The Bechdel Cast - The Rock with Miles Gray
Episode Date: April 12, 2018Jamie and Caitlin escape the prison that is the patriarchy and meet up with special guest Miles Gray to discuss The Rock.(This episode contains spoilers)For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at... patreon.com/bechdelcast. Follow @milesofgray on Twitter! While you're there, you should also follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and @hamburgerphone Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
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If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation, then I think it sort of eases us a
little bit. Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. Are all their discussions just boyfriends and husbands or do they have individualism?
The patriarchy's effing vast. Start changing it with the Bechdel cast.
Hello and welcome to the Bechdel cast. My name is Caitlin Durante.
My name is Jamie Loftus.
And we're here to talk about how women are represented in the movies.
Women are awesome.
Women are the best.
I love women.
Me too.
Okay. Well, as long as we've got that out right at the best. I love women. Me too. Okay.
Well, as long as we've got that out right at the top, I think that's critical intel.
Yeah.
Our listeners need to know that we are allies to women.
What if they came in like, what if they're not allies to women?
I think that'd be kind of like an insidious fun place to start.
Oh, like, you know, that podcast Analyze Fish?
Like, it's like, yeah. Oh, this is a podcast where you convince me to like fish where this is a podcast where you
caitlin convince me jamie to like and respect women yeah i'm like you know what i'm not sold
well they kind of seem like idiots well the movie we're talking about today i know we're we're
recording in a different space with different i think we should just address what's going on yeah we are recording in our normal building
right normal structure of meltdown comics but we're in a not normal space right because a bunch
of things have happened we haven't recorded in a while no um some things have happened since then
where meltdown comics the historic comic book store in hollywood california i've heard of it rest in power is
closing down which also means the comedy venue that i do the programming for is also closing
down so yeah we're recording in a different podcast studio which is adjacent to our normal
space but aristotle is not here he's not here today did you and aristotle have fun last night
at the movies yes we saw pacific room 2 oh that's so nice i liked it better than the first one that's good
what was better about it definitely more women um a more streamlined story that was easier to
follow not a billion characters who all looked the same and therefore you don't know who's doing what
that's good and john boyega is a much more charismatic leading man than Charlie Hunnam. I mean, John Boyega is very hot.
John Boyega.
Listen, let me just go off the rails.
Very unpopular opinion, JK.
John Boyega, very hot.
Whoa, cool it.
Full body paralysis every time John Boyega is visually in front of me in any resolution.
Hey, folks, this is an example of a conversation that
would not pass the bechdel test interesting because we're talking we're talking about
a man in the bechdel test uh which our podcast is inspired by i have a lot of for the movie we're
talking about today i have a lot of asterisks to the Bechdel test. Well, you kind of have to.
In a movie where women are certainly not the focus,
and if they are, they better be pregnant as hell.
I think that is, yeah.
So the Bechdel test requires that a movie has two female characters.
They have to have names.
They have to talk to each other. And with our version of the Bechdel test,
they have to have at least two line exchange.
So one woman says one thing,
another one woman responds to her,
and neither of those can be about a man.
Shall we demo?
Yes, let us demo.
Okay.
Jamie, what's your favorite flavor of soup?
Hi, Caitlin.
I think soup is hot water and is a big old racket,
and I don't believe in it.
Jamie, I agree.
Hot water with flavors in it?
Yeah.
What are you, vitamin water but left in the sun?
Stupid. That passes the Bechdel test.
It certainly did.
It doesn't have to be good writing. We have to say over and over and over. It does not have to be good.
So we'll figure out whether or not this movie passes the Bechdel test.
We'll talk about its portrayal of Lemon.
Infuriating.
This movie is infuriating to me on a number of levels.
So many.
But on this level specifically because this movie is the ultimate proof that the Bechdel test is flawed.
Is flawed.
Yeah.
You can pass it and yet still be a horrendous showing of a lot of things.
Sure.
And we'll get to that discussion later on, but first, let's introduce our guest.
Oh, he's wearing a great jacket.
It's so soft.
It's so tan.
Can I just say, it is a hand-me-down of a French man.
I'm wearing a French man's hand-me-downs, and that's the only way to live.
I mean, there couldn't be a better backstory for this very nice jacket.
We're thrilled to have him.
Yeah, the voice you just heard is that of the co-host of the Daily Zeitgeist.
Oh, my God.
On the How Stuff Works Network.
Oh, my God.
Miles Gray.
Hi.
Hi, welcome.
Thank you so much for having me.
I am really excited.
When you first asked me to do this,
I wasn't sure what movie we would do.
When you were like,
what movies do you like,
like ingest,
like, I love The Rock,
also knowing full well
that this is a terrible movie,
but I'm so glad we picked it.
I'm glad we did too.
Because I rewatched it
with a critical eye
because I think
I was telling Caitlin before,
like every time I've watched it,
it's just kind of been like on.
And that was like,
It is one of those movies
and the last time I saw it
was maybe like 8 years ago
so to watch it now
with a critical eye
in the year 2018
this is like a TNT
like you turn on TNT
and this is on
in the middle of it
I think by law
it had to be on
at some point
at least twice
in one weekend
like on whether it's TNT
or FX
it was always on
and it's one of those movies
that's one of my favorites
where you do,
I've seen bits and pieces.
This is the first time I've seen the movie all the way through.
I will say 36 hours ago, I'm improving.
But this is one of those movies that I've seen chunks of over the years,
and it's always the TNT edit where it's like,
that's not what Sean Connery said in the movie,
but I'm not quite sure what he actually said.
I think I know what line you're talking about.
I love a TNT edit.
Love it.
My name's Buck and I came here to party.
That's a Kill Bill line.
This is what happens when you meet a stranger in the Alps.
Yeah, exactly.
The other one from Big Lebowski.
Fuck a stranger in the ass,
turned to meet a stranger in the Alps.
Oh, it was the original line. How do you fuck a stranger, meet a stranger in the ass trying to meet a stranger in the Alps what was the original line
meet a stranger in the Alps
that's I mean truly the ultimate
creative challenge is to be the one
who edits for TNT
yeah and then but even though that you have
like the freedom to just be like
honestly I think meet a stranger in the
Alps is the only thing that's gonna work and
they're gonna be like alright fuck it
he's a pro he knows how to make words sound like
other words without context so whoever did kill bill one did a real bang up job and i love them
they're i have not seen that part that's that it really is i came here to party my name is buck and
i came here to party feminist icon buck with the, Buck from Kill Bill 1. with the pussy wagon. Lots of,
lots of feminist icons
in The Rock,
which is a movie
that for all you
idiots out there like me,
The Rock does not appear
one time.
I was waiting for
a Rock cameo.
He does not come.
Yeah,
yeah,
that was before.
Dwayne Johnson,
not in this movie.
Dwayne Johnson absent,
which already is like,
do I like this movie?
Hard to say.
So you had seen bits and pieces of this before.
I mean, very bits and pieces.
I knew that Nick Cage and Sean Connery were in a movie together and found that to be interesting.
Right.
I didn't remember that it was a Michael Bay joint.
And that adds a lot.
Peak Bay.
Peak.
Tessa Peak Bay. Peak. This is, well, this.
Tessa Peak Bay.
Tessa.
Stop that.
I have to go. Stop that right now.
Thank you so much.
My coat and I have to go.
He can't.
Jean-Paul's coat and I have to be going now.
Jean-Paul's coat and I must go.
So Miles, when did you first see?
I'm so sorry.
What?
When did you first see The Rock?
Oh, I thought we were talking about The Rock.
Oh my God.
I'm sorry.
I had to get high after watching the movie because I was so fucked up.
I was like, I need to smoke weed after seeing this.
So you're catching me there.
And I also ate half a pizza on the way here.
But the first time I saw it was in the theater.
Okay.
In 96.
Yeah, yeah.
So I'm like 12 years old.
This was like in the period when there were blockbusters in the summer.
This was a big movie.
These are like the big tentpole movies come out. And it didn't matter what the fuck it was you just knew you had to see it
because it was such a spectacle and the movie like its effect on me was like pretty profound
at the time i thought i wanted to be like a navy seal because of the movie like it indoctrinated me
very well that is something i had a question about because i was i was too young to see this
movie when it came out i and also it like even if i was old enough it wouldn't have been a line like i don't think that this is a movie in the 90s you would have taken a too young to see this movie when it came out. And also, even if I was old enough, it wouldn't have been a line.
I don't think that this is a movie in the 90s you would have taken a young girl to see.
Well, you know, it's weird.
The people would just take their whole families.
I remember I went with a group of people and the little sister came.
She was like six and was just like, hey, the big movie's out.
Let's go to the theater.
We got to all see it.
By the time I was in middle school, school high school there was such a reputation for all
the boys who were like getting into the military and the idea of going into the military it was
always navy seals and marines i'm like these are the badass branches of the military and i feel
like it's movies like this that really push that agenda and that's such a michael bay thing to push
a very specific view of very specific branches of the military that like
really took hold of young people's brains yeah and it's weird to watch now and be like oh this
is why all the boys i went to school with thought marines were like the fucking coolest is because
ed harris and his bald ass head were doing their best in 96 like this is crazy and the navy seals
too like the technology they were using and they're just like this is crazy and the navy seals too like the technology
they were using and they're just like this superhero type shit to me as a 12 year old kid
was like very appealing and sure god like i remember right after i like begged my parents
to buy me like urban camo like that gray and white like those fatigues that ed harris and those guys
wear because i was like that's how i'm gonna dress forever because of this miles i feel like
you're touching on
something very important,
which is when young people
see movies like this,
they're like,
oh, I want to be like that person.
So if a young girl saw
women being in the military,
they'd be like,
oh, I can be in the military too.
But so little has ever happened.
But I would argue that
this is such an inaccurate representation
of the military
that it's basically like
kind of a wash.
I'm not saying about this movie
specifically for women, but I'm saying if there were movies that made like women in stem
seem cool or women in like computer science or like women in law seem really fucking cool we
would see more women trying to do jobs like that yeah this is like a laser guided missile for
testosterone like this this film which is kind of like an overarching theme in
all of michael bay's work where even if you get into the transformers franchise and again i feel
like i do this every other episode but i will direct people to friend of the cast lindsey ellis's
really great video essay series on the transformers series but there's very strong pro military themes
in the transformers series too where like this is is just a big overarching theme of Michael Bay's work, which is always kind of regarded as like, well, these movies are not good, but everyone's going to see them.
So they are very relevant.
Yeah.
And from what I could tell, and I tried to backtrack and do some research on how this movie was reviewed at the time, which was pretty well.
I mean, it got three and a half stars from Ebert. What? It got how this movie was reviewed at the time which was pretty well i
mean it got three and a half stars from ebert what it got like this movie was well reviewed
right which is crazy to watch it now and be like oh yeah great but but this was like peak block
this is the same year that mission impossible comes out this is like peak action dudes military
adjacent shit yeah it's like this specific year is when all the big ones come out
and this is the most
successful of that year
but even now
just last year
the AV Club
wrote this big piece
on how The Rock
which is sort of
I feel like a forgotten
Michael Bay movie
now?
I don't think so.
No, no.
See, I had never heard of it.
I thought it was
a vehicle for The Rock.
It's like, yeah,
if Michael
The Rock stars in The Rock. But the movie is so well, it's a I for The Rock. It's like, yeah, if Michael... The Rock stars in The Rock.
But the movie is so...
Well, I read a few different pieces saying, like,
this is Michael Bay's technically, structurally, etc., best movie.
Sure, yeah.
Maybe not most memorable, but best in terms of putting a movie together
with a story that makes sense is the closest he's gotten
to making a cohesive narrative.
Right. But i'd never
heard of it see i've heard of it for years so my backstory with this is i only saw it for the first
time almost exactly a year ago because i remember posting on facebook saying that yep because for
years i was always like fuck michael bay i hate him he's a horrible director and he sucks and
everyone's like well have you seen the rock and i'm like no'm like, no. People would be like, that's the one.
He's living off that one.
You would like The Rock.
The Rock is actually a good movie.
So I heard all this stuff.
Who said that?
So many people were like,
Caitlin, you will like The Rock.
And I was like,
I genuinely think that that is a thing
when we're looking at male directors
versus female directors
where male directors,
if you have one good one,
they're always like,
no, he's actually good
because have you seen this movie that came out 22 years ago?
But if it's a female director, if she makes one bad one,
it's like all her previous successes are completely nullified.
But yeah, this seems to be the one that people direct you to of like,
well, Michael Bay was at one point semi-competent.
He did one good sort of thing almost.
But I wouldn't like cape for it like that and be like, you know, you would really like The Rock.
Like to say that, you'd be like, you're kind of a dickhead.
I've had no less than 10 different people say that exact thing to me.
Well, yeah, he kind of sucks, but The Rock's pretty good and I think you'd like it.
And then I watch it and I fucking hated it.
I think the movie is terrible.
Unless it's like the caveat of like, it's the most brainless peak 90s action film.
No one offered any caveats.
But I would be,
I would attach so many caveats.
I wouldn't just be like,
oh, here.
No, you know what is peak cinema?
Yeah.
Once I found out
this was a Michael Bay joint,
and also reading
the behind the scenes stuff
for this movie is wild
in that like,
there's,
who's the guy,
Don, what's his name?
Producer.
Don Simpson.
Oh, Don Simpson.
Okay, so Don Simpson
in the middle of production for this movie,
he's like the big producer who works with Bruckheimer
and works with Michael Bay on this movie,
dies of a coke overdose a few months.
Not to laugh at someone's coke overdose,
but this is peak 90s, like toxic male,
like, we're going to make a movie about seals,
and then one dies of a coke overdose.
And then the twist at the end is it's dedicated to this guy
who had a coke overdose.
There's also, I'm getting way ahead of myself,
but I do need to say now,
Nick Cage is the protagonist, technically,
one of two in this movie.
I would say, yeah.
I would say technically the poster protagonist
where Sean Connery's the villain, but not really.
Like there's a lot of straight, white, male heroes, but are they villains?
But they're so nuanced.
But if they weren't like white and straight, probably they would just be villains.
But anyways, Nick Cage at the end of this movie, the last line he delivers is basically a prequel to National Treasure.
Yeah.
Where he's like,
babe, did you know
who the real killer of JFK is?
I was like,
are you reading the fucking
back of the Declaration
of Independence right now, dude?
Like, what are you?
It was...
Forget Maui.
Right before he goes there.
The way he looks at that microfilm
is so amazing, too.
What about Nick Cage
is like,
we have to give him
a Chekhov's gun style prop
that reveals
deep seated American students.
Also there's a dog
in that scene
that we haven't seen yet
in the movie.
There is a dog
in that scene.
In the last like 30 seconds
of the movie.
Do they not even have
a dog at their house?
No.
No.
Wow.
Don't.
The end is like,
oh, I guess they got married
but like-
And then pretended
to be like broke
because they're like,
we're in this shitty
VW Beetle. In Texas, right, I guess they got married. And then pretended to be broke because they're like, we're in this shitty VW Beetle.
In Texas?
Right.
Kansas.
Fort Walton, Kansas.
Oh, okay.
I'm sorry.
I was not watching this movie.
I just watched it and I have a pictographic memory.
So I was remembering the note.
Wait, do you really?
Front pew, right leg.
Wow.
Wait.
Miles, that's awesome.
No, it's only for The Rock, though.
You're asking about any other movie. That's your curse. Your curse. Yeah, that's awesome. No, it's only for The Rock, though. Ask me about any other thing.
That's your curse.
Your curse.
Yeah, it is.
You remember everything you saw about The Rock.
I've been going to a lot of therapy, and I'm beginning to see it as a strength.
Oh, good.
I'm glad.
Sorry for triggering you.
No, that's fine.
No, no, I'm not triggered.
You're actually activating my coping skills.
That's a great way to look at being triggered.
Should I do the recap?
Yes, please. Okay, I'll do this so freaking fast so the rock is about so we uh as you said not the rock not duane the rock
johnson but the protagonist is nicholas cage his character's name is stanley goodspeed goodspeed
what a reveal he is a like chemical, chemicals weapons expert for the FBI.
He gets called in to help with this hostage situation that takes place where Ed Harris's character, whose name is Frank Hummel, is a...
Which is a weird choice.
Hummel is a German porcelain statue.
Was interested in what the deal with the whole Hummel thing was,
but I couldn't crack it.
Yeah, my grandma would collect Hummels.
They're like these weird German porcelain,
very commercial statues
where it'd be like Christian parables
and porcelain.
And then, okay, I know we interrupt.
I know we interrupt the thing constantly,
but the two writers credited on this movie
who are not, thankfully, I think for their own reputations, not visually credited and also because of writer's guilt rules.
Oh, right.
Sorkin and Tarantino contributed to the script for The Rock.
No kidding.
Yeah.
So it's impossible to say where these names come from or what these specific things I find interesting comes from.
But there are a lot of good writers involved in this movie, but few of them are actually credited.
Yeah, there was a quote about how Sorkin wrote,
quote, most of the good dialogue or something like that.
I mean, of course he's going to say that.
Is there good dialogue in this movie?
I mean, look, if it's Don Simpson,
you know, Sorkin loves Coke too,
so they're probably all just flying off Coke.
So it was apparently Aaron Sorkin, Tarantino,
and then the three credited screenwriters
were David Weisberg, Douglas Cook, and Mark Rosner.
So a bunch of freaking men wrote this movie.
Cool.
All right.
So anyway, the story is Frank Hummel is like a Marine, like black ops.
He was doing things commanded by the government that were technically illegal and then not
compensated fairly or, you know, just various injustices were done to him and his fellow Marines
and their families and things like that.
A lot is done to humanize the villain in this movie,
which is, I think, a Michael Bay thing that is normally not thought about.
Right.
Right.
Well, he literally sets his stakes up in the first thing
by talking to his wife's grave.
I would say he screams at his wife's grave.
I'm so sorry!
His wife's grave says
Barbara Hummel, his wife.
He literally just, I was like,
ah! First of all, whose wife?
And secondly, who is? It's the first thing.
It's the top line. It's his wife.
Yeah, his wife, Barbara Hummel. I guess because they're already
pre-designing the plot,
so he'll be there, and then it'll be his wife.
She is only defined on her gravestone
by her relationship to a man.
It's so crazy.
Maybe they'll finally listen to me.
God, when this movie started,
a Jerry Bruckheimer joint, a Michael Bay joint,
you're like, okay, so there's going to be
a lot of men with veneers in this movie.
Great.
Then you find out the movie is about Alcatraz.
You're like, great.
And then you find out about poor fucking Barbara Hummel.
His wife.
Ed Harris, who is, I will say,
doing his very best in this whole movie.
I love it.
I mean, I have such a soft spot for character actors,
and Ed Harris has been sidelined his entire life,
and I love him.
But he, I i mean there's only
so much you can do he screams at his wife's grave he says i miss you so much everyone screams
michael bay's directing style is more screaming please scream louder like yeah it's a lot hey the
rain's really loud imagine she can't hear you through the rain ed you're screaming at her ghost dad you dumb bitch right like you know he's like just screaming profanity is at everyone at all
times and so no one no single actor can be held accountable for whatever atrocities take place
in the movie okay so ed harris's character um in response to the injustices that he feels has been directed at him, he takes a bunch
of people, like tourists hostage
in Alcatraz. So 81
tourists are taken hostage.
It's the most diverse group of people we see
in the entire movie
where there's a lot of, there's young
people, there's old people, there's black people,
there's Hispanic people, there's all sorts
of people. We never
see them again. Never check in with them.
No.
Never.
Don't need to, except for the crying father white hostage dad.
Exactly.
We see a series of racist caricatures,
we see a crying white hostage,
and then we basically forget that they're there from the very end.
The most diverse scene just reinforces the craziest stereotypes.
Right.
Because one cell is the clueless elderly Asian people
and the angry black dude who's like, man, this is a fucked up tour.
And then they go to like, okay, well, so we have angry black man.
Now let's go to sassy black woman.
And it's like, yeah, it's just like, what the fuck?
And then this film, like, you know, that's why I say it's like peak 90s of sort of like this completely, you know, this was normal.
And it was almost like, like, you could tell people almost had to write these like, and then, you know, this was normal and it was almost like,
like you could tell
people almost had to write
these like,
and then,
you know,
we're gonna have to have
like a sassy black woman
say something here.
You know what I mean?
And it was like,
yeah,
this movie has all
of the great tropes in it.
Oh,
and that like the character
who is coded as gay,
the stylist who comes in
and like cuts.
the stylist.
We'll get to that.
You can't, you can't just bring in a stereotype for two minutes
and then discard the character forever
more concisely than this movie does.
Right.
And truly emasculate the character.
Yeah.
Oh, absolutely.
Oh, yeah, totally.
Okay, so Ed Harris is holding all these people hostage
and has these missiles filled with the most deadly chemical
ever to be known by a man.
And he's threatening to fire these missiles on the city of San Francisco if the government does not comply with his demands, which is that he and his group of probably like, I don't know, 15 or so Marine black ops people like him.
Guys who decided to join the cause.
Right.
These like rogue Marines.
They all want to be paid $1 million each and you have 40 hours to do it.
So everyone, like the people at the White House, the Pentagon, military people, they all gather in this conference room, almost entirely men.
They gather up a team basically of, I think, also Marines.
I think, oh, Navy SEALs.
This is where they use, those are the Navy SEALs.
Okay, Navy SEALs.
Because they're the good guys.
They're the good guys.
And then they get Nick Cage because of his chemical weapons expertise.
And they're like, but we don't know how to get in and save these hostages.
We need someone who has been to Alcatraz because, like, the place is all, there's, like, no blueprints and all this stuff.
Yeah, like the old warden has died.
The security guards don't remember anything.
Right. So they're like, well, we have one last chance with this guy named John Mason, played by Sean Connery, who is the only person to have ever successfully escaped Alcatraz.
So they find him.
They bring him in.
They, like, tunnel through Alcatraz.
They get into the prison.
Ed Harris is all like, get out of here.
I'm doing my thing.
Oh, he's doing his best.
He's doing his best. He's doing his best.
Yeah.
So most of the Navy SEALs get killed in a standoff.
And the only people who are left of the good guys is Goodspeed and Mason.
So they have to figure out a way to find all the missiles, because there's 15 of them,
I think.
And Nick Cage has to disassemble them or make it so that, like, destroy the tracking
chips or whatever. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It sounds sort of vaguely like a video game
directive. Like, at some point, this movie...
Find all 15 missiles and take guidance
chip. Right, and then every time that
they do that, like, a new challenge,
I'm like, at some point, the plot of this
movie does begin to feel like a bad
video game. Yeah. Right. Well, did you notice
one of the last Navy SEALs to die is the actor Danny Nucci.
Who is Fabrizio.
You texted me about this so quick.
I missed it.
I straight up slipped.
Oh, I was like, that's Fabrizio from Titanic.
Danny Nucci is iconic.
Fabrizio.
He's like a silver fox now.
Oh, yeah.
He is very hot.
He's like, wow.
The Nucci.
And he was hot then. Yeah. The Nucci. I thought you'd appreciate that because I know He is very hot. He's like, wow. The nooch. And he was hot then.
Yeah.
The nooch.
I thought you'd appreciate that because I know Titanic is very near and dear to you.
I was genuinely very upset with myself because I went back and I was like, oh, of course that's Fabrizio.
But there are so many random B characters.
I would say that there's three, maybe four in this movie that when they're Navy SEALs and when they're killed, you hear the little like,
and you're like, wait, who's that character?
They're like,
and they're bleeding out.
You're just like, wait, but who is that?
Have you heard them speak?
It's like,
No, it's senseless killing of Americans killing Americans.
Right, and it's just like, oh, he was a hero.
All those scenes, there's like three different scenes where three characters, I could not tell you who they were
if you had a gun to my head.
There's a two-minute scene about how sad it is that they died.
And you're just like, whom is that?
Well, speaking of guns, there's a ton of them in this movie.
And a lot of them are being shot and fired into other people.
So, like, a bunch of people are dying.
Goodspeed and Mason managed to find most of the missiles.
But there's, like, one left.
The green doofy one?
I mean, they're all like that.
They're all the missiles.
And I don't know.
Listen, I don't know about missiles.
Do I think that they actually look like Nickelodeon slime?
I'd be surprised.
Oh, yeah, the VX guys.
I'd be fully surprised.
I think the art department had a good time with that.
The ADs really went wild on that.
This is how we feel it should look like.
They look like those like-
Anal beads?
Yeah.
They do look like anal beads.
It's a string of anal beads.
They look like a huge like colander of anal beads.
Yeah, they're major league anal beads.
These are not for weekenders.
Do you have, yeah, this is for an ass.
This is for a real ass.
Deadly.
This is a lethal anal bead.
So there's one final standoff where most of the rest of the bad marine dudes die,
but Nick Cage has to find the one last missile.
There's this whole fight,
and then he saves the day.
He disassembles it, whatever.
And then, what's his name?
Mason is like,
oh, now I'm going to have to go back
and be in jail again.
And he's like,
not if I tell them you died.
So he lets him escape.
Like the homie does.
Right.
Help you fake your friend's death.
I hope you guys have
that kind of relationship.
God, of course Jamie.
What happened to Jamie?
And you're looking at her and you're like, she died.
She vaporized.
She's vaporized.
She told me where the anal beads were and then she disappeared.
So yeah, the good guys saved the day.
The city of San Francisco is safe.
None of the hostages.
Wait, but did the good guys save the day?
Because if you think about it, all Ed Harris was really advocating for was better veteran care right right his whole
thing was like i want 100 million dollars 83 of it for the men that i lost and get discarded like
trash that was the thing was like this is like a weird uncanny valley situation much like i would
argue the original ghostbusters, the enemy being the EPA.
Right.
Like, where you're just like, are they really the enemy?
Are they, like, why are we supposed to hate them?
Right.
Where, I mean, Ed Harris, where his practice is perfect, they were bad.
They weren't.
They were bad.
But he knew when he lost.
That's why he was like, I bluffed.
They called it.
So the mission's over.
Right.
You know what I mean?
And then it's the other dudes who kind of take over.
And then the greed takes over. Yeah. Right. You know what I mean? And then it's the other dudes who kind of take over. And then the greed takes over.
Yeah, right.
You know what I mean?
This movie is very weird.
And also, I mean, I think we'll get into this, but there is a male friendship that coagulates
through the course of this movie between Nick Cage and Sean Connery, right?
But everything that they are bonding over is completely toxic.
Oh, sure.
Where do I think it's good to see a movie
where two men form a friendship?
Yes, I don't think we see that enough.
But do I want to see it based on, like, guns?
Dislike?
Like, you know,
they bond on every problematic, weird thing
there is possible to bond on, according to Michael Bay.
And then it's like, oh, but they're friends.
That's kind of nice.
And he should absolutely be in jail because, like, in the many scenes of destruction in this movie, I would say we've got hundreds of casualties on our hands that are never addressed in the city of San Francisco.
Oh, sure.
When they're plowing through.
There's like a whole trolley full of people
who are flinging themselves off.
Hey, but all the stuntmen rolled away.
It's not like you suddenly get caught under the wheels.
That's what the thing is because it reinforces
this 90s sort of
ignorance of like, it's like the most
consequence-free film
that's a film about people
taking hostages and potentially killing an entire city of people for like that's a film about people like taking hostages and potentially
like right killing an entire city of people like there's and that's what the 90s was you know i
mean like there was like cell phones weren't scary yet you know i mean we had internet enough that it
helped improve things but like things hadn't quite turned to like peak scary and i think
this movie like is such a reflection like it because like there's no thought given to anything this is like right before we get into like the late 90s like hacker characters of like
the internet's getting scary right I think this is like sort of maybe the last like year or so
where that doesn't exist in the movie but the three main characters we have in this movie
and hopefully this works as an effective transition. The three main characters we have in this movie are all grounded
or the plot attempts to
ground each of them using
a female character.
So with Ed Harris, we've got
his dead wife. Barbara!
His wife! I'm so sorry,
Barbara! And his wife.
So his wife is dead
so he's mad and has nothing to
lose. And that is the basis of what we have to
characterize him with then we see nick cage and we see first of all an actress whom i love because
she played brenda on general hospital my mom watched general hospital every night growing up
and we used to recite the names of the characters during the intro. And it would end with Brenda and Max.
So I knew exactly.
I was like, it's Brenda.
But so this was supposed to be Brenda's, you know, breakout role.
Didn't work out because it's a bad role.
She's forced to be on top of Nicolas Cage.
She's fucking Nicolas Cage.
She has pigtails and a feather bow on.
And it's like, there's no hope for this woman.
There's no career upwardness going on here but but she is the female character who i would say is the
strongest of the movie i mean she gets the most screen time which is maybe a combined total of
two minutes yeah right like yeah most of it is her crying yeah A lot of it's her crying or being like sassy.
The most I'll argue for this movie is that she seems smarter than the amount of screen time and credit she's given.
She doesn't seem like a stupid person.
She's costumed like a stupid person.
But it's like, you know, there's no depiction of women having jobs in this movie at all. But her depiction is that she is Nicolas Cage's girlfriend.
And to add and to raise the stakes, not to necessarily have a female character, but to raise the stakes, we have his girlfriend be pregnant.
So whenever Nicolas Cage needs a reason to not be dead, he's like, I got a baby on the way.
And then.
Can't fuck this up.
Can't fuck this up. Can't fuck this up.
Brenda's pregnant.
Carla.
Carla is her character's name.
But Brenda,
for all my general hospital heads
out there.
And Brenda.
We'll call her Brenda.
And Brenda and Max.
And then Sean Connery
has a daughter,
Jade,
I think.
I believe so.
And so there are
three female characters
anchoring our three male
characters and it's just peak example of like we're only introducing women into this narrative
to increase the depth of our male protagonist right and that's the only reason one of those
three characters is dead and we never see them on screen one of them we only see his wife his wife
his wife one of them we only see on screen for one scene,
which takes about two minutes of screen time.
A scene that passes the Bechdel test.
It doesn't, though.
It does.
Stacey and Jane.
We know their names, but they're talking.
Hey, are you okay?
Well, okay, yeah.
Are you okay?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Boom.
Bring me along.
Yeah.
And then Carla is in a number of scenes,
but the thing with Carla is that she's poised as like this,
like you said, like kind of sassy,
but also like naggy, a nuisance, like a distraction.
Because there's one scene where Nic Cage is like,
my girlfriend's coming.
She's flying into San Francisco and she's pregnant.
And he's like, you need to focus on the matter at hand.
So like she's poised as a distraction.
She just basically is there to cause complications for Nic Cage to focus on the matter at hand. So she's poised as a distraction.
She just basically is there to cause complications for Nicolas Cage.
They're like, oh, your girlfriend is pregnant?
Oh, no.
She's pregnant.
I love that video so much. I don't know if I'm pregnant.
Pregnant.
That was my impression.
So she's pregnant.
No, and it's funny, too. The way it's revealed, too, is she's like, how's your day? He's like, and it's funny too
The way it's revealed too
She's like how's your day
He's like the world's so fucked up
I don't know if sick people would have kids
Anyway this place is such a shit
I have a lot to say about that scene too
That scene is wild
First time we're seeing a woman in the movie
Who is not Barbara's grave
There is one woman in the lab.
Oh, there is a woman in STEM?
I missed.
Who is hurried out.
You see the back of her head running away.
Bye, bitch.
Get out, Linda.
Men gotta do this bomb thing.
So this is the whole first top 10 minutes.
Ed Harris screams at a grave.
Nick Cage, full hazmat suit.
Someone melts.
And then we cut to
the first speaking female role
in the scene.
Nick Cage,
before she comes in,
Nick Cage is shirtless
playing the acoustic.
And pantless.
He's almost naked.
Playing the acoustic guitar
like,
man, rough day at the office.
Someone melted.
Well, the best is
what he's playing is so horrible
bending the notes like and he's like just winding down and this is like a magic hour for nick cage
where he does not yet know that he is going to be considered a bad actor by history i would argue
maybe he's not the worst actor to be fair he found out he was nominated for Academy Award on this set.
Yeah.
And he won a fucking Academy Award.
And he fucking won. For what movie?
Leaving Las Vegas.
Yeah.
This is the film he did directly after Leaving Las Vegas.
And this movie helped him get face off in all these.
This movie made him an action star.
It made him that other.
It's so funny because, yeah, he could have gone that Leaving Las Vegas path possibly.
He did not.
Or he was probably always meant to be like crazy hair plug dude.
This movie sets up National Treasure in a crazy way.
But then, so, okay, so then Brenda comes in.
Carla.
And she says, you know, like, how was your day?
No, she says, I had an interesting day.
Yes.
And then he, ignoring her, interrupting her, not giving a fuck about what she has to say
says i had an interesting day too and she's like okay you go first i guess and he's like
yeah so someone melted rather than like taking the time to like see what her interesting day
was or let her speak he's just just like, my thing's more important.
And this is all to set up.
And we don't find out from what I can tell.
We don't find out.
I have to assume Carla, Brenda.
We have to assume Brenda has a job.
But we don't find out what it is.
I was listening so carefully, even a hint of what she might do for work.
But he's like, someone melted in FBI.
And she's like, I'm pregnant.
I was like, okay.
I'm pregnant.
Oh, fuck.
I'm pregnant.
Yeah, the best is when she's like, well, what about what you just said?
He's like, what?
It was like about the world not needing you or her baby.
He's like, that was seven minutes ago.
Or she's like, that was seven minutes ago.
A lot has happened.
A lot has happened. Oh, shit. seven minutes ago. A lot has happened. A lot has happened, man.
Seven minutes.
Oh, shit.
Oh, gosh.
A lot has happened.
Do we know, does he say her name in that scene?
I don't.
I don't think he does.
It takes a while to hear Carla.
The only time, I feel like it's not until 90 minutes into the film, I heard the words
Carla.
Are you sure?
Okay, because I thought I maybe missed it.
I thought I did too.
And I was like, did I just hear her name for the first time now?
I think you only hear it once.
Yeah.
And it's like halfway through the morning.
Okay.
Oh, yeah, because this movie is two and a half hours long.
It's so long.
Carla was the prom queen.
Yeah, two hours and 16 minutes long.
I would say of the times you see women speaking on screen, it's probably only a minute and 30 seconds.
Does someone have a super cut of that?
Because I'm pretty sure it would fit into an Instagram video.
Totally.
Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely.
So this is a result of there being almost no female characters in the movie
and almost every single scene populated by tons of men.
So for example,
the lab where Nick Cage is deactivating the bomb that comes in,
they think like sarin gas might be in um you see like we said the back of a woman's head running away every other person in
that scene is a man then you see a scene where ed harris his character is naming the terms of like
what he wants they're in like a conference room there's two women at the table only one of them
has a one single line.
Granted, she is talking about a man being dead and other men being useless.
So that's like if a woman has to say anything, it might as well be that men are dead or useless.
And they're like, shut up, Maggie.
And getting back to Brenda, I do think that like the one thing I was impressed about in that scene we just talked about with the shirtless, pantless, necklace cage.
Like everyone melt in.
She's like, I'm ready.
She is the one who proposes.
Oh, yes.
Which I thought was kind of cool.
I did make note of that because I do like to see representation on screen.
That's a bit of a subversion.
Yeah, it's a subversion of the trope. Not only that we see in movies, but we see in real life as well.
I don't know how inspiring it is to aspire to be Mrs. Goodspeed,
but I did think it was cool
that she proposed
and then also he was not like,
ugh,
because I feel like sometimes
when you see a woman propose on screen,
the male feels emasculated by it.
He didn't seem emasculated by it.
He just seemed like,
well, someone just melted
and I'm a little bit overwhelmed.
And then he later does agree
to that same proposal, but he does agree to that proposal when she is in pigtails, wearing a
feather boa, and surrounded by what appears to be 500 candles and Chinese lanterns. It almost looks
like an inordinate amount. A crazy who set that up. And it reminds me of the Phantom of the Opera's
lair. It's what it looks like like the only
difference is they're not steeped two feet deep in stagnant bog water that's the only difference
yeah anyways sorry she does propose she does propose yes and I I enjoy that but again as we
say about so many movies that maybe try to subvert a trope for like a split second i feel
like movies like that don't get to do that and then also hardly portray women or portray them
poorly like and only like on the condition that this subversion appears in pigtails and a feather
bella right yeah yeah not the best right but so back to the scenes that are populated by
entirely men or almost entirely men um all of them right pretty
much yeah because all of the men the tourist moments i think are the only time when you'll
see a woman say something yeah but there are so many opportunities i mean like any of the people
that ed harris has with him in his like rogue troop of people all men all the navy seals are
men all of the government officials who are sort of in the
command center giving orders and stuff like that they're all men it's just like and okay granted
you could say this is this is 1996 there weren't that many women in the military back then there
weren't that many women around back in 1996 yeah i think there's not 51 of the population i don't
think my mom was even born then no no no women, no. Women are kind of a new thing.
Yeah, it was pretty chill.
It was pretty chill.
It was pretty chill.
It was a pretty chill time.
Really chill time.
We just had our dicks out on the table all the fucking time.
But, like, my point is basically that movies about military have so little representation of women.
And the movies about people in politics, again, there's almost never women in those roles.
Yeah.
A recent exception is, like like Annihilation.
I think Natalie Portman's character is definitely military.
And I can't remember if all the rest of them were as well.
All the rest of the scientists who go in.
I haven't seen it.
They might all be military.
Is she Japanese in that film?
Wasn't there like some whitewashing thing with that?
Oh, from the adaptation.
Yeah.
Oh, no.
I love Natalie Portman.
I love her.
I haven't seen it.
Anyway, even so, movies about the military very rarely have, and you can be like, what
about G.I.
Jane?
Okay, cool.
One example.
Name another one.
Yeah, exactly.
Renaissance Man with Danny DeVito.
I think that movies about the military in particular and movies like this, this is such a specific moment in time where 96, we're at the top of the Clinton administration of like, you know, these movies come out when the country the movie is putting the movie out in is doing well.
Fucking flying.
Right.
Like this movie does not come out during a recession.
This movie would not be made right now.
And if it was, it wouldn't be made successfully you know it's like this is the kind of movie that comes out when
people are feeling nationalistic vibes and willing to accept the kind of stuff this movie is portraying
like this movie would not work right now right and so like the context for like this sort of movie
doing well and why there were a million movies very similar to it that were doing well
with similar protagonists and characters and sidelining anyone who wasn't you know nick cage
tom cruise whatever this action schwarzenegger exactly and all three of them have huge movies
that come out in 96 this is like a very specific weird moment in time where like america's kind of
like you know it's it's very like a miracle kind of vibe
at this time yeah i mean yeah and then like i said there was no need to think about anything
that deep because everything was so everyone's needs were met i mean for the most part like in
the country and again we were we were living the in the best of times because i mean i think that
pre-911 90s straight white men's needs were met. No, no, but I mean like,
I meant like just more from like an economic
sort of standpoint of sort of like
how the sort of sentiment in the country was.
Yeah, for sure.
And this movie makes back its budget almost five times.
Like this movie does incredibly well.
And the only previous Michael Bay like thing
was Bad Boys, which was kind of a fluke
because it was an indie movie
that ended up doing really well.
And so this is the movie that that puts Michael Bay on the map.
They had two black guys in it.
What the hell?
It's a fluke.
How'd that happen?
Put three white guys in a movie, Michael Bay.
See what happens.
It goes very well.
Yeah.
It goes very well.
Well, what I'm trying to say is that you could argue at the time, oh, it's 1996, not as many
women in the military yet, not as many women in the military
yet, not as many women in government positions yet. But if you put women in those roles in movies,
even if it's not necessarily super reflective of how it's working in society, people are going to
see it and they're going to say, oh, there's a woman in a government, like a general position
in the military. Oh, there's a woman working at the Pentagon? Oh, I could do that too.
And basically it's just upsetting
that there were opportunities
for several of these characters to be women in this movie.
None of those opportunities were capitalized on.
And then you have a whole,
just like the whole generation of young people
seeing only men being in roles like this.
No opportunities for young girls
to see themselves represented on screen. And then they're like,
well, I can't be in the military because...
See, I have complicated feelings about
not being represented in a movie
like this.
Hindsight, I'm glad
that... And not to say
I'm glad that women are not represented
in military roles in movies. I'm glad
that women are not represented in military
roles in this movie
because this is such a toxic,
so many steps removed
of what the actual stakes
of a military job actually is.
Like this is such a false depiction
of that whole lifestyle
where I feel like young boys,
like you, Miles,
when you're seeing this,
like you get such a fake idea
of what the military is
and it's all action
and it's all valor and it's all this stuff that a lot of military movies push on you that
ends up kind of militarizing youth and also giving them a total false idea of what being a hero is
and that frustrates me on the behalf of young boys seeing this movie yeah i agree sold an idea
that is false and we'll put them in danger one day and so i'm grateful that like you know you
don't see women putting themselves because i would feel the same way if i if i saw a woman putting
herself in danger in a very false way and so it's a tricky i just think michael bay should just be
in prison and be allowed to make movies because there's no there's with military movies in
particular that's such a tricky genre because it's so rarely depicted accurately because there's no, there's with military movies in particular, that's such a tricky genre because it's so rarely
depicted accurately
because it's,
you know,
it's hard to make a movie
about the military
that doesn't want
to glorify it.
Well, yeah,
because they all function
as recruiting tools though.
Right, exactly.
I mean,
and that's probably,
I'm sure like with this,
like with most films,
like whenever you have
like scenes depicting
any kind of military hardware,
like that's with the blessing
of the military.
Right. Saying, we'll loan you this shit for your movie but also like we're gonna we have script notes
you can't make it look bad you can't make it look uncool no that's a that's a trade-off a lot of
people don't realize like if you see tanks and like real shit in films that's because the military is
like sign up they've signed off on it and like that's what top gun was too that's like that was
their air force screening tool like is there like you want these jets well
let's make sure this is as favorable a
depiction of the military as possible or like the most
like the best version of like dude I want to be
fucking Goose and Iceman you know what I mean
the military movies like on a
base level they it's hard because
it's like you know they have to exist they are
such like the military is a big part
of a culture but it's
it's you can't really unless you have access to stuff that would be very difficult to access,
you can't make an accurate depiction of it.
And so every time I see a young person seeing a military movie,
it just makes me feel very conflicted and frustrated.
Yeah, I see what you mean.
Yeah, right, right.
Because they're being sold a false narrative.
And I hate seeing young men being sold a false narrative.
I don't want young women to be
sold the same false narrative so i don't know yeah yeah i wouldn't want to be a 10 year old girl
seeing a woman in a movie like being like i'm great at military stuff and then being like i
should do the same thing right but it's a fake thing right because i think we need to demilitarize
our country there's too much i mean the military budget is like $80 bazillion.
And the education budget is like, here, have $2 for textbooks.
Meanwhile, they're like, here, have $80 bazillion for the military.
And it's just like, hey, let's maybe reprioritize.
So, I mean, this is a large cultural question.
You know, I feel like it's a very easy answer to be like we see so many men
shooting guns on screen shouldn't we see women shooting guns on screen and i'm like i think we
should see less men shooting guns on screen and that you know like do i think it should be equalized
and should we see female action heroes absolutely should we see the same amount of female like
violent female action heroes as men no because there shouldn't be that many and so it's
like there's so many i just don't i just hate seeing children being like made to be like you
know what would be like very you go girl cool if you were also extremely violent like if you broke
this dude's neck with a fucking fire extinguisher right which is cathartic and cool for for any
gender on the spectrum but do you want to show that to any gender on the spectrum when they're kids?
I don't know.
Probably not.
No.
Our heroes should just be honest people.
You know what I mean?
Every movie should be very boring is what I'm saying.
We should all have indie sleeper heads.
Very boring.
Honestly, Michael Bay, you could have just made this a PSA about veteran care and saved
everyone the headache.
The villain is the one who's pro-veteran care.
Yeah.
He's basically saying,
y'all are mistreating
the veterans.
And they're like,
well,
brr, brr, brr.
And you guys aren't
listening to the point
that I will fake kill Americans
to get my point across
because the government
isn't listening to your needs.
Wow.
I mean, in a way,
Ed Harris, wow.
Ed Harris, I think,
really does like-
Have you guys done
Milk Money?
Hmm?
Milk Money with Ed Harris?
No.
What is that?
Where he's like the nature guy,
and him, his son, and his friends
go to this city to pay a prostitute
because they want to see a woman naked
for the first time.
I'm sorry, sex worker.
Really?
For the first time,
because they're like 14,
and they're like,
we've not met until we've seen a naked woman.
And then they go,
then he wants her to be his mom
and like tries to hook him up with Ed Harris.
But it's crazy
because I think these films came out
within a year of each other.
And so on one side,
you have crazy veteran Ed Harris
and then like nerd,
like single dad Ed Harris.
That's why character actors
are so interesting to me
is like in the space of a year,
they will sometimes do like,
okay, this is how they pay their rent
and this is how they spent
the rest of their time.
Like, no one has done a career retrospective on
Ed Harris. I bet it's fucking fascinating
the amount of different shittings done. Was it a few years
before this that he was, the first movie I ever saw
him in was Apollo 13, which is a movie
I watched probably like 30 times as
a kid. I don't know why it was on so much.
I used to confuse Apollo 13
and the movie that happens
because of The Rock, which is Armageddon.
Right.
That's the next Michael Pitt.
Apollo 13 is a much better president.
Same universe.
Well, then they'll say that it was John Mason, James Bond, too.
There's like that theory, too.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
That's terrible.
As I was looking up weird shit about the movie, there's like, what about this James Bond theory?
I'm like, no, I don't need that to be James Bond.
Well, let's get back to those characters.
Because at some point, once it's established that Nick Cage and Sean Connery are going to be friends,
it gets very silly.
They're basically quipping at each other for like 45 consecutive minutes through various obstacles.
Well, there's one line where Nick Cage says something and then Sean Connery replies with, oh, my days aren't that exciting now because I just read a lot of philosophy and avoid getting gang raped in the washrooms.
And then he says, it's not as much of a problem these days.
I think I've lost my sex appeal.
And it's like, oh, you don't know.
Interesting precedent about rape to set.
Like, we don't even need to talk about
everything that's wrong
there's not enough time to unpack
I hate this movie so much
it's horribly directed
I hate Michael Bay
he sucks so much
Nick Cage overacts every single scene he's in
every line read of every line is terrible
I stand for Nick Cage I hate him he sucks but he's amazing he's
amazing not in a good way but he's amazing amazing person raising arizona and i like him in moonstruck
and i don't mind him in adaptation and every other movie he's in i fucking he needs to be used
exactly right i feel like nick Cage can be directed very well.
Well, there are some lines that he says in this movie that I just want to point out
and then a few other lines from other characters.
Dan Santa.
One of the...
Dan...
Nick Cage starring as Dan Santa
at Dan Santa University coming to theaters again.
No.
We're getting him to do the read next.
That's our life skill.
I would never...
Go on.
So a few of my favorite lines.
Nick Cage says something like, and I'm going to try to get this line read right, where
he's just like, what do you say we cut the chit chat?
A-hole.
His volume control is all over his.
A-hole.
A-hole.
And then he's like, how in the name of Zeus's butthole.
Did you escape your cell?
It's just, oh, God.
Because nerds don't curse.
He hits buttholes so hard.
And then Sean Connery says, he makes a really funny joke that we all just laugh and laugh at,
where he says, you're between the rock and a hard case.
Tee hee hee hee. He says, when does he the rock and a hard case. T.
He says, when does he say that?
I don't know.
At some point.
I think they thought it was the funniest joke in the world.
I think I was suffering so much, my brain just forgot about that one.
I for sure missed some stuff in this movie.
So annoyed.
It was just like, oh, jeez, I have to tune out for a minute.
My favorite joke that is not a joke that needs to be fully explained
top to bottom in this movie is the rocket man joke oh oh towards the end i don't listen to
that soft ass shit so so nicholas cage and another navy seal who he's about to kill
nicholas cage says hey ever heard of rocket man and the guy says, I don't listen to that soft-ass shit.
And then Nicolas Cage proceeds to explain the joke he was making.
Well, I ask because it's about to be you.
I only bring it up because it's you.
Pause.
You're the Rocket Man.
And then shoots him with a rocket.
He's like impaled by a fence post or something.
There's so many quips in this movie
where you're just like,
could have used a second draft.
Yeah.
Could have paid Aaron Sorkin a day rate.
Dude, that was,
no, that was Aaron Sorkin.
He's like, that stays.
He wanted it.
You're the rocket man.
Oh, there's a fun line.
I think,
I don't remember exactly who says this.
It might be Sean Connery,
but he says something like,
losers or blah, blah, blah.
Winners go home and fuck the prom queen.
I don't know if you know this, but women are not actually people.
We are rewards.
Women are rewards that men get to go home and have sex with.
And have sex with because they're waiting in a bed prone for a man to enter.
500 candles, pigtails, feather.
I'm pregnant.
I'm pregnant and I'm laying on a bed out with my arms out
just paused
my life is on pause
until the man comes in
but not visually pregnant
that'd be gross
that'd be gross in it
you put your
gregnant in me
oh my
gregnancy
my gregnancy
I can't
one last thing
I gotta say
is that
we do
the high risk
gregnancy we don't see any cats in this movie we don't but a cat one last thing I gotta say is that we do the high risk Greg
we don't see
any cats
in this movie
we don't see
a dog
for some reason
a cat is mentioned
because
Nicolas Cage
says that he
killed his cat
with his chemistry
set when he was
a kid
yes he does
so now's a good
time to mention
that cats
do have
eight nipples
this is cat facts
with Caitlin
they have eight nipples
yeah
male cats too?
Yes.
Wow.
Do they just recede?
Do you as a man
have the same number of nipples
as a cat?
Well, because I had like
I had a male dog
that I felt like
I couldn't find all its nipples.
And I was like,
oh, where'd these things go?
Were you searching actively?
Yeah, as a kid.
I was curious
because I was like,
oh, I was like,
this cat has nipples.
Searching for the nips.
And I'm like, and this boy dog when I was like, this cat has nipples. Searching for the nips. And I'm like, and this boy dog, and I was like, three.
I don't know.
Or they dragged on the ground or something.
They wore down.
You know when you're just nippy and start to just drag.
When you're just nip sliding on the pavement.
You're slipping on your own nips.
Sorry I brought it up.
Tripping on the nips.
Sorry I tripped on my nips.
Dude, nip tripping over here.
I'm like, I tripped on my own nips.
Can we,
I do want to talk
a little bit more
about the stylist character
who,
okay,
so I asked.
Do we have time
for a CKL protein pack?
It's his line.
Tee hee hee.
Oh,
there was one character
who I would argue
is a queer icon
who I was shocked
only appeared in one scene.
Ranger Bob,
I think it was,
who shows around Alcatraz and he's like, this is Alcatraz. And I was shocked only appeared in one scene. Ranger Bob, I think it was, who shows around Alcatraz,
and he's like, this is Alcatraz.
And I was like, queer icon, he's amazing.
He says something like, welcome to Broadway.
Right, he literally drops Broadway.
I was like, this is such a Michael Bay
weird view of queerness.
But for the Ranger Bob character,
it really works for me.
He's wearing khakis, they're tight.
Wool socks. Wool's wearing khakis. They're tight. Wool socks.
Wool socks. Very confident.
He's like, welcome to Alcatraz.
It's basically
Broadway. And I was like, what a queer icon.
I love him. You never see him again. Nope.
Like many great potential
B characters, he disappears.
What's the matter, fellas? Something wrong with the tour?
And then, bye.
I mean, comma fellas, comma queer icon.
Yeah, fellas.
Amazing.
Loved it.
Hey, fella.
So confusing queer icons with just old-timey people.
James Cagney characters.
So, Brag, I have a few gay male friends.
I know.
Wow.
Shut up.
I know.
I have friends.
You guys, stop.
And I asked them how they felt about representation of characters like this stylist who are coded as being gay but not necessarily explicitly stated.
Right.
So one of my friends said that if a movie character is gay, they want to know because the character explicitly states it, not because the movie is relying on harmful stereotypes to communicate
that information. Another one of my friends said that they're okay with effeminate gay men being
portrayed on screen because that is how some gay men present, but they would want that content to
be made by a gay creator, like a director and stuff like that, because when it's someone like
Michael Bay, who is notorious for treating all of his characters like archetypes and stereotypes.
It's antagonistic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would direct people to a documentary that I saw a couple years ago and really enjoyed called The Gay Word for a further exploration of how gay characters are depicted by like especially straight, often male filmmakers.
And also gets really deep into the gay villains trope that is popular for
decades and decades of just like how coded gay characters appear on screen and depending on who
the filmmaker is how that affects how harmful it is yeah yeah what's it called the gay world okay
great check it out i sure will yeah there's a line that ed harris says at some point in the movie that goes like this. Marbra. Marbra, I'm sorry.
His wife.
Menacing.
His wife.
It's the first time I've ever fucking named.
Before the year she was born.
His wife.
His wife.
His fucking wife is what it should have said.
It might as well have said. But again, we're talking about the coding of a movie.
His wife is saying,
he's got nothing to lose.
Right.
That's it.
That's why it says his wife
before it says like 1957.
You know,
it's just,
drives me crazy.
Okay,
Ed Harris says,
man your posts,
men,
which is,
I think,
the thesis statement
of this movie.
It's just like, using man
as a verb to do your
job, and then just be like,
man, men. Man, you're supposed to be men.
As long as you're manning things, make sure you're man
when you're doing it. Man that man cannon, man.
His wife.
Alright, his wife.
His wife.
His wife.
Okay.
I mean, that was the only place it could end.
It's aggressive.
Just watch it again.
I'm pretty sure I'm not hallucinating, but I felt like the text was so big.
It was like the size of the tombstone.
It was like his wife.
Barbara Hummel.
His wife.
His wife.
His wife, Barbara.
Does anyone have any other?
She's the predicate to a sentence.
Yeah, exactly.
You're not even the subject.
Does anyone have any other thoughts about the movie?
Shame on anyone who would try to tell you
it's a good movie.
It's not a good movie.
If anything, they're conflating their nostalgia for it
for a time when they were younger
and couldn't have an adult thought about
or critical thinking about the films they saw.
When I think really about
the feelings I have about it, it's purely
the nostalgia of it rather than
like, man, when I fucking
need to get inspired, I watch The Rock.
I'm like, no. The last time I watched it, I'm so
hungover that The Rock is on
in the background. And I'm not going to
turn it off. Yeah, and it's only because the
remote is on the floor across the room and i cannot get up i wanted to say something really quickly
we didn't really talk about the jade character i would say this is again just a big not surprisingly
missed opportunity by michael bay where we're presented with a female character who does not
seem stupid she we see her at her college.
She's meeting up with her convict father
and brings a friend.
This tracks for me.
It's like if you're going to meet your father
who's a convict, don't show up alone.
She cops to this openly.
She questions what he's telling her,
which makes sense if your father is a convict.
But she's still ultimately in the space of the one scene she really appears in
is characterized as property to the male character
to the point where Sean Connery says to her,
like, you're the only proof that I exist.
Which totally just, I'm like, well, that's all she is to the plot.
And so it's a bummer to see people, like, characters like her and, like, Brenda, not Brenda.
Brenda, actually Carla.
But it's like you see these women who appear to have some potential as a character just ultimately be discarded.
And, like, seeing the Jade character, I was like, because I didn't really know what this movie was about, I certainly didn't remember her.
I was like, oh man, I hope she comes back.
And she never does.
Never does.
Yeah, well, their mere existence,
or it's sort of heightened by,
or it's exactly connected to their ability
to procreate as men.
Exactly.
You're a verification that my dick works for Jade,
and because you're pregnant,
now I'm going to be a hero
due to your ability for pregnancy.
I have to live because you're pregnant.
The conversation about Jade
leads us to whether or not
this movie passes the Bechdel test.
It sure does.
It doesn't.
Here's why.
So there's only one opportunity
where this could potentially happen,
and it's where Jade and her friend Stacy, both the characters are named, go to meet John Mason.
And Jade says to her friend Stacy, it's okay.
And Stacy says, I'll be over there if you need me.
No men are explicitly stated or mentioned in that two-line exchange.
Do you get coded into the conversation?
But they're talking about whether or not Jade feels safe meeting her convict father.
I am beyond willing
to say this movie
does not pass
the Bechdel test.
Yeah.
Yeah, that was,
I mean, that was
the only scene
where I feel like
it even comes into question.
Right.
No other women
interact at all.
To the point where,
and this is how badly
this podcast
and this test
has jaded me.
So I'm like,
why did he even bother to give Stacy
a name if she was ever gonna
come back? It's weird that they went out of their way.
It was to make the point that
Sean Connery couldn't even recognize his own
daughter, right? Oh, okay.
That does track. Wasn't that because he's in
Jade and she's like, Stacy,
you fucking weirdo. Right.
Okay, so yeah, this movie doesn't pass.
So she's merely there to underline how shitty
of a dad she is.
It's purely to be like,
well, how is he going to,
oh, he'll think this other woman
is his daughter.
What's her name?
Oh, it's Daisy.
Yeah.
So, movie does not pass
the Bechdel test.
And I like was really,
I almost had a panic attack
and I was like,
did that just pass?
And I was like,
wait a minute,
the context of their conversation
is specifically about John Mason, so it does not pass.
I'm very glad you said that.
I couldn't believe it.
I was like, oh my God.
Because in my mind, I was like, nah, there's no way.
And I was like, holy shit.
Which is why I think sometimes when women are talking in a movie, they can mention a
man and the movie still passes, and they can not explicitly mention a man and the movie
does not.
I think it's more about context than it is about whether or not
a man's name
happens to be mentioned.
So we've come up
on this a lot.
Yeah, because the subtext is,
is this man making you feel unsafe?
Yeah, exactly.
Which, if he's Sean Connery,
probably not.
My dad who met my mom
after a Led Zeppelin concert?
God, yeah.
Way to, I mean,
and I appreciated
how realistic Jade was
about like,
yeah, of course, I'm curious, but also like, I don't trust you. I mean, and I appreciated how realistic Jade was about like, yeah, of course, I'm curious,
but also like, I don't trust you.
Yeah.
Just again, the seeds of a female character that it would be interesting to see a second time.
Yeah.
We do not see.
No, we don't.
Bad movie.
I hate it so, so much.
Three and a half stars, Roger Ebert.
Bad movie.
Well, speaking of rating, let's rate on our nipple scale.
I'm going to give this movie zero nipples.
I think it's a bad movie on top of it portraying women horribly.
And Jamie, you brought up some great points about, well, do we really want to see that
much representation of like women in the military and women in government positions when it's
a movie like this where it's just perpetuating and glorifying violence and stuff like that where like no i don't i would rather women be left out of those
movies really i would rather movies like this not be made at all because they're not good and
michael bay sucks and he should be not working in hollywood wow so i mean the fact that there
are almost no women in the entire movie that all the female characters that do exist are there just to basically support or provide the motivation of the male characters.
They're just flat.
We hardly see them on screen.
They hardly have any lines.
And it's just not great representation.
Miles Wade.
I would give it zero also.
Because it's like if toxic masculinity was like a missile from the movie, like the rock is like the VX, like the rock as a film is the green anal beads that destroy everything.
It's the kind of shit.
They're even connected.
Right.
It's like the kind of shit, though, that like, you know, looking back, you're like, man, like this is what we were like inoculating and socializing like young men with.
And like was just like this idea of like yeah dude the bros
will get it go in there and just do their shit and get it done yo chill the fuck out you're
pregnant hang back i'm gonna do my thing and i'll be back in the baby chill like so yeah and in that
sense and again when i was really thinking about it the only reason i have anything good to say
about it is that it's purely like a sensation of the time that it came out in where I was 12 years
old and my world was only as complex as like going to like a movie or like, you know, having a crush
on someone. So in my low stakes world, sure, that, but other than that, it's like, it's like a one.
Yeah. I'm giving this a zero nipples as well. I do agree that it is an interesting time capsule to point to if you see any extremely toxic adult man with a military industrial complex now.
How did he get this way?
They have The Rock on DVD.
This movie is a great way to be like, this is the sort of propaganda that was shoved at them at a very young age.
And that is why people like this exist in the world.
Right.
Yeah.
I,
I,
God,
I think that earlier in this podcast,
just going off of how jaded we've gotten via doing this podcast.
And I think our listeners have to,
um,
is that it's no longer,
you don't get half a nip,
a single nip for simply having women in your movie.
Cause the context of how those women exist is so there's no woman that is introduced into this plot that isn't strictly with the intention of characterizing and giving more shades of gray to a man.
Yeah.
So there's nothing.
There's nothing.
Every female character with any potential is completely sidelined, half written by Lord knows what male writer did not want to be included in
the credits of this movie. I mean, not I don't know. And ultimately, where, you know, not to
glorify toxic masculinity in any way, but like, there are some bad Michael Bay movies that are
sort of fun to watch. This one isn't even fun to watch for me where i have no
cultural context for it i'm like it's just a mediocre movie that is saying bad things
so didn't enjoy the movie zero nipples i'd be curious for people to like if you're ever on a
date and you're dating somebody have the rock on dvd and it's a man is the owner to challenge them
what they think of the film now because i feel like you'll find people who can either understand how bad the movie is or some people who are still
actually holding on to like I think like it would be very telling because I'm sure I have a few
friends who would be like dude the rock's fucking sick like you know what I mean and I think like
it's very I think you can use that film almost as a litmus test to see if you can if someone
we need to add it to our we have a litmus test
list of films
of like red flag films
red flag films
this is going on the list
for if someone tells you
this is one of their
favorite films
and means it earnestly
it's a red flag
and if they can't
at the very least
be like
I understand it's bad
it's a nostalgia
or whatever
and you can at least
acknowledge that
but I know people
who would probably
fucking knuckle down
and be like
dude it's actually
like the perfect action film
when you think about it it actually she's great now and that's good
yeah oh okay he saved a pregnant woman so it's bad all right whatever i don't know what this
pregnant thing is and we don't have time we should you should plug the video because the
video is hilarious that's my plug okay Okay. Okay. What is it called?
It's this video.
We'll put it in the footnotes.
Okay.
So across the board, zero nipple rating.
Bad, bad, bad.
So bad.
Michael Bay, boo.
Miles, where can people find you? Oh.
I reckon it.
You can find me on I co-host the Daily Zeitgeist which the two of you
have been gracious enough
to come on many times
yay
yeah just check out that podcast
I'm on there a lot
on Twitter and Instagram
at Miles of Grey
and the video is called
Am I Pregnant
oh it's so good
pregnant
gregnant
gregnant
all the hot ones
are there
all the hot spellings
yeah
great
you can follow
the Bentlecast
on all the social media platforms
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And it gives you two bonus episodes of the Bechtelcast every single month.
Coming up in April, Juneau.
Speaking of Gregnett.
Gregnett.
Oh, goodness.
16 and Gregnett. Miles, thank you so much for being here. It's been such a delight. Thank of Gregnant. Gregnant. Oh, goodness. 16 and Gregnant.
Miles, thank you so much for being here.
It's been such a delight.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm glad I was able to come by.
People who are 16 and were impregnated by a high schooler named Greg.
It's my dad, my baby dad, Greg.
Gregnant.
I'm Gregnant.
What a time.
I can't handle it.
I'm sorry that we got so sidetracked with pregnant.
I'm glad you saw it.
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