Blank Check with Griffin & David - Blood Simple with Ray Tintori & Jordan Fish
Episode Date: July 13, 2025Gather round, folks - it’s time to embark upon a journey through one of the most sterling filmographies in American cinema. Our Coen Brothers series - Pod Country for Old Cast - kicks off with Joel ...and Ethan’s remarkably assured 1984 debut Blood Simple. Coen experts and hosts of the To The White Sea podcast Ray Tintori and Jordan Fish join us to do some serious tablesetting for the odyssey ahead, offering some context that JJ didn’t even manage to dig up. Speaking of digging - Ben Hosley has some thoughts on the subject. Listen to the To the White Sea Podcast Sign up for Check Book, the Blank Check newsletter featuring even more “real nerdy shit” to feed your pop culture obsession. Dossier excerpts, film biz AND burger reports, and even more exclusive content you won’t want to miss out on. Join our Patreon for franchise commentaries and bonus episodes. Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter, Instagram, Threads and Facebook! Buy some real nerdy merch Connect with other Blankies on our Reddit or Discord For anything else, check out BlankCheckPod.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Blackjack with Griffin and David Blackjack with Griffin and David
Don't know what to say or to expect All you need to know is that the name of the show is Blackjack
The world is full of complainers and the fact is nothing comes with a guarantee.
I don't care if you're the Pope of Rome, President of the United States, or man of
the year, something can go all wrong.
Now go on ahead, you know, complain, tell your problems to your neighbor, ask for help,
watch them fly.
Now in Russia they got it mapped out so that everyone pulls for everyone else, that's
the theory anyway.
But what I know about his podcast,
and down here, you're on your own.
It's a very hard voice to do.
M.M. at Walsh, yes, he was just a little quiet.
I feel, M.M. at Walsh is loud.
I think he's quiet in this.
Well, maybe I'm thinking of the ending, obviously,
where he is loud.
So maybe he is quiet.
He's got this kind of, yeah.
He's louder than, I saw him on the West End stage once.
Okay.
In his, in his later, sort of in his semi-dottage.
Uh-huh.
Like, I remember Walsh was always a middle-aged
slash older guy in movies, right?
Correct. Classic, like.
Was never young.
Right.
But then, then he was like an old guy.
Yeah.
Like, for like a while.
He lived a very long time. Right, exactly.
Yeah.
And he was in a West End production of Buried Child, the Sam Shepard play, one of my favorite
plays of all time.
Yeah.
Which has like an old guy who basically just sits in a chair the whole play going, right?
And he was that great.
I was watching some of the stuff on the Very Good Criterion Disc.
Oh, yes.
And they talk about that they cast him.
He's from Vermont.
Is he really?
I believe he said.
Let's find out.
No, Virginia.
Virginia.
Totally different place.
I know.
No, you're wrong.
He's from Vermont.
I had it right the first time.
Yes, you did.
Okay.
He was raised in rural Swanton, Vermont, which is in the top of Vermont.
He played a lot of Southern guys.
Northwest Vermont. Yes, he did.
And this is like...
You think of him as like a Southern sheriff guy.
What he was saying was just like,
that's not my way of speaking.
It's not how I was trained to speak.
I grew up around this very clipped, precise speech.
And he was like, and I worked really hard
to come up with the Texas accent for the character
and people really bought me as it. And then I watched the different interview on the disc with
the Cullen brothers and it was with David Eggers and he was asking them about how they worked with
actors and they were like we had never met this guy before until he showed up on set it was the
first time we were ever like meeting an actor who we had seen before.
Like everyone else in this movie, we kind of were like meeting through auditions, right?
And so we were so intimidated and he comes and he's like, guys, I'm excited
to show you this, here's my accent.
And he does it for them and they're like, we cannot understand a word he is saying
and we don't know how to talk to him.
We are too intimidated to give him any note.
I would be too intimidated to give that guy a note.
But his voice is so fascinating.
I could not approximate it.
But it's like this very drawly whisper.
The musicality of it.
Yes.
It almost sounds like that voice actor who's in
the Disney Robin Hood at times who
plays the sheriff's underling.
Yes. In a previous episode,
misidentify as Slim Pickens, but it's not.
It is...
Let me find out for you.
I'm guessing it is, who plays who, sorry?
He plays the sheriff of Nottingham's side guy.
Yes.
Kind of a wheezy, soft musical voice.
That guy was in movies too, that-
Pat Buttrum. Yeah. Pat Buttrum movies too. That Pat Butrem.
Pat Butrem played the sheriff of Nottingham.
Did you guys see straight time
in his performance in straight time?
Because I feel like that was their thing.
They cast him off of that.
And in that one it's amazing because he's
a scary character who really messes up
Dustin Hoffman's life. But he's so soft.
And he's sweet. And I don't even know if he
really is out of line. He's just doing his job, but he's so soft and he's sweet. And I don't even know if he really is out of line.
He's just doing his job and he's wearing leisure wear
with like big lapels.
He's like instrumentalizing his ability to be like a soft
kind of like unassuming sort of like orderly person.
And then like all of a sudden he like snaps into like,
give me your arm, let me see if you got any track marks.
So they were both saying that was the performance that led to him,
them writing the letter and trying to get him cast in this movie, right?
And it was just very fascinating watching the Rashomon of the two interviews and how he
self-methodizes and how they talked about working with him.
And it does feel like there was some like, if not active tension, a sort of like failure to communicate
between the two parties,
even though obviously worked out great in the final product. And he was like, my dad
was a cop, and I got this role in straight time. And I felt like a lot of people would
have villainized this character and I wanted to play him empathetically, like he's really
trying to help this guy. He was like, I want to not make this character antagonistic at all. And he felt good
about what he was doing. And then you watch the final cut and he's like half of this movie, I come
off like a scary asshole. And then the Coen's are like, Hey, you know, we like how in that movie,
you keep switching between the two things. And he was basically like, that was a failure of me
executing what I tried to do that half the scenes felt like they got away from me
or something.
It's just very interesting to hear,
this performance is so singular.
And it sounds like in a lot of ways
it kind of happened by accident.
Is this, I think this is indisputably true,
but I'll just say it anyway,
be the M.M. at Walsh performance?
A man who gave 100 performances.
It's Paris, Texas, you're saying that's the Harry Dean Stanton performance
in a great tapestry of work.
He was basically saying that, like, he carved out his career
where for like 20 years there were 10 guys,
where if you wanted three scenes and someone could lock horns
with a movie star and they wouldn't try to upstage them
But they challenge them and get better work out of them
He was like it was me Charlie Durning Harry Stan like he listed the guys
Right, and I feel like Paris Texas is that same thing where you're sort of like wow
I didn't think you could build an emotional story around this guy as a leading man and
Blood simple is obviously more of an ensemble piece.
He won best actor at the Independent Spirit Awards,
even though I would argue he is supporting in this.
It's inarguable if he's supporting in this.
That's kind of crazy.
He won best lead beating Griffin Dunn for After Hours,
we were talking about right before.
That's back when the indie spirits, you know,
truly were indie spirited.
Yes.
But yes, the nominees.
It was the first, it was the first Indie-spirits ever.
And Scorsese and the Coens tie for director.
Sure, why not?
After Hours, one best feature.
Yeah.
I do not see Griffin nominated.
That's even more insane.
So who else was nominated?
The nominees are Ruben Blades, Blades?
I would say Blades.
Yeah.
There's no accent in it.
Sure.
And also means he has the coolest name
in the history of actors.
You guys like Ruben Blades?
You guys can talk. You like saying Ruben Blades?
I hate finding out that it's actually just pronounced
Blade and not Blady. I don't know if it's pronounced
Blades, I have no idea how to pronounce his name
and I'm so sorry.
For a film called Crossover Dreams
that I have not really heard of,
Tom Bauer for a film called Wild Rose
and Treat Williams in Smooth Talk.
He is so good.
Have you seen Smooth Talk?
God, he's amazing in that movie.
That would be a worthy winner.
I'm just confounded by them not nominating Griffin Dunn.
How does that happen?
I don't know.
They had like four nominees.
I didn't know from them.
And they don't even, here's the thing.
They don't even have featured actor or whatever.
It's just male lead, female lead.
So maybe it's just kind of like,
we'll just nominate the performances.
Because Street Williams is also kind of supporting it.
Because I feel like a supporting actress wins
for lead actress that year.
Right.
You want me to bring it back?
Someone wins for Tripp to Bountiful,
but it's not Geraldine Page.
A movie, of course, that I once described on this podcast
as being like, meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee love After Hours in every category, but best lead actor.
One of the most lead performance-driven movies.
Because the whole movie is that also he's a Griff.
Yes. And Laurie Singer for the Alan Rudolph film Trouble in Mind,
which I've never seen with Keith Carradine and Chris Stoperson.
But obviously it's a great movie.
I have MMM...
Oh, you've never seen it, but it's obviously a great movie.
It must be. I have MMM... Well, should said that five times fast nominated for supporting actor though. I
Think this is just
The his like most iconic
role, right
Blade Runner
Trying to think of like competition, but this is the thing you could throw out a bunch of movies where you're like, M.M. at Waltz crushes in three scenes of that movie.
Crushes a scene, yeah.
The jerk.
But this is the movie where his character is larger.
Yeah, so that's why I think this is it.
Larger than life, I mean.
The complexity of the character.
It's the first fully inscrutable, very layered, very contrasting, very powerful magnetic Cohen's
character.
I think that is very well said.
And I think hearing them talk about how much they couldn't agree on the character,
by mistake it kind of helps them identify something that they will try to intentionally,
by design, build into the characters and the performances from here on out.
Because everyone else in this movie is a lot more straightforward.
Not a bad way, right?
But you watch it and you're just sort of like,
you can't imagine the Coens placing a character
as uncomplicated as like,
not John Dahl.
John Getz.
John Getz, thank you.
Although John Dahl would have been good too.
Yes.
But you know what I'm saying?
Like, the John Getz character feels so streamlined in a way
they would never kind of let happen again.
Well, Billy Bob Thornton in Man Who Wasn't There
is a little bit of a play on the same thing.
Like this guy, this very masculine cipher
stuck in a noir story,
but it's almost like they go so inside his brain.
In that movie.
In Man Who Wasn't There, you almost want more characters to say to him like,
hey, hey, like, anyone awake in there?
Like, he's so flat.
Yeah.
Well, it's also, they make it into the joke.
Right, right.
That's the bit.
Exactly.
Is like this guy looking more intense
than anyone's ever looked,
going on these long internal monologues
while like cutting a child's hair.
Versus like, yeah, Gets is kind of doing something a lot simpler in an effective way.
I mean, the other, I just watching this, I was like, the two movies in their career,
This Feels Most Twinned With, are weirdly No Country and Burn After Reading.
It's like those two movies are the splits of the two things they're doing in this. The Burn After Eating, you mean because of the sort of cuckoldry and assassinations?
That it's another movie based on a thing they love, but I think these are the two clearest
examples.
A bunch of overconfident idiots having no idea that they don't know what's going on.
Right?
That everyone thinks they got control of the situation. Like, what's fascinating about this movie is that, like, it avoids all the
conversations that could clarify things and stop all the terrible things from happening.
And I saw someone point out that, like...
I think Fargo has that too.
It has that too.
Fargo.
It has that too.
It's not as much, like, unintentional crisscross, double cross.
Not as much, but there are a couple conversations in Fargo that would have helped things out.
Sure. But this, yes, yes. This has the thing where you're just like, there are a series of misunderstandings
based around everyone thinking that they can hold the upper hand.
Yes.
And the fact that Emmett Walsh never interacts with Getets or McDormand directly is the most interesting thing.
Yeah, she kills him at the end.
The final joke of the movie is she kills him and says,
I'm not afraid of you, Marty.
He's the only one who gets it.
The entire movie has been this Rube Goldberg mousetrap to get to that point,
and he's the only character who sees it.
They see his hat in his Volkswagen Beetle for like one frame in the first scene of the
movie.
That's the only time that they have any type of like an eyeline match.
Like the only time that they ever see him throughout the whole film.
And I think that's something that they're, the Coens are interested in because also in
No Country like you, Timely Jones like never meets Brolin, and he never meets Chigurh either.
And the second Brolin meets Chigurh,
the movie just jumps ahead and it's like conflict over.
You know?
This is a blank check for Christian and David.
There we go.
It's a podcast about filmography.
Woo!
Directors who have massive success early on in their careers,
such as being nominated for the first ever
in their independent spirit awards
and winning best directors,
given a series of blank checks
to make whatever crazy passion projects they want,
and sometimes those checks clear,
and sometimes they bounce.
Baby, this is the beginning of a very long,
but very exciting mini-series,
as chosen by you, the listener,
in our March Bandits competition.
We're talking about the Coen Brothers.
The series is called,
Pod Country for Old Cass.
I believe so. I believe so.
I was hoping you remembered.
I think I remembered correctly.
This is our first episode in the series.
We've recorded one before.
Yes. And today we're talking about their debut film, Blood Simple,
joining us on the show, returning for the first time together,
but dear friends of the show, family, I would say say family very much part of the blank check when I threw out
Having them on for this episode David's response was their family
Well, because should we do guest list exactly we offer the first episode with no guest
And then you were like bye, but Ray and Jordan and I was like, yeah
They think they don't count as guests in the same way, they're family. And when you're here, you're family.
We like to think of this podcast as the Olive Garden.
It is Olive Garden, right?
You guys do have never-ending breadsticks.
We do.
Which most of our guests don't call out,
considering how much we're spending.
That would rock if that was true.
Like, it's in our writer.
It's like, by the way, unlimited breadsticks
have to be wherever we are
They have to follow us when I say never ending. I mean never ending. It doesn't end once I leave your restaurant
No, they just keep rolling out. Yeah, like you can bear. Yes, you actually have to eat them or it's a problem
Do any other chain like fast casual chains?
It's not fast cat whatever you would call Olive Garden. Maybe it is fast. I don't know.
Have like a tagline is ubiquitous is when you hear your family.
Like those guys really did nail it with.
But I'm loving it.
No, that doesn't count.
Like, what's the Applebee's have it your way?
Eating good in the neighborhood?
Well, he knows it.
I know.
You keep asking me, we got the meat.
I want my baby back ribs.
It's pretty good.
Chilies. What is the one keep asking me. We got the meats. I want my baby back ribs. It's pretty good.
Chilis.
What is the chil-
Currently it is savor the moment.
Well that sucks.
I agree! This is what I'm saying. This can be hard to get.
Outbacks is like, it's always good in the outback.
And I'm like, guys, try again. Come on.
Isn't there something about Outback Steakhouse?
What was the theme? The song, the jingle used to have a different line at the end of it. Outback Steakhouse. What was the theme? The song, the jingle used to have a different line at the end of it.
Outback Steakhouse.
Well, there was the, who was that band?
Of Montreal.
The guy from of Montreal recorded a jingle
for Outback Steakhouse, but then when people were like,
why did you do this?
This seems very commercial.
He was like, I have no memory of agreeing to or recording.
And the lyrics was, it was a re, it was a like,
redo of the lyrics of Let's Pretend We Don't Exist.
And it's like, let's go out back tonight.
You know, the world will still be here tomorrow.
That's good.
That's good, I like that.
Let me say outright that our guests are
Rae Centauri and Jordan Fish.
Welcome, fellas.
Excellent filmmakers, dear friends, family,
but also co-hosts of the To The White Sea podcast.
A years-long project you guys have been doing.
Perhaps coming back soon?
You're not coming back this week.
Oh, by the time you hear this.
It records.
That we release. There you go.
We said it now.
To The White Sea is like the great unmade Cohen's...
We will talk about it, I'm sure, later in this mini-series.
It is probably there.
I mean, when I'm a teenage boy, and just think of that.
What a fun kid that was.
We all like to think about it.
Reading my Empire magazines.
I was right on, like, to the White Sea.
That's the great unproduced Coen's movie.
We're all waiting for To the White Sea.
And like, Aina Cole being like,
this might be the greatest screenplay I've ever read.
Whoa.
Right.
Brad Pitt walking to the White Sea?
Yeah.
Possibly.
Gets very close to happening, falls apart,
and then that basically directly leads into
what is seen as like the Coens weirdest,
the fallow period before they have the
No Country comeback. Pre-No Country, right, right really fallow period before they have the country.
Right. Right.
Yeah. They dust off, uh, intolerable cruelty, which is a script that they had written
basically just to be like, we got to make something. Right.
Like I guess we'll direct this thing that had been a for hire job.
And then they did a lady, right.
They do these two studio comedies back to back that I, in my memory,
we're kind of received by people
as like, are the Coen brothers just trying to cash in now?
It seemed like it was over forever.
It really felt like it was over forever in a way where when no country played at Cannes,
no country for all men.
Yeah.
And people were like, you're never going to believe this.
It's good.
There was this sense of almost astonishment of like, I guess we wrote those guys off too
quickly.
We'll get to that.
Yeah.
But yes, there was a little bit of like, the fear of had they finally lost the shine in
the new country is, was it Cannes?
Yes.
Cannes.
Couldn't remember if it was Cannes or not.
But you guys have done this project that started when the Coen brothers sort of soft split
and have been doing their solo projects of being able to like timestamp it and be like,
here is the at this point complete filmography of the Coens, who knows if it ever resumes
as a team through the prism of this unmade movie and going through the script and doing
a sort of radio play version of the script and which of course you had me play the Brad
pit role. Had to. Obvious casting. A beautiful nuanced performance. Thank you.
He really does do a wonderful job. But then also using that to sort of like
thematically go through the Coens and talk about different recurring themes.
The big point here is that you guys have been so deep in the trenches, doing so much research,
going through fucking personal archives and microfiche,
and reading and watching everything,
that we said, what a great opportunity
to have them on for the first Coens episode,
coast off of all the work they've already done for the last couple years,
and create a really good reason to fire JJ.
Let's fire his ass.
Let's fire JJ harder than we've ever fired JJ before.
Well, all I want to say is that when I look at his dossier and you laugh,
when I go to a restaurant, I want legendary food and legendary service.
OK, you're asking me to guess you're doing the reverse.
I am legendary food, legendary service.
The service is legendary.
Now, having been to this restaurant, which I enjoy,
I remember the service being particularly interesting.
It was fine.
Medieval times would work.
That would be...
Medieval times make sense in terms of legendary.
It'd be incredible, but it's not.
Michael Jordan's steakhouse.
That would be great,
but I have to imagine the service there is awful.
I have to assume this is a sit-down chain.
Yeah.
How wide is it?
This isn't like the Paul of the biggest sit down change.
One of the biggest it's one.
It's a growing, growing, growing.
Is it Ruby Tuesday?
No, I don't think so.
Well, you, you should know you're the one quizzing me.
It's growing.
What is Ruby Tuesday?
So steak.
Cool.
It's not red lobster.
I'm going to abandon this in a second.
Ruby Tuesday slogan is,
fun between the buns.
This one is.
Not joking.
That supposedly is their slogan.
I feel like they're more steak than sandwich though.
It's not like Hillstone Group, is it?
No, I don't know.
It's growing.
It's on an up-slope.
It's just so weird that they were like,
let's name our song after that,
like lovely emotional song by the Rolling Stones.
Like who listens to Ruby Tuesday and is like, I'm hungry.
You know, it's like, it's a good song,
but it's this sort of like sweet, sad song.
If I can circle back,
the jingle I was trying to remember was,
let's do out back tonight.
It was the opposite.
It's leading in.
Okay.
But legendary service, growing chain.
Yeah.
I believe it's, I believe I read an article by my colleague, Yasmin Tayek, the great Yasmin, but legendary service, growing chain, on the upswing.
I believe I read in an article by my colleague,
Yasmin Tayeg, the great Yasmin,
that it is the fastest growing sit-down chain
in America right now.
But it's been around for a while.
It's just having an upswing.
Yeah, I'm gonna wrap this up.
Sure.
Texas Roadhouse.
Oh, was never gonna guess that.
So topical.
Yeah, yeah, this is a real Texas Roadhouse of a movie.
Could be the name of the movie.
That's true. Main set. We are talking about Blood Simple, Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. This is a real Texas Roadhouse of a movie. Could be the name of the movie.
Main set.
We are talking about Blood Simple,
the Coens' first movie,
directed of course by Joel Cohen and not Ethan Cohen.
I'm going to do that bit until no con...
Lady killers.
Right.
Which is set in Texas.
And is a rather stripped down neo-noir.
Did you detect, Griffin, that this film is a bit of a Neo-Noir?
You know what, David?
You know, there's Noirs, but they're black and white,
and Humphrey Bogart is there, but then there's the Neo-Noirs.
David, I know that you are the film critic by trade,
and I'm not trying to one-up you,
but here's some observation I made while rewatching the film.
I'd almost call it a Neon-Noir because of how much goddamn neon lighting
there is in this picture.
It's a neon boot.
It's a neon boot. It's a neon boot.
That's the name of the bar.
Yeah.
Similar to Tec Noir.
Yeah, yes.
The film kind of announces itself with the bar.
Yes.
So here we are, the Coen brothers.
Griffin, I'll start with you, but I'm gonna ask everyone.
So Ben, you might have to steal Jordan's mic.
Ben's here too, of course.
When did you first get on board with the Brothers Cohen,
those Minnesota Jews?
It's a good question when I first got on board.
I'm trying to-
Because if you're a cine-ass at the age that we are,
teenage film fan, in the sort of mid to late 90s,
the Coens are dominant in terms of like,
that's a director you find quickly, I feel like.
Right. As you're growing up. I feel like I was told from a very young
age about their importance right I'll build to a story briefly yep it's a
synagogue please but then I think my parents tried to show me raising Arizona
when I was fairly young and I put my foot down and said I don't get it it's
not funny and then I feel like a down and said, I don't get it, it's not funny.
And then I feel like a couple years later,
Washington was like, I get it now.
Quite funny actually.
I was simply a child back then.
Pretty winning movie.
Yes, yeah, yeah.
But I was maybe a little too young to watch it.
I feel like, Oh Brother must have been the first one
I actually saw in theaters.
I think it's the same for me.
I think it has to be.
I definitely, The Big Lebowski was rated 18 in Britain.
I guess because of like toe severance,
I don't really know why else.
There's a lot going on.
I mean, there's a lot of F words in that movie.
No, in Britain, you really only get an 18
for really extreme violence or any sexual violence.
If you say shag, then they're like,
oh, we're all hot and bothered.
No, I mean, like God bless the British rating system.
Like 18 really is supposed to signify, like,
this is a really, really violent movie.
Not so much like, oh, you might see a Willy.
Can you say, can you circle back and repeat 18
because of Toe Severance?
It was rated like 18, I think,
because of, like, the Toe Severance.
Stiller and Tarantino working on a picture together?
Wow. Really good.
An Apple series, actually.
Oh, okay.
Anyway, so yeah, I think the first film
I would have seen in theaters is Oh Brother, We're Out There.
It would have been about 14, and I loved it.
I'm just trying to remember if I would have seen
any of the other ones before then.
Maybe Raising Arizona?
The first time I was aware of the Coens
is when Frances McDormand won the Oscar for Fargo.
This I was gonna say probably same for me.
And my mom was like, oh, well yeah, she was gonna win.
And I was like, oh really?
Like, you know, like my mom was like, oh yeah,
she had to win.
And I was like, why?
And she was just like, I don't know, man,
look at the clip, like she's a pregnant cop.
It's just crazy.
I'd never seen anything like that.
She did a really funny walk to the stage.
Do you remember McDormand's walk for her first of three
best actress wins?
But she's not doing the like, oh my God thing.
She does this sort of like,
it's almost a post-modern sachet of playing being too cocky.
Wow, and Nicolas Cage is giving her the Oscar.
So that's a fun group.
I think you're right that the, I, I, I,
And but like, so the clips from Fargo,
and that's in the year that English patient
is dominating the Oscars.
So that's the first year I watched the Oscars live.
And English patient seems like a movie
that wins Oscars to me where I'm like,
yeah, it's set in the past and it's all orange.
And there's like, you know,
war and important things happening.
And then they're like Fargo. And I'm like, what's that? And my mom's like, oh God, war and important things happening. And then they're like Fargo and I'm like, what's that?
My mom's like, oh God, it's hard to describe.
You know, this is so, and it looked so different.
Even before her winning, the way they cut Billy,
Mr. Crystal into the Fargo clips in the opening montage,
I think I had that same reaction of what is this movie?
Like they were doing her puking on the side of the road.
Ooh, it is a strut. God damn, she looks like she's about to like push cage off the stage.
It just felt like she looks like she's entering the wrestling.
Yes.
Doing like an elbow on a shoulder thing.
Yeah.
Burned into my memory.
She's so hot.
But I also, I feel like it's to your point, like-
Oh, in a standing O.
Yeah.
All the big ones. Jim Carrey, Jeffrey Rush,
Karen Svazin.
I'm at this party that my parents have brought me to,
and there was that same feeling of like,
this was undeniable, this is her night, she's getting it,
this is an anointment thing.
And to a certain degree also like an anointment night
for the Coens, right?
And I think I'm absorbing this context around me.
But also in the Billy Crystal fucking montage,
you're like, I get the bits for the other ones.
English patient looks really serious and Billy Crystal's coming in and
doing something silly.
Fargo is the only one where I was like, this almost has a crystal tone to begin
with?
There are already jokes in this movie?
But it's also violent?
What do you do for secrets and lies?
That's a really good question.
Now I gotta rewatch those Oscars.
My parents met at the Deauville Film Festival in the north of France,
where my grandmother used to work.
And I then it was...
For listeners is the French Film Festival that asks,
what if we watched American movies in France?
Correct.
It is, that's what it is. I will say, with as much respect as I can put on it,
it is a festival that basically has no reason
to exist anymore.
Except to create you.
Back in the day, it made more sense.
But that's why I'm saying,
it no longer has a reason to exist.
I've been made one time and that's one time too many.
We don't need another one.
Every year that festival is creating more griffin damage.
This is a problem.
It's unsustainable.
We're flooding the economy.
It was basically in an era where movies did not have
global distribution, were sold off more piecemeal.
Even big studio films were often being released
by like local distributors.
And it was basically like this fulcrum point
between the big summer blockbusters
and what were going to be the more serious fall movies, where the studios and independent films
all went there and it was like this one-shot final leg of a press tour. Bring all your stars
to the north of France to a beach and have them promote the movie and get enough buzz that maybe
then you're able to sell off the smaller European rights to these other films
or use it as a launching pad
before there were kind of global press tours.
It was like a way to trick stars into having a vacation
and doing one last batch of interviews or whatever.
My parents meet there.
My grandmother worked there for many years.
I was trying to do the math on this.
I think it probably would have been the second
or third year my parents had then after they met here
would go every year.
Sure, yes, yes, yes.
Basically for their anniversary, right?
It is either the place where Blood Simple premiered
or the second festival.
IMDB lists something slightly earlier in the summer.
The USA Film Festival.
Which I cannot find any.
Well, the USA Film Festival was the Sundance, the progenitor to the Sundance Film Festival.
But it by all accounts premieres at Sundance the following January.
Did it premiere there?
Doville would have been, or I'm sorry, not premiere.
Yeah, it doesn't premiere there.
It plays at Sundance the following January.
Correct.
It had already done Doville, TIFF, and New York.
Was it Toronto, like a big turning point for the... Yes.
It's early in Toronto's shift from sort of the festival
of festivals, which is what it used to be too,
like the powerhouse.
Doville happens like one week before Toronto,
which is another thing that has killed that festival,
as like Toronto and Venice have gotten even bigger.
But it possibly was the first place it played,
and at least it was the second.
And my parents and their friend Susan, who was their best friend in the early 80s,
uh, would tell me all the time when I was growing up, them being there, looking
through the like, um, brochure of all the movies and being like the Cohen brothers.
There's an award film by Joel and Ethan Cohen.
Hey guys, we made a noir movie.
And seeing these guys walk around
and for like five days, this being their joke of like,
yeah, we should go see Blood Simple.
And then they went to see it
and were just like, holy fucking shit.
It is one of the most profound movie going experiences
my parents ever had because they were like like we're mocking the idea of these guys and
how shitty this sounds on paper. Why have two Minnesota Jews made like a
Texas neo-noir and then seeing it being like who the fuck are these guys
immediately. So I also grew up with that where my parents would constantly just
talk about the experience of like a thing that basically no one ever got ever again of like going into a Coen Brothers movie
without any reputation because right after this it starts their run of
basically playing this movie playing festivals for like over a year and just
building momentum and movies don't really do that anymore they don't so it
looks like Billy started off with a Yoda scene Because it was like Empire Strikes Back. It was the re-release. Uh-huh. Nice. Yeah, he's doing he's on the phone with Jerry Maguire
He's shirtless. Uh-huh. I don't mean to stun anyone here
He's telling the show and then he then he switches phones to talk to Brenda Blathin funny in secrets and lies. Okay
You know and she's like, oh
She's telling some of the secrets and some of the lies.
Right, and then he's getting a hug from Armand Mullerstahl
in Schein. For Schein?
Then we got Fargo.
He's got the cop outfit on.
She's cute.
And then he's talking to Buscemi.
Okay.
Then he's back to Cruz in the locker room.
Okay.
Did they do the wood tripper?
Help me help you.
They did the total silence scene? Yeah, they did that did that scene then they have him he's in the cave in the English patient with Kristen Scott Thomas
Then the thing I remember the most
They do the plane crash from English patient, but it's Letterman going like
Oprah, which is funny. Yeah, gotta bring it back. My parents had to lean in and go, he did a bad job last year.
It's what he did last year.
I saw the letter in Oscars.
Anyway, Blood Simple, it is one of the most
undeniable debuts in film history, I would say.
Where you're like, well, these guys surely
have made 20 movies.
Yep.
To make something this like honed and precise
and like sort of
Confident and instead it's like now there are a couple of squirrely
Youngsters and yet I feel like when asked they continue they forever say this is obviously our worst movie. It's clumsy and amateurish
They say that yes, they rag on it endlessly when they did the director's cut re-release
It was shorter. Yes, cuz they were, it was badly edited the first time.
By them, obviously.
Right. They view it as like, well, that's the last time we're not going to get everything right.
Because we were still learning.
Yeah, this is a great moment when they're going through like shot by shot with Sonnenfeld where they were like, Gets is sitting in a chair on the set of the apartment
that the two lovers sort of on the run moved into.
And he's just like sitting in a chair
and like the wall is sort of like grayish blue
and he's wearing a grayish blue denim shirt.
And I think Joel just stares at the shot and is like,
that wall is something that we're not gonna be doing again.
Wow.
Ray, Jordan, your Cohen's experience,
maybe you have covered this on the podcast a little bit,
but I don't.
I'm trying to figure it out because
Hudsucker was a big deal in my house.
Okay.
My mom's friend Sheila had one of the cable boxes where she got all the channels.
Sure.
And then she would tape movies off of HBO and give them to my mom in the mid-90s.
Shout out to Sheila.
Yeah.
HUD SUCKER was a movie that we would watch a lot.
That was the first one you think you saw? but I also saw thing to a family-friendly movie
They made but I also saw Fargo in theaters and was like really blown away by it
And I remember just like feeling like it was the first adult
movie going experience in a theater that I'd had in a very distinct way like just walking out of it being like I
Can't breathe, you know?
Like I've been holding my breath
the last 30 minutes of this movie.
I'm gonna argue you were too young
for Fargo in theaters, Jordan.
You were probably a couple of years older than me, right?
But still. Yeah.
I was a minor.
I was 10 when that movie came out.
And it was rated 18 again, geez.
Maybe also because of the severance, leg severance.
Fuck, who's a leg severance? But the thing is, I'm not sure, again, I'm not sure which one of them we would watch,
which I watched first, and I also don't think I knew that it was the same directors.
I knew, I know that when, I know that when Lebowski came out, I knew that was the next
movie after Fargo, and I was excited to see that in theaters. And I saw, like,
I'm like moving forward, I feel like coming into the city to see a Coen Brothers movie a week or two before it went wide was like a big part
Of like my early New York City experiences because I like grew up right outside the city. Yeah
To see the early platform release of yeah, like Oh Brother or whatever. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I think I
Like, Oh Brother or whatever. Yeah.
Yeah, I think I was so aware of how much my parents revered them that even when,
like, there was a new Cohen movie coming out, like Lebowski, I was absorbing the
sense of like, people seem cooler on this one.
Then saw Oh Brother in theater, which makes sense as like their most family
friendly movie since Hudsucker.
And then after that, I think pretty quickly,
like, watched every one of their movies on DVD,
or started that project,
and then would go see every one that came out.
Here's another thing about them.
For a very long time, they were once-a-year guys.
They were like clockwork.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Where if you're a budding cinephile,
it's really easy to be like, I can latch onto these guys,
what's the next Cohen movie?
I'm filling in the backlog, and I'm like looking forward to the future. I would say they're kind of once every couple years
In terms of like the spacing between their movies. Yeah, they were very very reliably
working all the way up to I
Guess to, I guess... Mid-2000s, really?
Yeah, like it's really...
2010s, really.
Even then, it's like, it's True Grit,
Inside Loon Day's Davis, Hell, Caesar, Scruggs.
That's four movies in that decade,
each of them about three years apart.
Like, it's like, you know, they worked very consistently.
Look, when they announced that they're sabbatical
from working together, I feel like that was the number one thing cited. Yeah, which just like Ethan feels burned out
It's been a lot right and they would have side projects. They'd release fiction
They would do some stage stuff like it's like yeah, they were busy. Well, I'm sure make a video game
Yeah, it's a great idea. Thanks Ray your history with the cons. I
remember the
Like the Roma pizza on 7th Avenue in the 90s was just a shrine to the career of John Turturro.
It was just all signed John Turturro stuff.
So I remember the Barton Fink poster in there, seeing that as a little kid.
My parents being like, this is a movie about a guy who can't write and is being attacked by a mosquito.
So I thought the whole movie was just him v. mosquito.
And then I remember seeing Hudson's Secret Proxy in a movie theater in LA,
and my parents being like, wow, they blew it.
The general consensus on that one.
And that being an out-of-body experience, seeing that as a little kid,
it's so heightened and cartoonish, and the whole hula hoopsie.
I remember all that stuff for kids, that totally landed on me as an elementary school kid.
Best joke I ever heard.
And then, yeah, I saw Fargo in the movie theater with my mom and my sister.
We were both super young, but it was just a cultural event.
And I think it was post-Pulp Fiction, there was a sense that we can take them to this.
We can't take them to Pulp Fiction, but we can take them to Fargo. Pulp Fiction created a new bar of what isn't child appropriate,
which then sort of on a curve made Fargo seem like more queen.
I mean, it's also, it's like, right.
It's Fargo does have this weird amount of like Looney Tunes energy
and as violent as it gets, it's sort of a comedy of manners in the same way.
Yeah.
It's a cultural portrait of, of like a particular type of,
like a particular part of Minnesota.
Yeah, but just became a session that saw a preview of Big Lebowski.
Also, everyone at Big Lebowski was like, that sucked.
Like at the first screening and people were like, why wasn't that like Fargo?
People don't remember that.
I have this very distinct memory of like going over to dinner with my parents and my siblings
to their friends, a couple with a young kid.
We were all like eating pizza together or whatever.
And they had just seen Big Lebowski and were just like, we are befuddled.
What are they doing?
Why did they blow it?
In the same way as Hudsucker of, like,
everyone just took them seriously,
and now they're doing some weird lark?
I remember, at the time, there were, like,
one to two critics in Britain who were like,
"'Psst, I kinda liked Lebowski."
Like, and they were saying it in this way of, like,
"'I know this is crazy,
but I actually think there's some stuff to that."
Well, you know, like, and within,
really, just three or four years, it had completely turned around.
It was like the DVD, like supernova.
Yes, the early DVD thing.
Right.
But like that run of Lebowski to Oh Brother,
to Man Who Wasn't There,
you know, it's not like they were out
of critical favor exactly,
but it was kind of like, huh,
not another Fargo in these guys, huh?
I remember seeing this in the theaters for the first time.
The film was Blood Symbol.
The re-release.
Yes, 2000, I think.
2000, the shorter version with the music that wasn't on the VHS,
put back in, I saw it at the Quad in an empty theater.
Just me, Joel Schumacher and Joel Schumacher's assistant.
Wow.
The big three? Incredible. Well, Joel's gotacher and Joel Schumacher's assistant. Wow. The big three.
Incredible.
Well, Joel's got to keep their tabs on other Joles.
They got to know what the Joles are cooking.
One of the nicest directors I ever met, Joel Schumacher.
I've told the story many times of him.
He was not so kind to you.
I asked him for a direction on how to play a scene
and a fourth fucking callback I had for him.
And he said, I think acting is a lot like fucking,
where if you're asking for help for how to do it,
you're probably doing it wrong.
And you were like, I do that all the time.
That's what I said, he didn't think it was funny.
His hair looked incredible.
His hair was unbelievable.
He had really amazing hair.
Yes.
Ben. What's up, Griff?
No, I have a hard time tracking where my money goes.
Jeez, you're telling me.
I can keep track of this thing and I own it until I give it away in exchange for goods or services.
I truly don't know what's coming in, what's coming out.
I'm dining out. I'm eating food. I'm putting food in my system.
I'm handing money out of my wallet over to a restaurant.
And I go, where did that dang stuff go?
No idea.
Not to mention food delivery, online shopping, retail therapy.
Ever heard of it?
Yeah, I hear it.
And I'm not getting rich doing that.
No.
Everyone else is getting rich around me and I've lost track.
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["The First Man's Day"]
I was thinking that I probably saw this for the first time on the DVD release after the
director's cut re-release, which means I've never seen A, the longer version, which I
feel like is totally out of circulation now, or B, the VHS version of the longer version.
How much longer is the longer version?
Three minutes?
Okay. Yeah. But it's not just like they cut one scene out.
They like Titan sequences and change shots and but it's a
three minute shorter, but the others.
The VHS version uses Neil Diamond.
I'm a believer, which is great song.
It's the same old song.
Yeah, quite haunting.
Yeah, I remember that re release.
I was sort of vaguely aware of the movie.
I'm beginning coming vaguely where the Coen brothers and all
that and the poster obviously for the re release was the shovel and I was like, vaguely aware of the movie. I'm becoming vaguely aware of the Coen brothers and all that. And the poster obviously for the re-release was the shovel.
And I was like, so I confused this movie
in another debut by a crime-y filmmaker, Danny Boyle,
Shallow Grave.
Oh, sure.
Right.
Where I was like, man, in the nineties or whatever,
like back in the day people were digging Shallow Graves.
Casino also.
Yeah.
Casino, I mean, I just remember.
Mystery Man.
The Ratchet and Shovel movies.
And hey, that's William H. Macy.
Well, hey now.
The Coen's favorite.
Yeah.
Blood Simple, I'm gonna read from the dossier.
Joel Daniel Coen was born November 29th, 1953.
A Thanksgiving boy.
A plump Thanksgiving turkey.
Is he was plump?
No, I'm sure he came out of string bean.
He looks like fucking Spike from peanuts.
I know I invoked Spike recently on some other episode
was trying to explain Spike to Ben,
but I was watching all these fucking special features
last night and I was like, who does Joel Cohen look like?
And it just hit me like a ton of bricks now
he looks like Spike.
Yes, so he was born in 1953, and look like and it just hit me like a ton of bricks. Now he looks like Spock. Yes. So.
He was born in 1953.
Ethan Jesse Cohen arrives in this world 1950 September 21st, 1957.
They have an older sister, Debbie Debra.
Dad, Edward was a professor at economics at the University of Minnesota.
And they grew up in Minneapolis. Right. Edward was born in the U.S.,
but he actually grew up overseas.
His grandfather, Victor, so Edward's father,
was a Barastrofian of court in London, of course.
Order!
See, I had to do a gamble there.
After the listeners at home,
David is wearing a powdered wig.
Yep.
I remember when he retired,
my grandparents went to live in Hove,
which is a seaside town next to Brighton,
I can tell you, exclusively.
JJ didn't look it up.
Byron?
Yep.
And we used to live in there.
My father actually grew up in London.
I think he lived in Croydon, pearly,
is a neighborhood in Croydon,
which is sort of South London suburbs. And he had very British tastes in London. I think he lived in Croydon, Pearly, is a neighborhood in Croydon, which is sort of South London suburbs.
And he had very British tastes in movies.
They would watch all the Ealing comedies
and things like that.
Cohen's mother, Rina, is a professor of art history
at St. Cloud State University,
which is another Twin Cities place.
They're Ashkenazi Jews.
They're from Poland, Russia. You know, Edward was in the army.
You must be looking at the wrong dossier.
They're Jewish.
We're talking about the Cohen brothers now.
They are Jewish.
I will tell you this now, exclusively revealed to you that the Cohens are Minnesota Jews.
The directors of True Grit.
Edward was in the army during World War II, and they were raised relatively traditionally,
moderately strict.
We of course will be wrestling with something
I'm sure you guys have wrestled with a little bit
when you did your podcast.
The Coens are a little taciturn,
not huge on kind of discussing their motivations
and interests.
They'll do a lot of interviews.
It's not like they don't do press.
We would like to gently debunk that.
Okay, go ahead. Okay, we'll do it.
I would say that they're not film professors.
No. Yes.
You know, of their own work,
but they've been pretty forthcoming over the years.
I mean, there's many.
You guys have been delving through too,
like you've been piecing it all together.
I think it's interesting that there's this
received wisdom about them that they
won't explain their movies kind of on the same level
as David Lynch or something where it's like,
no, I'm not telling you anything.
And it's like, I think it's mainly just because
they sort of embed jokes and sarcasm
into their answers a lot of the time.
They're Jewish, this is interesting.
Jewish humor.
Yes, go on.
Like in the preface to this book, like they give some advice to writers where they say,
keep going until the work is boring to you.
And then that's when you know to stop because it's
the sort of arena of the amateur who
doesn't have the imagination to quit,
who keeps going and going.
And then like the question would be is like,
is that a completely, is that completely sincere advice
or are they fucking with the reader, you know?
But I do think that they, you know,
they'll get on a Blu-ray and go through all of Blood Simple
with Barry Seinfeld like shot by shot by shot
talking about how they made it, what they were going for.
So, you know.
Our buddy Sean Fantasy of the big picture, was talking on some recent episode,
but it was somewhere in the transition period coming out of Oscar season
and going into 2025 movie preview where he was comparing...
He was comparing Brady Corbett to Paul Thomas Anderson, right?
And he was saying like, as we're getting out of this Oscar season,
the thing I think that everyone's exhausted with
is Brady Corbett, like,
explaining the themes of his movie 8,000 times.
And he was putting that in contrast
as to Paul Thomas Anderson,
who never explains his movies at all.
That when he goes and does press
and he'll do long-form interviews,
he will talk and he'll talk openly about stuff.
But the thing he doesn't want to tell you at all is how to read his movie versus Brady
Corbett being like, here's everything and this is exactly how I intended it.
And he was like, it's the thing that makes sense because Paul Thomas Anderson was totally
like that when he started out.
He was like such an early DVD commentary guy, such an early, I'm telling you all my ambitions for this
and how I want it to be received.
And I'm speaking of the frustration of the elements
that are misunderstood and all that sort of stuff.
And he's like, it makes sense
if you're a certain kind of film nerd
and you grow up like loving movies
and then studying their construction
and then like learning how to analyze them more deeply
that your greatest dream is to make a movie
that people can read as deeply as you've read other films.
And when these guys get the chance
where they're finally in that sort of spotlight,
it's very hard for them to resist the temptation
to start that conversation themselves,
which ultimately doesn't do the movie that much of a favor.
And most guys learn to, as time goes on,
back off and get a little more elusive and what do you say versus?
What don't you say? I think what is unique about the Coen's is like they have consistently
Been in sort of like old master phase from the beginning. There was no point in time where you're reading clumsy interviews with them
Where they're kind of exposing themselves
I wonder wonderful dig up like they have been from the beginning and I think that's the difference is a lot of times when
we do this show and JJ's digging through, you know, like the quotes from the first couple
movies.
He's digging through the shallow grave of quotes from the early films.
He's putting the shovel on the ground.
Sometimes you're like, oh, it's a lot easier to find more information in the earlier stages
of their career where they like haven't been as media trained, right?
And they're like less guarded.
And also they're willing to talk about these things like 25 years
later with more distance.
And the Coens like recut their own movie and have spoken
extensively about this film.
And it's not like they've disowned it or tried to make a mystery box around it.
And they didn't massively recut it.
Sorry, just to jump in.
Yeah. Like they just, they tweaked it. They, make a mystery box around it. And they didn't massively recut it, sorry, just to jump in. Yeah, yeah.
It's like, they just, they tweaked it.
They tightened it up.
They didn't cut whole scenes or put whole scenes in that weren't...
It's this fascinating balance of them being like,
yeah, we're like a little embarrassed by this,
but we're also not distancing ourselves from it, right?
And I was watching one of these things on the Criterion disc
and they just said the thing that they always say,
which I think
some people think they are using this to throw people off their scent, I believe with them
it's genuine, and they were talking about their sense of structure and Ethan said like,
I don't know what a three act structure is. Like he makes a joke of like, I've heard rumors
of this and I've never seen it myself, right? And he's like, I never think about that stuff
at all.
I think we've watched so many things
and read so many things that to some degree
we've internalized some innate sense of structure,
but we never do that consciously.
And then Joel says something to the effect of,
our basic writing process is,
let's come up with enough ideas that excite us
that we're ready to start writing.
Then we start writing and we're like,
I guess it'd be cool if this happened next.
And then they go, wow, feels like about time
to wrap things up.
That they like tend to write straight through
from beginning to end,
once they just have enough ideas percolating,
and they're not thinking consciously
about how to design these things like Swiss watches
with the intent of people pulling them apart later.
That's hard to believe.
It is because their movies are so good and tight.
And they are very Swiss watch-like as well.
That's why I don't believe them.
I'm not calling them liars.
I feel like the big story we always heard is in Lou and Davis,
there's this part where he's driving past Akron,
and there's an off-ramp to go to Akron where he knows,
he's just found out his son is living, who he's never met. And they were like, we're writing it, and we's like an off-ramp to go to Akron where he knows he's just found out his son is living who he's never met and
They were like we were writing it and we're like, oh the off-ramp for Akron's coming up
Is Louan gonna take it and they were like no, no, no, he doesn't take it and just as they're writing
They decided like that whole section of the movie is not gonna happen, right?
Like that I love that they're not idiot savants, but the way they
Present themselves a little bit as idiot savants.
It's sometimes still maddening, like, are you guys just perfect instincts?
How is that possible? And then they'll talk about how prepared they are in terms of shooting.
Right, they have an excellent reputation throughout Hollywood for being incredibly good, on time, under budget, all that kind of stuff.
But also that they're like, right, very disciplined,
very storyboarded.
The two-headed director.
Right, they're like, we see other directors
who get the kind of buzz from showing up on set
and not totally knowing what you're gonna do
and that sort of pressure inspires them.
And that's our nightmare.
And we'll change the plan if something isn't working,
but we wanna come to this set
knowing exactly how it should work.
In contrast to the script seemingly coming out of just like,
I don't know, it just like flows out of us and we ask ourselves the questions
like should he take the offer? And then we just go from there.
Another good story in a similar vein is they wrote all of Fargo up until
Steve Buscemi's character is quote, humping the escort and then could not figure out
what would happen next and like basically put it in a drawer
or, you know, six months or a year or something.
Which certainly that does seem to be sometimes part
of their process, like when they hit a wall,
they don't ram into the wall.
They're just kind of like, okay.
If it's not coming to us, then we have to put it aside
till it makes sense.
They wrote Barton Fink, I think, in the middle of trying to write Miller's Crossing.
They said that that was kind of the birth, almost, of a new process where it was like,
instead of trying to create a mousetrap contraption type script, it was like,
this is one idea that just came out.
Yeah.
Now, look, Ray, I don't know if you know this,
but the Coens grew up in kind of a boring suburban part of Minnesota
called St. Louis Park.
And Ethan said, I like this quote a lot.
And this is a classic Ethan Cohen quote to me.
It was the suburbs, you know?
I cannot think of a single seminal childhood event.
I relate to that so much.
Someone's like, come on, tell me something
from your childhood that might inform,
like, well, clearly your work is informed by your adolescence sometimes.
And he's just like, yeah, I can't think of anything.
18 years, blank.
Joel says, Bob Dylan got out of Minnesota at an early age and you can see why.
These guys are really roasted in Minnesota. They don't live there, right?
They live in LA, I want to say?
No, they live in New York.
I don't know.
Bicostal.
Yeah.
Bicostal.
Okay. I feel like they're more New York though, right?
Maybe.
I don't know. Where are the winds blow?
Recommend everyone check out
Pedro Cohen's Instagram page if you want.
I used to be on Pedro's.
He was, cause he was like, he's,
is he a bodybuilder, a model,
or he's sort of like an aspiring kind of he's living the life
He is living that is the thing. Yeah, I remember Katie rich our
Son of Joel and Francis. Yes
Katie rich was the one who got me into Pedro McDormand Cohen's great Instagram years ago. Anyway
So when the Coen brothers are growing up they watch a lot of movies
Ethan we saw a lot of Tarzan movies
and Steve Rea used muscle movies.
Cool. They liked comedies,
kind of like British far-seed comedies.
Boeing, Boeing.
Boeing, Boeing, which is a great play and a kind of okay movie.
Bob Hope movies, Jerry Lewis movies, Tony Curtis.
They like Doris Day movies, Jerry Lewis movies, Tony Curtis.
They like Doris Day movies, they like Pillow Talk.
We didn't realize we were watching crap,
is what Joel says, like they just love movies.
They get their hands on a Super 8 camera.
They remade a lot of bad Hollywood movies.
Their most successful in their memory
are Cornell Wilde's Naked Prey
and Otto Preminger's Advice and Consent.
They said they didn't really understand,
they would edit in camera obviously,
they didn't realize they could edit film physically
by cutting it up and stuff.
I'm not gonna read all of this.
They also made a movie called Henry Kissinger,
Man on the Move.
I was gonna say.
That sounds good.
They bring that up at the Oscars
when they win for No Country.
I forget which of their three acceptance speeches.
My guess is directing, if I...
Yeah.
But they say like, when we were kids, we'd run around in the backyard with briefcases
and make movies like Henry Kissinger, Man on the Move.
And what's weird to us is that what we're doing now still feels exactly the same as
that.
And I do think that's part of their secret and and it's a benefit to being a team, and a team that knows each other so well
and can communicate like wordlessly,
and has a shared reference base and interest base.
And they always talk about watching movies together
and reading books together,
and like being in tandem like that.
Is that to some degree,
I think they're trying to retain the purity
of when they made movies as children,
and would just be like,
what's interesting
enough to us to be worth the effort of pulling together costumes?
There's a lot of play acting like when they talk about question it.
Yeah.
People describing seeing them write the script.
It's just the two of them.
One's playing one character, one's playing the other, and they're just doing scenes together.
When they talk about storyboarding it, they're getting up with their storyboard artist,
J. Todd Anderson, all acting out the scenes.
Yeah, when we interviewed J. Todd,
he said that the reason he got the job,
or one of the reasons he got the job,
storyboarding Raising Arizona,
is because he was willing to act out the drawing with them.
Yeah, and there's even in this movie,
there's like 40 to 50 shots,
which are literally just starring the Coen brothers,
shot by Barry Sonnenfeld.
There's so many pickup shots in this movie,
down to like that little drip of water,
that's the very last shot of the movie,
all the burial scenes, the fight scene out in the lawn.
There was a lot of like full movie stuff in this movie.
Well, obviously I imagine the dossier is gonna get to this,
but like their meeting, Remy, is so humongous. Okay, well, right, okay, let me hit the gas on the dossier is gonna get to this, but like their meeting, Ramey, is so humongous.
The trajectory of both.
Okay, let me hit the gas on the dossier.
Okay.
Okay, just cause, you know, this is a big episode.
But that's like a real Ramey filmmaking principle thing
of just like, just get the shot.
They go to Bard College at Simon's Rock for a minute,
which is the sort of hippie early college
where you can get in when you're 16 years old,
but then Joel goes to NYU and studies film there.
I wanted to keep making movies and that was an easy school to get into, he says.
Another description of time at NYU is our professors weren't famous directors.
They'd made a career essentially in teaching.
Joel, I was ciphered there.
I sat in the back of the room with an insane grin on my face.
I mean, that's all funny. I do think, like, my mom has friends who...
One friend in particular who would always say,
like, I went to NYU back when it was bad.
You know, like, NYU only became kind of the, like,
insane powerhouse.
In, like, the 90s, it suddenly was cooler
to want to go to New York for university.
It also needed a couple generations
of successful graduates to be like...
And then the film school, right.
There's a track record there.
Right.
And he does, Joel makes a short film there called Soundings,
which is about a deaf person whose girlfriend fantasizes about someone else
while she's making love to him.
Have you guys seen Soundings?
That is not viewable.
Never even heard of it.
Yeah. Yeah.
This was new to me reading about it.
Well, JJ just got rehired, I got to tell you.
Then Joel went to a graduate film program at the University of Texas in Austin,
and he married somebody and then got separated
soon after and left the program after just a semester.
Ethan went to Princeton and studied philosophy.
Okay, King.
Our comrade, Melissa Tuckman,
who has some affiliation with Princeton,
has put in a request for Ethan Cohen's thesis
on Wittgenstein.
So in three to four months,
we may be able to read it from the archives.
That sounds fun.
It's 45 pages.
It's the longest thing he wrote
before the Blood Simple script.
That's crazy.
Well, that's like academic writing, you know.
Yeah, there's a lot of stuff about college. I'm going to move on.
The cartridge is fired again.
Yeah, they wrote the first scripts together while still enrolled in school.
A movie they've written that was never produced was called Coast to Coast,
which was sort of a screwball comedy.
Ethan, for the plot details here, it had 28 Einsteins in it.
The red Chinese were cloning Albert Einstein.
Okay.
And then after they graduate, they moved to New York City
and they feel like this is when they actually start to get to know each other.
Like obviously three years difference when you're a kid is big.
By now they're both grown up and they become real pals
apparently and Joel works as an assistant editor for Edna Ruth Paul
Ethan works at a temp agency as a typist you were telling me Ray I think the data
entry did entry in Mises eventually maybe right and then Joel starts work on
Sam Raimi's film the Evil Dead Dead, as an assistant editor. He'd been fired from another
movie called Nightmare. And he says that Evil Dead is obviously an inspiration. A lot of stuff
in our film, like the camera running up the front lawn is Raimi inspired. Raimi's first impression
of the Coens. Edna, our editor, says, you got to read these guys' scripts. And I go, oh god,
Joel's Brothers was just a statistical count in Macy's at the time,
and I thought it was probably gonna be awful,
and then I read it, and I thought,
wow, these guys know how to write scripts.
Okay, thank you, Sam, really interesting.
Hey, I think it's interesting.
It is interesting.
What I think is interesting about thinking of that moment in time
is like Joel has successfully started getting work in the industry.
He's doing film work.
He's bottom of the totem pole editing the lowest budget horror movies, but he
is employed working on films.
And then he's got this mystery brother with this day job who they keep saying,
like they write scripts together.
Uh, who on, on their face, I think were received the way my parents received the
idea of like, who the fuck are these guys making?
a neon noir
But but Remy was one of the first to sort of like give him the shot read it
Notice that they were good. Yes
And then I think what they're getting from Remy in such a huge way is like this guy just went out and fucking that's the thing
He had finances movies by like bothering dentists
in Detroit or wherever it is the same.
Ramy did and they were like, well, we could probably do that.
Right, like can you get like 60 financiers
who each are contributing less than $10,000?
And if you can just keep knocking on doors,
you might have enough to make a movie.
Now Ramy had essentially made a short film
called Within the Woods, that was his proof of concept.
They decided to do something similar,
so over three days they shoot sort of a trailer
for Blood Simple.
They rent a camera.
Did you watch this, David?
Yes, I did.
You guys, I'm sure hipster.
Legendary.
Yeah.
It's basically...
And of course, most famously, Bruce Campbell is in it.
He's playing the M.M. at Walsh.
Analog or is he a Hedaya?
He's playing Marty.
Yeah, he's playing the Dan Hadea.
But in it, it almost seems like they have the Visser character
because the guy who's playing the guest character
has this long fur codon.
He's a cowboy.
He's much more of a cowboy.
He's got...
Kind of looks like the cowboy in Mulholland Drive.
Seriously, yeah.
You basically...
Monte Montgomery.
You basically don't see actors' faces in this.
They were like, our thing is rather than make a proof of concept short film, let's
make a trailer as if we have made the finished film.
Because correctly, they were like, no one wants to read shit.
Both people in the industry and dentists who will maybe give me a couple thousand dollars
don't want to read shit.
They said they had the script and only one guy actually read it who was urologist
And he handed them back the script and it was covered in blood. I think he invested though. He did he did invest
But he was like if you say to people like hey
Can I show you something and we showed up with a 16 millimeter projector they shot the trailer on 35
But then they like knocked it down to 16 so that it was in a format that was easy enough
to then like prop up and show people.
Super cool, because you can walk in
with a little 60 millimeter projector
that's like a little briefcase.
And we're like, this will just get people's attention.
And they would like book screening rooms in New York City
and they were like, well, we know you usually charge
by two hour blocks, how much can we get 15 minutes for?
And then just funnel people in and out
and show them this thing.
The trailer is even more Raimi than the final movie.
But they talk so much about, I mean, AI,
it's being inspired by. It's got the shovel.
It's got the bullet holes through the wall.
Right, the Raimi cam.
But I mean, it has images that are gonna be
pivotal to the feature.
You don't really see an actor's face because they hadn't cast people.
But they're, like, showing you some of the images they have in their head,
and then they're doing kind of crazier Raimi camera work.
And what's also interesting is it feels more horror than the final film.
And they talked about, like, Raimi was their model of this working,
but we also saw other people getting to make horror movies at this number.
It felt like the easiest way to get a little bit of
money was horror was seen as
a safer return on investment that didn't cost a lot.
And so they're finding this midpoint in their mind
between like, we're interested in like
Dashiell Hammett type stuff.
Can we like find the way to match that up with
horror that will trick people into giving us money?
The final image of the trailer is the moon looms up and turns red.
It's pretty cool.
The tagline, just to clarify, is Julian whatever, what's the last name?
Come on.
They might have changed his name in the trailer.
No, it is Julian Marty thought he'd hired the murder
Thought he had hired the murder of his wife when in Texas you get what you pay for
blood simple
Anyway, they
Do and son and felt obviously involved?
Raise about half a million dollars, which is pretty crazy
They say the movie eventually ended up costing about quarter three quarters of a million dollars
Back in the day to be clear It was fucking hard to fund the tiniest movie because film shit is so expensive and you can't just put things on an iPhone
Or whatever, you know, they raised the movie and money in New York as you know, the screening room thing
you were just talking about and
they wanted to make an entertaining movie.
Like this trailer is for an entertaining movie.
It's not like we're gonna make an art film.
It's like, we're gonna make a fucking thriller.
This Eggers talk, he kept asking them where it came from
and they were just truly like reverse engineered from
what feels like the easiest to get financing for,
what feels like the easiest to sell people
on actually going to see in theaters, what feels like the easiest to sell people on actually
going to see in theaters, what gives us the greatest chance of return on investment.
And they were like, our two overriding goals were make our first movie, just knock down
that door and have made a film was one.
And two was not fuck it up to a degree that we can maybe get to make a second film.
But this like isn't coming out of any burning,
like we had the most incredible idea for a story
or this is something we want to say.
It's what's so fascinating about this movie
is that they were just sort of like
trying to find the midpoint between what interested them
and what they thought would work as a calling card.
Now, I would say this film is coming out
during a neo-noir boom.
I don't know if you guys would agree with that.
They're very conscious of body heat while they're prepping this movie.
That makes sense.
Things that they thought were cheesy in body heat that they wanted to avoid.
Yeah, they didn't want like halation filters on the lenses.
They want things to look really sharp.
Right, yeah. Because body heat,
it's kind of a sweaty movie. Have you guys picked up on this with that one? on the lenses, they want things to look really sharp. Right, yeah, because Body Heat,
it's kind of a sweaty movie, have you guys picked up on this with that one?
It's kind of got this kind of like sweaty, sexy thing
going on.
Well, as a result of the Body Heat.
So hot!
And you know, the Bob Raffelson postman always rings twice
for you, which is like, to me,
the epitome of kind of a bad neo-noir, no offense to it,
where it's kind of just like,
you know that kind of like sexy noir?
What if they like fuck and we see it?
Right.
We actually fuck.
You know what? Sometimes things should be left to the imagination.
Like that's the magic of noir, right?
But there's lots of good noir and there's like
thief and then there's stuff like Blade Runner,
that is sort of Jason or whatever.
But they are like, we're not really
inspired by those kinds of movies. We're more inspired by like the literature, that those kinds of adjacent or whatever. But they are like, we're not really inspired by those kinds of movies.
We're more inspired by the literature that those kinds of movies are inspired by.
So James M. Kane is obviously the number one guy they referenced for Blood Simple.
Obviously, guys like Chandler and Hammett as well.
But Kane is the big thing,
but they're not making a whodunit like many a noir obviously has that as the driving plot thing there
Just making a double cross movie. I guess
Although in some sense there is a who done it aspect to it just because characters are so confused the characters
Definitely do not know who done pretty much anything in this movie. It's not a who done it. So what happened? Yeah, right
What the fuck is going on?
Everyone trying to make sense of what's happening around them
and then coming to the wrong conclusions
about what they think led to that?
Yeah, it's actually the exact opposite of a whodunit.
It's like, you know who did it and they don't.
But you don't understand what they did or why.
And everyone's just reacting.
So James N. King, just to be clear,
wrote The First Man I Ever Shrinked Twice.
Anyway, so they make this movie.
Oh, wow. Okay.
M. M. Walsh was in written, it was written for him,
you know, they'd seen him in straight time.
And...
He said he was, he'd gotten to a fight with his reps
shortly before this,
because he found out about some other projects
that had been offered to him
that they passed on without telling him.
So he said, any single thing that comes in for me,
you have to send it to me immediately.
I want to make the decision.
But it's one of those things where like,
the timing is perfect for this script to hit his eyes.
A month earlier, he never would have seen it.
And maybe two months later, he would have been like,
actually, you can start filtering shit again.
But it's like right at the time where he's like,
any single thing that comes in the mailbox for me,
I'm looking at.
And he just says like, why not?
Like truly, who could?
Okay.
He's like, why not?
He says they were horrible at directing actors
because they never worked with actors before.
A way he puts it that I think is really funny
is Joel would be like, why don't you look over there?
And he'd be like, why am I looking over there?
And they'd be like, just humor me.
Just fucking look over there.
You know, like, they weren't good at talking...
His response was, I'm humoring you by being in this picture.
I am, I mean, pretty much.
He insisted that they pay him in cash
because he thought the checks would bounce.
This whole damn movie is just to humor you he said
It's just funny. It's so Cohen's or whatever. It's so like for them to be like hoping you can get em at Walsh
Oh, like that's that's the coup for them totally but he's being paid in $100 bills
Most of the money you see him waving around in the movie is his salary for the movie
the money you see him waving around in the movie is his salary for the movie,
where he was just like, am taking cash because I don't think these guys are good for it unless I have it in hand.
And B, I don't want to leave the cash they're giving me in my hotel room
because I'm worried that the staff will steal it.
Saundersfeld having no filter was like you were paying him four grand a week.
So then you have to imagine by like week three, he's walking around with
12 grand in cash.
Stuff into his-
You can see the outline of like bills all over his wardrobe.
He's wearing his entire salary in every shot of this movie.
So Fran McDormand is in the film and Joel Cohen,
I don't know if you guys know that actually ends up marrying her.
They have a long relationship.
You guys aware?
Okay.
Can we double check that?
And he was looking to go to a lot of theater,
trying to find people who are interesting.
He sees Holly Hunter in a play called Crimes of the Heart
and they want Holly Hunter.
Good taste.
Yeah, very good taste.
And of course they'll end up working with her.
She's in this film too. She's on the phone. She's on the phone. You might notice her voice. Want Holly Hunter good taste. Yeah, and we're still end up working with her
She's on the phone. Yeah, you might notice her voice. She's kind of a distinctive twang
And she's like I'm doing another play. I can't do your dumb movie You know who you should look at but I am roommates with Fran. They were living in the Bronx
Make me a movie about Holly and Fran in the Bronx by the way and and Kathy Bates the third room
and Fran had barely done, by the way. And? And Kathleen Baines. The third roommate. And Fran had barely done anything.
Dan Hedea, Hedea?
Hedea, I always say Hedea.
I got it right.
Just came in and they were like, yep.
Ethan says, quote, you know it when you see it.
Joel, I don't think we could have imagined the quality
that Dan would have brought to it.
I don't know where Dan Hedea is in his career then.
I think Cheers is in 84. I think I don't know where Dan Hedea is in his career then.
Cheers is in 84.
I think 84 is a big year for Hedea.
It's all about to start happening.
Yeah, because he's in Buckaroo Banzai the same year
as Bloods of Bull, and he'd just been in the Hunger.
I mean, he's a guy who plays a lot of cops.
Hello, Jordan.
You don't have to raise your hand.
You can just interrupt us.
We just talk all the time.
We interrupt each other.
Yes.
They have said also that they wrote this character
with Martin Scorsese in mind.
Interesting.
But like, if you imagine like this,
his entire character being an extrapolation of
like Scorsese's character in Taxi Driver.
Yeah.
Hideo's my favorite performance in this movie.
I think he is extraordinary.
I mean, he's really fucking good.
I find it to be like...
I mean, M.M.M.
Walsh is awesome.
He's awesome.
It's an iconic work.
That's the...
Right.
Iconic is the thing.
But I'm like...
And no disrespect, no backhand to M.M.M.
Walsh.
I think what Hideo is doing in this is so
Fascinating I find it so deeply affecting is a performance that truly haunts me
He's on the ground and he's crawling around like I think we were we watched it like on a big screen
Ray's office and it was just like off big screen ray. All right I think Ray just turned to me and was like, what he's doing right now is so incredible.
Incredible.
Just like how wounded he is, like how pathetic he is.
At the same time, he's like an animal.
And I don't mean that in like, I mean, he's got a hairy chest.
Okay, fine.
But you know, like there's something just sort of like primal about him.
There's like taxidermied animals all over his house.
And he has a dog.
Like there is something like,
it's an association with him.
The Speedo shot or the still photo.
Yeah.
What do you mean Speedo?
He was wearing a two piece wool, black wool body suit.
He's wearing one of those old fashioned bathing suits
that covers your whole body.
Just made out of burillo pants.
Yeah.
We just did Clueless very recently on this podcast, and Amy Heckerling said her whole
thought was, I want to cast someone who would usually play a hitman as Cher's father, right?
It is like the inverse of this.
This guy seems so intense and so menacing and so criminal to have him play
like a sweetheart lawyer, but speaking with that level of gruffness and intensity to his
daughter will be very funny. Hideo just looks intense when he shows up, right? It's not
just his physical appearance, but also like his energy, literally his eyes and everything.
Cheers this same year, he's just like coming even. Ah, Carla, come on! Like, yelling everything.
Speaking of criminal, his performance in Dick, as Richard Nixon, criminally overlooked.
Yeah, I was gonna say, I hope you weren't accusing him of being a criminal,
because he tells you that he is not a crook, in fact, in that movie.
Re-watching it this time, I had this specific thought of what is interesting about Hedea,
both the character as written and his performance,
is that it's sort of an anti-Sydney Greenstreet, right? Where it's like, here is the guy in the
prime position of power within the structure of this movie. This is a very small movie with a very
tight cast, and the most capital anyone has is owning this bar and also having someone legally
tied to them in marriage, right? And yet from the beginning, this guy has no effect on everyone around him.
It's true.
He holds the power.
He does undeniably.
And yet everyone's like, shut up.
Fuck you.
Fuck off.
Right?
Like no one respects him.
No one takes him seriously.
And also he like like, the failed attempt
to pick up the woman at the bar.
Sure. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Everything he does kind of fails.
It fails, right.
It's like, here's a guy who actually,
it's not that he's Sidney Greenstreet in his mind,
it's that he is technically occupying that role.
And yet he is so uncomfortable in his own skin.
He is so self-loathing. He is so self-loathing.
He is so sensitive, really, right?
Like everything like hits him.
That he cannot like sell the confidence
of his actual position in a way
that makes other people allergic to him.
Like people are grossed out by him.
That scene is a lot longer in the shooting script.
And he like, he's like,
hey, do you want to go see the Oilers and the Rams at the Astrodome with me? And like Maurice comes by And he's like, hey, do you wanna go see the Oilers
and the Rams at the Astrodome with me?
And Maurice comes by and he's like, just give me the usual
and Maurice brings him a glass of milk.
And he's like, no, come on.
And then Maurice goes to pour out the glass of milk
in the sink.
He's like, no, pour it back in the bottle.
It's just an extended, such a loser.
It's almost like a Mikey and Nicky kind of scene.
What's also that he clearly goes like,
I know how a guy like me is supposed to act.
He walks into the bar and then just goes up to a woman
and basically says like, you're fucking me now.
And he cannot sell it.
And she just goes like, no thank you.
And he takes a second stab at it where he's like,
I don't think you understood what I was saying.
And she's like, yeah, I'm not interested.
And you can see him short-circuiting
that he doesn't know how to handle this,
and yet this is probably every fucking night of his life,
right?
Like this kind of archetype of the gangster
with the wife who hates him,
who he finds out is having an affair
and sends him into a spiral of jealousy
where there is always the like,
yeah, but this guy's fucking everybody.
He's not angry that his wife is disloyal to him
because he believes in the sanctity of marriage.
He's just jealous in a way that he can't control.
And this guy's even more pathetic where it's like,
he wishes he was fucking other people
and he can't pull it off.
So part of it is just like, I'm jealous and possessive
and also I can't make anyone else fall for me. I tricked this one woman.
Right. He's the most small time version of right. Like, yeah, he tricked one woman. Yes.
So then M.M.Walsh says that when he got the script, he was like, Oh, is this my chance to do a Sydney Greenstreet thing? Right.
I mean, so he reads the character as like, well, I'm in sort of like middle-aged, I'm like probably going to transition the latest start.
Like I need to start thinking about who I want to be on screen
in my 60s and 70s.
Is this a chance to sort of do this?
And it's the opposite where it's like,
can you like have a guy who on the outside seems like
Buffalo Bob from like the Howdy Doody show?
Is dressed like the man in the yellow hat, right?
But like inside he secretly is this kind of like menacing, heavy.
And so you have these two guys circling each other who both have this disconnect
between how they read to other people and their actual power within their lives.
And Hadea is just like so sad.
It is such a sustained, like, angry sad coil energy.
Yeah, it is yeah, yeah.
It is my favorite moment in this entire film
is just him having to walk past the like,
lovers rock lineup of teenagers, all laughing at him.
Incredible.
With his finger in like the little sling, yeah.
And they notice it and they bully him.
Right, and you're just like,
there's so much in the inherent dynamics of like why is
I'm Emmett Walsh asking this guy
Who's about to hire him to do a hit to meet him at like the teen makeout point?
And I'm at Walsh with his Beatles somehow is like able to at least get these kids to humor him this woman's like this young
girl's talking him for 30 seconds and
Like the second day in Hadea enters the space everyone's like what's girl's talking to him for 30 seconds. And like the second Dan Hedea enters the space, everyone's like,
what's your, shut the fuck up.
Fuck you.
Uh, he's a bit off putting as much as I love Dan Hedea, the actor,
if I met this character, I might not want to hang out with him.
But it's, it's the, like, it's the, the anger and the sadness and the fact that
he's not able to even like cover it up with bluster.
He is uncomfortable because you're just like,
Jesus Christ, this guy's an open wound.
And it's all ugly.
We haven't mentioned John Getz yet.
What do we think of John Getz?
I know, but we haven't really...
This is one of his earliest performances, obviously,
and he does not go on to fame in the same way as everyone else,
but he's a pretty reliable working actor.
We talked about him on social network even,
where it's like he's become a pretty reliable older guy.
He's always great, yeah, but it is funny
because he's, right, he is ostensibly the lead of this movie.
And yet it-
Yes, sort of, although it sort of is a cipher.
I think his highest points are like post burburying Marty the morning, that look on his face,
like, oh my God, I've just buried someone alive.
I think he's very, very good at conveying that feeling.
But I feel like if you look at Roland in No Country for Old Men, you just see like, okay,
what is this like this like masculine guy,
but with some charisma,
with some like Burt Reynolds charisma added to it?
They are obviously, they have the benefit
of starting with Cormac McCarthy book on No Country,
but it's why I kept thinking about that movie
while watching this one is like,
by that point 20 years later,
they know how to make the guy at the center interesting.
Even when it is this kind of blank slate,
hack turn, like, right.
Yeah, because I didn't notice until the rewatch for this
that like that first scene is them telling each other
that they have an attraction.
Like, that's the beginning of their relationship
is the first scene. That's the first time they hook up
when he takes a photograph of them.
And I don't feel like you feel that through the,
like the way they're behaving towards each other.
And it's important for the setup of the movie
to know that they are tentative around each other.
So it's like, yeah.
He just inherently doesn't have leading man energy.
And I don't say that in a negative way.
There are movies I think of like one from the heart
where like Casting Frederick Forrest is like a disaster, because you're like, he needs
to be in the Harry Dean Stanton role and this guy trying to play leading man is
like throwing the entire movie off its axis. And like Getz is not like that at
all. It feels probably like they wanted that out of him where it's like, part of
the intrigue for them is placing just some guy in the middle of a movie like this,
who is not carrying himself like a noir leading man.
The part of it is that this is the one guy who like halfway through is like,
what the fuck have I gotten myself into?
I don't want to be in this film.
But they also said like a big thing about this movie that makes it such a miracle,
and the way you were saying David, of of where the fuck did these guys come from,
how is this not their 15th film,
is that they basically establish their key crew
all from film one, right?
Like they have Skip Leavesay, and they have Sonnenfeld,
and they have Carter Burwell,
and they have Francis McDormand.
A wonderful score, perfect Carter Burwell,
minimalist theme, like that you can't shake.
It's so melodic.
They find so much of the team, like, right there from the beginning.
And Skip Leavesay, who's their, like, incredible sound artist,
and works on every one of their films.
And who has a pretty cool name, let's just say.
Phenomenal name.
He is maybe the most established of everyone they're working with.
He brings in Carter Burwell.
Right. He knows Carter Burwell. Right. Yeah.
He knows Carter Burwell just as like a music friend.
Is this half music, half animation?
Right. Right.
Is it like everyone's coming aboard and the more people that get at it are kind of like,
oh, these guys seem to know what they're doing.
Hey, come aboard, Ray, no.
Everyone's like surprised, it turns out, as well as.
Yeah. OK. Everyone is kind of like, all right, maybe this is just a dumb lark that we're doing.
Because Leafsay is working on big movies in lower positions,
but he actually has some stature as a sound guy,
if not being the lead sound guy.
He's got a resume.
Right, he had a little more of a,
I thought the script was interesting,
it's worth taking a chance on these guys.
I think the Carter Burwell thing is this guy's smart's smart, maybe I can like throw him a bone.
I think they might get along well.
Carter Burwell was doing animation
and he was in this band called Thick Pigeon.
I went and listened to the Thick Pigeon album
that he recorded in the middle of doing this score.
Thick Pigeon.
Just like with like guys from New Order
and just really like an experimental.
He said he just wrote all of the melodies off of watching 20 minutes of the film.
And basically they tried to hire, I think, three other people first.
And then they came back to him.
Yeah.
I mean, he showed up with that melody.
I can't imagine, you know, like, it's interesting though, because the music he
made is like, like what I listened to was a lot more like monotonous and intentionally
atonal than his film scoring work, which is really very appealing, like so melodic.
They did this sort of like bake-off audition thing, right?
They asked him to come in with some stuff.
He came in with like 10 different pieces.
The melodic piano thing was one of them.
But there was more electronic stuff and more conventional thriller score stuff.
And they were like, we like that.
Can we work on that more?
And he gave them a bunch of stuff.
He was just like, there was an attritional spotting section.
I was like watching a cut and they were sort of like, I guess that's 60 seconds we need
there.
I gave them a bunch of stuff and they re-edited it and placed the music in different places
than I had intended.
And he was like, I was angry at them.
I was too inexperienced to actually get upset about it.
But if that had happened to me on a studio film,
I probably would have made a bigger stink
in a way that would have killed my entire career.
Versus like trusting them long enough to see
that it ultimately worked out in everyone's favor.
But it feels like everyone's relationship to them
was like that.
And Mehmet Walsh was like,
I don't know what these fucking guys are doing.
But the thing Skip Leavesay said was like,
reading the script, it was so sparse,
it was like so tight, there was like no emotion
in it whatsoever in the way the characters are written.
And he's like, any sort of emotional nuance
in that film is what the actors brought to it.
Like there was kind of nothing on paper for Fran's character,
and she came in and filled all the stuff.
And it feels like it teaches them this lesson of, like,
A, we got to give actors room to work
and, like, fill in those gaps.
That strikes me as a thing that so much,
so many young directors have to figure out
how to actually work with actors.
And then, so they're seeing, like, oh, my God,
she's finding stuff where we didn't give it to her.
And then they said about John Getz,
they were like, we watched the movie now,
and they're like, wow, we were doing him no favors.
We gave him nothing to play.
The character is basically just an audience
who are getting a thriller,
which means he needs to be behind the eight ball.
He has no idea what's going on.
The whole movie is watching him walk into room silently
and trying to figure stuff out.
And they were like, we think he's really good.
And as time goes on, we're more and more grateful
for the favor he gave us of like doing that well
in a way that informed us that we need to actually
give actors more playable things from now, here on out.
He also has a really big challenge
in like the last third of the movie
because they set up this idea that
Yuri says to Abby
Stay away from Ray. He's gone crazy
And so it's a challenge for the actor because he's got to seem completely bewildered trying to reach out to her trying to
Protect her from like whatever sort of like unclear threat there is but also he has to play it in a way where he's giving
her the like crazy hooks to grab onto where she can misread one of his signals and be like, oh,
actually he might be the person who wants to kill me. So like that's tough. That's, that's,
I would imagine that that's really hard. And I think what he does very smartly is rather
than playing like a movie version of crazy, he is playing the sort of slow burn shock
of having killed a guy and watching a guy die, right? Like there's some sort of like
delayed trauma bomb happening within him that is just making him seem a little unhinged.
And the big thing he's playing is, you know, Marty early on goes like, at a certain point,
she's going to say to you like, I'm not doing anything funny. And it's like, when she says
that to him, that's the moment that he stops trusting her.
They lose faith in each other, basically.
But I mean, our beloved producer, Ben Hosley,
always talks about, it was not on mic as much
in this episode because we had to-
We don't have enough microphones.
Adjust the microphone over to Jordan.
But Ben, you love to talk about the bag full of money movie
that makes you think, if I were in this,
I'd do everything right and I'd end up owning an island, right?
Right, so you hire an assassin in this movie.
Like, I would hire a good assassin who would do his job
and then we would shake hands and part ways.
I mean, I wouldn't hire this guy.
You don't want to hire me? I can't do it either.
You don't want to hire, like, Porky?
As soon as I saw, like, four flies on his face,
I'd be like, no, thank you.
The movies that I feel like you often point to...
often point to and say, I would know how to do this better,
are the things like A Simple Plan,
where like a very kind of like all-American button-down
milquetoast guy starts, like, his moral slip away.
He starts losing perspective and judgment, getting caught up in his own, like,
how do I maintain this? How do I hold on to this?
Now you're killing more people and all this sort of shit, right?
And you're like, I would just be normal.
Cool as a cucumber.
John Getz in this feels like the opposite, where you're, like, so used to the movies like this
making people get into this, like, Walter White-esque like morass of evil to hold on to what they have.
And instead this guy the more things get bad around him the more he's just like, oh fuck
I hate this.
I hate being here.
Right?
Like he's fucked up too deeply to ever fix it,
but he's not doubling down on it
and making it worse in a certain way.
Obviously he kills Dan Hedea, right?
But like the last 20 minutes, he's just sort of like,
I don't know what the fuck to do anymore.
Why does Visser do what he did, do what he do?
Because Dan Hedeay insulted him.
Yeah, because Dan Heday is just a pain in the ass.
Yeah.
Because I mean, like, it's just a lot of trouble in the 80s to be photoshopping, is all I'm
saying.
Yeah, he has to do that by hand.
Like, manual photoshop, like drawing little blood stains on people.
He might have even used his own blood.
That's, yeah, maybe he did.
Drip, drip.
Because like, this is a movie where nobody's like,
hey, this is why I'm doing this, by the way.
Not that I need anyone to do that.
I don't want that.
I don't want some monologue, villainous monologue
or whatever.
And the first time I saw it,
I remember being confused when Geth shows up again,
where I was like, I thought they were dead.
Right.
Where I fell for his photo.
Yeah, you fell for his thing, right.
Yeah.
Ben, before you hand the mic back,
I forgot to ask you, your Coen Brothers thing. Yeah. Where's all for his thing, right? Yeah. Ben, before you hand the mic back, I forgot to ask you,
you're your Coen Brothers thing.
Yeah.
Yeah, we're your first Coen Brothers guys.
They are filmmakers my dad really loved.
That checks out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like Fargo was a favorite of his.
Look, all of us being like 80s, 90s kids,
it checks out that we all have the same story,
which is my parents told me these guys were important.
Absolutely. The Coens were one of those filmmakers
that they did talk about.
Because also they're like, quote-unquote serious movies
that are entertaining and funny.
Like, as much as they were seen as like,
these guys are high artists and this is like highfalutin shit.
On the other hand, it's like, it's silly and it's exciting.
Hit pause on whatever you're listening to and hit play on your next adventure. and shit. So you said this would be the summer of you. But then you remembered? You have kids, and now you spend every sunny day at water parks and petting zoos. So be it.
We do the prep, so you can get your you time back
with freshly prepared, ready-for-you dishes from Sobeys.
[♪ music playing, sound effects fade out.
Here's the basic plot overview of this movie.
Because it's not like it's told out of order,
it's not like a Mento-style obfuscation,
but they just withhold certain information
from you at certain times.
As much as it is like following
into the basic thriller playbook of like,
the audience needs to be a step ahead of the character,
so the tension comes from us knowing the thing
that they don't know and being worried
about how it's gonna go down.
This movie does withhold key bits of information
from the audience as well, so it takes a while
to figure out even what has gone wrong.
But John Getz is having an affair with Francis McDormand,
who is married to Dan Hedea, who is a pathetic man
who owns a bar.
She wants to leave him for her.
He is hired a private eye who has found photos of them sleeping together.
In a fit of rage, I think spurred on even more by the fact that he cannot fuck anyone else.
That he's... Let's say the man is Riz-less.
There is an astonishing
lack of Riz in this guy. Decides to put a hit out on
the two of them to get his ultimate revenge.
He makes this mistake of sort of lightly mocking M.M.Walsh who tries to present himself as almost
like the Andy Griffith show version of a private eye assassin, right? Like he's couching everything in this sort of folksy cuteness.
So when Hedea takes a swipe at him, you assume,
is this guy so kind of oblivious and good nature
that it's just bouncing right off of him.
Instead, he breaks into their home, takes a photo of them sleeping,
and manually, basically hand-tint, tilt, tints it?
He Photoshopped it in the literal original meaning of the herbs.
Yes.
To make it look like he has murdered them in bed, that there are blood shots on the
sheets.
Which then, his plan is to then just rob Hedaya, take all his money, which he knows the location
of when he goes to get paid.
He also steals Abby's gun,
which is basically a frame.
He's doing that to frame her,
and that'll tie it all up, essentially.
It's like, this was a lover's quarrel.
That's what happened here.
But when you're asking why he does it,
it's like the ego is bruised.
He has the line later where he repeats the thing
that Hedea said to him about, like,
looking dumb or something like that.
He says, now it looks stupid, which I...
I've watched the movie a few times.
I don't think that Hedaya ever actually calls him dumb.
Hedaya never calls him dumb. No.
No, Visser is the one who says,
you look like an idiot or you're...
I think you're an idiot.
But my read on it is he just thinks
that Marty is not trustworthy,
that this is not a good guy to keep a secret with.
And so it's actually cleaner to take the money from him,
frame the lovers, and leave.
And then it's a totally tied up.
But also, Hedea...
And they have no idea who he is.
Like, whereas Sadea knows him.
Hedea in that car scene isn't, like,
flat out insulting him,
but he is doing snarky under his breath-trit.
And he's giving him an attitude that is clearly,
I think you're dumb and I'm smart.
He's treating him like shit.
I mean, he, like...
That's the thing. When he gives him the money,
he pushes across the table with his boot.
You know?
And he's like, don't come for me.
But it's also, it's the no country, it's the Fargo thing.
It's the like, all this for a little money
that they're obsessed with, which is like,
the promise of such a small amount of money
can make people lose their fucking minds.
Where you're just like, this is absolutely not worth it.
The other thing too is, I don't think this is the point where Visser fully decides to
do it, but it might be the moment that makes him cross the threshold is when Hedaya says,
I put a call in and the less you need to know about it, the better. And at that point, if I'm putting myself in the detective's mind, I'm thinking, oh, he's
involved with the mob.
He got funding from somebody who now understands the workings of this situation, which is,
which is funny too, because what he actually did is he put in a call to Muris being like,
you stole the money from the safe.
Right. It's, yeah, it's one of those things where,
watching it the first time, you think,
is there a bigger conspiracy going on here
that's slowly gonna get unfurled?
And instead, you realize this guy just made too big of a play.
Right? Was just sort of like, I don't trust this dude,
and I guess I could make five times as much money
if I just kill him, and I think my plan is foolproof
and no one will see through it.
Don't hire a hitman.
Yeah.
Because like, you know, they kill people.
They do.
So they could kill you.
This is an interesting take, David.
You know what I mean?
Well, no, it's not.
Like, they're already comfortable killing people
for no particular reason.
This is very similar to the beat in No Country 2,
where they go out to visit the scene of the firefight,
and Sugar just shoots those two guys that have hired him,
and you're like, why?
Why is this movie about this hitman suddenly about a hitman
who's going total chaos mode?
And I always forget that he kills those two guys.
Although, the interesting thing about Visser
is he doesn't really come off as that psychopathic.
Like, when you realize that he didn't actually kill them and he, and he,
uh, did this fake frame job photos, it sort of feels like, Oh, this is a guy who
will choose the sort of more weasely fake out path as opposed to like actually
just pick up a gun and shoot somebody.
But then he immediately picks up a gun and shoots Marty.
Right. And the other big mistake he makes is thinking that he's dead, right?
Which is another thing that Cohen said was like a big animating idea for them in this movie.
And I think it comes a lot out of Joel editing horror films, watching what Raimi's doing,
seeing that like grow as its own sort of cottage industry of the 80s horror films, watching what Ramy's doing, seeing that grow as its own cottage industry
of the 80s horror films and whatever
in the early part of the decade,
was he was like, all these movies presented,
killing people is one move and it's done.
And obviously, sometimes you shoot someone
point blank in the head and they fall down and it's over.
But even some of the trailers and marketing materials
for this movie use the tagline of like,
death takes a lot longer than you'd think,
or something like that.
That that was their big set piece idea,
was like, can you have a guy who thinks that he's closed off
the loose end and killed a guy,
but in reality, it's 15 minutes of the movie
that we're going to have to silently play out with like,
fuck, this is taking longer than I thought. I think there's some versions of the movie that are gonna have to silently play out with like fuck This is taking longer than I thought I think there's some versions of this movie that have an
Opening title card that talks about like a quote from like Hemingway or something about like how hard it is to kill somebody
Actually easy shoot him right in the head bang
Which I'm sure you guys know this but the opening
amendment Walsh
Narration which I butchered, was not in the script. They had him having the
final line at the end of the movie, they put it together and
they were like, feels like it kind of needs something at the
beginning. And he was like, we just wrote that we just came up
with something, we brought him in to do ADR, handed him two
pages of paper, he read it cold one time.
And I think part of it was that like, they don't tend to make movies with conventional
narrative structures where you're following one character the entire time.
They're so into ensembles, and they're so into sort of the arc of the movie is the incident,
rather than you following one character through incidents.
It's like, how does this incident progress
and affect everyone around it?
And Carter Burwell, when he lands on this piano melody,
they go, oh fuck.
All these scenes of characters in silence,
and we have this movie that already has these open spaces
and people looking and listening and considering,
if we're playing the same theme across all these characters,
it does start to bring them together. It like unifies them in a mood and a feeling. And
I think they have the same thought of like, if we put Emmett Walsh saying something at
the beginning, what it is almost irrelevant, it starts to bookend it and frame it a little
bit more as this guy's worldview. Roger Eber, when this film came out, not to put Hosley on blast again, but this is I think
what is the most potent idea in this movie.
He said, a lot has been written about the visual style of Blood Simple, but I think
the appeal of this movie is more elementary.
It keys into three common nightmares.
One, you clean and clean, but there's still blood all over the place.
Right.
A Shakespearean nightmare.
Two, you know you have committed a murder,
but you're still not sure quite how or why.
That is really true.
That's great.
Right, that you're like, I think he's dead,
and I think someone did it,
but I don't know where the body is or what happened.
Classic Ebert observation.
And three, you know you have forgotten a small detail
that will eventually get you into a lot of trouble.
You're obsessively overthinking, like, but did this, you know, yes.
The lighter, yeah. I mean, the viscer leaving is lighter.
It's like...
Now, Ebert saying those are the three common universal nightmares seems to imply that we
all think about killing people all the time.
Oh, gosh.
But what I actually think he's saying in a hosly way is that we all watch movies like
this and
Start to think could we pull it off and it's just about deceit, right? Even if it's not murder, right? We're right. That's the only good version of it. Could I weave a web of lies?
Could I get away with something? Can I end up with an island?
And what would happen and how would I do it and where would it start to go wrong?
Postmodern riff of this movie is like, okay, this is how it actually would go down.
Everything would just kind of be sloppy and meaningless.
Because like in a Coen Brothers movie like Blood Simple,
you should, you could watch this and be like,
well, all of these characters
are essentially kind of worthless.
It's not like these are lovable characters.
So what do I care what happens to them?
Let them all, you know, shoot each other.
And instead you're like with them.
You're not exactly rooting for characters always,
but like you're kind of just like you're in that experience
that you're talking about of like,
huh, what would I do?
And huh, like what would happen next if I, you know,
whatever like it's a movie designed
knowing that audiences watch these types of movies that way.
And when they're skipping over information, it's taking advantage of the fact where it's
like placing you in his head space of, I don't know why I just killed a guy.
You know, you have, get to walk into the office, see Hedaya there, step on a gun.
Think mistakenly that he's the one who just shot him when in fact he has been lying
there bleeding out in a chair.
And it's just like everything spirals off of that.
I think just one thing that I would just want to say about like the,
like all the performances in the movie is that...
I think something that's generous about the movie and possibly like,
related to the fact that it was their first movie where they wanted to give...
kind of juicy roles to everybody is,
I really do think that there's moments in this movie where every every character
feels like they're the main character like more more so than I think any of
the Coen's other movies although I do think that is kind of a thing that
carries through for most of their career Fargo kind of has three leads and sort of three,
like, right, like it's like you could argue,
well, McDormand's the lead.
Yeah, sure, but she's not in a lot of the movie
and she kind of shows up late.
You could argue the same with No Country.
Well, Macy's the lead.
You can argue the same with
Banish the Reading. Well, Macy vanished
from the movie. It's the braid.
They love the braid.
You can also argue
three stranded braids. Three lines, yeah.
Well, actually, Buscemi's the lead.
Like, Buscemi's actually maybe in more of the movie
than you think he is or whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
I would just say though that Marty coming back
for an extremely extended dream sequence
where he has this strange, almost touching heart to heart,
like menacing slash touching heart to heart,
that feels like a little bit like,
why are you bringing this character back? You know, it's like...
The shot of the blood, like out of a bucket,
like hitting the floor is so good.
It's hitting every part.
It is actually, yeah, you're right about that though.
That like, woof, rattle speed.
It's giving one extra crazy horror thriller moment
that the movie maybe needed.
Yeah, it's a good pop for the movie energy-wise,
and it's a good reminder of the thing you're talking about,
the sort of the guilty frenzy that builds up.
Yes.
Yes. Yes, Griffin.
No, I just, I, yeah, I saw that Ebert review
and it hit me very hard where I'm like,
I do think that is...
He's fucking good at boiling something down like that.
But also, the admitting, we all think about this, right?
Like, part of the buy-in of this movie
isn't that we all sit around plotting murder, but we all like Ben
Read a noir novel or watch a movie or whatever and think about how you would handle it
And this is like a movie in which the people inside of it are trying to act like people in a movie and they can't get it
Right. They're sort of like I know my role in this story and I just have to do this and it will all work out.
There's also just a doomed, it's like once you have the affair,
it's like once you start a relationship
where you threw someone else under the bus
at the beginning of the relationship,
like they're never gonna trust each other.
And that's the thing, like when he comes to see Marty,
he's like, one day she's gonna say,
I'm not doing anything funny.
And then when she has the dream,
you know, they're saying, I love you.
And he's like, you like, you're just saying it
cause you're scared.
And that's what Ray says to her at the end.
It's just, their relationship is haunted
in a kind of final destination way from the beginning.
They like, they did, they touched the monkey paw.
They're doing-
Hideo is totally in their heads.
Yeah.
He's gotten into both of their heads.
He's in my head too.
And my heart.
Okay. So what else do we discover before
the iconic famous ending of this film which I feel like is the most famous
part of the movie? I think the two most famous parts of the tour de force
performance is that there's the 20 minute burial scene. The burial scene.
And I feel like those are the standout.
There's no dialogue other than the radio.
Yes.
There's like 15 continuous minutes that play out
without any of the primary character speaking.
Yeah.
That is just kind of process.
And that's what, when you watch this movie,
you're like, yes, this is a Coen Brothers movie.
It's about people on the edge and sort of idiot criminality
spiraling out of control.
But at the same time,
we're like, it barely has any dialogue.
Like it doesn't have that kind of,
the flourishes we associate with them later in their career.
And it's not funny.
It basically only has five characters.
The only guy we haven't mentioned is Sam Art Williams,
who plays Maurice and I think is incredibly good in this.
He's great.
And is kind of the one neutral party in this movie.
I was gonna say, you keep wondering
whether he's gonna break in a direction and he kind of doesn't. Almost every scene of his in the one neutral party in this movie. I was going to say, you keep wondering whether he's going to break in a direction he kind of doesn't.
Almost every scene of his in the script is cut in half,
and the movie ends with an action sequence where he fights the dog.
That's how it's written?
Yeah, he fights the dog in the room with the beige billiard table,
and he fights it with a cue.
That's fascinating.
Because it feels like in the final product,
his function is to remind you,
like, these people are all caught up in some shit
that is kind of in their heads, right?
It's like a weird combination of like anger
and like lust and jealousy and paranoia
that's animating all of them.
And he's just like a guy clocking in and clocking out
and doing his job.
Yeah, he's like, he's the unin a guy clocking in and clocking out and doing his job.
Yeah, he's like, he's the uninvolved.
These characters exist in a real world.
Like this world is not inherently evil.
They're making decisions.
This movie is not funny.
Now I'm not saying it doesn't have funny moments
and there is that dark, dark black humor
of the Coens like there.
But like, again, you don't watch this movie
and see Raising Arizona coming.
No, it's a wild swing.
Right.
And you don't see, but like Fargo is an interesting contrast
to this movie in that it is so funny.
It has a luminously heroic character in the middle of it.
Like pure good.
Right.
Right.
And like nonetheless has so much, you know, what common DNA.
It's just like the arc of their career is interesting to think about.
And it is interesting to think of them watching this movie and being like, oh, boy,
like, you know, because it's like Stanley Kubrick made Fear and Desire.
And you're like, nice try, Stanley, like, maybe take another cut, you know, right.
Whereas the Coen brothers are treating this like their fear and desire, where they're like,
this is so amateurish, like that's crazy.
Please Jordan.
Well, the only thing I would add is that
like the Coens have different modes that they're in
and you see it throughout their career.
So like there's definitely movies like Fargo
where dialogue and character interactions
and funny voices is like a big part of the meal
that they're serving up.
But then if you watch No Country, which is probably in the long run,
the movie they're gonna be most remembered for.
It's a great question.
Is very little dialogue.
Obviously there are memorable dialogue scenes,
but huge stretches of that movie
is just like a guy putting gear together
in order to trick somebody else
or do like cat and mouse stuff in a hotel room.
And like.
Yeah, and the script that I mean, to the YC is nothing but that opening stuff from No Country or the 20
minute silent sequences where you're just watching almost like dialogue scenes that are happening
silently between objects and a person's face, watching them build one version of a thing.
Which I think they are better at than any other filmmakers alive.
Yeah, and you can read it in the script. It's like that whole scene where he's cleaning up
the murder scene, it's all like, you know,
he tries the windbreaker and it says,
this isn't gonna work.
And then it's like, he adds the towel.
It's like, this is gonna work.
It's all like, step forward, step backwards.
It's very trackable.
Silent conversations with objects
is a great way of putting it,
where I'm like, no country is one of the best
like shot reverse shot between human face and inanimate thing movies
I have ever seen, where you understand exactly
what they're thinking and what they're looking to do.
But I remember Wes Anderson always talks about
on Bottle Rocket how he would lose certain arguments,
not even arguments, but like producer, line producer,
first aid, whoever comes along, go like,
Wes, we're running behind schedule, we have to move on.
Or we don't have time to prep this,
we just need to shoot this,
rather than holding up and waiting for the wall
to be finished, you know, painted the right color
or whatever it is.
And he's like, I watched that movie
and it drives me crazy and it causes me physical pain.
That all I see are the things that I like conceded
at the final moment as good enough.
And he's like, it makes me so physically,
viscerally uncomfortable that I made this commitment
to myself from that movie of just like,
I am never letting something film
until it's ready ever again.
Like I do not want to have a single second,
any of my movies that irritates me in this way,
where I feel like I didn't get what I wanted
versus owning the mistakes of misjudgment,
but executing it in the way you had it in your head.
And I think Blood Simple's like a little similar for them,
where they just look at it and they were like,
from this moment on, we were just never gonna let anyone
make us move on.
But on the other hand, like, something that they talk about
in their sort of like, let's say contemporary or like,
when they hit their stride, is that part of the process is,
as much as the movie is storyboarded to all hell,
and like, you know, every single moment is storyboarded,
that's now what the actors are looking at.
So when the actors get to set, they block the scenes and like the way
Deacon's describe it is describes it is, and yet somehow the blocking ends
up being exactly like the storyboards.
Right.
But I will say maybe that's something they learned from this where they're
like, the, the performances feel too chopped up or it's, or it's chopped up, or it's like it's not giving the actors room to breathe.
I don't know if you guys found this, but that the storyboard artists they hired kept drawing
the Frances McDormand character naked, so she kept asking to see the storyboards.
And they were like, uh, we just really go off of whatever you want, because they were so embarrassed.
Obviously, they start dating like right after this.
But the last shot of this movie
with Emma Walsh's POV of the dripping of the faucet, right?
You notice if you watch it closely
that they have to replay the shot backwards.
Joel refers to it as rock and rolling that frame.
He said we had to rock and roll that frame.
They just didn't get a long enough shot of it.
They basically just make the drip go to the left and then to the right and to left to
right and then it drops.
And they do the same thing when he shoots Hadea, actually.
They do an optical to make him just totally freeze for a second longer.
Yeah.
But there's stuff like that where I wonder if that came out of necessity.
Oh yeah.
Like we don't have the piece we need in the edits
or how do we like fudge it to make it work?
It's hard to direct a drip from a pipe.
Totally, but that probably drives them insane now.
Versus like today they would just be like,
we spent three months figuring out how to film the drip
before we got to set.
And there's lots of stuff like that in Barton Fink with drains and drips.
Yes. I mean, in the famous drain shot that Robert Deakins makes fun of him for,
which we talk about on that episode.
Oh, as this series goes on, you got to check out the Deakins website.
Every single film, he publishes his lighting plans,
and you can really, really understand what he's doing.
I know this is not a Deakins film, but as the show goes on,
you got to get into the department heads,
Jane Muskie, Dennis Gassner,
Jess Gonshor, just like the transition from
their production designers, their DPs.
It's so trackable with their movies because
they'll go through phases with a production designer,
or they'll go through phases with a DP.
But yeah, gets so excited for the Deacon stuff. It is crazy that they
only made three films with Sonnenfeld because it feels so impactful that these
three guys like all started together and then Sonnenfeld obviously figures out
how to take the style he develops with them and puts it on to like the biggest
studio comedies imaginable and then they sort of transmute it into something new
with Deakins and the other DPs they work with later.
But like Sonnenfeld is such a designer,
but I don't feel like his style with the Coens
is ever quite as immaculate in the blockbusters.
I mean, I guess he's still,
he's got a lot of the rushing camera stuff.
But also the big wide angle lens.
Yeah. And really good sense.
He had a lot more money to throw around, too, for most of his movies, too.
Was there a lot of money in Men in Black?
Was that... Well, well, West, that was an indie, right?
That one they made in his backyard.
The notorious thing about Sonnenfeld is on his studio movies,
his direction is always slower, flatter.
Are you serious?
Yeah, because it's like this thing that they developed with the Coens of like,
can you develop this visual style where if you have a compelling actor in the middle of the frame,
the least they're doing on this wide of a lens will end up amplifying.
Like, the Adams family has Raoul Julia and Christopher Lloyd in a like,
not slower or flatter competition almost, right? You know what I mean?
I guess Men in Black is like the height of that for him
where it's like telling Tommy Lee Jones to do nothing.
Which is awesome.
And warps in Tommy Lee Jones is what the hell is happening
to me and then he sees the movie and he's like,
oh, I get it.
Yeah. Yeah.
Although Tommy Lee Jones is the Gene Hackman style actor
where he's like, yeah, I hated making the movie
and thought the guy was an idiot.
Then I watched it and I was like, oh, that's pretty good.
Well, I think they had this,
they like developed the style together where no matter how thought the guy was an idiot. Then I watched it and I was like, oh, that's pretty good. Well, I think they had this, they like developed this style together
where no matter how seriously the thing was being played at the center,
things feel a little funny and off.
There is like some innate black humor just to the actual lensing of these movies
that then Sonnenfeld carries over onto movies that are more explicitly funny, which then makes it less funny as his career goes on.
Like when you watch fucking Nine Lives,
and it's a Kevin Spacey talking cat movie
that's shot like this.
Normal movie, I bet.
Right, now you're like,
well, we're just in like, Bug Nuts world.
Right.
Yeah, the ending is rocks, and it is funny.
It's so, so intense in the theater.
I've seen this movie in a theater,
like you are like truly, truly gripping your seat.
And then him laughing, being like,
oh, he didn't even know who you were fucking shooting.
Like, Rox.
It's meaningless.
And also, Emmett Walsh cracking up as he's dying.
Like, it's just a great character detail.
Like early on when Hadea, Marty says,
like I know what rock to turn over to find you.
He loses it and he says, that's very good.
Yeah, what rock to turn over, good one.
And then blow out the mic on that.
It sounds like he's blowing it.
He's blowing it a lot.
And then at the end when she says, I'm not afraid of you, Marty.
He like, he has to get that last line in where he says, uh, what does he say?
Like ma'am, I'll be sure to tell him if I see him.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which is great.
The image of she has pinned his gloved hand with the knife, right?
That has crossed over into her room on the windowsill.
All other parts of his body are still outside of her view
on the other side.
She's like, where are this guy here
just by his bloody pinned writhing hand?
And then he's shooting through the wall
and this weird like, here's a physical reminder
of the guy who you're fighting with
only through one anonymous appendage and then
the sense of danger that is leaking through on the other side in this weird cackling laugh.
Yeah, and just as showmanship, it really does end with a sequence that feels like Terminator
or Halloween.
It has that great final girl feeling.
And also just the ending is someone who's wounded, who can't see you, who's shooting
at you. It's so hard for her to know,
should I go to the left or should I go to the right?
You can shoot in any direction through one of those walls.
Yeah, and what's so great about the visual is that they
put individual lights on each bullet hole,
pointing in different directions.
It looks like basically the light is the trail of where the bullet went,
which makes no sense based off of how light works,
but it's a perfect kind of Looney Tunes, like just escalation.
It's like swords going into like a magician's trunk.
And that will carry over to raising Arizona.
Like that energy does recur.
Oh, hey Ben.
Ben's leaning in. You're just deep in thought?
Ben's kind of doing a neighbor and home improvement thing over his brother right now.
Wilson.
I've been on the record.
I love dirt.
This could be a good series for you, by the way.
Poof, I know.
A lot of dirty bags of money.
Yeah.
If you're digging at night, something really fucked up is happening.
If you're digging in the dark, yes.
That's why he's our finest film director.
A hundred percent.
Two guests, I need to hold back, I pass the mic over to Jordan, I don't need to enter
the conversation, and you're just sitting there like, this has to be shared and is a
thought we would never get to in eight hours.
But what a profound statement.
You were right.
Has there ever been a good night dig?
No.
No. I mean, unless, yeah, maybe you're like really desperate to make a shelter.
Well, yeah, this is what I'd say.
It doesn't have to be nefarious.
Right.
But if you're doing benevolent night digging, your life's in a bad place, right?
Like, there's a reason they literally call it the graveyard shift.
Like, the worst kind of working position you can imagine
is you are being paid to dig graves at night.
And you're like, look, this is a job.
Whatever, I got to pay the rent,
but yet this is the least desirable job
anyone could possibly have.
Right, so you're either trying to get away with a crime,
something's gone horribly wrong,
like you're trying to get out of a jam,
an existential jam, a threat,
or you just, you got bad options.
Or you're like a woodchuck.
I suppose if you're a woodchuck,
he came up with the one extension to his own rule.
But it's pretty limited. It's pretty bad. I suppose if you're a woodchuck. He came up with the one extension to his own rule.
But it's pretty limited. It's pretty bad.
Yeah.
Have you guys, I know we're all like
grew up in the city for the most part.
Have you ever dug?
It's a good question.
Why would I have ever been digging?
I don't think I've ever really dug.
No. Why would I be digging? What would I dig? think I've ever really dug. Why would I be digging?
What would I dig?
I play dig dug.
I know you buried some genes, Ben.
I'm aware that you did that.
We're very aware.
It's come up on the show.
And I've dug a lot of holes in my life.
Why?
I have to say.
Putting in fence posts.
Sure.
Never had to put in a fence post.
Never had anywhere to put a fence.
Helping my dad garden, planting a shrub.
So I've done that.
I think of that as that's pretty, that's little dig.
Little dig.
You're using a trowel.
The little trowel.
But I'm talking big boy.
I've maybe helped my grandma do that.
Slam it down with your boot.
Chopped wood.
Yeah.
Have I done much digging?
I don't know.
Ray. No experience.
Shakes his head. Ray. No experience.
Shakes his head.
Jordan.
Every year, my dad and I and whoever's happens to be around
before the Passover Seder.
Bernie Fish?
Yes, we go out to the side of the house
and we dig up some horseradish, which we'll then.
The horseradish for the Passover Seder?
The bitter herb, yes.
Wow.
Like around 4 p.m.
Okay, so right before Sunday. An evening dig. You gotta get out. An evening Like around 4 p.m. Okay. So right before sundown.
An evening dig.
You gotta get out.
An evening dig, but not a true night dig.
I mean, I could imagine though,
something messed up happening
and having to do the dig at night.
Be a bad sign, yeah.
Anyway, that was just a little dig corner.
That's all I had.
Okay, well, it was invaluable.
There's regular cold.
And then there's the mountains are blue cold.
Mountain cold refreshment.
Coors light.
The chill choice.
Celebrate responsibly.
Must be legal drinking age.
I'm going to tell you a little bit about the release of the film.
So, M.M. Walsh, of course says, the film had a huge impact on his career.
His price went up like five times.
He says, I was the guy everyone wanted.
Here's a funny call.
At one point he gets a call from Joel Cohen saying,
hey, Em, I guess you call him Em.
They say that, that when they met him,
they didn't know how to address him.
And they were like, is he Em?
Is he Emmett or is he Mr. Walsh? The same as Michael they didn't know how to address him. And they were like, is he M? Is he Emmett?
Or is he Mr. Walsh?
The same as Michael Emmett Walsh, to be clear.
But they called him M.
Can you blow smoke rings?
And he was like, I guess.
He tried. He made himself sick.
He wasn't a smoker. Tried. Tried. He didn't really do it.
And they were like, don't worry. We came up with a little machine for it.
And...
He tells a different story in the criterion thing.
But then when they shoot the scene.
Yeah, okay.
No, here's the, the machine didn't work.
Yes.
And so a little prof girl was like,
I grew up with four older brothers in the bar
and give me a cigar, I can do it.
And she starts beautiful, like blowing beautiful smoke rings.
And then she starts barfing.
Yeah, per fiusly.
Because cigars are pretty disgusting to anyone,
but especially a little girl.
And Walsh throws that out as like, that's the movies right there.
A one year old puking after getting to do big screen cigar smoke rings.
A crew spotlight.
They had an overqualified key grip on this movie, who they said was like
a L.A. guy who had moved to Austin because he
was afraid of the big one earthquake happening in LA and he was doing sheetrock and he was
so bored. But basically they're like, we have this small movie, but we had like a big A
list key grip. So all those like flying, like when the camera moves over the drunk guy at
the bar, all the kind of animated flying camera stuff is just like, they have this extra muscle
behind them that is out of size with the scale of the flying camera stuff is just like they have this extra muscle behind them
It is out of size with the scale of the movie. They're making a boom your camera up. I'll just say
Is a big deal
I feel like that shot in particular and that camera move of jumping over the drunk is
Like the moment where I have to imagine people at film festivals like my parents
But also this fucking year- long run of them doing like
a global tour of this movie.
The moment where every screening people lean forward
and go who the fuck are these guys?
But also that's the moment where all the pieces
have been set on the playing board
and then he's going back to the bar
and she's like don't go back to the bar and he goes back.
So it's like everything is set up
and I almost feel like that moment is being like,
this mousetrap is perfect and the camera is just like moving over it.
So they don't want to disturb a hair.
It's just such a funny flourish with so much personality.
And yet if you're seeing it at a film festival and you're probably someone who
works in film or studies it immensely, the second that shot happens, he goes,
fuck, that's complicated.
The fact that these guys would take the time to set that up
when it just kind of feels like something
to make themselves laugh,
immediately tells you a ton about them.
The film was shot over the course of eight weeks,
I haven't mentioned that, in Texas.
Now, Joel had spent a little time in Texas
because he went to UT,
but I think just a little bit of time.
But they kind of loved it as a sort of swerve
from the urban feel of most bars.
I mean, this is a thing they're always saying is like,
these are just genre films.
We're working in well-established genres,
but we're just trying to make things off the hump
and specific all the time.
So they're just like, this the opposite of rainy, New York
So it's a great place to do a noir
Now
Joel is credited on this film as the director Ethan's credited as the producer
Largely due to DJ regulations. We talked about this a little bit on Barton Fink episode
Which is with someone who has run into these DJ regulations
They do become an established DGA duo
by the time of the Lady Killers.
JJ points out that the Fairleigh brothers did this quickly.
I do think sometimes you can just do it.
And my guess is they just didn't bother
to sort of like make the effort to be like,
hey, can we be, you know, right?
They just kind of settled into this routine.
They got rejected at first and then I was,
we're like, I guess we won't get approved
and their ongoing success probably made it easier for other siblings,
like the Wachowskis and the Fairleys and whoever,
to hit the ground running and get approved the first time out.
They say, they joke like, oh, Joel's taller.
That's why he's the director.
But they seriously say that the credits don't really reflect the collaboration
and Ethan does plenty of the directorial stuff and Joel does plenty of the production stuff, you know, whatever.
Like,
everyone who works with them calls them the two headed director. They're like, it is the most bizarre symbiotic.
Come a two person school of fish. They move simultaneously.
Yeah, I was just gonna say it's funny that with drive away dolls, like as soon as you get into the interviews with Ethan and Tricia Cook,
like they'll just be like, yeah, we co-directed it.
Like just funny that they're like recapitulating that exact thing,
like having the credit be a little bit wrong.
Well, so here's another thing we'll get into in the Barton Fink episode not to tip the hand too much,
but it sounds like if you successfully get the DGA to approve the idea that you are a true team,
that's not a thing that can be untangled and retangled.
Yes, you're not allowed to flip it on and off.
So they're like, you can't make a new team now.
So Barry did throw up a lot.
I think you referenced that briefly, Ray,
because you've been throwing up a lot,
not to call you out.
Ha ha ha!
Similarly, out of nerves, right?
Barry was very nervous.
Um, but obviously the film does turn out to be pretty good.
Uh, they were very inspired visually by the conformist and the American
friend, uh, right, which is a great movie.
That movie is so well shot.
They also said they had a laser disc on location, a laser disc player, and
they had just seen road warrior.
So they're watching Road Warrior on a laserdisc.
They talk about Road Warrior a lot.
That's one of their evergreen biggest inspirations
of just like, this is just pure filmmaking.
Right.
Yeah, I don't know if George Miller broke through
for the American public as a name at that point,
but you just see this time again with James Cameron
or any action director at that time just being like,
I wanna do what George Miller is doing.
It just like, it truly was your favorite director's
favorite director at that moment.
They have this film, no one wants to release it.
Every studio is happy to watch it
because there really aren't a lot of independent
35 millimeter films, you know what I mean?
This is still an unusual American product.
There's not much of an indie scene.
Everyone sees it and is basically,
how would I sell this?
This is like an art film about murderers.
And it has no stars.
Right.
And it's pitch black.
Yeah. Yes.
And at one point they meet with
the Crown International Pictures, Mark Tensor,
and he liked it, but he had no money.
And he said, don't worry about my screwing you,
I don't have time to screw you.
And Sam Raimi, they went to Sam Raimi
and they were like, should we do this?
And he said, yeah, in six months,
he's gonna come back to you and say,
hey, I found the time.
An incredibly good line.
Good line by old Remy.
Probably a good call, I mean, I don't know,
but it's just an interesting little possible detour.
That could have been how it went.
Instead it goes into TIF and Circle Films,
which distributes their first three movies.
Which had started out as a bunch of different theater owners.
Yes, Ben Barron-Holtz is into it.
And so they said it was the, he said it was the debut film that impressed him most since Eraserhead.
Speaking of people we recently covered.
And then it went to New York, which was a really, really big deal back in the day.
Not that the New York Film Festival isn't a big deal now, but I feel like it used to have a more primo place
on the festival calendar.
Whereas now New York is more like,
yeah, you know, stuff's already been at Venice
until you're right, and it's like getting here.
Well, that's the thing that's really changed
is the like film festival.
The internet has flattened this, yeah.
The festival's wanting premieres and exclusives.
The idea of a movie like this playing at festivals
for over a year, and each festival not being possessive
of like, well, that's damaged goods
because this other place got to it first.
That right, it was like prominence in terms of like
the headiness of the jury or the selection committee
or whatever versus like this film is either good or bad
based on what festival it's premiering at relative to which is the best launching pad for an Oscar campaign.
Yeah. Right. Like now New York Film Festival has become like these are movies
that already are pre approved basically by and large.
After the New York Film Festival premiere, Janet Maslow, the New York Times,
one of its film critics, gives a good review that back in the day is just huge. Obviously it a good review. That, back in the day, is just huge.
Obviously that's important now, but back in the day,
very important, goes to Sundance, early Sundance,
nonetheless won the Grand Jury Prize there,
which only helps its buzz.
Pauline Kael took a big shit on it,
as she did to any movie released post 1980, essentially,
but Roger Ebert was a huge fan,
and it made movie, made money, like decent money.
I think it made about $2 million, which is obviously a big return on investment for the investors.
And everyone basically likes it, except for Joel, who says it's pretty damn bad.
And Sonnenfeld agrees the pacing too slow,
I could have shot it better.
These days we do it for 10 times the price
and it would be 8% better.
That's kind of a funny line from Sonnenfeld.
He knows he's actually being a little silly criticizing it.
It's not like Sonnenfeld's like,
oh yeah, the guy who made RV would have a better take on this.
And they don't hate it.
It's not like there's a lot of directors. They have affection.
They're first like, oh, it's like,
cute, we didn't know what we were doing.
Yeah.
Could I, just real quick, like the Pauline Kael pan
is interesting just because her main take
without the benefit of being able to read the future
is it seems like these guys are just trying
to make this movie as a calling card to make studio films.
Yes. She's like, this is too derivative.
Like, it's like I can see all of the influence.
And I just think it's interesting in terms of thinking forward of like what,
where the Coens are going to go,
because as much as they are making films that are extremely to their own standards,
they also do make movies that are commercially minded and like audience minded.
Yes, they don't.
It's a great way to think about it.
It's like they make challenging movies,
but even Bart and Fink, which I think of
as maybe their most challenging movie
of pretty much that they ever made in a way,
like their arduous movie.
And I am also thinking of it
because we already did this episode,
he's incredibly watchable and has velocity,
even though it's about a guy sitting in a fucking room going crazy.
And I remember watching as a teenager and being like,
wow, this is heady.
And I watch it now and I still think it's so brilliant,
but I was like, damn, this thing moves like thunderbolts. I love it.
It kind of reminds me of like 90s,
re-listening to 90s albums where you're like,
oh yeah, this was so stripped back.
And now you listen to it now and you're like,
wow, that was extremely produced.
Yes, right.
There's a thing that Carter Burwell talks about,
like him and Skip working together on this movie,
kind of establishing a thing,
which is like we need to let the audience know
by what we're doing with the sound
that this movie isn't one thing or the other
it's not just this harsh dark thriller it's not just a comedy and I do think
they established that in this first movie is like you're not gonna be able
to pin down exactly what this is but you're gonna be entertained they get
even better at it when as their career progresses and I also think their most
beloved movies
are the ones that find the perfect balance
between those tones,
but it is my favorite thing about them
that they always like in the most dramatic scenes
will find a way to put in something funny
and the funniest scenes find a way to put in something
that's like very terrifying and heartbreaking.
They also talk a lot just process wise,
like they will take things to a point where it
gets more locked down and they will walk it back.
Yeah.
Like there's an interesting in Barton Fink, they're like, there was a scene in the script
where you like there's a point in the movie where it's pretty clear you're going into
his fantasy.
But then there was a beat almost like in Brazil, where you go outside of his fantasy and you
see what's really happening to Barton.
And they were like, that just locks it down too much.
That makes it resolved.
And if you just leave it more enigmatic,
then it's something that stays alive in the audience's head.
Right.
I was trying to find, there was one review
they were talking about that they remember hitting
really hard that basically described the movie
as having all the depth of a resume.
And the soul of a Bloomingdale's window.
Okay. But I was trying to remember whose review that was.
Is that Cale?
It's just Joel saying, I love this review.
Yeah, it wasn't Cale.
Cale says Blood Simple is no sense of what we normally think of as
quote reality and has no connections with quote experience.
And then she says at the end,
nobody in the movie making team or in the audience is committed to anything.
Nothing is being risked except the million and a half.
She's doubling the budget.
But this was the strike against them.
And then I found Rosenbaum did a piece like 15 years later,
20 years later, explaining why he still thinks
he's right about Blood Simple being shitty.
And he wrote, remains mired in a smart alecky
film school sensibility.
Like this was the whole thing that everyone threw at them
when they didn't like them is like, we get it.
You guys are clever.
You're smart.
You've watched movies.
You know how to move the camera.
You have nothing to say about humanity.
You don't think there's anything personal
about this film about a marriage falling apart
that Joel wrote while his marriage was falling apart?
Set in Austin, Texas.
You don't think there's some energy?
I think they're sincere filmmakers.
I agree with you, but I think this is where
the rep that I was referencing is tasked or whatever.
It's like you do have to think a little around
their jokiness and their straightforwardness to dig into.
Yeah, actually, right.
These guys are not just like,
I don't know, we just sit down and write the movie, who cares?
I'm like, no, you're motivated by your own feelings
and the conversations.
Like I don't think they just sit down and they're like,
what if a guy's name was Barton Fink?
Oh, good idea.
Where, when would he have lived?
I don't know, the forties?
Okay, let's keep going.
You know?
I guess there's this weird balance to me,
them feeling like incredibly earnest nihilists,
if that makes sense.
Like there is a real emotional sincerity to them being fascinated by this question of, like,
is this truly all meaningless? And so often their movies are built around that.
These characters doing these, like, making these decisions that make zero sense
in pursuit of a thing that's maybe going to ruin their whole fucking life.
And I think that got written off as being condescending
and just like they don't care.
This is all them like shaking up an ant farm
and like laughing at stupid characters doing stupid things,
which combined with their just like technical proficiency
in craft is just like, okay,
so these guys are just like jerking off.
They're just like torturing characters
and showing me that they're good at making movies, which like over time, I think people calm down.
But we, we also been talking about any time a young filmmaker is like very quickly anointed as
not just this is a good movie, but this might be a major voice. There is like 30% of the community
that immediately needs to be like false idol. Fuck you.
I need to take them down.
We cannot immediately like put them into the firmament.
Should we play the box?
Sure.
Do you guys have anything else you want to say?
I mean, I just want to say like, for some reason, the scene that's coming to
mind to sort of respond to what you just said is, uh, the scene at the end of True Grit where Rooster, uh, just carries,
uh, carries Hailey Steinfeld for like, you know, the whole way and it's like hallucinogenic and it's
just like...
Maybe their most nakedly emotional movie.
Maybe.
Yeah.
And then, and then, but then at the end of it too, like where, um, you know, where she doesn't
actually get to see him later, like it's just, it's hard for me to imagine anybody seeing that and being
like, these guys don't have like a sense of like heart.
Well, that seems so emotional that in the movie ends with her being like a
bitter woman who has never gotten over these events and the film basically cuts
off mid sentence.
Sure.
Yeah.
No, they're, they're aware of, of audience expectations and not necessarily
wanting to give people like the
Hollywood ending so to speak but that is also their only blockbuster that movie was so fucking massive and
It is by their standard. Yeah, but also by anyone's standards. It's like a fucking 160 million dollar grossing
Like adult Western that movie made like 300 worldwide.
Yeah, I mean, I'm not, yes, I'm not just kidding.
And it clearly is that there was like a level of emotion
in that that people connected with more
on top of everything else.
Box office game?
So this film came out 18th of January, 1985,
right after Sundance, I guess.
It does not open in the top five.
Number one at the box office is a film we've covered.
An action comedy.
Action comedy.
It's been out for a couple months at this point.
Okay, so that's Beverly Hills Cop.
Do you guys like Beverly Hills Cop?
Love it. Pretty good.
Which came out at Christmas, so this is now like...
Late January. It's been out for about eight weeks.
It's made $122 million.
Yeah, it's front of the table.
No complaints.
Number two at the box office has been out for about three months.
It was a Halloween release,
including its horror genre.
Horror in quotes and air quotes.
No, no, no, it's a horror film.
Okay, so don't put those quotes away.
One of the most iconic horror films ever made.
Kind of helps launch a studio.
Is it The House That Freddie Built?
That's right.
And the picture is called Nightmare on Elm Street?
Yes.
Yeah.
The original Wes Quaven.
Wes Quaven.
Wes Quaven's Nightmare on Elm Street.
Nightmare on Elm Street.
Do you guys like that movie?
I like it.
I met him one time and he claimed that he did all his writing
while he was asleep in Lucid Dreams.
He was like, during the day I have errands to do and I have a family and I have stuff to do.
So I just go to sleep, start a lucid dream, build the world of film around me, hang out in it for like six hours.
I wake up, I write everything down in like 15 minutes and then I have stuff to do all day.
So as Freddy ghostwriting his movies, this motherfucker went to sleep,
Freddy Krueger just starts typing away
with those fucking knife fingers,
and then he wakes up and he's just like,
oh yeah, something came to me.
Freddy Krueger's real.
Freddy Krueger's real, he was looking to get into pictures.
He invaded Wes Craven's dreams.
Must be hard for him to type on the typewriter.
Yeah, do you think he only uses the other hand?
I love that film very much.
I think it's very scary and very, very cool.
And you like Freddy Krueger as a person.
You endorse his personal life.
I love Freddy Krueger.
Freddy Krueger.
Freddy Krueger.
It's an interesting film
in terms of
the franchise it spawns, a lot of it is not there.
Right, like the sort of, the jokeyness of Freddy,
the like, sort of like kind of, like the musical sequence kind of vibe
of a lot of the kills in the later movies, right?
I like both two and three more.
Sure. I like two and three a lot.
I think one is more scary and impressive.
Uh, yeah. Yeah. And then right, when you get to, I like the whole series,
but when you get to four or five,
you're like in goofball's McGillicuddy town.
Yes.
Right.
Nightmare on Elm Street is number two.
Number three at the box office is a,
we've mentioned it before,
I feel like we've probably done a box office around this period,
because I remember this one. It's a drama with two big stars, an Oscar winner and a younger male star
who's he's pretty big at this point.
It's not loose cannons.
No, and I don't even know what that is.
It's a big swing. If I've been right, it would have been impressive.
What's loose cannons?
Fienn Hackman and Dan Ackroyd.
Oh, that's right.
No, that's 1990.
That film is made for...
Bigger Oscar-winning star, like an older star?
Old?
No.
No, just older.
No, no, the Oscar winner...
Is it Stakeout?
No, no, the Oscar winner might be throwing you a little bit.
The Oscar winner is a lady.
The Oscar winner is a lady. The Oscar winner is a lady.
And the man, well he's in a film we just discussed, is a Cohen influence.
He's in a Cohen influence?
And the man is the younger star?
Yeah, well I feel like that.
Yes he is, yes he's eight years younger than her. Or seven years. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She's won an Oscar. He hasn't. No, he's kind of at the start of his big run
as an American movie star.
He's, you know, like, he's just emerging in America
is a big deal.
This is not a really big remembered movie,
but the Oscar winner does get a best actress nomination.
For this film?
For this film.
She's already won one, but she gets another nom.
Because she's a big actress.
Like, she's a really respected actress.
Jessica Lange?
No.
No!
No, I'm...
But that's a good guess.
Yeah.
Like someone who like racked up like six noms, you know, over the career.
Yeah, I'm probably like Diane Keaton.
No!
But I'm getting close.
It's not Meryl, obviously.
No.
I'm being...
This film was shot by Vilmos Zygmund.
Okay.
It's the director is one of those guys who made big movies, but I feel like is not as
respected an auteur these days.
Like a Mark Rydell or higher 20-year than that. Well, when you say Mark Rydell, you've really naileduteur these days like a mark Rydell or higher well
When you say mark Rydell you've really nailed it in that it is mark. It is mark Rydell. So in fact
So it's like a perfect comp for him in a way. Yeah him. Okay from mark Rydell type. It's kind of like right
Yeah, they were kind of when they made this movie
They were like could we get mark Rydell or a type and they're like, oh we could just get him
So he's kind of Rydell-esque.
He's Rydellian in his work.
Okay, it's a Mark Rydell picture with an actress.
Fuck, fuck, fuck.
Fuck.
All right, I'm gonna give this.
I'm gonna call this. No, no, you have to give me
one more clue.
Who's the distributor of the picture?
The distributor, of course. What if this unlocked?
Universal.
It's a universal Mark Rydell picture
where the actress has an Oscar,
the lead man is eight years younger.
Is it a romance?
I think it is a, it's sort of like a drama,
you know, about like bad shit happening
to working people in America.
Oh, fuck.
I think, I. Oh, I think
I'm not. I don't think it's a period piece.
That might be.
I don't know.
I'll never watch it.
You'll never watch it. Well, it's never say never, but it's not high on my
me one of the two actors.
Sissy Spacek is the actress.
Coal Miner's daughter.
No, that's the movie.
She, of course, won one for it. It's not Raggedy Man. No? Nope. That's the movie she of course won. That's what she won for.
It's not Raggedy Man.
No.
No, because that's fucking, of course, that was her husband.
That was Jack Fisk.
It's Mark Rydell.
Sissy Spacek.
She's older.
The guy's popping.
The guy's, he's the beginning of a...
He's hot.
Hot.
Now he's a bit problematic.
It's not Mel Gibson.
It sure is Mel Gibson.
Sissy's basic Mel Gibson, Mark Rydell.
Yep.
The film is called The River.
Okay.
Yeah, I know what you're talking about.
The second you say it, I picture the poster in my head.
It's like they're in a river.
They're like, ah, this fucking river.
To get there.
I could have done that for five hours
and I wasn't gonna get to the river.
They're farmers and it's like about flooding.
Yeah.
Like the Tennessee Valley.
Right. That's like a video box I remember seeing being like, wow, that looks serious.
And like it's right.
It's just like it seems very serious.
It seems very and like the the tagline is like an epic love story of today.
I mean, unsurprisingly, it was a huge flop.
I mean, I think it was like relatively well received
It's like his yeah, this poster is like him saving her from the river, right?
It's his follow-up to on Golden Pond. So like he had juice that was huge
It was huge the pond but like he was like pond. What about a river?
He cracked his knuckles and he was like,
I'll hold my pond.
Yeah, but not a movie that's remembered.
It's just one of those things like, like I'm saying,
where I'm like, am I ever going to watch The River?
No, you're right. You know what, in fact,
I actually think you will never watch The River.
Probably not.
Yeah.
Number four.
OK.
At the box office is not a movie I know.
I know the stars.
It's a rom-com directed by a legendary comedic director
who made a lot of movies with this guy, the star.
Is it a Karl Ryan or Steve Martin movie?
No.
Okay, but I was-
Although people got mad at us for not mentioning
Dead Wind Don't Wear Plaid during our
Johnny Dangerously episode.
And I didn't think about the fact that those movies
came out around the same time
and probably did kind of cancel
Sorry for making a big deal out of that. Yes that you yeah, my alt you jerk
Okay, wait, so this is a different
Director and star work together a lot. Yeah, they work together a lot
This guy is a big comic star of this era, but he exists in many eras
He's as many eras?
But he's having like, he has a hot 80s.
Is it George Burns?
No, but who else has like a really hot 80s?
Who booms in the 80s, is it Rodney?
No, we love him though.
But is it a man of an advanced age?
He's a little older, but no.
Okay.
I'll tell you what he's not advanced in, height.
Okay, so it is Dudley Moore.
There you go.
And it's a Blake Edwards movie.
That's right.
And is it, it's not the one with him and Darryl Hannah?
No, what's that one?
I think it's always called,
it's called Crazy People or something like that.
Sounds like a great title.
Okay, so it's not, it's not 10, obviously.
No.
It's after that.
Yes, it is. And this one, is it Mickey and Maude? Mickey and Maude! Okay. And who are
Mickey and Maude? Well he is Mickey. Nope, he's neither. Okay, this movie sounds good.
It's got two ladies. One of whom has been on this podcast. Amy Irving? Amy Irving!
Okay. Who's Mickey? Anne Reinking! Oh, of course.
The legendary Densa! Yes! Yeah, I don't know much about it. And what's Dudley Moore doing?
He's an overworked haploid reporter. Great. Happily married to Mickey. Okay. And then
he interviews a young cellist, Maude, and starts to have an affair. Dudley Moore has this huge 80s that were like a series of comedies mostly predicated on-
It's just like, this guy fucks.
This guy might be getting a dangerous amount of pussy.
Right?
Like all of it was just like-
He's just like, hello.
And everyone's like, let me at you.
He can't stop.
Absolutely.
This was Anne Rankin's last acting role in a film.
Wow.
It's been remade in Bollywood a couple times,
or in India, I would say.
Maybe not always in Bollywood.
Um, and yeah, not a movie.
It was a box office.
The poster is him marrying both of them.
Hey, only Dudley.
Number five at the box office,
this has been a great box office game,
is, um, it's a teen movie, I think.
Okay.
You're not very familiar, you don't sound certain.
I've never seen it.
Oh, right, it has a bit of a,
odd, trivial part of film history.
It was the first ever PG-13.
Because everyone always says Temple of Doom and all that.
But they're the ones that inspired it.
Now, it was not the first released,
because that I believe is Red Dawn,
but it was the first to receive it.
It was the first to get the rating.
Yes.
The team picture, which distributor?
The distributor, of course, is 20th Century Fox.
Find folks at 20th Century Fox.
Okay, and it's a...
It's from a very established comedy director,
made a zillion movies, kind of a Blake Edwards type. Kind of a Blake Edwards type. Just a new comic director who made a zillion movies. Kind of a Blake Edwards type.
Kind of a Blake Edwards type.
Just an comic director who made a ton of movies.
Yeah.
But he would make, this guy would make more
of your emotional comedies.
Comedies with heart?
Yeah.
He probably described it as like,
a comedy should have heart.
He'd probably like yell it.
It's not Herbert Ross.
No.
It's not Gary Marshall.
It is Gary Marshall.
It is Gary Marshall.
Is it The Flamingo Kid?
It's Matt Dillon as The Flamingo Kid. people like that one a lot. I've never seen it
It's about a working-class boy who works at a beach resort and learns valuable life lessons
Hey, let's some lessons. I might stun you to learn that Hector Elizondo
Security how did this guy end up on set?
You surely wasn't invited. Richard Krena.
And Jessica Walter.
That's fun.
Sounds fun.
I don't really know much about it.
Anyone ever seen the Flamingo Kid?
He's like a Cabana boy?
Yeah, he works at a resort.
That's the Box Office Game.
The rest of the 10 is...
A Passage to India, new this week.
Sure.
What have you done lately?
I forget when we referenced that story, but it's somewhere.
Oh, get ready.
It's a call forward.
It happens in three episodes.
A film called That's Dancing, which was a compilation of dancing and film.
Okay.
Protocol, it's a Goldie Hawn movie.
Yes, that's, it's, well...
Herbert Ross.
Yes.
Uh, in which she's...
Does she become a cop?
It's like a DC thing.
She like stops an assassination attempt or something.
Great, great. Yeah.
Uh, Starman, which we've covered.
Uh-huh.
And the, uh, the famous bomb, the Cotton Club.
Oh, sure.
It is great that Goldie Hawn just had her thing carved out for like 15 years,
where it's like, Goldie shouldn't be here, and yet she is.
I'm a dumbass.
This is the last place you want her, and yet she's going to kind of figure it out.
Well, it's simple.
Yeah.
An auspicious beginning to a great career for the Coen brothers.
Are there things that you guys want to seed in our heads
to think about as men who have been deep diving
for several years now into their work
as we go on this journey chronologically?
Well, I think we've touched on a lot of it
over the course of this conversation.
Like the first episode we did was about opening monologues
and that's certainly here.
And then the second episode we did
was called the meticulous montage,
which could also call like a methodical montage,
which is definitely a big part of this movie
and a big part of many of their movies.
It is fascinating how much it does feel
like all the pieces are here.
Like we kept comparing this to other films
and their filmography and you're just sort of like
all the interests, all the obsessions
Right all the stylistic flourishes
Yeah, and I think the goal is is like some interview where they're like, why are you moves so violent?
And Ethan was like you mean dramatic, right? Right, and they're just like we want to make this dramatic
We want to make it specific
Anytime that someone's like what are the themes underneath this? What are you trying to say about society or America?
They're like, no, no, no, we're Americans.
We're expressing our Americanness through trying to make a film
that's very specific and very dramatic.
And we're, oh yeah.
They talked about this in that Eggers interview
where they were like, foreign critics,
especially in Europe, tend to have hugely political greetings
of our movies.
And it is transparently just that we do not think
we have enough of an understanding to set a movie
in any other country but the one we've lived
our entire lives in.
And here it's not viewed as some overarching statement
about our country and our culture,
but there it is always taken that way.
And there being any other country.
And when they tried to write Gambit, it was just a complete, you know?
Yeah.
No, I don't actually stand by that.
I think there's a lot more going on in that movie.
Also, I think to look out for when we talked to their storyboard artist, he was like, it's
basically two things at all times.
It's either surprise or suspense.
Like we're just toggling back and forth between those and that's basically the whole thing.
That's a good line.
Yeah, I think if you're watching their movies
and you're just watching like,
or suspense versus surprise,
or moments where suspense turns to surprise,
I think you can get a lot out of it.
I kind of just want to do the thing about the gun though.
I kind of just want to like walk through the thing
that I figured out yesterday.
Say this, can you say this? Will you please say this?
So we, I've watched the movie a few times and I only put it all together on the very last viewing I did.
Which is just that early on in the movie, they go to Marty's house, the two, Abby and Ray.
And she goes there to pick up bullets from a box that fit the gun that he gave her. And so she finds exactly three bullets
that she puts into her gun, which is a six shooter.
So, and then when Visser steals the gun from their house,
he checks the barrel and you see that there's three
empty chambers and then three bullets.
When Visser shoots Marty, he shoots one bullet.
Sure.
When Ray hits the gun, a bullet goes off.
Then when Marty clicks the gun, when he's getting buried,
he clicks it three times.
And the last click is like right
as Ray is taking the gun out of his hands, like gently and in a way that the Coen's describe it as like the Michelangelo Sistine Chapel shot of like God and man touching their hands.
But like if you if you track that, you realize that by the end of the movie, when Abby takes Visser out.
end of the movie when Abby takes Visser out,
and she doesn't even know this. She had exactly one bullet left in the chamber,
in the revolver.
It's just like a great example though of like
sort of the intricacies and the details of a plot
that could actually like make the movie
a lot more thrilling.
Cause like when I figured that out,
I realized like Ray has no idea that he's,
like he seems pretty, he thinks the gun's empty, right?
But when you're watching, you're like,
oh, if Hedea had gotten one more shot off,
like he would have.
But that's also right.
Like as meticulous as these things are,
they're also sort of about how meaningless these things are.
Like it is absolute happenstance
that he doesn't get shot by Hedaya in that moment because
he doesn't know that he's grabbing a still loaded gun from him and that McDormand doesn't
know that she only has one shot to actually hit the guy.
Right.
And it's a mistake on his part also to not check the gun like several times throughout
the movie.
What was the other point you said you wanted us to tee you up?
Well, we're not going to do it up? Well, you only did it for the film.
We're not going to do it?
No, we're not going to do it.
But no, these are beautifully made poetic movies, and they're made with a level of care that,
I mean, me and Jordan have just found, like, basically every episode of our show, we do
two pages of the To The White Sea script, which is this, like, $200 million action film.
But every two pages, you can be like, okay, what's going on in these two pages and then pull out scenes from other Coen brothers films
and like everything tracks.
Like every detail is there on purpose.
There's never like a story about their shoot
where they're like, oh yeah,
we shot with this other actor for a long time
or we shot for two weeks and we threw all this stuff out.
They're just, these are intentionally made films.
All their collaborators are really teed up
to do good work with them always.
They never talk about a feeling of misstepping on any film past this. Like, regardless of
what the public perception was, they're never like, we had this idea and then we got into
the edit and it didn't work so we had to cut this whole thing out.
Exactly. That's what I'm saying. I think you can just hold these things up to the light and even
examine different movies against each other and the themes, even though they're like,
we did a lot of this very instinctually,
like when they talk about their process,
they're not like, oh, we went and made notes
on all these James M. Cain books and we're like,
oh, let's make a master document where we can synthesize.
They were like, we read all those books at the same time
and then we just kept talking about them forever
until we were able to instinctually kind of write
in a James M. Cain mode.
But just all of that intention together adds up to these films that just track
that just every piece is in is in its place for a purpose.
That I think will lead to five months of exciting conversation here on Blank
Shots. No, these are we were very excited that they won because it's just like,
great. All of these movies are fun to talk about.
Yeah, they're the best.
Can I just say that? Like I just the the premise of my life is that they won because it's just like, great, all of these movies are fun to talk about. They're the best. Can I just say that?
Like, I just, the premise of my life is that they're the best.
You know, these are the best directors.
I like every one of their movies.
I find every one of their movies interesting
to talk about, to watch, to think about.
And to watch endlessly.
Like, the rewatch value of these things, it's like,
every single time I've done a rewatch of all their movies,
it's a completely different experience. Yeah. Yeah. Excited to do it. Thank you guys for being here.
Thank you for kicking this voyage off on a good note. Thank you so much for having us. Of course.
Such a pleasure. Hey, you guys are family. To the White Sea. To the White Sea. New episodes coming
out. Everyone check this out. This is like the most bonkers Bonanza action movie
they ever wrote and we're going through it.
But as you said, you'll like jump into something
in that script and be like, what is the recurring motif
of the big guy and a little guy in Coen Brothers movies?
Oh yeah, there's a scene where-
Build an episode out of like these elements, right?
What is the through line across the career?
We did a whole episode on distant fathers.
We did an episode on sneaking around,
an episode on teamwork.
Yeah.
Act breaks?
What is it?
Why do you sort of intuitively make this jump
from act one to act two?
David and I have Coen Brothers, Big Guy, Little Guy energy.
Sure.
Yeah.
Coen Brothers also kind of have Coen Brothers, Big Guy, Little Guy energy? Sure. Yeah.
Coen Brothers also kind of have Coen Brothers, Big Guy, Little Guy energy.
Well, they say Joel got to direct because he was the bigger guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You and Jordan are basically the same height, so it falls apart there.
Ray's got a few inches on me.
Really?
Let's just be completely transparent.
You got the hair height though.
You do a mini think.
You got a little hair height working for you.
I was saying...
I got a little eraser head going.
When me and Jordan directed the Porches video, we based our storyboards off of the Blood
Simple storyboards.
Really?
Yeah, we did.
Absolutely.
Which is each page we had a little drawing of the frame and then we had a bird's eye
view of the set and where the camera was going to go and where the actors went.
We love these guys.
We model our craft off of them on almost a daily basis.
Such a good job on the Porches video.
But now I'm thinking, did we miss an opportunity by not having that video in with Ben discovering a bag of money under the porch
And it's firing out into a 90-minute narrative. That would have been a nice payoff
Maybe that's our fundraising trailer what we already made. Yeah, there you go. Okay. Yeah, let's talk off offline
Thank you guys for being here. Thank you all for listening. Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe.
Tune in next week for Raising Arizona.
It is wild, that's their second,
like as wild as it is that this is their first movie.
It's a master stroke to go Raising Arizona,
your second film.
Yes, right.
They go to Hollywood basically.
They try to make a commercial studio picture
It has everything that this movie doesn't have so many ways right?
It's the counterpoint that then the rest of their career is like
toggling between those two modes usually within the same movie
So yeah tune in next week for that and
As always David, what's the email you're currently reading?
You look very deeply and thought of whatever is on your screen
I'm just I'm seeing bring her back tonight and I was just like what's that about? So I brought it up
We give a shot at this weekend. We're all going to Ben's wedding. Oh, hey
Yeah, get married.
Then because I've got to be done, we have to end the show. This has let's be done energy.
This is what I'm saying.
What I'm saying is because I have mangled this setup
and we need to end on something strong, Ben,
is there anything you want to say on the record?
Your last episode as an unmarried man?
Fuck I don't
Hmm I
Had a lot of I was up to a lot of nonsense and that was really fun. Do I remember a lot of it? No
But damn did I shine bright as hell as a fucked up?
guy and No, but damn, did I shine bright as hell as a fucked up guy.
And I'm glad that I made it this far and I met someone who really is great.
Love can be, love can happen to you.
Feel that in the bottom of my heart.
It's beautiful.
Beautiful words, man.
Love can happen.
Blank Check with Griffin and David is hosted by Griffin Newman and David Simms. Our executive producer is me, Ben Hossley.
Our creative producer is Marie Bardy Salinas.
And our associate producer is A.J.
McKeon.
This show is mixed and edited by A.J.
McKeon and Alan Smithy.
Research by J.J.
Burch. Our theme song is by Lane Montgomery and the Great American Novel, with additional music Created by AJ McKeon and Alan Smithy. Research by J.J. Birch.
Our theme song is by Lane Montgomery and the Great American Novel.
With additional music by Alex Mitchell.
Artwork by Joe Bowen, Olly Moss, and Pat Reynolds.
Our production assistant is Minick.
Special thanks to David Cho, Jordan Fish, and Nate Patterson for their production help.
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This podcast is created and produced by Blank Check Productions.
The world is full of complainers.
No, that's not it.
That was to Michael Jackson.