is a little bit like these people are crazy
Not like oh man, I just see what they're saying and all this right
I was just thinking these people are nuts right it's it was just kind of enjoyable to hear their interpretations of it
Well, and I think it had a it was a comment on obsession and fandom more so than
The shining for sure, but there I thought there some of their ideas were interesting totally
I said room 227 didn't I like one of the conspiracy theories was like Mary
Wouldn't room 227 like a sitcom. Yeah, it was just called 227. Okay. Yeah, gotcha. Remember was jackay. She'd be like Mary
Oh, okay. That's what my impression was. What'd you think I was doing? Well, I wasn't sure what you meant being a weirdo
Yeah, okay
The second movement was of course the the howl sequence the computer the howl
Was it the howl 9000? Yeah
Really creepy and howl ended up being a lot of people's favorite character
Even though it was just a voice the super computer on the discovery ship. Remember he's like, what are you doing?
It's so creepy. I had the mad magazine spoof of 2001 when I was a kid. It was great. Yeah
And then the third movement is when Dave
moves on to
The next stage of human development with these extraterrestrials that you know only here and
Basically, it's when it comes full circle
The third movement
And the third movement is the one that has almost
Well, it's really just the second movement that has dialogue. Yeah. Yeah
Some of the alternate titles for 2001 journey beyond the stars
Terrible universe not bad. Yeah, okay tunnel to the stars
Not so great planet fall
That sounds bad sounds like a James Bond movie and then how the solar system was won
As a play on how the west was won. Yeah, which like
Uh movie geeks would find that appealing but everybody else would say that's um, you ruined everything
Yeah, and uh Kubrick was uh, this is the last thing I have he was so obsessive
Uh with protecting his material
That he allegedly, uh, I don't think allegedly I think he did. Yeah have all the sets and props and miniatures destroyed
After he shot it so they would never be reused which is a common thing at the time. Yeah, okay. We're doing a space movie go get the
Uh, go get that space ring from Stanley set. Yeah, let's reuse it for uh, planet fall
he uh
He also destroyed all of the footage that didn't make it into the original
Theatrical release. Yeah destroyed. It's gone. Yeah, so they wouldn't one day after his death recut it
Which they invariably probably would have done. Yep. He's a smart man
Yeah, I could we should just do a podcast on Kubrick
Okay, he was I I'm down for that challenge a ba
dude
Yes, one of my heroes. Yeah, cinematically. You got anything else. I got nothing else
Uh, if you want to know more about movies if you like this one, you probably also love our exploitation episode
Exploitation movie episode. Fun. What else have we talked about movies in?
Cannonball run. Oh, yeah
That had a lot to do with the movie. Yeah, our James Bond episode. Yeah. Uh, yeah, we've had a few of these and people always
Respond to these like you guys should have a spin-off show. Yeah, do an all-movie podcast. Sure. Maybe one day
Maybe remember if you're looking for any of these, um, press control f or apple f in your web browser and search that way on our podcast archive page
Uh, you can also search for this, uh, article on how stuff works by typing movies in and seeing what comes up
And since I said how stuff works, it's time for listener mail
Uh, I'm going to call this mic to do pot really clear something up for us on scientific method. Okay. Uh, hey guys, it was a great, um
Well, actually he doesn't say it was great. I think I just made that up
Hey guys, your scientific method podcast has a consistent misuse
Of what a scientific law is in relation to uh, to the working of the scientific method
It appears that you believe that a law e.g. Newton's law of gravity is in held
Uh, in higher esteem than theory and that eventually a theory matures into a law
Um, I think I probably did think that because of politics. Right, you know, yeah, Bill becomes a law
Right, exactly. He says when in fact theory is considerably more robust than a law
A law is a mathematical model that describes observed behavior does not answer the why
Right. Theory does, uh, answer why something happens. Did we not say that? I thought we did
Like I knew that I remember finding that out from the research. I just can't believe it didn't come out of my mouth
He claims we did not and I
Feel like I'm learning this so I definitely did not. Okay. Go ahead. But you may have
Uh, for example, Newton's law of gravitational attraction describes
The action of two bodies that can be used for pretty much everything. Um, it is perfect for describing what happens
But it cannot tell you why the two items are attracted or drill down to the underlying mechanism
Yeah, a law is like much more succinct
It just is what it is
Uh, nor is the law even universal and could not be used to explain
the
Perihelion procession of mercury's orbit burn in comparison
Einstein's theory of general relativity was eventually used to solve the mercury issue. Oh, yeah, the mercury issue
Uh, and the standard model along with the recent discovery the Higgs boson my stern can answer the why do these two masses
Uh, attracted to each other a question. I think what you mean is why are these two masses attracted to one another?
Mike, it's pretty teleological
Uh, theory is considerably more developed in richer than a scientific law
Which is more of a tool that is applicable to a wide range of applications. Keep up the good work. That is Mike Dupont
Thanks, Mike. Thanks for that of the valley forage duponts. I think so
Huh, uh, have you seen fox catcher? Oh, no, I've heard it's good. Is it good?
No, uh, really? I don't think so. No, I've heard it's kind of slow. It's beyond slow. Really? Oh, yeah
I I can understand why
Um, the academy loved it or sure
A lot of people I'm sure do like it. I I was not a fan of fox catcher
I think people generally seeing like a turn by an actor like steve curl doing something really different. They're knocked out by that
No, I still can't believe you didn't like bird man. No
No, spoiler alert for people who have not seen bird man. The following conversation is full of spoilers
Yes, what didn't you like about it?
um
So I thought I thought michael keaton was good. Okay
um
Who plays his daughter emily blunt is that who that is? Uh emma stone emma stone
excellent, okay
Edward and even pretty good. Okay, so the acting was fine
Uh, who is Naomi Watts was in it? Yeah, she did great. Uh, okay. So yes, the acting the acting was fine. Sure. The acting was fine
Uh, I thought the photography was amazing. Yeah, the whole seemingly one take thing kind of knocked you out probably
I didn't even pick up on that. But yes, it did. Um, it was more the uh
The for me the juxtaposition of the story. Mm-hmm, which was pretty
Boring and in realistic and everyday life. Even though it was about a Broadway production. It was still about the everyday life of it
Sure
Against the surrealism that's like threaded and embedded in throughout the whole movie. I didn't like that. Okay
It was like choose one or the other man. Gotcha. It irked me. Um, and uh,
And then just so that one part with the critic or michael keaton tells off the critic
I thought michael keaton did a wonderful job. Yeah, but just the whole point that it was in there of like the director
You know using michael keaton's character to tell off all the critics. He's ever wanted to tell off in a movie
Yeah, I just thought it was pretentious
And I thought it was kind of clumsy in that sense too. All right, and it was enough that it it
Tainted it. Yeah, that's and then the ending
I did not like the ending at all. Yeah at all
That'll ruin a good movie because it was
It completely went contrary to all the other stuff that he went out of his way to point out was fake or fraudulent
Not real and then all of a sudden it is
What?
Yeah, no choose one or the other the director
Refused to make very important decisions and I think that that ruined the movie. That is a very well
Thought out the criticism. I think thank you. Thank you very much. Sure
Uh man, that was the end of listener mail even wasn't it?
Yeah, because now I'm not like she's josh's weird. He didn't like bird man now. I'm like josh didn't like bird man
He has good reasons. Thank you. Thank you. Um, I like justifying my opinion
Don't we all uh, so if you want to get in touch with chuck and I uh, or gerry
Who I apparently just spoiled bird man for um, you can contact us via twitter at sysk podcast
You can join us on facebook.com slash stuff. You should know you can send us an email the stuff podcast at house of works
Dot com and as always join us at our home on the web stuff. You should know dot com
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Hey, I'm lance bass host of the new iHeart podcast frosted tips with lance bass. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would lance bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do you've come to the right place because i'm here to help and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week
To guide you through life tell everybody you everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen
So we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with the lance bass on the iHeart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
I'm munga shatikler and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to believe
You can find in major league baseball international banks k-pop groups even the white house
But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject
Something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too
Listen to skyline drive on the iHeart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts
Hey, it's chuck wicks from love country talk to chuck where we bring you what's really happening in the country music family
We also if you love country, here's the deal. You love country music. You can be on the podcast
So if you're a fan country music or you can call in anytime you're like, oh, I wouldn't talk about this
Hall kogan called in he's like chuck larkster. I love your podcast jason al dean jimmy allen carlie pierce
lorna lana
Listen to new episodes of love country talk to chuck every monday and thursday on the national podcast network available on the iHeart radio app
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