The Bechdel Cast - The Goonies with Sarah Marshall
Episode Date: April 27, 2023On this episode recorded live in Portland at Curious Comedy Theater in February, Caitlin, Jamie, and special guest Sarah Marshall chat about The Goonies! Bechdels never say die! Just a reminder that y...ou can grab 'on-demand' tickets to access the stream of this live show at linktr.ee/bechdelcast (This episode contains spoilers) For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast Follow @Remember_Sarah on Twitter. While you're there, you should also follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante, and @jamieloftusHELPSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello, Bechtelcast listeners.
It's us again, the hosts of the Bechtelcast.
Ever heard of us?
This is, well, I guess, let's say our names.
Yeah, sure.
My name is Jamie Loftus.
My name is Caitlin Durante.
And we recorded a live show in Portland a few months back
that we are now releasing.
It's On the Goonies with Sarah Marshall.
Ever heard of her?
She's the best.
Yeah.
She's next door to me right now, which sounds scary.
It sounds like I'm holding her prisoner, but it's just the truth.
Yeah, you're on tour together.
We're on tour together, babe.
Beautiful.
Beautiful. yeah you're on tour together we're on tour together babe beautiful and so this is one of
the shows that we live streamed recorded at curious comedy theater in portland oregon ever
heard of that and if you haven't you should go it's fun it is very fun point is we live stream
the show and the recording also exists as like something that you can buy on demand so basically
if you go to a video stream yes so if you want to see for example us eating a hot dog on stage
see our cute little outfits no spoilers but we're wearing some cute little outfits if you want to
see the special segment that we did at the end with sarah that you
won't hear in the audio version it's a trivia treasure hunt uh it's very goofy it's super fun
and if you're a big fan of the show and you're a big fan of sarah marshall i bet you'll like it
but yeah we have that linked in our lead tree but we, but we were about to hear is, uh, our,
you know,
audio version of the live episode on the Goonies.
We also did this in Seattle,
but you were hearing the Portland version,
little inside baseball there.
Um,
and there is still one more Portland live episode.
We will be releasing in the future that you can also buy on demand to watch
right now.
If you so choose,
it is the Hannah Montana movie with Robert Evans.
And really, what more could you ask for in terms of a dissonant pairing?
But we're very thrilled to present to you now
The Goonies with Sarah Marshall.
Welcome, everybody, to Curious Comedy Theater.
Make some noise for the Bechtel cast.
Please keep that going for Jamie and Caitlin.
Hi, welcome to the Bechdelcast.
Hi, welcome to the Bechdelcast.
Hello.
Thank you so much for coming.
How are you, Portland, Oregon?
The superior Portland.
Wow.
Wow.
Shots fired against Maine.
Yeah, everyone in Maine just passed out,
and they have no idea why.
Welcome.
Thank you for coming.
Give it up for yourselves.
My name is Jamie Loftus.
My name is Caitlin Durante,
and this is the Bechdel cast.
Yay!
I don't know why.
I was like, I'm going to pause so that everyone claps again.
No, we're so excited to be back
we haven't gotten
to go on tour
for about
three years
for no particular
reason really
it just kind of
didn't feel like it
but we're so
pumped to be back
and back in
Portland specifically
because
this is
I think this is
my favorite city
to tour to
it truly is
and which I don't say I did not say specifically because this is, I think this is my favorite city to tour to. It truly is.
And, and which I don't say, I did not say that in San Francisco. I got pretty volatile in San Francisco last night. I was like, what's wrong with it here? It's depressing. Why is
your mayor in all of the movies? Um, anyways, I don't feel like that here i feel great here um should we tell well actually
has anyone been to a bechtel cast live show before oh my god so who has never been to a
bechtel cast live show before a round of applause wow okay second graders let's do it
great stance also okay, hang on.
We're live streaming the show, so we should
say hi to the
people in San Francisco who are like,
what the fuck?
I totally forgot
that other people could hear me.
Hi.
We love San Francisco.
That was a technical error.
And I'm a deep fake.
I think everyone can agree
that was a deep fake.
And that's what I think
is the pro of evil tech
things going on
is that anytime I say something
I regret,
I'll be like,
that was clearly a deep fake.
Why would I say that?
I love San Francisco.
Bridges are awesome.
Last night at the show, I mistook the,
this is not important,
but I mistook the Golden Gate Bridge
for the Bay Bridge and everyone screamed.
Someone threw a tomato.
I got egged at the show.
You also said the word finger.
Okay, wait.
Quick story.
So last night we did
an episode on George of the Jungle in San Francisco
where it takes place in
first the jungle and then San Francisco.
But there was a moment where
well, you were talking about George getting
horny. And what was the phrase
you were trying to say?
I was trying to say that he starts to
figure out how to
like, seduce
a woman.
But that's not what they said at all.
I said that he starts to finger out.
And
everyone laughed at me.
But you didn't know that you had said it.
And so you just kept going and then you're like,
why is everyone laughing?
It was really, it felt like a nightmare
that was happening to us, but it was exciting.
It was awesome.
And that's the joy of live comedy.
So thank you for coming.
We should tell people what the show is.
For those watching on the live stream,
this is the Bechdelcast.
It's a show where we take an intersectional feminist look at your favorite movies.
We sure do.
But Caitlin, what the hell is the Bechdel Test?
I'll tell you.
It's a media metric created by queer cartoonist Alison Bechdel, sometimes called the Bechdel
Wallace Test.
There are many versions of the test, but the one that we use, that we've cultivated over the years,
is that two people of a marginalized gender have to have names, they must speak to each other,
and their conversation has to be about something other than a man.
Ideally, some narratively substantial conversation.
Right. And then there's just movies about a group of young boys
falling in a lot of water.
So there's sort of like a spectrum
of the kinds of media available to people.
And we celebrate that.
We do.
We do.
So tonight we are covering Oregonian classic, The Goonies.
Who here has seen The Goonies?
Okay.
And who here, who are the brave people
who have not seen The Goonies?
Yeah. Own it.
Yes. Me two days ago.
Oh my gosh. Okay. So we're really
excited to talk about this movie
and about the movies of Oregon in general.
We're thrilled to be here.
Really quickly before we bring our guests out,
I know that there's someone here that has a hot dog for me.
And I would like it.
The hot dog, yeah.
Come on down.
Thank you.
Wait, what's your...
This is heavy. What's your name uh i'm carly hi carly um
so uh well do you mind we have a second right yeah okay i just want to open it
where'd you get this i got it at donny vegas it's a Bon Me hot dog. Oh my God. Wait, chic.
Holy shit.
Another count against San Francisco.
I asked San Franciscans to bring me their hot dog
and someone brought one from Paris Baguette
and they were like,
um, we do burritos more here.
And I was like, get out of my sight.
Wait, this looks amazing.
Thank you so much.
Give it up for Carly.
Wow.
Do you want a bite?
I would love a bite, yeah.
Can I feed it to you?
Oh, I mean, yeah.
We gotta give...
We're just demonstrating
what the Bechdel test can do.
Caitlin, do you mind
if I feed you this hot dog?
Just don't bring up...
Wow. Thrilling.
I'm going to take a bite from the other side.
Actually, I'm going to save the other side for our guest.
That's polite did people get pictures of that or or what or was it all for not
um
this is going really good so far. Donny Vegas, huh?
Wow.
Okay.
Very close to here.
Really?
Wow.
Okay.
So this is a nightmare for people with mesophonia.
I get so many emails from people that are like,
what are you eating?
I'm like, pudding, hot dogs, chips, Mike's Hard Lemonade,
like whatever.
Kind of whatever's around. I'm a scavenger.
Did anyone else bring a hot dog?
I want to make sure our bases are covered.
Okay, fuck you guys.
What the fuck? Really interesting.
You ask, you ask, you ask.
Carly provides.
Give it up for
the rest of you.
You may be flopping a bit, but we can make up for the rest of you. Maybe flopping a bit.
But we can make up
for that. I'm just going to leave this hot dog detritus
here as a memory. I was going to say you've got some
on your face as well. Oh. No.
I don't think I do.
Should we bring our guest out?
We should.
Oh, I'm so excited for
tonight's guest. One of
the greats and one of the Portland greats.
A Portland local host of You're Wrong About and You Are Good podcast.
You know her.
You love her.
It's Sarah Marshall.
Sarah, Sarah, Sarah, Sarah.
Hi.
Welcome.
Chunk has arrived
yeah we're doing some light
Chunk cosplay
this is kind of like the Disney bounding version
of Chunk
it's subtle
it's for the fans
do you want some hot dog?
I saved you the other side
just a fresh bite
you're welcome.
Happy birthday!
Oh, yeah, you didn't feed it to her.
Oh, sorry, I'm supposed to...
Do you want a second bite?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. a rogue cucumber appears.
That was very feral of all of you to say,
feed it to her.
And you'll notice I obeyed immediately.
I was like, sorry.
They asked, we had to do it.
Well, this is an unfortunate time to be like,
so Sarah, what's your experience with the Goonies?
But, you know, we can wait.
I'm getting there.
Take your time.
So when you're ready,
so when you're ready to answer the question,
tell us, what is your history with the Goonies okay i've actually never told anyone this story but when i was like six i used to go to this house where like it was
one of those like home daycare places and there i just remember it being pandemonium there were
just kids crawling around everywhere and so there was this like baby toddling around and some girls were like we're helping her walk
and i was like oh i can get in on that and then somebody was like come watch the goonies and i
was like yeah i'm doing that and then i apparently dropped the baby wow i mean not you know not the
the sloth kind of a way i was gonna going to say. A different way. Leading with the bottom?
Leading with the bottom.
The way they're supposed to go down.
But yeah, The Goonies originally was a movie
that I saw a bit of
and felt an overpowering sense of shame
whenever it came up for years.
And then I watched it like 10 years ago
and it's charming enough that it overtook my overpowering self-loathing
which is always huge that's powerful if only for a moment yeah do you know what became of that baby
or did you leave that out on purpose
i i think she's she recovered from that trauma
I think she's doing okay
if anyone knows about the fate of that baby
please come up to me
is that baby here tonight?
what if we were doing
a Maury style like well guess what
and bring them out
she's here and she's pissed
and she's gonna feed you hot dogs
forcibly
it's Carly.
And she's
fucking furious.
Oh my gosh.
And this is how I die. It's okay.
I don't remember, I'm sure that, I mean
I had like a million cousins. I'm sure that I dropped
one of them at some point. I remember
my dad once being like, well everyone
drops their kid a couple times. It's just it's's all about angles. It's true. I do have a mysterious lump on my head.
I mean, I don't know. That's why we have curly hair, you know, you don't have to worry about it.
Caitlin, what's your history with the Goonies? I saw it i think once as a kid once again in college and not really
at all aside from that it wasn't a movie i grew up with i was too busy and it was too busy watching
indiana jones because that was for adults and i didn't like kid stuff that's not even true
but uh i don't know it was mature content uh yeah i don't know it just it for some reason
uh it wasn't one of the vhs's we had growing up so yeah i don't know i don't have much of a history
with it but i always i enjoy the idea of it i think more than the actual movie because there's
some fucked up shit in the movie that we'll talk about yes um what's your history
with it i yeah i hadn't seen it until two days ago i feel like there was such a wealth of uh
movies about a group of uh young boys on bikes that would swear at each other
during this era that like i you just sort of see like you could you could watch it you could watch E.T. you could watch the Goonies like there's like so many ragtag groups of boys that would each get
to say shit one time yeah um so I thought I had maybe seen this movie because I was like oh it's
a it's it's boys on bikes the movie um but I hadn't seen it and um yeah I I I'm interested
to talk about it there's a lot to love about, and then some stuff that you're like, oh, no.
Which is our favorite kind of movie to cover on this show.
It's true.
I wish I had dropped a baby to this movie.
That's a great story.
It's also like, and then my memory of the movie
is like of the smell of that like home daycare place,
which like, you know know they never smell good
that takes a while
to get over
yeah I mean
my mom ran a home daycare and
our house was stinky
but it is
what it is we were being dropped
as Mama Fratelli says
kids suck
Mama Fratelli says kids suck.
Mama Fratelli is the most complicated character in the movie.
Truly.
It's truly,
she,
I was never not shocked at like,
and I, and I say this as an extreme positive,
but how many times in the Goonies,
the kids flip from being in mortal danger to like fucking with each other again.
Yeah.
It's like a space of.5 seconds
where it's like Mama Fratelli is about to cut
Corey Feldman's tongue out
and then two seconds later he's like, makes
a pee pee joke.
Oh, you gotta go to the bathroom.
It's the best.
Those boys are on bikes alright.
Mentally and physically.
It's true.
Should I do the recap?
Let's do the recap.
Okay.
Thank you for that tepid applause.
Hey everybody, this is Matt Rogers.
And Bowen Yang.
We've got some exciting news for you.
You know we're always bringing you the best guests, right?
Well, this week we're taking it to the next level.
The one, the only, Catherine Hahn is joining us on Lost Culture East.
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Get ready for a conversation that's as hilarious as it is insightful.
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I feel some Sandra Bernhardt in you.
Oh, my God, I would love it.
I have to watch Lost.
Oh, you have to.
No, I know, I'm so behind.
Katherine Hanken's thing.
Oh, I'm really good at karaoke.
What's your song?
Yeah, what's your song?
Oh, I love a ballad.
I felt Bjork's music.
I just was like, who is this person?
I got to hawk this slalom, Luge.
I'm going to hawk this slalom.
I absolutely love it.
It was somehow Shakespearean when you said it.
It was somehow gorgeous.
Yee, my slok, you hollum.
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We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline, a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
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uh okay so we open on a prison break where a guy named jake fratelli played by robert davey is that right he breaks
out of county jail with the help of his mom played by ann ramsey and his brother francis that's joey
pants aka joe pantoliano they speed away and the cops are chasing them, but they escape. Then we meet a handful of kids who are the Goonies.
That's the name of the movie.
It's Mouth, played by Corey Feldman.
He's like the mischievous little stinker.
Yeah, he's got the hair.
You can tell because of the way his hair is.
You're like, oh, this kid's trouble.
We've got Data.
That's Kihui got Data. That's
Ki Hui Kwan. He's like
and woo indeed.
Data is
the best character and if you disagree
you have to leave the show.
You gotta go.
I was blown away though at how Data
if there's ever a character named Data
in a media property
that's gonna be the best character. Because it's also
true of Star Trek. It's going to be the best character. Because it's also true of Star Trek.
Data's the best character on that iteration of Star Trek
and in The Goonies.
You can debate me, but you'll lose.
You'll be wrong.
His thing is he's like the gadget kid.
He has all these gadgets.
We've got Chunk.
He's played by Jeff Cohen.
And his thing is that a lot of
fat jokes are made at his expense.
We'll talk about it.
The element of his personality
that they introduced that is not deeply
offensive is that he's a serial liar
and I wish they had
leaned into that more
because all of his lies are so
funny. The first line is referenced
as a janet jackson pete at his house once he's coming up with s-tier lies like he's really good
just stick to that so creative yeah uh we've got mikey that's sean aston and he's like our hero
he's kind of like the straight man uh and then mikey's older brother
is brand played by josh brolin and he's tough did people whistle a lot of people are like
okay someone's were in the back snapping a thanos
all right all right he does he out, and that's his thing.
He has workout equipment.
What's it called?
Exercise equipment?
Okay.
He's got springs.
I was like, yeah, that would make you strong, wouldn't it?
It's like resistance, like 80s resistance bands,
which were, yes, springs.
I don't understand it either. His mom thinks he ties himself up to work out.
Maybe that was his excuse before.
Could be.
Their mom,
Brandon, Mikey's mom,
is barely in the movie,
but every time she's on screen,
she is just in the trenches.
She enters in an arm sling,
and we don't know why.
She walks in, she's got an arm sling and we don't know why. She walks in,
she's got an arm sling,
she's like,
well, my house is getting
knocked down tomorrow
and then her kids just are like,
fuck you.
They break her shit
and then, yeah.
She's just having a bad day.
All she has is that
statue penis
and they took that away
from her as well.
Why is that her favorite?
She's horny, I guess. I don't know um okay so the goonies are best friends and it's their last weekend together before they all
have to move away because where they live which is the goon docks of astoria oregon i believe Astoria, Oregon, I believe. Ever heard of it?
It is going to be bought up and turned into a country club.
Which you pointed out, they already
have a country club. Astoria already has
a country club, which
we see in the movie, so we're not sure
why they need a second one, but that's
what's happening. And their families don't have enough
money to stop this from happening.
All the kids congregate at Mikey and Bran's house
and they go into the attic
because Mikey and Bran's dad
have a bunch of like museum stuff up there.
That they have yet to move off the premises
even though their house is being demolished in 10 hours.
Tomorrow, yeah.
Yes.
And they find this map to buried treasure
from I think like 1632.
It is treasure that a pirate named One-Eyed Willie had stolen, but then he got trapped with his treasure.
But as legend has it, he dug a bunch of caves and tunnels and made a bunch of booby traps for anyone who went looking for the treasure.
We also learn about this guy named Chester Copperpot
who searched for the treasure a few decades back,
but he disappeared and never returned.
So Mikey is like, hey, if we find this treasure,
we can keep the goondocks and we don't have to move.
So Mikey, Mouth, Chunk, and Data decide to tie Brand up
with his weird resistance band
and run out of the house with the map
and go on this quest for buried treasure.
So it's at this point where you're like,
oh, it's like the fellowship of the map
because Sean Astin is right there,
but he's kind of more of the Frodo character
than the Samwise character.
Sean Astin is obsessed with going on a quest he loves it he really does he loves it we we it needs to
be said that um Thanos is tied up to a to a Cyndi Lauper b-side yes yes and so the kids ride on
their bikes to this place called Gold Rock Beach where they see three rocks that are also on the map.
And they also have this doubloon that's kind of guiding them.
And they like match things up.
Oh, there's more hot dog eating.
I see.
There's Fritos in here.
There are.
Yeah.
So they're like matching things up with a doubloon and the map.
And they figure out that they're supposed to walk 100 feet north, which brings them to this restaurant.
Meanwhile, Brand has gotten loose and is chasing after them on this little bike with training wheels.
Cute.
And he encounters this rich bully kid, Troy.
He's with two girls, Andy, played
by Carrie Green, and Steph,
and that's Martha Plimpton.
I like the Troy. You can tell
he's the rich kid because he's wearing a visor.
It doesn't say money on it, but it
basically does.
80s rich guys
were just so
clear-cut in the way that they looked.
Now we have like
little elon musk looking villains i'm like i missed when it was just a guy with with bad
hair with a visor that said money nice yes uh okay so the goonies reached the restaurant
where they see a few people go inside so the kids go in but oh no it turns out that they were the three people from the prison
break scene at the beginning of the movie the fratellis who are like what are you fucking kids
doing here and the goonies are scared and they're pretending to order food and to use the bathroom
then mikey goes into the basement this is when he sees a man who is chained up we will learn that his name is sloth
played by uh former nfl player john mastuzik did i say that right
are you not a sports crowd what he want you want to um what's the game called?
Football.
It's called the Super Bowl.
We're like playing into stereotypes right now.
He won two Super Bowls.
And then he played Sloth.
I mean, kind of an iconic run he had. Yes, yes.
We'll talk more about this character
yes we'll come back to sloth uh then brand shows up and helps the kids escape from the restaurant
and then they're trying to figure out what to do they run into the two girls from earlier andy and
steph the fratellis leave so they go back in the restaurant where they find a tunnel in the
fireplace but that's when the fratelli show back up so the kids have
no choice but to escape into the tunnel yes but chunk gets separated from them and the other kids
are like go to the police and he's like okay chunk is like haunted by this corpse for like multiple
scenes yeah i just love um jeff cohen all of his like line reads are
so funny and they it plays just like i don't know it he reminds me of so many kids i knew who were
like this kid's speaking natural speaking volume is screaming where he like screams all of his
lines and it make like it's even better than if someone was like hey jeff you don't gotta yell like it's it's better than he does because kids do that shit all the
time where he's just like hi you're like oh my god um i love i love i love that kind of kid those
are i feel like those are like my closest friends because if you're a quiet kid you need like
natural volume screaming kids around yes to vocalize on your behalf balance
exactly yes so chunk is going to try to find the police and he escapes but the fratellis catch him
right away and bring him back to the restaurant and start questioning him meanwhile the other
goonies start making their way through the tunnel there's a scene with water pipes that's where you see the other or the already existing
country club uh they find a skeleton they discover that it's chester copperpot the guy who went
looking for the treasure like 50 years earlier right and so they're like haha bitch we made it
further we're better than you um they accidentally set off one of uh oneEyed Willie's booby traps.
Huge boulders are about to fall on them.
They manage to escape.
Then they think for a minute that they found the treasure,
but it turns out it's just like the interior of a wishing well.
And they find Troy, that rich kid,
is like above ground at the opening of the wishing well.
This part is truly wild to me.
Because Andy, at this point, understandably has had it.
She's trapped in hell with kids she doesn't know.
And she gets the opportunity to be brought back to the surface.
But then little Sean Astin gives such a powerful monologue
that she agrees to remain in hell forever.
Yes.
It is so wild.
That's what you cast him for.
He's like, you gotta stay in hell for me, Sean Astin.
For it.
This is our hell.
It's our hell down here.
Yes, so they realize that they could escape with troy's help but that's yeah
mikey gives this impassioned speech where he's like chester copperput couldn't even get this far
he's a loser and we're winners we're awesome we should keep going and then andy is like what if
we die and mikey's like goonies never say die and And then she's like, what are you talking about?
I don't know you.
Is maybe what I would have said if I were in that position.
Like, all right, well, best of luck with whatever the fuck you're talking about.
Goodbye.
Yeah, do they even ever tell those girls what they're doing or what they're looking for?
Well, no. I I was gonna try to
fax and logic my way the answer is I think no yeah which I think is best
expressed through Martha Plimpton who the whole time is like we I hate it I
hate it I'm babysitting but I'm not getting paid exactly but your options
are this are being sexually harassed in a car, so I guess it's this.
That's what the 80s were like.
I guess framed that way, I would also agree to stay in hell.
Okay, meanwhile, the Fratellis tie up Chunk with Sloth in the same room, and then they go into the tunnel after the Goonies.
But Sloth breaks loose from his chains, and then he and Chunk head into the tunnel as well.
The Goonies set off another booby trap.
Data falls through the floor into another room.
Everyone follows him down there, and then there's a scene where Andy kisses Mikey,
thinking he's Brand.
The fact that they have time for this
in the middle of being in hell is just like...
But don't, like, isn't it so relatable?
Like, when you want to have your first kiss
with someone you're interested in,
you're like, I'm going to call you from several rooms away.
I'm going to stand here with my eyes closed.
And I'm just going to see what happens.
And I'm going to trust that my friend,
if the wrong person shows up,
my best friend would definitely tell me.
He'll definitely tell me.
Why would she not tell me?
No, my best friend definitely doesn't secretly hate me.
And want me to make out with a 12-year-old.
It is just a really bizarre sequence. Andy is a 12 year old. It is just a really
bizarre sequence. Andy is a really
bizarre character. We'll come back to her.
Yes. This is also in the middle
of them all like taking a piss break.
They're like we gotta pee but also
let's kiss in the middle of our pee break.
Caitlin you brought up
when we were watching this together
you were just like getting progressively more and more frustrated
because of how wet the kids were getting all the time.
You were just like, how are they going to keep the map together?
During the wishing well scene,
Sean Astin just stands under a fountain for like five minutes.
And then there's
one line where like
for seemingly no reason
Corey Feldman's character is like
standing, completes his line of dialogue
and then just flops down into the water
apropos of nothing
and I think that it's just like
if you're directing
a 511 year old
they're just going to do that, and you're just like,
well, I guess that's the take we have.
He unfortunately flopped down at the end,
but he completed the line.
Yeah, they were very, there was too much water.
Okay, towel these kids off, yeah.
That's a problem the state has, generally.
We just have too much water around.
We just have to work with it.
Is that Oregonian representation?
I imagine it was really cold, too.
Because we know it's not summer.
Because they're like, this is a summer restaurant.
And it's only open during the summer.
But it's not summer right now.
So why are people going in there?
So it's like fall, maybe winter.
And they're still just like,
they're so wet and cold.
For the whole movie. And also most
deaths from hypothermia happen
when it's in the 40s.
Very stressful.
I was stressed. I do
respect Richard Donner
because it's like the only thing that sounds harder than
directing a movie that only has 12-year-olds in it
is wet 12-year-olds. It just sounds like the only thing that sounds harder than directing a movie that only has 12 year olds in it is wet 12 year olds it just sounds like the hardest task possible horrible
okay so the fratellis are right behind the goonies and the goonies are like rushing to get away from
them there's this piano related obstacle uh that's the great feminist moment, Tina.
They're like, wait, woman play piano.
Badly.
Wow, yeah.
But it's allowed.
Yeah.
And then they finally make it into the main cavern
and find One-Eyed Willie's pirate ship
and all of his treasure.
So they start loading their pockets with the treasure,
but uh-oh
the fratelli show up they take the treasure away they're about to kill the children but then chunk
and sloth show up to save the day the there's you know a battle and the goonies escape back to the
surface their parents show up as do the rich people who are trying to displace them for
this second country club and Mikey's dad is about to sign over their land but then it's revealed
that they smuggled some jewels at least one of which is the heart of the ocean from Titanic
and the close-up shot of those jewels are so funny because they're so visibly from like eye party
that they're like we have it the treasure and you're like oh buddy
um but it's enough money that they don't have to turn over their land and so they live happily
ever after chunk is like sloth you can live with me and my family.
And everyone has like a nice reunion with their parents.
The end.
Good recap, Caitlin.
Hey, everybody.
This is Matt Rogers.
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Katherine Hahn can sing.
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I just was like, who is this person?
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Not hawk the slalom.
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It was somehow Shakespearean when you said it.
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Yee, my slok, you hollum.
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Well, before we get started talking about the characters, Sarah, I'm curious, as an Oregonian,
how does this fare?
You mentioned that there's a lot of movies
that take place in Astoria, specifically.
I'm not aware.
There's a lot of movies that take place
and or are filmed there,
and my favorite is Free Willy,
because there's endless scenes where they're like,
we're in Portland under a bridge
we're in Astoria, we're in Pioneer Square
we're in Astoria and it's like
yes we all want Astoria
to be five minutes away
and yet it isn't and we all have
to live with that and then
Kindergarten Cop and Short Circuit are the other
to me the biggest story in movies
so if you're like an 80s movie buff
you can, or 80s to early
90s i guess you can knock out four biggies there and i and also green room which we were just
talking about yeah the opening was filmed there um and i feel like it's just because like it's a
very or a story is a very picturesque city so i feel like it makes sense as a place that you would
film but i one of the things i love about this is an oregon movie is that i do feel like it makes sense as a place that you would film. But one of the things I love about this
as an Oregon movie is that I do feel like it depicts our weather well. Because a lot
of movies that are set in Oregon, either it'll be totally sunny and bone dry, like Stand
By Me, which is great. We are bone dry in the summer. Love that. But then when they're
like, it is Oregon and raining, it'll be like a blade runner downpour
and i love that the goonies is like no everyone's just like
moist and you feel like shit and that's the whole thing
which i guess is why the kids are so unfazed to be constantly introduced into new levels
we don't care kids actually, we don't actually
sexually reproduce here.
Babies just like grow on fallen
logs like mushrooms.
And you just harvest them.
Wow.
That's like a whole job industry.
It's a whole industry, yeah.
That's wild, because if you said the job
name baby harvester to me,
that's just like not where my mind would have gone
but maybe that's a me issue.
It's all about how you harvest the babies.
Right. There is ethical
ways. It's about sustainability.
That's so cool.
This is like I mean it is always
really cool to feel a very specific sense of place
with movies like these.
There was a big moment for my hometown this year when the Anya Taylor-Joy character in the menu
ended up being from my hometown, and they said it as not a net negative.
Right.
And it was like, people were just thrilled to think that someone who's as hot as Anya Taylor-Joy
could come from where we live.
It was pretty thrilling.
So today is Groundhog Day.
Happy Groundhog Day, everybody.
And Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania is like a 20-minute drive from my hometown.
So that's kind of my hometown's claim to fame movie-wise.
That's so bad.
But have you ever been to the
the un-she thing of the...
They don't kill the crown dog, right?
I'm confusing it with like
when for some reason
the American president like
like meets the turkey
that he'll be eating later in the day and it like meets the turkey that he'll be eating
later in the day
and it like
forgives it
I don't know
what happens
apologizes
forgives it
I don't really know
it's the turkey pardon
you pardon the turkey
yeah
and then
you know
you also have the option
to like chase the turkey
across Paris
for 20 years
oh wow
in a futile quest
to like stop law-breaking.
You can do either one.
I think that that should be something
that's introduced for every major holiday.
The American president should have to do that
for Santa Claus.
Oh, my God, the Easter bunny party.
The Easter bunny.
I gotta pardon that bunny.
The Easter bunny, honestly,
deserves to die
yes
I think so
I mean for Easter you could also bring out
Jesus I guess
he's gonna get it anyways
so I guess it doesn't matter
if the president eats him
just an idea for holidays well to answer your question no they don't kill the groundhog i can't get to them they do they take him out of his tunnel where i imagine he's down there
looking for buried treasure and they're like hey Punxsutawney Phil
do you see your shadow?
And he's always like yes I do.
And so there's always six more weeks of winter.
The end.
Damn. Boring holiday. They should kill him.
That would really raise the stakes. I think you'd
get more people out there. I agree.
Yeah. Yeah. Alright.
The Goonies. The movie.
Well, we wanted to start by talking about the character of Sloth.
Yeah.
Because, I mean, there's, I think, been sort of a wide variety of discussion about the
character of Sloth over the years.
He is certainly coded as having a disability and has been
thoroughly rejected and abused
by his own family
as a result of
being disabled.
I don't believe that we get any specificity
outside of
the joke
that Mama Fratelli
dropped him at least two times.
Right. I only dropped that baby one time.
And she's fine.
And then Sloth rightfully tosses Mama Fratelli overboard.
Throw Mama from the pirate ship.
Swish.
That was a good joke if it was 1988, which it isn't.
Right. that was a good joke if it was 1988 which it isn't right so so we've talked a lot about on the show about disabilities being ascribed to villains uh in media as a way to other them
and further villainize them interestingly sometimes in the case of like pirate characters
where there's kind of like an overlap there true true yeah um and this
obviously has like horrible ableist implications yes um but even though sloth is associated with
the villains because he's a part of the family he ends up being one of the heroes he rejects his
family for having rejected him like you said they're they're wildly abusive to him. And so there's this kind of subversion of that trope.
It doesn't mean, though, that the representation is great.
Obviously, so the actor playing Sloth is not a disabled actor.
And they used a lot of like makeup and prosthetics to
turn John Mastuzak into sloth I thought there were a lot of tropes commonly
associated with disabled characters kind of like all kind of amalgamated into
this one character where he has like he's portrayed as like worthy of pity
he's ostracized from his community.
I do think it's good that he and Chunk connect
as the misfits of their respective groups
and then form a super alliance and save the day.
That is the coolest fucking thing in the world.
But the way he's initially presented is like,
and also he has super super strength um they're
just like all of these sort of it feels like random broad stereotypes kind of like thrown
into his character absolutely but the character is a hero right so and then well it also means
that like the most physically othered character in the movie is the most mistreated and while
there is a historical precedent for people with like atypical physical
traits or people with disabilities to be mistreated it doesn't mean that we need
to see that happening all the time especially in a kids movie because like
drawing attention to a character's disability in that way is the opposite of normalizing disability
which is what we're aiming for i would be i mean i would be curious to hear um sort of more uh more
viewers opinions uh spit oh no um specifically uh disabled listeners of of their take because
i've seen sort of a wide variety like I've seen a lot of reclaiming
arguments for Sloth
and like he's certainly like a character
that we're rooting for the entire time
but there's like
his character is so mired in all of these
stereotypes at the same time
it's like a very 80s dilemma
yes
it's complicated
it is
alright well dilemma yes yeah it's complicated it is um all right well that's the bummer on that one
the bummer portion of the evening um no but i mean i i think i do think that sloth and chunks
uh relationship is really sweet and beautiful.
I mean, I would say that I don't think that
like, Sloth's character was written
with any intended malice, but that in the 80s
it was just like not well handled.
And that there wasn't a lot of precedent for handling
or even really thinking very much about
writing disabled characters, which is a net negative.
But yeah. very much about writing disabled characters, which is a net negative. Right.
But, yeah.
Yes. I also wanted to bring up that Mikey has asthma
and uses an inhaler.
Oh, my God.
I'm all so...
You're looking for the word finger.
You're right.
Yeah.
He uses an inhaler multiple times um and a respiratory disability is often ascribed to villains in movies think of a morton joe and mad max fury road you've got darth vader
bane in batman is that an example i don't remember that movie very well. Whenever anyone says Bane,
you can just see a flicker in a bunch of men's eyes
of like, I have an impression for that.
And you're like, I'm sure you do.
But I don't need to hear it.
The year that that movie came out
was like on par with the year Borat came out
of just like 14 year old
boys are gonna have a fucking field day with this and I'm never gonna hear the
end of it it's also like anyone can do it you just do a Sean Connery with too
much spit in your mouth and then just pitch it down anyways we were talking
about Mikey yes yes yes so just to say say that it's not the case in The Goonies
that a character with a respiratory illness or disability
is one of the villains,
because Mikey is the hero.
He's the leader.
Although at the end,
there is a cast-off line
where he throws away his inhaler
as if this journey has cured him.
Yes.
So it is very thoroughly the 80s
in every single way in this movie um but i yeah i noticed
that as well i think the last the last um element of this movie that's very deeply 80s and still
discussed pretty frequently is um how chunk's character is treated both in his literal nickname
and just how the character is, you know,
repeatedly ridiculed for what he looks like and for his body type.
And that again,
it's like,
there's obviously a huge precedent for that in society,
but it's like,
especially with a movie as successful as the Goonies to have a fat actor be
repeatedly ridiculed by characters that we like um in a movie intended for children that's
not going to move the needle in any meaningful way it's going to make it worse right um because
every i would say every scene he's in it's either uh his friends fat shaming him and making him do
some kind of like body shaming humiliation type Like the, the truffle shuffle is an extreme example of this,
or he's just always characterized as being famished.
He's always thinking about food,
but he's like putting himself in danger sometimes to be like,
I'm so hungry.
I don't even notice the danger around me.
I would say that the same thing kind of happens with Andy's character where
she's so horny for Thanos.
I do think it's like a similar thing where it's like oh our like our leaning uh female character is so wildly horny that she'll
almost die constantly and our only fat character it's like it's it just it feels like a similar
kind of move yeah um is where I mean I like knew what the truffle shuffle was even though i have like
avoided not avoided but i've like managed to not see this movie for three decades
and i still knew what the truffle shuffle was again mostly because of like men's t-shirts that
i would see on the gym was like why am i looking at this who is this child yeah he doesn't seem
um i wanted to share really quickly because uh down line, I think this was just a couple of years ago,
the director of this movie, Richard Donner,
who seems very, very well loved by the entire cast,
he's passed away since,
but he and Jeff Cohen, who plays Chunk,
later did an interview about this scene
because it had become so iconic.
Jeff Cohen did not act into adulthood.
He's actually now a really high-powered Hollywood
lawyer. And so sometimes
people just, they're like,
call Chunk.
I don't know. Or maybe Chunk will call
me. That's what I want.
My Chunk will call your Chunk.
Talk to my Chunk.
I'm sure
that's such a fun thing to happen to him every single day.
But I did want to just draw attention to this interview
because I do always like that when there are scenes and moments
and tropes like this, when people reflect on it later
in a more kind of thoughtful way,
because that's really what we're able to ask of them.
Richard Donner said of that scene,
there was no direction.
I don't take any credit for that.
It was just Jeff.
He had to stand on that stump and be ridiculed by his friends
so he could come in the house,
and he did it as best as that character could do it.
So much humor comes from pain,
although I'm sure he was too young to be analytical about it,
but I'm sure that was part of his instincts.
It was a painful scene to film. And then later in the interview, this does
not make Richard Donner sound very good, after the movie had finished wrapping, he said that
he then got Jeff Cohen a gym membership and a trainer, quote, he lost lots of weight and
built this great physique and became captain of his
wrestling team in high school captain of his football team and blah blah blah blah blah and
um i don't know i mean i i think that fucking sucks yeah um and uh jeff cohen has uh spoken to
this um a bit as well and said that like you know it was like a an embarrassing and like shameful
experience to be asked to do that also without direction so it's like you're not even being
really like protected by your own director right um and that like he was like having you know
difficulty being teased already and then had to do the scene on top of it and then the other thing
he said that was kind of funny is he was like, I also had chicken poxed at the time.
Yes, I read that.
And I didn't want the kids to know I had chicken pox.
I was like, two questions.
Are you allowed to go to work with chicken pox?
Well, I read that he didn't tell anyone
because he was afraid he would be fired and recast.
So he went to...
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Well, that is very upsetting.
I just wanted to...
I mean, I think Jeff Cohen has since very much moved on
and still has very positive associations with the movie.
But it was just interesting to kind of read those reflections.
Also, it's like if the director's like,
yeah, it was a really uncomfortable scene to film.
It's like maybe take a step back and wonder why and then don't film the scene like right the other
thing i wanted to say about chunk is that he's he's characterized as being like the biggest
scaredy cat of the group in that he's like not as tough or as brave as the other kids he like
gives up his friends immediately when the
fratellis are like what what are you doing here he's like we're looking for buried treasure and
all my friends are over there well he has to talk like that he has to yell it's who he is well it's
not so much the volume is that he didn't even try to lie about it um and i feel like this is a common
movie trope where especially in kids movies
kids movies like making a fat character the kind of like scared and quote-unquote wimpy kid and we
talked about this i think on the matilda episode uh the way that media kind of feminizes fat men or boys and masculinizes fat women or girls
not that that is
a bad thing at all
but the movie wants you to think that
that like a female character
or a femme, a woman would have
masculine traits, the movies would be like
ew gross, because movies
love binaries
yes, even when it comes to
cave bathrooms it's gotta be binary as possible
but i feel like the movie is like oh look at look at this wimpy fat kid who is not as brave or tough
as his thin friends which is ridiculous too because it's like chunk is consistently right in a lot of
situations where like he's the one that's like yeah don't go into the murder house and they're
like shut up chunk and i was like chunk is right he's right he's correct you shouldn't go into the
murder house you just shouldn't yeah i i i think that like there's so much to love about his
character and like there's so many elements and so many moments where it's like this kid fucking rules like and it's just kind of like burdened with this other
very dated stuff for sure and also i never noticed this before but like he's the only
character who's jewish and this is referenced many times yes yes we love it i see you Shana and you're like that's so great
that there's a Jewish main character
and also he's the scaredy cat
liar who no one likes
like that sucks
yeah
I mean I didn't even catch
that on my first viewing
because Chunk is already so thoroughly
disrespected that like that on my first viewing because Chunk is already so thoroughly disrespected that
that on top of
80s movies just make my head
hurt, honestly. It's just
brutal.
Let's talk about the best
character, Data.
Data!
No, no! Love him!
Oscar for Data.
Please consider.
It's so cool that Data's going to win an Oscar next month.
He's so going to win an Oscar.
He is.
If he doesn't win an Oscar, some heads will roll,
and that's not metaphorical.
We'll all get the Data punching vest.
Slippery shoes.
Slick shoes.
Pinschers of peril.
His inventions are so cool.
I just think he's the coolest character ever.
There are some line reads that are just the best thing I've ever heard.
He falls through things multiple times.
And I think the last time, he falls through a surface.
Everyone else takes the stairs down.
He's like i spent
months working on my inventions and my ideas god it was just like the greatest line read i'd ever
heard it was just like amazing he's the best he's the best and i i did like uh i mean data there's
like a number of times in the plot where data is the only non-white goonie yes um and he also i mean
i i felt like particularly for a movie of the 80s he's treated very equitably uh within the group
and there's times because he is like the gadget kid that uh like he's the only person that can
get them out of certain situations um there's like multiple plot points that couldn't happen without
it's like shoes that come or like
whatever those were he was like no guys don't worry i have cum shoes and you're like all right
data let's see if this works and it does it works it's great because he's been getting up in the
morning and putting on all that gear like every day for years yeah and waiting for it to pay
waiting and he knew the day would come and this is the day and we get to be part of it every day for years. Yeah. And waiting for it to pay off. Waiting.
And he knew the day would come, and this is the day,
and we get to be part of it.
Yeah, and it's all the same day.
He has so many belts.
I was like, how many belts is this kid wearing?
He's more belt than boy now.
I just, yeah, I mean, this character's the greatest.
And I feel like at the end of the movie,
you get to see, I think, almost every kid's parents
and them reunite with their parents.
And Data, by far, has, like,
the most memorable, sweetest reunion with his parents
where he sees his dad, and his dad's also a gadget guy.
Yeah.
And then, like, something, his weird invention isn't working,
and then his dad says to Data,
you're the greatest invention of all.
And you're like, oh, wow.
Sometimes coming is the greatest invention.
And I was reminded of that in that moment.
I just really, yeah, I just think Data's a perfect character,
and I love him.
He's great, yeah.
He's like the token minority friend
in an otherwise entirely white cast.
Yes.
This movie has Italians in it.
It's diverse.
You're right.
The diversity of joey pan um and those characters are treated very respectfully uh the italians no notes there
um great representation singing opera and doing crimes the whole movie. The whole spectrum of being Italian.
You take a break from crime to sing a little opera,
and then you're right back to it.
Yep, yep, yep.
But yeah, Data rocks is the moral of the story.
That's true.
Should we talk about the gals?
Yes, let's do it.
Because I guess that Brand kind of factors into that.
Because Mikey and Brand,
quick moment,
I really liked their brother relationship.
There's specific scenes in these Spielberg-y
Boys on Bikes movies where I just,
it's so fun,
where there's a moment where Thanos
puts his arm around Sean Astin.
It just kind of lovingly drags him off of a porch.
Which is definitely
something that kids do, but you never see it
committed to the movie
because why would Thanos
do that?
But I just loved it. I was like, oh yeah, I would have
done that to my brother if he was sad.
Just been like, I love you,
and then drag him out of the room.
Yeah, I appreciated that brother relationship dynamic.
So we have the two girls, Andy and Steph.
They're not part of the main Goonies group,
at least at first.
They show up after the boys have already started the adventure.
They're not even fully informed
what they're doing in this tunnel, I don't think.
It's unclear if they know what the Goonies are until she's convinced to not be removed from hell.
She's like, he's like, no, you're one of us now.
Right.
And she's like, okay.
Okay.
Andy especially is often having a meltdown in a way that felt very like girls be screaming and scared kind of way i mean
to be fair were i in hell i would be screaming and scared um however yeah the way that like she's
there's like that there's like one particular meltdown where i mean i guess to contextually
where she's coming from she like is coming off of a situation where she had been sexually harassed
in a car by uh the guy with the money visor yes yeah and she says that he like tried to look down
her shirt and she like elbowed him in the face was that right yeah yeah and then she immediately
went to hell like she's just like having the worst day. That's what happens. Yeah. It truly is.
What if the movie is canonically,
is canonically,
everyone has to say something filthy accidentally on this tour.
But what if it's canonically, like,
all of her vision after she was trying to get out of the car
with the money visor guy,
and this is all kind of a fantasia that she's dreaming for all of us
it would give her more to do that's but even in her own fantasy she's still a secondary character
she doesn't even get to that's how it is for me you know
in my fantasies i also don't get to kiss my crush.
I end up with the wrong person.
There is, like, I don't know.
I think, like, Andy is, she has, like, good moments.
I feel like generally she is, like, sort of passed over and done a disservice.
But I do like that, you know, normally when you see cheerleader characters, they're not nice. They're, like, typed as, like, quote-unquote bitchy, mean characters.
Andy's a sweetheart.
I think that she's just often too horny to live.
Like, that kind of is sort of something that happens to her a lot.
I mean, relatable for me.
Sure.
But did Andy ever say she was a role model?
No, she didn't.
But why can't there be horny role models?
You know,
they are.
Both of the girls are framed as love interests for a number of characters
because brand likes Andy.
Mikey also seems to have a crush on her and is really excited when he kisses
her accidentally.
That scene is so weird um
and then steph ends up with mouth after they've both nagged each other relentlessly throughout
the entire movie yeah i guess that martha plimpton at one point got so annoyed at cory
feldman who was famously annoying that she like pushed him Maybe that's why he fell in the water.
That's why he flopped.
He flopped because he was a voice.
He's ducking a punch.
No, yeah, I, Steph, I thought like, I mean, I'm,
I feel like I connected to Steph where it's like,
she wears glasses and that's the character.
But I guess I was sort of like of two minds about her
where she is like very much the voice of reason friend,
but she has like elements of like,
I think it's kind of fun that she's diabolical enough
to not tell her friend one day
because it's the wrong person.
Like there are a few elements where you're like,
well, this is pretty specific to who this person is.
You pointed out that like Mouth only becomes interested in her after her
glasses break.
And you're just like,
well,
great.
Cause you were like,
yeah,
you're like,
Oh,
it's,
it's nice that like the best friend character who wears glasses gets a
love interest.
Cause that normally doesn't happen.
And then I was like,
but she only becomes a love interest after she loses her glasses.
Yeah.
So glasses,
people don't deserve love according to movies.
Said Caitlin Durante confidently,
making eye contact with someone wearing glasses.
You all saw it.
It's also like, isn't her love interest like 12?
Yeah.
It's like you can find love after you can't see,
and then it's a good thing that you can't see
because you're going to get hooked up with a seventh grader.
Okay.
Also at the end,
when Andy goes to Mikey and she's like,
he's a weirdo.
She's like,
you keep kissing girls the way you do.
You won't have any problems.
And the parts of you that don't work,
we'll catch up with the ones that do.
I'm like,
what does she mean? Write it in your journal. and the parts of you that don't work will catch up with the ones that do. I'm like, Andy, jail?
What does she mean?
Write it in your journal.
There's like, I mean, there's...
We have like, I feel like it's in the past five years
that we've stopped making movies for kids
where like a 12-year-old boy gets to make out
with a female character
who's like clearly way too old for him.
Like, do you remember Blank Check? That's a whole other conversation that was brutal that's like
sandlot oh right yes absolutely uh it is it is just an absolutely uh weird line and then
everyone's their parents are watching when she says that and they're like, yeah, yeah.
Whatever that means, probably normal.
That was really nice of you to say that to that boy.
That'll mean something to him.
He'll think of it every night.
And then she just turns around
and starts making out with Brand again
and Brand is also like, does he know that happened?
Like, it's so, Andy is ultimately,
I just think kind of a weird character
the last thing i want to say about her and then we have uh we got to uh do our fun activity we
have an activity yeah as her first kind of like meltdown which again i understand why she's kind
of like you know like panicked when she's brought to hell but her reaction is like, she's like, I wouldn't be here if I had just let Troy
look at my body.
I'm going to die here.
Is my body beautiful?
And I was like,
again, a journal,
more of a journal thing.
Save it for your
one-woman show
at the Astoria Playhouse
where Clark Gable
got his start.
It's true.
Really?
Yeah.
Wild.
Oregonian. Real shitty guy. It's true. Really? Yeah. Wild. Oregonian.
Real shitty guy.
Let's move on.
Yeah.
And it's also like, I think that the most important thing with scenes like that where you're like,
oh, I don't know what to make of that.
You just have to picture Chris Columbus at his house writing it down.
And you're like, no, that's a weird line of dialogue.
Chris Columbus on a fucking like old word processor that's like the size of dialogue. Chris Columbus on a fucking old word processor
that's the size of a building being like,
my body is not beautiful enough.
He's like, this is how girls think, right?
I don't know.
I've never talked to one.
He's like, and print.
We got another classic.
And he was right.
And then he opens up another file and he's like,
how do I solve this babysitting movie
they're forced to sing the blues perfect
like it's just uh chris columbus is an interesting character uh the last thing i want to say about
andy is um i i was surprised that she was able to like have that moment where she contributed a
skill and like got them out of
peril i was not expecting that at all i will say though that the things that the boys are doing to
overcome the obstacles are more like physical things and hers is more artistic which feels a
little tropey of like boys are tough and they do sporty they get to swashbuckle and girls are fragile.
So they play piano.
Yeah.
But I mean,
she doesn't do it.
Well,
I don't know.
I don't know.
That makes it better or worse.
And then brand is like,
why couldn't I have a little sister?
I would never be in this mess if I had a sister as if sisters don't like to go on adventures.
As if a sister couldn't lead you directly to hell
she knows the way she can feel it in her bones i led my siblings straight to hell all the time
okay exactly um okay so this is when we in the live show when we went into that special segment
where we did the trivia game with Sarah
Marshall. Again, you can see that segment if you, you know, buy access to the on-demand version of
the show on the link tree is where you can find the like tickets to access that. But we wanted to
also take this opportunity to add in a chunk, haha, get it, chunk of discussion that we didn't
have time to get to during the live show. So we are doing it now. Yes. And you may recall,
if you attended our Seattle show that we did talk about it at our Seattle show, but it just makes
more sense to do it in this way. We wanted to talk about the character of Rosalina played by iconic character actor Lupe Antiveros yes
so she is hired by Mikey and Bran's mom to like help them move and basically what's happening with this character is that a number of
stereotypes about people from Latin America are employed with this character yes she cannot speak
English she is present in the story to service the white characters she's in a role where she's like the hired help and a ton of jokes
are made at her expense because she doesn't know english and so what happens is mouth is asked to
translate mikey's mom's instructions to rosalita and then he mistranslates it and it's like all of the jokes are probably I mean I would
be interested in how this was handled internationally but all for English-speaking audiences all of the
jokes are in the uh the lower thirds are in in the subtitles about how he is misleading her and it's like the joke is at is both at Rosalita's expense and also just done to like
elevate mouth's character as like a little stinker like it is just it's reductive in every way that
you could imagine not to like and and and it isn't like the same amount of like punitive shame is not
applied to Mikey and Bran's mom for not being able to communicate
with rosalita right like they are having the same communication barrier but it is in a very racist
way like leveraged at rosal like she's the one who who suffers for it and is mocked for it yeah
yeah and it's mouth being cruel because it's him like deliberately mistranslating what Mikey's mom is saying in order to like freak Rosalita out.
Because he's saying things like, oh, this is where they keep the like cocaine stash.
And this is where the sex torture chamber is and stuff like that.
So it's just him being cruel to a character.
And just like, again, the joke is at the expense of someone not knowing English.
Right.
And then Rosalita does come back at the end of the movie with those really fake looking jewels that they find.
Yeah. yeah but again it's it's even though that um she's not mocked in that moment she's very much like a tool for the scene versus being treated as a character because you would think right you know
if i'm rosalita and i've only been treated like shit this entire time i'm pocketing these jewels
and getting the fuck out of there right maybe if i'm feeling nice i'll slip them one yeah but like
that's not on the mind
of this movie because this movie is not considering her in any way like you would think she would get
at least something but it's like this that's just not the um consideration that this movie is giving
anyone who is not the main cast and and I think it's so i don't know it's very 80s i wanted to um we
talked about this at the seattle show um lupe andaveros like she i think most famously at least
to me played yolanda in the selena movie with jennifer lopez but uh for the most part her career
in hollywood has consisted of roles like these to the point where she made a documentary about it called Made in America because she had played a maid at least 150 times on stage and screen and is a huge advocate for wanting to see more and better roles available.
Not that a maid is a bad role, but like a more diverse amount of roles available to latin
actors um she said quote i'm proud to represent those hands that labor in this country i've given
every maid i've ever portrayed soul and heart which is absolutely true and comes through even
when the writing is not giving her what she deserves for sure sure. But I just wanted to, she's, she's a legend and it is frustrating to see her have to receive these
underthought,
underwritten,
um,
very stereotypical and racist roles.
So shout out to Rosalita.
Yeah.
I love you.
And then the other thing that we didn't get to talk about,
uh,
during the live show that we wanted to touch on really quick was class.
Yeah.
Because the whole story unfolds because these kids who are from working class families are being forcibly removed from their homes in favor of a country club being built, which is a very 80s premise where it's like there's a country club
there's a shopping mall something like that it's all yeah very very 80s threats they feel quaint
now but still bad right the world is on fire um no but this is like a legitimate issue um although
i will say that you know people being displaced from their homes and forced to relocate uh
disproportionately affects people of color and indigenous people absolutely um and as we discussed
these kids are mostly white with the exception of data but it's still I think worth mentioning that
class plays a big part in this movie it's a it's a major theme that
again these working class kids they have to go on this journey just so they don't uh have to
leave their homes and have their lives be uprooted and we see them talking at the beginning like
they're lamenting that like this is the last time they're ever going to see each other and they're going to have to go to different schools and be kind of torn apart yeah and i think that that is
one of the things that i know this isn't the spielberg movie technically but it's very
spielberg coded his fingerprints are very much on it yeah um and i think that that is something
that is pretty consistent throughout this like era of Spielberg is that like it does generally.
The unfortunate part is it always focuses on white boys.
But in terms of class representation, I feel like you do see a lot of working class or lower middle class like families just getting by,
which is something that I don't think you see in big hollywood movies as much
these days um and so i it's always kind of nice to to see it definitely and back to the show folks
yeah all right well give it up for sarah marsh more time. Really, really well done.
We just have two questions we answer
at the end of every Bechdel cast.
I feel like I'm going to choke.
Do you want me to talk?
Does the movie pass the Bechdel test?
I don't think it does, right?
I don't think it does.
There's arguably a very, very small exchange
between Steph and Andy that may,
but I think spiritually it really just doesn't.
But most importantly, there's one unquestionable metric
that's never been wrong before,
and that's the Bechdel-Cast-Nipple scale.
That's true.
Yeah, give it up.
Thank you. yeah give it up Caitlin it seems like you were gonna like
throw something at them
you better clap for the nipple scale
it is a scale of
zero to five nipples on which
we rate the movie looking at it through
an intersectional feminist lens
I think
that despite some kind of like reclaimable things from the movie regarding
certain characters overall it doesn't do very well it has 80s movie written all over it and i think i
would only give it like a half nipple and i'm gonna give it to kiwi Kwan yeah because he's the best yeah I'm gonna go
one nipple because I'm feeling I'm feeling so I mean I had a hot dog I'm in
a good mood and I don't wonder I mean yeah I think that there yeah like you're
saying there there are reclaimable elements we didn't get to talk about the
racism applied towards the only Latin character in the movie we'll talk about the racism applied towards the only Latin character
in the movie. We'll talk about
that off mic later or on mic at a
different state. Whatever.
But yeah, I think that
there is some
diversity in this movie, but it's
barely any and
more often
than not handled
particularly well.
The women are so horny. more often than not handled particularly well. And the women
are so horny.
Which is a
relatable thing, but we talked about it.
You understand what I'm saying.
I do feel like I'm getting the meat sweats a little bit
right now.
So it's kind of like freaking me out.
Okay, so I would
give this movie one nipple
and I'm going gonna give it to
carly who brought me a hot dog give it up for carly feminist icon carly
sarah hmm um one nipple way way up
i tried one perky nip one perky nip yeah because it's I mean it's like it's so riddled with the
problems of its era but also I watched 16 candles yesterday and so like within the 80s it feels I
don't know it's like that there's like a whole other this length-long conversation to be had
about like 80s meanness and what do we do with it but like you know the um the sort of like generalized like maliciousness culturally of the decade
is so there but like malice by characters doesn't feel so pronounced in the way that
it does elsewhere which is like a terrible scale to drag John, but woohoo! Thrilling.
Who would you like to give your nipple to?
I want to give my nipple to
Alfred Molina.
He deserves it.
He does.
He could have been any part
in this movie.
He could have been Mikey.
He could have been Andy.
You know, just like corny in a tunnel.
He's a chameleon.
I think it would have been really fun
if this movie was about four 12-year-olds
and Alfred Molina playing a 12-year-old.
I think it would have been really special.
Just Pen15 with Alfred Molina.
He could do it. He has the ring.
We deserve it. Or maybe we're not worthy of it.
You deserve it. None of the ring. We deserve it. Or maybe we're not worthy of it. You deserve it.
None of the rest of us do.
Thank you.
Oh my gosh.
I thank you so much for being here, Sarah Marshall.
Give it up for Sarah.
The greatest person ever.
Give it up for yourselves for coming out.
Give it up for Curious Comedy and all their wonderful staff here.
So there you have it. That was the live show that we recorded in
February in
Portland at the beautiful
Curious Comedy Theater. We had the best
time. Thank you again to
Sarah Marshall. If you
don't know who Sarah Marshall marshall is take your head
out of the sand you rube um yeah you can listen to her podcasts you're wrong about and you are good
she's on the road a lot she's an amazing writer you just and she's wisely not on social media so
you can't even bother her you can just engage with her amazing um media as you see fit she's the
best and here's where you can find us yeah at bechtel cast on twitter and instagram on patreon
at patreon.com slash bechtel cast where you can get all of our matreon episodes two per month for five dollars plus access to the whole back catalog
and merch at tpublic.com slash the bechtel cast where you can get all the wonderful merch
designed by our very own jamie loft has ever heard of her it's a me. And yeah, just thanks again to Sarah, to everyone who came out to the shows.
Thanks to Curious Comedy Theater for having us and all the wonderful staff there.
And thanks to you for listening right here and right now.
And with that, we love you so much.
Make good choices and have a good day.
Wow. Bye. Bye bye. I Make good choices and have a good day. Wow.
Bye.
Bye-bye.
I'm sorry.
I have a fever.
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