Blank Check with Griffin & David - Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World with John Hodgman
Episode Date: May 31, 2026Beat to quarters, men..and nice Brazilian lady holding an umbrella! We're sailing the high seas with John Hodgman this week as we unpack one of David Sims' favorite films - 2003's Master and Commander...: The Far Side of the World. We're talking Crowe. We're talking Bettany. We're talking James Cameron's Mexican water tank. We're talking soused hog and we're talking Saluting Day. And yes, we are talking BOATS. Is Ben about to enter his Salty Dog Era? He should! If you wish to inquire about Ship Happens, shiphappensbrooklin@gmail.com. Check out the rest of Patrick O’Brian’s work. Read New 'Master and Commander' Film In The Works, But Russell Crowe And Paul Bettany Probably Won't Be Back BY Ben Pearson. Listen to The Lex G Podcast. Pop over to the Sunken Harbour Club if you’re in NY. Watch Medieval Barber Theodoric of York - SNL Read Grab your breeches, hoist the mainsail and prepare for an epic ride -- but is 'Master and Commander' seaworthy? By Mick Lesalle Watch Dicktown on Hulu Read Hodgman’s Books in any format Subscribe to Hodgman’s Substack 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
Discussion (0)
April 1805,
Napoleon is master of Europe.
Only the British fleet stands before him.
Podcasts are now podcasts.
Podcasts are now podcasts?
Podcasts are now podcasts.
No.
I think it's got to be podcasts are now battlefields
or oceans are now podcasts.
Which one is?
I think it's oceans are now podcasts.
You can't put podcasts for both.
It doesn't, yeah.
But there is a lot you could do.
Like, one must always choose the lesser of two podcasts.
You just said there's only one thing
I think that's the thing to do.
And I tried to throw you off the hump by putting podcast in two places to make you annoyed.
Joe Rogan is master of podcast.
I would like to at the start of this episode ask you to try and not make me annoyed on this episode, please.
That is a sincere request from me.
I am not intending to make you annoyed on this episode.
Okay.
Well, I want to make that sincere request.
This is a movie that really matters to me, and I don't want you to be antagonistic.
I'm very real Aubrey Maternity.
Okay.
There is a real thing.
I want that right on the record to start this episode.
I'm not trying to do any nagging.
You just said he tried to make me a note on the floor.
For your damn hobbies, man.
The one thing.
You said there's only one thing I could do.
Well, I mean, I do feel like I'm wearing it right now.
You are.
I feel like that is, because it's the opening.
Sure.
It's like, it's the most, uh, sure.
But then I was, I was like, but of course, there are so many great lines.
And I didn't want to this cat.
And I love your admiral hat.
There are no admirals in this movie, Ben.
Oh, boy, here we go.
Is this one of your 10 favorite movies of all time?
Yes, I think it is.
And I think I should just like, next time I do sight and sound, stop being like,
I love some important movie.
Just fucking put this on there.
Why is this not an important movie?
It is. This is what I'm saying.
Before we started recording, you said maybe this is the most important.
I think it's the most important movie to me.
Last night you texted like the best movie ever made.
This is, isn't it?
Is it not?
Are you talking to me?
Yeah.
I'm very self-conscious about being here, I must say.
Oh, you're worried because you're like, I don't, you know.
You don't feel worried.
I had, I'm not worried.
Some weeks ago, as the Peter Weirth
was just getting started in my feed.
I had lunch with J.D. Amato.
The great J.D. Amato.
The great J.D. Amato.
And I'm willing to say this, past and future guest.
That's a big...
Oh, yeah?
You think J.D. will come back?
He was on just last week, and he'll come back again.
Good, because he's waiting outside.
Oh, right. He was just on the show in chronology.
And I said to J.D., we were talking about all kinds of things.
Oh, actually, you know what?
Embarrassing for you?
Made a learning grogo.
It's in between.
Fuck.
So, get there.
was right. But Cheney was on two weeks ago.
I regret to inform you. It is, in fact, the
Mandalorian and Grogu.
So I...
Really? I was gesturing to Grogu.
Somewhere there is Grogu.
Yeah. In this...
Down there. In this palace
of secrets and delights. I'm sure we got
a Grogu somewhere. You gotta get a
grogoo in here somewhere. There's got to be a Grogu, right?
You know, there isn't, and I've actually...
I've been surveying the landscape recently.
I'm like, does there need to be
some Grogu representation in this office?
And if there is...
What's the one?
I don't know if you know this.
It's a very merchandised character.
Oh, you're kidding.
There's too many grogu items.
Too many grogues?
So I'm trying to pick the one.
But I'm sorry, you were getting lunch with the great J.D. Amato.
We're talking about a lot of things.
And I mentioned I'm excited about this Peter Weir thing.
Yeah.
Because I love Peter Weir.
Yeah.
I haven't seen all the movies.
Yeah.
But I mean, and a lot of them I hadn't seen since they came out because I'm elderly.
And I'm weird.
I'm realizing now I was quite a weird child.
I remember seeing Gallipoli when it came out.
Or maybe a couple of years after.
But you would have been a teenager?
I would have been like 12 or 13.
But this is a man who feels...
Why was I going to see the year of living dangerously?
I was going to say, this is a man who feels aligned with your sensibilities and makes
movies that are aligned with your interests.
Is that fair to say?
My interest as a 12-year-old was definitely Sigourney Weaver.
So that...
But I mean, not to call you out, but you're also, you know, a bit of a...
Weirdly.
A nerdy fella.
Perhaps something historical, right?
might have interested you.
But I said to J.D.
Amato, I can't wait till they get to Master and Commander.
And I wonder who the guest will be.
And J.D. said, I don't know if anyone will, because it may be David's favorite movie.
It's one of David's favorite movies.
So we did spirit it away.
Yeah.
That's in that conversation.
This is the exercise I wanted to do.
Never done alien, but we did on Patreon.
We did on Patreon.
I was thinking through our respective, 10 favorite movies of all time.
And I feel like we have covered most.
of our list, the majority.
And then the question is, what are the outliers?
We haven't covered a lot of what I would call my favorite.
What would you put in your tent?
Spirited away, alien, master commander.
Matter of life and death.
Uh-huh.
We both hope to do that.
Chunking Express, which I, you know, I think we'll do him someday.
One car, why, of course.
We done Mulahun Drive.
We have.
Never done yee, yee.
No, but in other words, been thrown out a lot.
Okay, so four out of ten right now.
L'Atlanta.
Malibu's Most Wanted.
Malibu's Most Wanted.
Projection.
The Malibu's Most Wanted
spec sequel that I wrote
and he said to be film.
Malibu's second most wanted.
Isn't it nice when a title
just gives you a layup on the sequel like that?
I know the film didn't succeed,
but it is right there.
They could have done it.
Yeah.
You know, there's probably others I'm not thinking of.
I mean, I don't know.
We've done it.
We've done it.
We've often referred to as being way up there.
Jerry McGuire.
Well, we did that.
And that is true.
Right.
It's sort of like,
Jerry McGuire,
I've seen 40 times.
Master and Commander,
I've seen many,
many,
many, many,
do I think like late spring
is one of the greatest movies
every day?
Yes.
Yeah.
Have I seen it like two or three times max?
The big 10.
I put this movie on to.
Yeah.
It's like,
I was just watching the pit last night,
Pitt finale.
Yeah.
Anyone watch?
No.
Push Master and Commander to get my BP down, right?
I'm coming in in crisis.
Like Dr. Robbie would be like,
get Master and Commander in the DVD right now.
it'll calm him. That'll tell.
That'll get his sats where they need to be.
Right?
I have done that many times in my relationship with my wife.
Like, not because, you know, like, I've been, like, stressed out and then I put it on.
And then, like, 20 minutes, and she's like, that really did settle your mood.
Yeah.
And I'm like, yeah.
Ship is England.
Yeah.
We have a movie coming up in a couple weeks that is one of those for me.
Right.
But I was thinking, because, like, Toy Story 2, Ed Wood, guested on by our current guest.
I think that was the first time I ever appeared on the show.
I believe so.
Is that right?
Yeah, I think so.
Gosh.
Broadcast news is probably in my 10.
Good one.
Robocop.
Robert Cobb.
I was going to say.
That's sort of the Griffin episode, too, where you're just kind of like, you're Kobe.
You're just like, let me have a ball.
Like, it's 48 minutes.
I want to be clear, because I, I know your sensitivity and I want to be very clear.
This is your episode.
The way you talk about, like, it'd be great if we did the Muppets so I could take two months off.
I want to watch you.
to go off about this movie.
It is David's episode.
It is.
And when JD told me that, I was like, oh, great, I can't wait to hear it.
Oh, sure.
Right.
And then, you know, I'm also, aside from being a weird only child even to this day, I'm also a great insinuator.
But I promise you, insinuate myself into things that I love.
Yeah.
And I promise you, though, that I was not trying to, like, I texted you guys after I listened to the Gallipoli episode with Jennifer Kent, which is great.
Thank you.
And I revisit Gallipoli.
She's the coolest.
the coolest, the movie's amazing, et cetera.
All this journey.
And I couldn't help myself.
And I'd say, as I said,
I can't wait to you guys get to Master and Commander.
And then David goes, do you want to be on it?
Well, I'll give you a little behind the scenes here.
We had been going back and forth on,
is this a classic guestless episode.
Yeah, do we do no guess, which is fine.
Sometimes there is a movie, like Robocop, you know,
where it's just like, this means so much to one of us.
Do we need another voice in the room?
And then when we get into those hypotheticals,
there's always a like, if it was the right person,
It could add even more to the episode.
It could be cheese on top of the burger.
Look, I wasn't going to say no, because I love this movie,
but at the same time, I feel self-conscious because I have a...
I just want to say this to you.
I don't know what qualifies me to be here other than I have been on a boat,
and I'm very happy to talk about boat.
You've been on many of a boat.
You're a boats, man.
I mean, I want to share with the listeners that when Mr. Hodgman was doing his levels,
he was going through different kinds of wind.
This is true.
And he's wearing a hat.
You know more about the high seas than I.
He's wearing a hat that says,
why not and has a drawing of a knot.
Yeah.
This is true.
It's a pink trucker hat.
Yeah.
But to my point, I'm sorry.
I'm not sure at Griffin,
but I think he might have drawn that on there.
Not sure that that was bought.
No.
I had it.
commissioned?
It was not commissioned.
It's not bespoke.
I bought it off the rack.
Really?
At the general store in the unnamed coastal town.
in Maine where I spend some time.
It was created by the daughter of our friend Molly.
Lola Blake, 13-year-old Lola Blake.
You're going to like this, Ben.
She makes T-shirts and hats where she draws nautical shit on it.
And the name of the line is, ship happens.
Oh, that's good.
This is really good.
It's a great hat.
And if you wish to inquire, I've just received an email from her mom.
Hey.
Ship happens, Brooklyn at gmail.com.
That's P-R-O-O-K-O-I.
Oh, people want to order.
Okay.
If you want to inquire.
She's not,
she's 13 years old.
Okay, got it.
Yeah, let's not overwhelm her.
Let's not overwhelm her.
You can inquire.
Yeah.
But we had gone back and forth.
We were like, maybe this guest, if the timing worked out, there were a couple
options, but we kept being like, but also, David, it could be guessless.
I think that's a strong move if it's guessless.
And then you had popped into my head truly the night before as like, I feel like
Hodgman loves that beyond just being a man of the low seas.
I think he specifically loves that movie.
You sent the text.
I side text David.
I go, I've been thinking,
Hodgman for M&C.
And immediately, David was like,
yeah, that makes sense.
There was no argument about it.
It was absolutely.
I like a comforting guest.
Well, I aim to be a comfort to you here.
I feel sometimes I push my way through
into podcasts
and sort of try to wrestle control.
I'm mutiny.
Do you know what I mean?
But today, you are, oh, captain, my captain.
Oh, relax.
And I am your own.
I'm your midshipman
Hallam. Just a shameful
I was going to say, but that's not the guy you want to be.
A shameful. And he's worse
in the books, you know. Imposter syndrome
guy. And at any point, I'm going to
jump off this ship with a cannonball.
He's worse in the books? Yeah, his
character is less sympathetic in the books.
But we don't have to get into that
because this is not, you know, the books.
How hard have you gone on the books?
I'm not as hard as I could because
there's so many of them.
So, okay, wait, what's this podcast?
This podcast is called Blank Check with Griffin David.
My name is Griffin.
I am David.
Let's put down our violins for a moment and get to podcasting.
Which are playing like guitars.
Yes.
It is a cool moment.
It's the greatest ending in a movie ever.
This movie is the fucking greatest shit that's ever happened.
This movie obviously does not mean as much to me as it does to you, but I cannot deny that ending for a millisecond.
It's like the greatest ending.
line. It's phenomenal. Perfect ending line. You're like,
oh, I'm so happy. And then they're like, let's fucking
you know, have sex, aka
our stringed instruments together. And you're like,
wonderful. They're doing it. And you're like, this is great.
And then he does a little
violent to the side. And you're like, oh, this is so saucy.
And then, I mean,
bling, bling, bling, and then. And you're like, they're going to have
a million more adventures. Like, where else?
Where else can this go? Are you going to tell me that
the vision is now picking up his cello and playing
that like a guitar? He is the vision.
Like in this perfect scene, how could it get
better and he does? That's the final
scene of the movie. My father owned all
of these books. He was very, very into
these books. And so I have them all
in my house. I have read, I
would say, I think, six of
them. I have,
they are, they are something
that dads especially are
go very deep on. There's 20 books.
There was a 21st that was unfinished at the time of
his dad. That is unfinished. And I think is...
This is by whom? The author's name
is Patrick O'Brien. I think it's a pseudonym.
And he wrote them, the first one's in 1969.
The last one came out 30 years later.
So we're 20 books in 30 years.
And Master of Commander is the first one.
The name of the first one is Master and Commander.
Okay.
And the name of the last, the name of the 10th one is the far side of the world.
Got it.
This one, this book, the movie.
It's pulling.
It pulls from various things.
They are, as I think, our guest, John Hodgman, who we haven't introduced yet.
Oh, boy.
I also haven't finished the intro.
But yes, it's true.
The books.
They are very heavy on the particulars.
of naval life
and Napoleonic procedure
and all of the stuff
that goes into
being on a fucking boat.
The poop decks.
Certainly the poop deck.
That is exactly what I imagine
the ropes.
The not lines, lines,
Ben.
Lines, Ben.
We all know this.
Lines.
They're called lines,
not ropes on a ship.
They're very interesting.
What's crazy is
like the first book,
Master and Commander,
is, you know,
what you think it is.
It's Aubrey's only a,
he's just become
mastering commander.
He used to be a lieutenant.
Master and Commander is like a naval rank, to be clear.
It's sort of like a captain, basically.
And it's like him meeting matern and all that.
The second book is called post captain,
and it's mostly about them onshore while they're like various shit is happening.
Like, he's lost money because like the debt court is dealing with his seizure assets.
And it's kind of like a Jane Austen novel.
And it's kind of about them both falling in love.
You know, like, it's just crazy that that was the second book.
And then the third book, like, they get the HMS surprise.
they're back on the seas.
Like, the books actually do defy
what you think of them
as just like dad shit.
They are really, really awesome
and interesting, but I am no expert on them.
I'm not.
I'm like, not an expert on the book.
I'm certainly less of an expert than you.
And I, you read the first one, you said?
I read, no, I read like six of them.
I read about half of the first one
and then I realize,
if I go down this road, I will never get all this.
Maybe you should read them all right now.
You got up to the ampersand
and then you give up.
I read the master part.
This is a podcast about filmographies,
directors who have massive success early on in their careers and are given a series of blank checks
to make whatever crazy passion projects they want. Sometimes those checks clear and sometimes they
bounce baby. This is a mini-series on the films of Peter Weir. I tried to call it
Podster and Cast Mand or the Podside of the cast, but instead it is called Podnick at Hanging
Cast. Today we are talking about his penultimate film. Yes. Which is fascinating only because
it is 23 years ago. The man is still alive.
And this has now become at the top tier of the films that he's known for.
For sure.
But I wonder if he is even known for the film.
In other words, I think that people who idolize this film in its reassessment that's been going on over the past half a decade or so or decade, think of it as a Peter Weir film or just think of it as a master and commander.
It's certainly a question we've been interrogating and doing this series is how many people put these?
movies together under the vision of one person and how they're filed in their mind. It feels like
there are few people who have enough films that loom this large in the culture that the
public doesn't really have a sense of. Well, as I've been watching them over the course of
listening to you guys do it so far, I'm reminded like, he doesn't have a genre. No. He doesn't have
It doesn't have like a through line.
His defining style is very subtle and is malleable.
Yeah, and he's not showy.
Right.
Even though he is probably one of the most showy, not telly directors.
Yes.
That I can think of off the top of my end.
But in a very elegant, quiet way.
Yeah.
I also think...
It kind of disappears.
It is interesting to me even just in going through these movies,
how few of them at the time were really sold as from the director of Blank and Blank.
You couldn't do that with him because I feel like
It would just look weird for this poster with Russell Crow's fate.
To them be like from the director of the Truman Show, people are like, well, I like the Truman Show, but that doesn't affect me wanting to see a boat movie.
Well, they both have boats.
That's true.
That's a good point.
They do both have sailing scenes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But let me just say the Truman Show sailing scene, not very realistic.
First of all, it's inside a dome.
Well, that's very rare.
The film one might call science fiction.
If you think about it a little bit.
Isn't the shared thing we've been talking about with him, though, is that his films cover small communities?
I was about to say.
Yeah, I think that's very insightful.
There's so many boat movies.
There are so many other boat movies.
And I feel like there are so few that are about, like, the ecosystem of life on the boat, like, versus this.
Obviously, Pirates of the Caribbean.
We understand that they have.
It's fascinating.
Tenticles, possibly, and have been cursed.
and we do get into that life.
Yes.
But do we hear about Salutin Day?
Okay?
No.
No.
Does, you know, I mean, like, is there Achillic type?
No, there's not.
No, well, because Jack Sparrow has a $40,000 a month rum budget.
He does.
He's staying up all night with his Hollywood vampire friends.
Much?
Noodling.
Riffing.
Yeah.
First made, Alice Cooper.
I wonder, yeah, what Aubrey would make of Captain Jack Sparrow, if he would like
the cut of his gym. I feel like maybe not.
But it is funny that,
right, the same year you have Pirates
of the Caribbean and all the British naval officers
in that, which I think is great, are
these prigs, right? Are these
like stuffy, sort of
gray. They're Star Wars and Imperial
officers. Right. I mean, I know Jack
Davenport has a little more flair and then he gets
sexy in the second one and he's sort of back to
being regular. He's got a good arc
in those movies. These movies are good. The first three.
Yeah.
But Pirates of Caribbean did kind of fuck this movie.
Right? I mean, obviously, this film was well reviewed, got a ton of Oscar nominations.
It did all right.
I don't think Pirates is a super expensive.
And obviously, the ambition was to launch a franchise that didn't happen.
This movie is a miracle.
This movie is a miracle.
It's a miracle it exists.
It's incredible it exists.
It's incredible it was made.
It was, right.
It was an Oscar contender.
Like, yes, should there have been sequels, certainly.
Yeah.
If 20th Century Fox had just, you know, had a stiff back about it and just fucking done it.
Because, like,
It's a movie that had such a long life.
Yeah.
Has such a long life.
Sure.
And they could have just seen that come.
And they could have just been like, look, Crow,
he's going to fit into these, you know, breaches for another six, seven years max.
Like, let's try to get another two movies made.
Well, we always point to Robin Hood as the last time.
Right.
Tightened up a little bit.
You wouldn't even look, I mean, in all respect to Crow's performance in this movie, which is good.
Mm-hmm.
Like, it didn't even tempt.
someone to go, why don't we do a young Jack Aubrey?
There have been threats recently.
Of course there have been.
But then someone stops and thinks about it and goes,
oh shit, we'd have to film it on a boat.
I think that's what often happens.
How do you achieve it?
I mean...
I couldn't even...
Even though I've seen this movie a couple of times rewatching it for this,
the first thing I thought of this movie is a miracle in the sense that I can't
believe it existed and it will never exist again.
Yeah.
In part because those boats are...
It's nuts what they did.
I also think.
And it would be CGI now and it would not.
I think that's more weird.
You could do it, but it'd probably be a little.
But to the credit of the people run in 20th century films now,
don't you think they know if they made a young Aubrey prequel that was shot in the volume,
people would revolt?
They know they can't do that.
There would be immunity.
I don't think they're going to do that.
What do you want to say?
John Hodgman.
Please.
Our guest today is John Hodgman.
By the way, Judge John Hodgman.
How many episodes have you been on one, two, three.
Three, four, five, six.
All right, this is your seventh episode,
not including voicemails.
You've done some favors.
Thank you.
The, they live, subliminal cut.
That's right.
You were inside the little door
in the Coraline episode.
You did, of course,
watch Infinity War with us on Patreon,
having watched the movie the night before.
I didn't realize we were going to be watching a live show or two.
I'm a much more of an able seaman now.
You're a dear friend of the show.
I'm more seasoned.
You've always delivered.
In the dialogue of the show,
I started out as a landsman, as a lubber.
you're a pretty...
Then I became a normal seaman.
I know I'm an able seaman.
Consistent kind of one a year on blank check, I will say,
looking at your record here.
Any time you wish I will be here.
Well, you're busy, man.
Mm.
All right.
Take it back.
Let's maintain that fiction.
I'm going to make this case that if someone at 20th pictures,
like let's do another mastering commander.
it would be a failure.
And here's why.
David put his masterly and commanderly finger on it.
This is dad shit.
And the thing is, this came out in my thoughts,
in kind of the last time dads were going to movies.
So many dads were seeing Peter Weir movies.
There are a lot about dadism.
Just to get this out of the way.
What would happen is a show, not a movie.
They would do a streaming series.
Yes, well, that's the thing.
Now Dad.
And that's what they are.
often are threatened to do. I'm speaking
to this from personal experience. Dads are definitely
watching YouTube's
about sleeper cars on trains
across trans-continental sleeper cars.
I love to watch one of those. Right?
Gondolas and finiculars.
Sure. I would say less so for me. Dead
empires. Yeah.
And you think I... What were the Hittites
up to? Tell me. Exactly. And you think I
haven't been going to sleep watching
YouTube videos with 3D models of the
HMS victory breaking down
a classic British ship of the line of 1805.
of course, and that's what I'm doing at home.
Dads are not going to go to see.
Dad's stay at home and watch things.
You can go see the H.R.
Victory, you know.
That's what I hear.
You should go.
Well, where is it?
Portsmouth.
It's Portsmouth, New Hampshire?
Unfortunately, my friend, no, it's in the original Portsmouth.
I'll stop on the way to Maine.
It's kind of out in the UK.
Yeah.
Well, it's a little easier.
This is the point.
A lot more dads would stay at home and watch a streaming master and commander than they would go to
Portsmouth to stand on the victory.
Unfortunately, it wouldn't.
I think one day it will happen.
More, you know, more dads would.
would even go to Portsmouth to stand on the deck
of the ship where Lord Nelson died, the HMS victory.
Yes, he did die there. The greatest man in the world.
Then go to a cinema to watch a Master and Commander movie.
I just think it's where we're at.
And this is like the dad shit in this movie is obviously obsession with boats
and procedure and all male worlds,
but it's also about the dadly relationship that he has with the young officers.
It is all dadism all the way down.
I just want to, you know who Horatio Nelson is, obviously.
Sure.
Okay, only you know a little bit.
Yeah, even on.
And you guys don't know who Nelson is, right?
No, no, but he was invoked in this movie a lot.
Viscount Lord Nelson.
Yeah.
The guy who stands on the column in Trafalgar Square.
Well, yes.
That's how I often will, like, because my wife has watched this movie with me multiple times.
And every time I'm like, you get who Nelson is, right?
And she's like, no, don't know what you're talking about.
Like, whatever you told me last time, it's gone again.
But like, and I keep trying to be like, he is the most important British person who
ever lived.
And it's kind of crazy that like, probably.
And like it's crazy.
Churchill, I would say, is the other.
That feels like the obvious answer.
It's between the two of them.
But Churchill is like a, obviously he, you know, he's, he's, he's pretty cool, like
or whatever, but he's a pretty complicated figure.
Yeah.
You know, he has some, some failures, Gallipoli among them in his ledger.
You know, he was, you know.
Guy liked a Scrock.
Yeah.
He did like his grower.
Yeah.
I mean, but in the morning he'll be sober and you'll still be ugly.
But, like, Nelson is.
fucking five comedy points.
Nelson's the guy who beat Napoleon.
You want to say something nasty,
sit in a circle of these guys.
And it's like one of those things where I'm like, right,
like only British, every British child knows who Admiral Nelson is,
but like no other person really outside of Britain wouldn't care too much.
Who is he equivalent to even in like American history?
Eisenhower, I guess.
Like who's the most famous regular Grant?
Provicular, Patton.
Yeah.
Who's the most famous American military leader?
It's one of those guys.
Yeah.
Eisenhower, Patton, Grant.
someone like that.
Washington.
Nelson is the other ship captain
they're talking about,
right?
Yeah,
and that's kind of the beauty
of all of Peter Weir's storytelling,
which, in my opinion,
he'll drop esoteric shit.
But he contextual...
Well, I mean, if you're an American,
but it's contextualized enough
for an American and for a lay viewer
that you know
this is like the greatest dude
that's ever lived
and they're all excited just to have...
The fact that he sat at a table with him
is blowing people's fine.
Right.
You do know that there's the big column
in Trafalgar Square in London.
Like there's a big common. He's the guy on top
of it. Oh shit. Because he beat Napoleon.
Right, right. Which we kind of
which we, you know, British people really
like to bring up, you know, like that we
he beat Napoleon the second time.
Wellington also beat.
Bonaparte. Yeah, Napoleon Bonaparte.
Oh, okay. I was wondering.
But the guy from the water park.
Yeah. I mean, sorry, his was the first time.
Wellington is the second time.
Yeah. Wellington is Waterloo.
There are two things I want to
say.
One about the death of dad cinema, right?
It does feel like that is an audience
that was lost permanently
in the pandemic,
that those are people who are just like,
I just got used to watching things this way.
It is just not a thing I even
consider going to theater to see stuff.
Right, and I can surround myself
with all my dadly comforts.
Yeah, and I think even through the late 2010s,
there would be dad hits that would punch through.
And it feels like those things go straight to
now and one that's really emblematic and feels like a counterpoint of the miracle of this
movie being made at this scale by a major studio, this seriousness, close to 25 years ago,
versus like, I think still one of the most watch streaming movies of all times, certainly the
number one movie in the history of Apple Plus is Tom Hanks's Greyhound, which was meant to be a
theatrical movie.
Right, it was a COVID shuttle to Apple TV because of COVID.
And he just finished filming a second one.
Like, he has made this a franchise for him.
And they are movies that just like, unless you are the target audience, you aren't aware
this exists.
I would say, here are some examples of dad movies recently and I think succeeded.
Okay.
Top Gun Maverick.
But that doesn't totally count, but it still counts.
The magic of that is that dad movies are part of the slice versus the whole pie.
Ford versus Ferrari, I think Dad movie was a big part of the pie.
That's a 2019, though.
That's a perfect example for me.
But not that long ago.
Sully, you know, these are movies that still like made $100 million.
domestic.
No.
And you're like,
this audience is majority dad.
David?
Yeah.
Oh.
You do it.
Ugh.
I'm doing horribly.
You want to know why?
Tell.
Because I'm remembering what my experience used to be like shopping for glasses.
Ah, terrible.
Complicated.
Ugh.
Overpriced.
And the glasses,
the styles themselves,
they felt outdated.
Now,
you don't wear glasses.
Uh,
no.
You wear sunglasses.
You like sunglasses.
Love a sunglass.
You bought the Jeff Bridges,
uh,
Fearless
on glasses?
Sure did.
Or the closest
approximation.
When you're a person
with poor vision
and you gotta wear
glasses all the time,
something that some of my
friends such a Sam Rogal
contest, they like to say
I'm a faker and a phony,
my glasses are off right now.
I can't even tell who's who.
It's so blurry.
This defines me.
The thing I wear on my face,
the frames around
the windows to the soul.
It's important.
It's a process you want to make
as easy as possible,
and that's what our friends of Warby Parker do.
And boy,
I've been a happy.
customer for many years, a decade probably now at this point, with Warby Parker.
This is why I'm obsessed with Warby Parker.
Yeah, why. You use them. I'll tell you why. Seriously, nothing comes close on quality, price,
selection, and customer service. Very affordable. Lots of choice. I got the toddy and tortoise shell.
I love these guys. I've had them for years. And with Warby Parker, the options feel easy.
The prices are lower. The quality is good. And the virtual try-on is a total game-changer.
you can literally try on glasses from your phone before you buy.
It's wild how well it actually works.
I've tried other try-ons, virtual try-ons.
I feel pretty janky.
But with Warby Parker, you can genuinely tell how the frames are going to look and fit.
You just point your camera and boom, you see tons of frames on your face in real time.
Pretty cool.
You know, you don't have to choose between flimsy outdated styles or spending half your paycheck.
Their prescription glasses start at $95 so you can actually get their quality.
You can actually get quality and stylish frames at an affordable price.
They have everything you need for happier eyes,
and that includes contacts, online eye exams, and sunglasses, non-prescription.
Lovely styles, they also have 300, over 300 retail stores across the U.S.
if you like an in-person option.
And maybe the best part of Warby Parker, for every pair they sell,
they also give a pair to someone in need.
Warby Parker has distributed over 20 million pairs of glasses to people in need
through its buy a pair, give a pair program, which sounds a little suggestive, but it's a nice idea.
And they're covered by major eye insurance plans. So right now, by one pair of glasses and get 20% off any
additional pairs at Warby Parker.com slash check. That's 20% off any additional pairs when you
purchase one pair at W-A-R-B-Y-P-A-R-K-E-R dot com slash C-H-E-C-K. And now I'm going to put my glasses back on.
post-COVID.
The oldies aren't shown up, and we got them to show up.
We got to get him to show up.
But that's not going to make Russell Crow 40 years old again.
There's no sequel.
There's no perfect sequel to Master and Commander by Peter Weir with Russell
Crohn and Paul Betney that we'll ever get.
But that's okay because we have this movie, and it ends so perfectly.
This is the second thing I wanted to say to this point.
This movie's a miracle.
How does it exist?
Tom Rothman, who is pretty infamous at this point of being like a pretty brutal kind of mercenary
sort of here's the future of studios.
You know, he's not too precious about art.
He wants to make entertainment.
He's noting everything to death.
Now he's in charge of Sony, Columbia.
And he feels like the throwbacky guy
who's going out to cinema con.
I love Tom Rothman.
We got to make original movies, you know?
He was just a cinema con just like last week
being like, stop having so many fucking ads in front of everything.
And all the AMC people are like shifting in their CP?
Windows need to be three or four months.
Yeah, right.
You know, we need to make things for, like, different audiences.
In the 2000s, he was seen as, like, is this guy too crass of business, man?
And now he feels like one of the last guys fighting for integrity, but was just sort of a brass tax guy.
Despite being, as everyone said, a big fan of movies, very well educated.
But he's like, but my job is to, like, run this like a business.
This was a fucking passion project for him.
He was not applying the usual checks and balances in his head to this movie.
Because it was, like, from the moment he fucking got that seat at Fox.
He was like, I'm going to be the guy who's finally going to get the fucking Aubrey movies off the ground.
On to see.
And can I say something?
Yeah.
Looking at his biography here, I can tell you that when this movie finally came out, he was 48 years old.
Mm-hmm.
In real dad territory, is the dad to two daughters?
Yep.
He was into this dad shit.
He was into this dad shit.
Now, here's the weird parallel I was going to say.
When the story came out a couple years ago that Foxes maybe or 20th century is maybe new,
with a mastering commander reboot.
There was a writer attached,
or there was a writer attached,
no director attached,
young Aubrey,
whatever it is.
The reason that was happening
was not just because
this movie has gained
such a reputation
and a cult.
It is because Jason Isbell,
who is now the head
of 20th century,
his first movie as a junior exec...
I think it's Stevens as well.
You're right.
Jason Isbell is a musician,
I believe.
A different guy.
Okay.
I was going to...
I mean,
I like him as a musician.
He tears it up on online with right-wing weirdos.
This was the first movie he ever worked on.
And so he has some weird romanticism and nostalgia for this as well.
I don't think he gets it over the finish line.
But it's the only reason we're even talking about it.
Let's move off of that because we're not talking about that.
We're not talking about Master and Commander.
We're talking about Peter Weir's film Master and Commander.
When did you see this film, Griffin?
I saw this in theaters.
Sure.
I believe if not even opening weekend, I want to say there was maybe even like a preview.
Possible.
Weekend a week or two early.
Maybe.
Here's my relationship to this movie.
Came out in November.
Right before Thanksgiving 2003 makes obviously perfect sense for it.
I went to see this with the off-invoked Derek Simon, my childhood friend, my oldest friend.
Hi, Derek.
We went to see it opening weekend.
The movie starts and like three minutes in, I was like, oh, right, I don't like this kind of movie.
Sure.
I sat there and was just like...
You're a young man.
You're what are you, 14?
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is not my kind of thing.
I sit there.
I respect the craft of it.
But there was a little bit of, oh, I just signed up for a class.
in a subject I'm not interested in, right?
What kind of movie was it to you at that time?
What kind of movie was it to you?
When you say, I don't like this kind of movie.
It's like a history movie.
It's a bunch of boys.
It's a war movie.
You know, like this is not a Griffin movie,
especially not Teen Griffin.
No, especially not Teen Griffin.
There's no monsters or puppets.
No.
There's no cartoon characters.
I don't want to, let's not make it sound like that's the only kind of thing I like.
Well, you were 14, though.
But I think this is a very stoic.
film. It's a very emotionally reserved film.
A light heart with a lot of wonderful humor to it, but yes, that's true.
And it's, I think, very earnest.
Yeah, sure. Right.
Pretty earnest.
Right. I was not a fan of history, in a general sense.
It's just one thing after another you might have said.
That's what James Ford says in the history books.
Yeah.
History Boys.
Didn't, never rewatch this movie because I was just sort of like, I respect it,
but it's not my kind of movie. But you've slowly over the years, like anyone,
and you've noticed, like, huh, that movie gets talked about a lot.
A hundred percent.
It's got kind of a cult around it.
Huh, beyond cult, at this point, it's sort of like revered or whatever.
When we become friends and you tell me this is one of your favorite movies,
I'm like, that makes perfect sense.
Best movie at 20.
It both perfectly aligns with everything I know about you at that point
and helps me understand you further.
Six or seven years ago, Derek, who I'd seen it with,
and we walked out with the same reaction, was like,
have you ever seen Master and Commander?
And I was like, yeah, we saw it together.
We were both bored.
And he's like, I've seen it like 20 times now.
Clearly it just bounced off me at the time.
I rediscovered it.
I'm now obsessed with it.
I watch it all the time.
I'm like, huh,
I do need to reassess this movie.
But also, Peter Weir is pinned to the board as an inevitable.
So I just have kind of held off rewatching it.
And also, the 4K only came out recently.
There wasn't a good version of it for a while.
What have you?
So I, like, set it up for this moment.
And I will say, like, simultaneously, I rewatch this,
and I was like, I totally get this.
I completely get this.
it makes perfect sense to me.
I understand the value of this movie.
It is innately not my kind of film,
but I was not disengaged from it
in the way I was as a 14-8-year-old.
But it's the best movie ever made.
Ben, David.
Or sorry, Mr. Sims.
That's how you do it.
Mr. Yeah, exactly.
Had you seen this film?
Yes.
Okay.
Because of your enthusiasm.
Okay.
So you didn't see it at the time.
I didn't see it at the time,
but I probably...
Man, two or three years ago.
I feel like I threw it on.
Yes.
And I got to tell you, I had a big old smile on it.
Yes.
Loved it.
It is so comforting.
It's really one of the most likable movies.
It is incredibly likable.
For a movie in which like a 12-year-old's arm is amputated, various people die, there's war, there's no women.
Like, and I love women.
Yeah.
And this is a womanless movie.
I was going to say that's-consciously, you know, like there's.
That's a thing I saw the Wikipedia.
noting that people vaguely complain about at the time only because there are characters in the books.
There are women. I mean, like, yes. I mean, they're not on the boats usually, but like, there's
female characters and there's, they have lives at home. Because the whole thing is you go away and
then you come back is the naval life of like someone has to wait for your ass. Like, if you like,
if you like got engaged to them and you're like, anyway, I got to go. You got Laura Linney on the phone.
They don't have phones. Oh, right. Don't have phones. They don't have the telephone.
They don't even have the mail.
Wait, Ben, you're picking this up.
Oh, no.
Oh, well.
No.
You hit us a piece of paper folded and said, don't look at it yet.
I'm not looking.
Ben, I got to say, this is unrelated.
This chair is so squeaky now.
I need my new chair, I think.
I know.
We need a squeaky-ass chair.
What I was going to say is a Wi-Fi network name.
This movie taught me what battened out the hatches means.
Okay.
It literally means there's a lot of terms.
Just hammer the hatches close.
So the water doesn't come in.
Bat them down.
Bat them down.
My whole life going through just not even really recognizing what that meant.
And we're going to talk about beating to quarters.
We're going to talk about true colors.
We're going to talk about giving leeway.
All these phrases come from the HMS surprise.
We shall beat two quarters.
We should have started this episode by beating to quarters.
That is true.
Sam's see this immediately and love it on close sight.
At the Odie and Lester Square with Howard Amos, shout out Howard,
wherever you are, probably Scott.
where you live, my friend.
We were both 17 years old.
It was, I think it must have been, well,
it wasn't winter break yet.
I think it came out in Britain at the same time,
but now I want to find out.
Seeing this in the inland must have been
a very specific
fucking insane and spirit experience.
I was 17 years old.
So I am not yet dad, right?
And I am not yet.
But you're surrounded by people who know this.
It was a big deal.
Yeah, no, it came out the same week in Britain.
Yeah. So it's the,
It's mid-November.
It's November 17th or whatever is, or whatever.
That's sort of like mid-November, we'll, and of course we'll do the box.
This is not like a Westerosy fantasy world.
No, although I love that one, too.
The way it is to American audiences.
Sure.
Yes.
No, no, it's, you're right.
It's a much shorter thing to walk.
And, like, we all had watched Hornblower on TV in the 90s.
Right.
And, of course.
What is Hornblower?
Oh, man.
You'd love it.
Hornblower is a series of TV movies based on books, very popular.
very popular books.
George Luke is a big fan of hornblower.
Don't you watch the hornblower once a year?
No, it's more like once every sort of
five, six months with Marie.
David and Elisa, David Ehrlich and his wife.
And of course, David Barty Salinas, who fucking...
He might be the biggest fan of the hornblowers.
That is very unsurprisingly.
But this is about a jazz man?
If only.
It's about...
On ships of the line, there were very strange jobs.
It's about a young...
And one of them was the hornblower.
It's about a young Navy lieutenant called Horatio Hornblower, who, you know, the first one,
he's like low on the totem pole, but he rises over this series.
And it happened because Elisa, David Ehrlich's wife, texted me like, I want to watch like
a Master and Commander thing, but not Master and Commander because I've seen enough Master and
Commander.
Okay.
And I was like, there's not much, but there's hornblower.
Yeah.
And she was like, what's that?
And I was like, it's this British TV thing.
Yeah.
And she was like, it's not streaming.
And I was like, all right, well, I'm buying the fucking box set.
I have it.
Yeah.
I bought it now.
And we're watching them.
So we all watch that.
We blow the horn, we say.
Does this, is this really like the only modern version of this executed at this level of quality in movies?
And when I say modern, I say like anything post-1950?
There's got to be some other like, you know, there's other stuff, isn't there?
There's sea movies.
Sailing ships at sea doing cannon play with each other?
Like, here's the thing.
I felt getting feisty with the 25 pounders.
Pass the opening title cards the moment this movie started.
I had a very clear thought.
Oh, yeah.
This is the only movie that gets right what it's like to have been on a ship in this time period.
And then I step back and I go, I don't fucking know that.
I have no lived experience.
No, I mean, I'm looking at like lists of Napoleon.
It's like there's not much.
There was more back in the day, back in the sort of 40, 50, 60s.
But I think most of the Napoleonic stuff back then, it's more the land.
Like, there's that movie, Waterloo.
But that's about, you know.
okay, well, you should.
Do you know what I'm talking about, though,
that sensation of seeing something in a movie
that you have no firsthand experience of,
right, and the creaks and you're just like,
yeah, I feel like they got this right.
This feels accurate to something I don't know shit about
in a way, like Sunshine, I always point to,
that movie for me versus other sci-fi movies.
I'm like, this is what it feels like
to live in a spaceship for a couple years.
And I just, I have no knowledge.
I can't speak to that with any authority,
but I feel the same way about this.
I think that one of the things,
I mean, look, I did not live during the Napoleonic War era.
I saw this movie for the first time after I had spent a week with my family,
I believe in a 90-foot wooden two-masted schooner,
sailing schooner on a course that I took on schooner navigation.
Specifically.
Yeah, because, you know, it's something that comes up a lot.
You'd be surprised at how often you want to know how to sail a schooner.
But the wooden boat school in Brooklyn, Maine,
offered this week on the merry day.
And so I had spent time on a wooden boat and learning the pin rail and the sails and all this stuff.
And when we got back, I was like, I want more of that.
What year is this?
This would have been recently.
I didn't see this movie when it came out.
Wow.
This would have been 2018 or 2019.
Okay.
When I was like, you know, I never saw Master in Command.
You're in a boat headspace, right?
And you're like, what are the boat movies?
And there's only so many.
So at that time, I am a dad.
At that time, our son was not yet an adult, but was living with us.
He had been on the boat.
I was like, let's watch some boat shit.
Does your son care about this boat stuff?
Well, it might not.
I mean, I think he thinks of it relatively fondly, but he didn't get into it necessarily.
Am I wrong remembering that your son went to a boat school?
School on a boat?
You know, look, I've been coy about this town.
Sure.
But I've already mentioned it twice.
So it's Brooklyn, Maine.
Yes, you're loath to mention it.
And there are, well, I mean, it's just, you know, it's kind of a long-running joke.
Yes.
Because E.B. White had lived there, and he wouldn't reveal where he lived.
Got it always said.
I live somewhere on the coast of the United States between New Brunswick, Canada and Cuba.
And vacation land is only available on hardcover, right?
No, it's available now in paperback.
Thanks for asking. Okay, that's helpful.
I think I'm going to start talking about my experiencing the movie again.
I feel like we got off the rails.
No, no, I'm driving towards a specific point.
I just remember when I first met your son that he was very interested in boating.
Yeah, they built, so there's a lot of wooden boat building in that community.
Yes.
And when there was four local kids and summer kids, they all built a wooden skiff.
This is a family interest that runs deep.
I understand.
But I was in the, we kind of force me to do it.
Okay. David.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I saw it with Howard.
I thought it was great.
I then saw it on a date.
It's a bad idea.
It was a disastrous date.
Movie is quite long.
It's not that long, really.
It's two hours, 20 minutes.
And it's about what it's about.
Boys on a boat.
And did not,
my date was not excited by a mastering commander.
Did you make out?
Probably.
We were 17.
I mean, you know, it's all.
What did you deem skippable enough for a quick makeout sash?
Oh, oh, during the movie?
No.
No, no, no, no, no.
After, I think.
Because I was confused by, yeah, the idea that you would look away from the screen for even a second.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
You actually shoot her away.
I'm like, go right.
Yeah, we need a quarter.
Yeah, yeah, she's leaning in.
But I'm sorry, I'm sorry, my dear, I must watch.
I really liked this movie.
But when I was, like, 17, my favorite movies of that year were elephant, which was a big movie for me then.
That was a big one for me as well.
Yeah.
I'm trying to think, like, I, uh, fuck, David.
Gordon Green's all the real girls. Like, that was a big movie for Teen David.
Obviously, I enjoyed the Lord of the Rings' epic inclusion and X-Men 2.
Yes, that was way up there. Twenty-eight days later. Kill Bill, Volume 1, right?
You know, these were the big movie. I was at the time foolishly disappointed by the Matrix
sequels and Hulk. I would, you know, I would mature. You'd get there. Right. But Master
and Cermanagh was a movie I, like, really liked. Uh-huh. And I, you know, my dad liked it, obviously.
as a big fan of the books. He enjoyed it. I bought it on DVD right away.
But it was not an immediate. This is one of my favorite movies ever.
No. And then it just, I think as it was for a lot of people, I just kept going back to it.
And they kept making movies that weren't like it, which they have consistently done to this day.
Hollywood just keeps making zero movies in which Paul Bettney in a housecoat angrily yells at the captain of his ship that he can't go on the Galapagos Islands to look at cormorants because the ship has to go like fight.
you know, the French.
This is an interesting point.
Is this movie's Rising Colt also a byproduct of a kind of like,
the longer time goes on, it is one-stop shopping.
This is the only place you can go to this.
Paul Men's performance in this film is the greatest.
I think he's incredible.
The greatest performance ever captured by a camera.
Kind of the best sideburns, too.
The best everything.
The seriousness of this man, right?
Like, from moment one, like,
just like the gravitas, just steadiness, right?
you know, like, Aubrey's got more bluster and maturans, like, very calm.
And then, like, just for an hour into the movie, for him to just show up in that coat with the hat, right, ready to go.
Ready with his wooden cages to capture some iguanas.
And finally, finally admit to, you know, like, you know, show some vulnerability with when Aubrey's like, we got to fucking go.
And he's like, you promised me I could look at birds.
I need to look at the birds right now.
It may not surprise you to hear.
The Paul Bettney's character is the one thing I remember connecting with.
Of course.
Seeing it as a 14-year-old.
I mean, he actually got Oscar buzz.
Like, I mean, he was in the mix.
But I was just like, I get this guy.
This is the closest analog to what I would feel like in this experience.
I loved him.
I was like all in a Paul Bettney at the time.
Yeah, exactly.
He was such an exciting young actor at the time.
He's so fucking good and beautiful mind.
I feel like with distance, he's arguably the best performance in that movie.
Sure.
You know what?
That's a movie I have not seen in 25 years.
A little bit terrified to rewatch.
But I remember my mom and I walking out being like,
who the fuck is that guy?
Right.
He was, he was brand new.
Very excited.
He'd obviously been a Knight's Tale that year, too.
And gangster number one was a couple years before that.
But when this, seeing this, I was like,
well, this clearly feels like an anointment moment where they're going to give him a kind
of star is born, Jude Law and talented Mr. Ripley,
best supporting actor, Nam.
You've proven yourself and now you're a leading man.
And instead, his career, like, kind of immediately gets way like,
after this. At that time, I was writing
for Men's Journal Magazine,
which is the very famous
National Magazine covering the trend
of men keeping journals. Yep, of course.
And I pitched
a profile of Paul Bettney, having not seen the movie.
Just liking him. But you're like,
this character's going to pop. I'm like, yeah.
And they said, no, not that nerd.
Wow. Can I tell you that... And the same thing
to say about the man who is married to
Jennifer Connolly. Although he wasn't
yet, right? They were together. They may have been
together. Because they met on Beautiful Mind.
Yeah.
Even though he's a figment of someone's imagination in that movie.
So how could they even mad?
They also don't have any scenes together.
They don't.
Because he's a figment of his imagination.
He has no scenes with anyone, but Russell Crow.
I believe the story is that they, like, had a flirtation and maybe a hookup during the filming a beautiful mind.
Well, well, well.
Then the movie's obviously done and 9-11 happens.
And as he tells the story, when he sees the news on TV, he's like, all I want to do is
called Jennifer Connolly. You're right. That is on his Wikipedia page. And he called her and was like,
should we fucking give this a go? And they were married like six months later, right? They've been married
ever since? Yeah. Paul Bettney, the Oscar nominees that year for supporting actor were Tim Robbins
for Mr. River who wins. Well, my opinion, not a very good performance. Yes. I'm kind of a bad
win. Good actor. A lot of good performance. Bad one. Alick Baldwin in the cooler, it was the
Alec Baldwin moment. Yes. But in retrospect, you're just like, that movie doesn't exist. It is so weird,
that's his only Oscar nomination. It's not a bad movie. But it doesn't.
really exists.
I remember him being good.
He's really good.
But it also was, it was just the moment
of him embracing the character actor thing.
Everyone liked him being the bear.
Benicio in 21 grams.
He's amazing in that.
What I have often contended,
if he hadn't won for traffic,
he would have won this year.
An amazing performance.
Yeah, he's a dog shit movie,
but he's phenomenal in that.
Not a very well-remembered movie.
Jiamen Houns in America,
a performance I really like,
a nom I kind of love.
Same.
But another one that you're kind of like,
huh?
Like another performance,
somebody really talks about it.
Kind of a nomination morning surprise.
I forget who he bumped out, but he was not as much in the first.
This is what I'm getting to.
Betney.
And then Ken Watanabe in Last Samurai, which is a movie I don't love, but a performance I adore.
Yeah.
Like, and that was kind of a nice, you know, that was a nice thing.
The Globes had, right, so like Peter Sar's Garden Shattered Glass, who cleaned up at the critics of the ones.
Amazing performance.
Yeah.
Got snubbed, rude.
Albert Finney and Big Fish got the Globe and Baftanoms, seemingly an obvious nom there.
Real Lifetime Achieve.
And then the Oscars just like spurned Big Fish generally.
Yeah.
They were just kind of like, not for us.
The BAFTA nominees were at Robbins.
Yeah.
That's the only one it shares with the Oscars.
He was inevitable that season.
He cries.
You know, it's,
it also felt like he's had a really big 80s and 90s and here's the
annoyment moment.
And from the moment he gets that Oscar, his career is basically.
They were like, never employed this man again.
Right.
Tim Robbins Mystic River.
Ian McKellen Return of the King,
I think that's a bit of a, that's a bit of a softball novel.
but whatever.
And the thing I find very funny
is that Ian McKellen
often in interviews
will say,
I believe I'm the only
actor to be nominated twice
for playing the same character,
which is both wrong
in that other people have done it
and he didn't get
the Oscar nomination.
But he thinks he did
because of the BAFTA.
He'll cite it all the time.
Gandalf the White
and Kenneth the Grey
are kind of different characters.
In a way.
Yeah, one of them
doesn't even remember his own name.
Ian Mckellen,
Albert Finney,
Big Fish.
Bill 9th,
who won for love actually.
Yeah.
Which is a little bit of a moment.
I think the Brits getting a little too
Huffy on their own paint.
They used to do this, though.
I mean, he's so fun in that movie,
and I don't like that movie, but obviously.
And it was the naive moment.
We were all like,
this is also like my beloved,
like Denham Elliott winning best
supporting actor for trading places.
And Paul Bettman
was nominated by the Baptist.
It was the one he did get the novel.
But no, yeah, after this, he did Wimbledon
and it killed his career.
It's insane.
It's kind of wild.
When he gets the Ironman job, you know, to be the voice of Jarvis, it's kind of a like, you don't
have any fucking other shit going on, do you, buddy?
And that's because it's Favreau in Wimbledon.
They were friends from that.
I think Favro's in Wimbledon as an actor.
I mean, like, obviously he's like the villain in Da Vinci Code.
Like, he was working.
This is what I was going to say.
Da Vinci in another universe, you're like, if this movie isn't repellent dog shit, is this
an opportunity for like a fucking John Malkovich and in the line of fireman?
moment. And instead, it feels like
there's six years where he's either just
doing true paycheck shit, like
he's the villain and firewall.
Yep. Or
there's like...
Right. In-Cart's another one where you're like... He's like a guy in young
Victoria. Or it's stuff like Legion where
it's like he is on the poster, but that's like
a really odd junkie movie. This is like a $15
million screen gyms movie. Wasn't part
that he's supposed to be the guy? I like
both of those movies which are very odd and
stylish. I like both of those movies. But it was like,
okay, so this guy's neither seen as a
serious actor nor a major movie star.
And then he just has a run of being like Johnny Depp's journal wouldn't profile him.
Yes.
Hollywood was like, yeah, I guess we've got to take the message.
This guy is not for us.
He's not going to break through.
And then he has three consecutive Johnny Depp's best friend performances.
Mordecai and Transcendence.
I'm not sure the other one.
And also, why am I blanking on the other one here?
I don't know.
There is a third one.
I believe you.
It's the tourist.
Oh, right.
He's in the tourist.
Maybe he's a villain in the tour.
He's good in margin call.
But that's a small movie.
He's really good.
But that would be the third one.
the thing he'd pop up as like seventh build in a movie with like a good dramatic scene,
you'd be like, why is no one fucking using this guy?
He says when he got to be vision that he really was like just his career was,
his agent was kind of like, it's just not happening for you anymore.
He directed a film starring his wife, Jennifer Connolly, nice work if you can get it,
and Anthony Mackey called Shelter about a homeless romance.
And he was like, I needed to tell this story.
And I turned down a lot of jobs.
and I focused on this for like three or four years
and it went to Fessels and everyone was like,
why the fuck did you make this?
And then he tells the story of his reps being like,
we're dropping you.
Like you're just,
you fucked it up, man.
And he's like literally the same day Favro called me and was like,
No, it's Whedon.
We didn't calls him.
Isn't he in the first one?
He's in Iron Man, but like the, but he's the voice.
But like,
Shelter came out in 2014.
You're right.
You're right.
It's Whedon's then like, hey, by the way,
like I have this fun idea of like,
you're the voice of Jarvis and it'll make you
vision. And he's like, well,
that sounds good. Is that good?
And we didn't, like, yeah, like, that's like,
is the Avengers. Good idea.
Yeah. I, this is purely speculative,
but he's been married to Jennifer Connolly
for a long time.
First person he thought of when the Twin Towers
came down. Yep. They seemed to have a real
marriage. He said he's like, had, he had
a crush on her from, like, Labyrinth, which, I mean,
got in line. Yeah. I thought
he was the only one. But, like, I
hear that story, and I'm like, maybe I should have called
Jennifer Connolly on 9-11.
Can I holler at you, Jennifer?
I'm 13 years old.
I'm not saying that the vicissitudes of Hollywood were not unkind to him,
et cetera, et cetera.
Obviously, men's journal really fucking blackballed him.
But sometimes I feel like when someone isn't a good marriage,
that maybe his priorities are different.
Although she also has had an odd career.
Say it again.
She's had an odd career, too.
I know.
And maybe that's because they love each other and love spending time with each other
and they're not chasing fame.
in the way that a single hungrier person would be like, you know.
I'm not going to say.
And they're dads and moms too, right?
Connolly.
Yes, yes.
Connolly obviously wins the Oscar for the movie they did together at the very
beginning of their relationship.
And then it feels like she has continued to be for the last 25 years, one of these
people where I'm just like, why is everyone fucking taking her for granted?
Every four or five years, she'll like pop up again in a way.
And everyone's like, right, Jennifer Connolly, still looks great, is always good.
And then she goes back to being ignored for another four or five years.
But is she being in order?
Is she making a choice to just...
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's like fucking five seasons of snow piercer.
It's not like she's choosing to not work.
But it just feels like the stuff isn't sticky.
And then she'll be in like fucking Top Gun Maverick.
Which she's great.
She's luminous.
Yes.
And she's got incredible chemistry of Tom Cruise in that movie.
Sexual chemistry.
I actually think it is the most successfully a woman has conveyed.
She's so good.
Yes.
She's that great an actress.
Yeah.
He seems a little uncomfortable, but she's,
He's so good. I think that movie has the exact
right strategy in how to
make you by their relationship and what
they show you and the things they're just like,
we're not even going to attempt to show you this.
I'm going to open the dossier and then we're going to
talk about MasterC commander. Okay. Yes, okay.
And pop open that dossier.
All right. In 2000, here's a curious
note from
a, from this is not related to
Master and Commander, but in 2000, Peter Weir,
Wolfgang Peterson, Rob Reiner,
Jonathan Demi, the great Brad
Silverling, director of your favorite.
Casper.
I participate in a creative bakeoff to pitch themselves as the director of Harry Potter.
Okay.
They were all part of, I assume Warner Brothers was essentially like call a bunch of kind of
esteemed-ish directors who've done big productions.
Can you run that list again quickly?
Wolfgang Peterson.
So like obviously, you know, he's a big director.
I had done a lot of stuff for Warner Brothers.
Yeah.
Rob Reiner.
Yeah.
I mean, at that point, he's starting to lose his luster, but he's still, he's made huge
movies.
Demi.
Demi's kind of a wild choice.
What's, I mean, that would have been very interesting.
This is like, who knows.
Post-beloved.
Right.
But he's still fucking Jonathan Demi.
Like, you know, and Brad Sibberling, who, you know, is, he's kind of like a, I mean, they got Chris Columbus.
Right.
And it's like, Chris Columbus is more proven than him, really.
Right.
Columbus is more emotional.
Silverling is a little more technical.
But it's also like Columbus has just made two of the biggest movies ever with, like, kids in them.
I mean, also, the other famous story is that, like, uh, J.K. Rowling said my first choice is Terry Gilli.
And Warner Brothers said that's not a conversation.
Yeah, Warner Brothers, she was like,
respectfully.
Okay, lady.
I mean, like, there was like the rumor
that Spielberg sniffed and
Rowling. Only wanted to do it with Haley Joel.
Right, and Rowling was like, I'm not doing
like American Harry Potter. I'm not like, you know, she knew
that he would box her out. Like, he's more powerful than her.
Yeah, he also was like, I'd want to make some changes.
And Warner Brothers was like, your job
is to adapt the books, Harry Potter,
in a way that satisfies all audiences.
Eminemich Shaman supposedly was also, like,
given a phone call. I've heard that.
You know, whatever.
But that is interesting.
They might for like a very safe.
Weir would have been possibly interesting.
Where is fascinating.
Instead, though, weir does not win this bake-off, obviously.
He gets attached to an adaptation of Master and Commander for 20th Century Fox.
Tom Rothman, back when he was president of production at Samuel Goldman Company in the 90s,
read an Aubrey Matern book and loved it and asked Samuel Goldwyn,
acquire the film rights, please.
So that's in 1993.
Three. The rights then cycle between
Goldman and Touchstone, which is of course
Disney subsidiary. Yes.
This movie has three
studios attached to it. It has Miramax,
Fox, and Universal. It does.
John McTiernan, at one point, was attached
to direct an adaptation for Touchstone.
Makes perfect sense. Absolutely.
Yeah. At one point, Goldwyn
asked where to do it sometime in the
90s, and he says he turned it down because they
wanted to do the first book in the series, which is
more of a young Aubrey, like,
your Aubrey has just gotten his first command.
By 98, Goldwyn has the rights again, and he has a new home at 20th century Fox.
Oh, sorry, Rothman has the rights again.
And Rothman's at 20th Century Fox.
And then Fox, he becomes president and CEO in 2000.
And it is his passion project.
It is like, you know, his, like, as you're saying, Griffin, like, this is the one I'm
going to be remembered for.
And I'm going to ignore the usual studio noty kind of like, well, you know, kind of, you know,
You know, anyway.
This is the one for him.
Weir is always his top choice.
Yeah.
He's been his top choice since the mid-90s.
And since the mid-90s, he's only, like, he's only gotten more obsessed with the books.
He's now read, you know, the entire opus.
Weir has, you're saying.
No.
Or Rothman.
Rothman has.
Patrick O'Brien dies at the age of 85, January 2000.
Okay.
As far as he knew, the two towers did forever.
He's lucky.
He's lucky.
Weir still hesitant to sign on,
but I mean, it just seems like Rothman was basically like,
well, here's the story.
They'd have a meeting.
And Rothman says, what I really think you should do.
And then he pulls out a captain's sword and hands it to him and says,
is take command of the HMS surprise.
And Peter Weir is like, can I keep the sword?
And they were like, yeah, you can have the sword.
But go ahead.
You also have to imagine that Rothman's basically saying to him,
like, I'm going to give you full support
to make the best version of this movie.
You're not going to deal with dumb fucking notes.
This is exactly what Weir says.
He says, you could not have made this
without a studio executive at the top of the tree
who loves the material.
Like, you need Rothman at the top
every time someone's like,
hey, Peter Weir just bought a million more gallons of water.
Rothman's like, approved.
Right.
Give him another million.
The guy with the stamp,
the rubber stamp needs to be someone
who understands exactly what these books are
and has no temptation
to be like, could we add a romantic subplot?
Could we do this?
Could we do that?
Kind of bullshit.
Yeah.
There's a talking parrot.
Yeah.
That was my main note at the time.
Yeah.
Ben, the name of the boat is the HMS surprise.
Just so you know.
Okay.
And if you want to know how to drop anchor, I'll tell you sometime.
I would.
Okay.
Put a pin in it.
Great.
So Weir is still like, I don't want to do the first book, which is still mostly been
every attempt to adapt it has been working.
He's like, I want it to be on the friend.
of Aubrey and Materan. I want it to be on their longer voyage. You know, I like, if we're doing
essentially an origin story, we won't really have that. His favorite inspiration is, 1984 is the
far side of the world, the 10th book. It's where they get the subtitle, but it is not a strict
adaptation. They have some of the first book in there. They have some original stuff. John Colley,
a Scottish-born physician and professor whose medical travels have taken him across the world
before he settled in Australia is brought in. He's like a novelist and screenwriter as well.
He's brought into help.
I don't really know John Colley.
What are his other credits?
Happy Feet.
Really?
Yeah.
He's here.
Wow.
He wrote Happy Feet.
I mean, one of the several writers.
Happy Feet.
Along with the lady from the plumber.
But this is his first, this is essentially his first movie, apart from a movie called
Paper Mask, which is based on a book he wrote.
Okay.
In three episodes of Star Cops on these BBC 2 in 1987.
What is Star Cops?
Did you have any familiar with StarCops?
David.
Sounds cool.
It's a British sci-fi thing from the 90s.
Can't say I know this one.
I was a bugs guy.
If anyone watched bugs, hit me up.
It was another BBC, like, kind of sci-fi cop show.
It was really cool.
It was set in, like, the near future.
Because they would computer bugs.
They would do, like, hacking shit.
StarCops is set in a time when space travels become common.
Mankind is in the process of exploiting and colonizing the solar system.
They need cops.
takes place in 2027.
Do we need cops?
Yeah, I got to say, guys.
Hands on hips.
I'm gonna, yeah, a scab.
All space cops are bad.
Yeah.
Ah.
Love that.
So the breakthrough is,
the breakthrough is, according to Colley,
sings the film as a dialogue about what it is to be a man.
We're really writing about a family
in which Jack is the dad.
Stephen is the mom.
Blakeney, Max Perkis,
is the kid.
The rest of the crew are the teenagers, right?
you know, like, that's how they think about it.
And, like, I think the Max Perkis character is so vital.
The boy who loses his arm.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because, I mean, because it's a really good performance.
That kid's great.
He ended up on Rome.
I don't know what happened to him after that.
Yeah.
But, you know, he was sort of around.
You know what?
In 2016, he was appointed head of acquisitions and distribution at an embankment film.
So it sounds like he moved to the other side of the industry.
That's great.
Yeah.
Because it just rocks that you're like, this is this,
tender relationship, but it's also
a military relationship. Both
Aubrey and Maturin have like separate relationships
to him. You know, like Aubrey has the
naval and talking about Nelson stuff, but then he likes all the
bugs and the stuff he does with Maturin. And then at the end
Aubrey's like, you're in charge of the ship and then he is
and then he's like, we need to fucking storm them. And he's got a gun and he's got
one hand and he's shooting French people.
Cool. It rocks. When he walks
through the hole in the other shit. And he's just like
with a gun in one hand. And no hand in the other.
hand. It's crazy.
It's the greatest.
Just do a show about him.
I could. I could do a show about anyone.
Killick is my favorite. My favorite is when he says,
my favorite moment in Master and Commander.
Yeah.
Is when he says an extra rach of,
you know, an extra ration of rum for the two guys.
And Killick's like, we're saving the rum for Saluting Day.
He's like, we'll drink wine.
And he's like, we'll drink wine on Saluting Day.
And you're like, what the fuck is Saluting Day?
And they never
It's like you don't have to know
He's the captain steward
He's the only guy who talks back to like apart from
Materan does it like in a very formal way
McKillick is the one guy who's like
I was saving the girl
Marantleutantia I was
Which is it will be done when it's done
He's always starting sense
Which it is South Hog's face sir
I love it when he says South Hog's face
And Aubrey is like
Yeah that's my favorite
I love Southog's face
My mom
My mother loves.
You would think you hear hog face and you're like,
ah, fuck, it's hog face weak.
When I was a kid and my parents, bring it on.
When my parents said, we're like, what are we having tonight?
Hog's face, I would be like, again.
You sound hogs face.
It sounds disgusting, but what it is is you boil a hog's head.
The head.
You take off all the meat and then you put it into a mold
and all the gelatin that's come out of the skull bones.
turns it into a tureen, and you slice it.
Yes, it's cold.
You spread it like on toast.
Yeah, and my mom would eat it by the slice.
I personally, I love a patte.
I don't, I don't, like, I never messed with it.
It doesn't sound like the greatest thing in the world.
I never had it.
A lot of jellying of things on ships.
See, for me, when it was Monday at the school cafeteria and they served just up Hogshead, I was excited.
But then later in the week when you're like, oh, it's like hogshead loaf, it's hogshead's pie.
Right, right.
They're using every part of them.
what they're doing. Hugs at tacos. You're like, I'm tired of it by Friday.
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2025 for the Cadillac definition of luxury. All right. So the beauty of, Colley says, the beauty of the
books is the richness of the technical detail, the correctness of the dialogue. You know, the plots are good,
but the incidents, the little stuff. That's why people love these books. Like, they love the detail.
And it's perfect for us because we can just, you know, achieve all this versimilitude just by using the
books. Like, it's all in there already. You don't need to do a zillion.
He did all the research for you.
The whole point of those books is they are very accurate.
Like, they are really striving for, like, this is life.
But and Peter Rear is particularly good at capturing the minutia of worlds,
of communities and worlds.
He always is.
So, you know, it's a perfect match.
Takes him to your story as satisfactory screenplay.
And then he stops, right?
That's my work, definitely.
Is it satisfactory?
Good.
That Russell Crow comes aboard.
And he wanted to beef up their,
Maturin and
Aubrey relationship a little bit more.
So Akiva Goldsman, who of course
had just written A Beautiful Mind
does some rewrites
which is interesting because I think
of Akiva Goldsman, of course, as a master of trash.
But he's also been involved in things I like.
Yeah. And at this moment, he was
seen as hyper legit.
This is true. Yeah. Weir says his
ideal choice would have been Richard Burton.
Unfortunately, he was very
dead. Quite dead. Yeah. And also
before he died, had been a little
bit of a handful in those last 20 to 30 years of his career. I would go as far as to say that at this point in time, Richard Burton was extremely dead, more dead than most, and that the last 20 years in which he was alive were also kind of death-like.
Exactly. I don't think Richard Burton would have maybe had his sea legs, what might say. But anyway, he turns to Rosal Crow, who correctly, is the closest thing you're going to get to a Richard Burton type in 2000. Yeah. Ish, right? A big, burly, burly,
fucking man who is a great actor and a movie star.
Yes.
But who like embodies like a kind of masculinity that a lot of guys don't.
I was listening to the LexG podcast yesterday.
Love the LexG podcast.
The greatest.
Just the name of it?
It's called the LexG podcast.
Got it.
The world's greatest commenter has his own movie podcast.
And he was talking about, he was doing kind of a new release roundup and doing this
sort of like, why do I even see these movies anymore?
Why do I still feel this compulsion to go?
This seems to be the constant existence.
Why am I seeing ready or not two, opening weekend, whatever?
And then he was saying, like, I'm really trying to, like, watch more old movies.
And I'd love to make the podcast more about old movies, but I feel like people won't listen.
But I've been watching Ben Hur because the 4K just came out.
And he was just kind of waxing about Ben Hur.
And he was like, and fucking Charlton Heston, like, we don't have anyone who can do this today.
Like no one acts like this anymore.
No one can hold a movie like this
and sort of know how to be larger than life,
but also just steady at the center.
And I was thinking, hearing this right before doing the rewatch,
Crow's career has been weird.
Like 2001, right?
You're like, this guy's the top of the fucking world.
And always will be.
He had three consecutive Oscar Noms.
He won the middle one.
Gladiator was a massive blockbuster.
Beautiful Man was a massive blockbuster.
And it was like, if this guy can do fucking big,
big epics and intimate dramas,
then he's everything.
This guy's like Mel Gibson and Gregory Peck
and Charlton Heston at the same time,
and then he has gone off in a thousand weird directions.
There is the consistency of, like,
this was a reasonable hit,
although obviously did not make as much as they wanted relative to the budget.
And then you could basically say the same about Robin Hood and Noah
where, like, people went to see them.
Yes, they did.
And again, it's the dad thing we're talking about.
of just that audience was bigger.
He never hit the gladiator thing quite as big,
but you were like, this is the only guy,
I would argue, for the last 25 years
who people buy doing this type of movie.
And when they try to put someone else into this,
even when it is a proven actor,
like you get fucking Exodus gods and kings
with Christian Bale as Moses,
and everyone's like, not buying it.
You know?
And then like Russell Crow will hire a trainer
and be like, I'm going to try to look like a person
again for this one.
And everyone's like, yeah, sure, yeah.
He's the one guy who can pull this shit off in our modern era.
Crow and Weir, obviously are both from Australia, but they never work together.
But obviously Crows at this point, a gigantic movie star.
He has made Gladiator when he gets signs on here.
Beautiful Mind is about to come out.
He's committed to Cinderella Man, which is going at that point to be made by Lassa Helstrom.
Ron Howard eventually makes that.
That is the movie that's 2005.
So that's his next movie after Master and Commander.
He wants to do Master and Commander.
and he says, can you wait while I do Cinderella Man?
Like, can you wait a year?
And Weir says the ship sails with the tide.
Nope, I'm not waiting.
So Crow decides to postpone Cinderella Man.
Yeah.
And instead boards the surprise.
And that's probably tough on him because, like, Cinderella Man, he's playing a boxer.
Like, he's got to have the physique and all that.
And you probably would want to do that.
I mean, how old is Crow?
How old is Crow when he makes this movie?
That's a great question.
I'm going to guess 30.
are we going to realize that Crow is significantly younger
than I am right now in this film?
Yeah, Russell Crow is significantly younger than you are right now.
He is 39 when this film comes out.
So Crow is basically just like, I could not stop thinking about it.
And he says, like, did I want to give up a chance to work with Peter Weir?
I dreamed about working with Peter Weir in my whole career.
Like, he immerses himself.
He loves the books.
He finds that the later books turn off Aubrey into a bit of a buffoon, which he doesn't like.
But he, you know, he loves the character generally.
he loves the teacher-student thing
with the kids.
He wanted to show the responsibility
that Aubrey has
having these kids on board
because, like, to be clear,
the officer class,
as I'm sure you know,
these are the young boys
of like aristocracy.
Yes.
Who, like, it's usually,
if you're like the fourth son,
right?
Like, son one,
you're going to inherit the land.
Sun two, you're the backup.
Stick around.
Sun three,
maybe you marry next door neighbor
who's inherit their land.
Sun four,
we don't know what to do with you.
It sounds like you've got some extra sons.
Yeah.
You send them to be midshipmen in the Royal Navy to learn to be officers.
And if they'll rise and all that.
But, you know, but just, they're so young.
Exactly. Ben, the absolute madness of like a 12-year-old outranking these like salty ass sea dogs.
Yeah.
And the way the whole like microcosm of British class happening on this ship.
Like that there's no, you know, like the, obviously the great subplot of where that that does start to get fucked with a little bit with the Jonah.
But generally that like those lines don't get crossed.
And like the boys do get to sit at the front essentially and, you know, order everyone around.
And they get to wear those little hats and everyone's got to touch their hats.
And Blakeney and Calamie, well, Blakeney's got to be 12 or 13.
Calamie's maybe 16.
Holm is older.
He's a midshipman.
Yeah.
He's a real loser.
He says he's 36 or something.
Yeah.
He's just, he's like, you know, his, his, his rating mate are all 16, 15, 14, 13, 13 years old.
He's just never passed that.
He's never gotten to jump right to a higher command or whatever.
A number of historians hired to consult in the movie said that Crow could actually use his Australian accent that that would basically be acceptable considering like what British people talk like at the time and things like that.
Because the Australian accent is sort of a throwback to some time.
I think that's sort of the idea, right?
Like it's like, you know, that's around when we're starting to fucking send British people out to Australia anyway.
And did England stop putting shrimps on the Barbie?
They call them prawns in England.
They do in Australia too.
Yeah.
So Crow decides that'll just feel unnatural.
So he goes to this kind of British accent, you know, this like solid upper class, you know.
That does feel like a fascinating version of even if it's accurate, 99% of the audience is going to go, oh, so Russell Crowe was too lazy to do a British accent?
I may be.
You're not going to be able to fight the notion of like, is this guy cheating by using his real voice?
I feel like he was pretty well regarded for his accent.
like the LA Confidential performance is so good.
I'm sure, like, he, that's part of the juice for him.
Yeah.
You know, he's at this point a very, like, studious, obsessive actor.
It was 2003, so not as many people were eating shit online.
There weren't that many commenters who were going to get up in there and start creating a narrative saying that he was too lazy or whatever.
Sure.
But it's still, I got to say, I'll hate this phrase, but it would have taken me out of it.
Yeah.
I would have been wondering why he's talking about.
You question it.
No, they made the right call.
Yeah.
Weir is initially resistant to Betney because of the beautiful mind thing.
Oh, sure.
He's like, is that too obvious?
Do we need like a fresh combo?
He also thinks Betany is too tall.
Like, he's like, Matern is supposed to be the physical opposite of Aubrey.
Like, Betany's pretty burly.
I was look at the Wikipedia and the sort of people complaining, the book fans complaining at his casting at the time.
And the other thing that in the books, he's a spy.
And they remove that element?
Well, they don't remove it because they nod to it.
There's the moment early on.
when he says, like, they have their spies everywhere.
And Aubrey's like, mm-hmm.
Because, yes, often matern goes on spy missions.
Because he's the greatest.
Right.
Is spy?
Cellist, naturist, naturist, surgeon?
You don't got to sell me on mater.
Yeah.
Auto-surgeon.
But it sounds like in the books he is described as looking like Timothy Spall.
That he's a little gargoyle-esque.
Obviously, that was never going to happen.
Heath Ledger was considered, which makes a lot of sense.
It does.
Although then you got double Ozzie.
Double Burley.
Yeah.
I think.
Betney, though,
obviously is a
even though
Betney's kind of
a bigger guy
than you think of
in the face,
he's got a,
he's got a fine,
a fine bone
structured face
compared to
the big hunk of
like an Easter ham
that the crow has
for his head.
Everyone in the cast
does a boot camp,
right?
They do a sort of like,
you're going to learn
how to sail.
Betty is like,
no, thank you.
And instead learns
about like amputations
and how to cut up
fish. Russell Crowe says
that everyone, every actor should sew their characters
name into their t-shirts, according, colored
according to rank, you know, as
part of like a sort of, you know, like,
let's get into this. Right. Betany
refuses to do it. Betany, he's consciously
like, I want to feel apart from everyone. I want
everyone to feel a little weirded out by me.
You know, because Maturin is kind of an
oddity on the boat.
Bettney says, like, nonetheless, like,
we all bonded, you know, not in a testosterone
way, but you're really looking after each other.
It's like 20 actors. They should
this mostly in Mexico or off the coast of like Baja California and stuff like that.
That's where the tank was. Right. Yeah. Max Perkis was found at Eaton College. Britain's fanciest school.
He's a fancy lad. He's a fancy fancy, fancy lad. He's a fancy fancy playing a fancy lad and he
vibes fancy. I was curious, Sims, he doesn't seem to still be working for embankment, but I was
like, what films has he worked on? And that announcement of him being hired to...
Malibu's Most Wanted. Okay, so he's hired in 2016. Do you know what the first film Embankment does
under his watches, David.
Which is that?
The wife.
What if there was one?
One of our greatest running bits.
He was the one who asked the question.
What if we bankrolled the wife?
I mean, it's one of those movies where the production,
there's like 14 production companies.
Like, that's a classic TIF movie where you're like,
I can arrive 10 minutes late.
The various logos will still be playing.
Of like Jim's films.
That's a great way of putting it.
Jim's films.
If you're at the premiere, there's like
10 people who're like,
Yay, there's chills, you know, whatever.
I found the screen daily
Screen International news item
about him getting hired at Embankment,
and it has this whole thing.
You know, we nabbed one of,
nurtured one of the brightest. We're convinced that he's
an industry star of the future.
Embankment co-founder Hugo Grumbar and I
vividly recall first meeting him and thinking,
we've seen that guy before somewhere.
Turns out he was amongst the lead actors
and Peter Weir's master commander.
It's funny in what is otherwise
a pretty staid kind of press release
to be like, and we were thinking,
who is this guy?
His face looked familiar.
I got to say, when you Google him,
he's got the same face.
He's got a baby face.
Yeah, he still looks like that.
He's got the same face.
Did he grow his arm back?
Yeah, he does.
I mean, the cast rocks.
The cast is, I mean, James Darcy,
who I adore, is a great, like, British TV actor.
I just got to say with regard to that,
Ben, I mentioned to you,
the boat is called the HMS surprise.
Okay?
it's a smaller boat of the ships of the line.
The victory, which was the flagship, Admiral Nelson's boat,
was about 250 feet long.
Now, the surprise, which was a real boat,
126 feet long.
Now, I don't know if that's the length of the hull bend
or if that includes the bow sprit,
the big long thing on the front.
But it's much shorter boat.
You see what I mean?
Its beam is only 31 feet.
It's got a draft of 14 feet and a half inch.
You are reading these off like a PDF right now.
It's a smaller, no, it's all off the dump.
Okay.
His eyes are rolled back into his head, like Stephen McKinley Henderson and Dune.
What's surprising about the surprise for a boat that size?
It's got not one, but two Jarvis is on it.
It's a good point.
Thank you for setting that up.
I was going to.
James Darcy is the original Jarvis.
It was kind of beautiful to watch that wind up and just Jarvis.
I can go to Harvest.
I'm ready to go.
And you know what?
He's really fun in that show.
He is.
You know, what else James Darcy is fun in pretty much everything.
He's terrific.
He's great and Cloud Atlas.
Amazing in Cloud Atlas.
But yes, he was.
He was original Human Jarvis and Agent Carter,
and then they brought him back in Endgame.
He was recently in Oppenheimer as the guy who's not nice to Oppenheimer,
and Oppenheimer almost poisons his apple.
Right.
Which is coming in Oppenheimer really did.
It is this funny thing of, like,
I think of him as a guy who did not emerge until the 2010s,
and I feel like you often have these discoveries watching movies
where, like, the young supporting cast of recent drama school graduates
are guys who are a decade away from finally breaking through.
He's a classic, like.
Coronation Streets or neighbors.
But like Andrew Scott being in like Band of Brothers
where you're like, isn't this way too early
for Andrew Scott to be in a thing?
But they do a lot of BBC costume dramas
and stuff. And like Darcy, I feel like is also one of
those guys who was always on the
Doctor Who list. Oh, sure. Like every time
it came up. Makes a ton of sense. He rocks.
Obviously, it's so nice to see
Billy Boyd. I feel like this is Billy Boyd's like
other big movie basically.
Yeah. So I remember
Dominic Moynihan doing an interview
saying that this was like the peak
of his depression and I think his
drinking. Boyd or Monaghan?
Monaghan. Right. Because he was like
I have this like double act with
Boyd. We make these three movies
together and then I couldn't book a gig
for two years. So the movies
are coming out, winning Oscars, making tons
of money and Boyd's off on a fucking
pirate ship. Not a pirate ship.
Ship of the line. Yes.
But he was like, I was like he's going to
keep booking and I'm
stuck. And then basically
right after this it flips. And boy...
A little disappears a little bit.
And then, yeah, Moynihan's on lost.
Yeah, I mean, it's not like Boyd stopped having credits,
but I do feel like, you know, you don't really,
you don't really see him too much.
I got to say it was hard.
It was, this was a thing that took me out of the movie.
You kept being like to see him steering that ship.
What's Mary doing here?
He did a terrific job.
You know what I mean?
I disagree with you and I think you should apologize.
Sure. Okay.
All right. Thank you.
I don't want to get flogged.
The great Robert Pugh,
Who's the, you know, who's Alan, you know, one of the other officers.
Like, there's just Lee Engelby is really good.
Like all the, all the, these are all British guys.
Who's the guy who jumps?
Oh, the Jonah?
Yes.
That's the guy's name is Lee Engelby.
Yeah, it's Lingelby.
Oh, that's Lee Engelby.
Yeah, he's in one of the, oh, yeah, he's in an Ascabam.
Harry Potter Prisoner, Ascaband.
He's the guy who drives the night bus.
Or is he the guy?
He's the driver or the conductor.
Yeah, he's
stand, jump like, whatever.
Yeah, because the driver is,
I can't remember who the driver is.
Yeah.
Peter Weir made his first four films,
or, no, four of his early films,
though, with Russell Boyd,
uh, picnic,
way,
Gallipoli, dangerously.
Then John Seale has been his guy for a while, right?
I forget who shoots Truman's show.
Who shot Truman's show?
That's a really good question.
Thank you.
It's such a good question by me.
Peter Bizzou.
Interesting.
Who shot Life of Brian?
And a lot of, yeah.
Oh, that's the thing that kept striking me
while watching this movie.
One of the guys on the boat
looks so much like Eric Idol
and looks like Eric Idol
in makeup, playing an older
Boatman.
You're talking about David Threlfall.
You know who he is?
Who?
He is William H. Macy
in the original British shameless.
Ah.
Which back, the British one
is set in Manchester
and is also about a loudish father
who can't stop drinking
and his 4 billion children.
Right.
And every time, like, one of the kids ages up and it's like,
I want to be a movie star and leaves the show.
They're like, we found another fucking kid.
There's so many kids under couch cushions in this house.
But he's the, yeah, he's a great British actor.
He looks a lot like Eric Idol in this.
He looks like Eric Idol.
I keep expecting him to win-knudge, nudge, or something.
And then at the end of this movie, when they come across the French,
I was like, this really feels like the rude taunting Frenchman.
Yeah.
From, I mean, he's wearing these weird bandages on his head.
Yeah.
Comedic.
Yes.
Yeah.
One day, purely by accident, Russell Boyd is on an airplane going to Los Angeles.
Okay.
And they sit side by side. Peter Weir and He, they hadn't worked together in many years.
He wonders if we were arranged it.
He didn't realize it was going to happen.
And he starts saying like, on the plane.
Yeah.
No, he starts saying, like, I'm making this boat movie at Fox.
It was for 9-11.
So you could bring your naval cutlass on the plane at the time.
It's master and commander.
He starts explaining it's, you know, scene by scene.
and Boyd's like, that sounds great.
And he's like, let's get dinner tomorrow.
I'll drop you to the script.
And then like, you know, Boyd comes back on board.
This is the first time they worked together.
And of course, Russell Boyd won the Oscar.
Had there been an estrangement or something?
I don't think so.
It's just like he started using John Seale, who was the assistant on some of the earlier stuff.
And then, like, you know, he went to Hollywood.
Russell Boyd takes good pictures.
Also, I'm looking at Russell Boyd's 90s.
And it's like, White Man Can't Jump, Operation Dumbo Drop,
10 cup, liar, liar, Dr. Doolittle.
None of those movies are poorly shot.
No.
But I could see that guy being like,
I want to fucking challenge.
Not known for their visual beauty necessarily.
No.
No.
And probably there's cool stuff to see if you were to rewatch them.
And the early weird films were challenging productions that probably activates a guy like this.
Exactly.
That's like you hear about picking and hang rock and stuff of him like figuring out how to do stuff with no money.
Right.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, I just watched that last night in advance of this.
And I was like one of the most visually interesting movies I've ever seen.
So gorgeous.
And then the year of living dangerously is one of the most completely different, but so spectacularly shot.
The air.
You know, the way, you know, any movie that can make the air feel dense.
Yeah.
Peter originally wants to do a water world thing.
He wants to like, shoot the whole thing on the water.
He's also one of, one of history's wettest directors.
Petty Ware.
He is true.
Yeah.
I mean, last wave.
He gave us the last wave.
Truman Show.
Yeah.
They ultimately, the rain and the green car department.
Uh, true.
Depot Society is set in Thailand underwater.
Killing McGill is taking a bath.
Yeah.
That's true.
That's true.
I mean, she's, you know,
gotta take a bath.
They ended up running around all day.
10 days on the actual seas.
Well, here we go.
So I'm going to tell you.
Like, he wants to shoot in Tyler on the water and they're like, look, that's water world.
We need a floating ship trailing with you.
Right.
If you're going to do a reverse shot, everyone's got to wait while the ship like moves.
You know, like it's like, it will hear a night.
The entire industry learned our lesson on that movie.
Like, everyone took notes from that.
And so.
And so we're just like, fine, maybe we should build a set, you know, in a tank.
And, like, I wonder who would know anything about that.
James.
This is the thing.
The other kind of miracle of this movie is just being close enough to Titanic that James Cameron had done the legwork to build out the system to be able to basically shoot this on a gimbal in a tank.
Ridley Scott had made both 1492 and White Squall, I think, in a tank in Gibraltar.
but that tank was in disrepair.
Like only a few years between
like Titanic and White Squall, but like it's
enough. It's fucked up.
Then they're like, are we going to have to build a tank?
And we're like, I don't want to build a tank.
And then James Cameron's like,
Mexico.
Yeah. I have a tank.
I have a tank.
It has a deep channel where they could put the set on a big gimbal
so you can like move the boat around.
It has shallow water so you could put people waist deep
if you need to.
In Titanic, when the ship sinks,
Snow's first. That was on a gimbal.
That's a spoiler.
So they had to fuck with things because of the
way the Mexican tank was built for Titanic.
But to your point, David, these things
need a lot of maintenance, and studios are not making
like seven boat pictures a year.
Maybe they should. Maybe just to keep these tanks
usable. They should just make a boat picture every year.
I guess there's perfect storm.
And that did crazy tank stuff?
Yeah. That was a lot of CGI waves.
I remember when that came out.
They're great waves, but I remember talking to a visual effects guy before that came out saying waves are the thing.
When we can do waves, that would be the most amazing thing.
And then they cracked it.
And then they cracked it.
And that's all I could see.
Shooting inside the ship, right?
Yeah, I was just going to say.
Okay.
Sorry.
Go ahead.
But I just think it's an interesting hypothetical to entertain.
Had the order flipped and Brussels Crow did a Cinderella man first, they probably would not have had a workable.
tank. Possibly? Might have gotten all fucked up. Who knows? You know? Yeah. I don't.
But I will tell you that they didn't... Scum of algae on the top. They didn't want to remove
ceilings and walls. They wanted to use these cramps sets to their advantage. Like, let's actually
have it be like, let's just shoot inside the ship. They bought a ship for $1.5 million.
They moved it out of a bridge port where it had been a tourist attraction. It had been
designed to fight in the seven years war. It was in a few existing vessels that they could use.
Then they make it over new engine, sales, rigging, decks.
Then they build a full-size replica in the tank.
So, like, they have the real ship on the water.
They have the replica in the tank.
The real ship, I understand, to be the rose.
Does that show up?
Yes, the rose.
Yeah.
$1.5 million.
Do you have $1.5 million?
No, I don't.
But, you know, I could have it in 2003.
I just learned that the Mary Day, the two-masted wooden sailing schooner that I trained on,
as a midshipman.
Is up for grabs.
sale for $550,000.
But then it's like you got to park it.
It's like, you don't just buy a boat and then you're like, great, I have a boat.
There may be some costs associated with maintaining an old wooden boat.
I mean, I was going to say, like, if you bought like a fucking plastic speed boat, even that,
it's like you got to fucking put it somewhere, right?
No comment.
But I don't have a plastic speed boat either.
But, yeah, the good news is gas is cheap because it doesn't have it.
Sure, you got the only gas you need is air gas.
I think this movie was a little bit
hard to make.
Yeah.
What?
I just want to follow up quickly
and you saying that if John had
$1.5 million in 2003
money, he could own the Rose.
Do you know where the rose is today?
It was purchased in 2007
by the Maritime Museum of San Diego
and officially re-registered
as the HMS surprise.
So it exists permanently as the surprise.
Oh, you can, oh, fuck, I got to get to San Diego.
You do, my man.
I think that Patrick O'Brien, I had read somewhere, had been on the rose.
And he said, this is essentially the same ship as the surprise, both historically and in his novels.
Because it was a real ship that he sort of adopted to put into the novels.
And they immediately, he said, the only thing different is a coat of paint.
And they immediately repainted it as to look like the surprise back then.
It does say on the Wikipedia, by 24.
the ship was in a worn condition
with deteriorating paint and timbers.
Well, we gotta go spruce up.
Yeah. Also, they
cast the ship
in Pirates of the Caribbean 4.
But it's probably like some fucked up boat.
The HMS Providence.
Yeah. But otherwise, it's at the museum.
Film has 700 plus effects shop,
but Peter Weir did not want the film
to look like the perfect storm.
He wanted to use miniatures and stuff,
mostly for the, you know, storms and all that.
Weta built a bigoture, right?
like a giant miniature ship, I believe.
I saw the weta.
That sounds awesome.
I can tell you, according to Nathan McGillett, McGinnis from Asylum, another VFX company,
there's not one piece of ocean in that storm sequence that isn't real.
Wow.
CGI water is obviously more controllable, but I thought, you know, this is the more believable solution.
So while they're in post-production, fear begins to circulate around the studios.
They realize the film has no villain.
They realize the film has no romance.
Mm-hmm.
They could have read the script.
Those are usually things that are in a movie.
It is fair to say that this film begins with them getting their shit rocked.
Then lots of things happen, but there is no more real action.
The storm in the middle is an action sequence, but there's no real battles.
And at the end, there's an awesome battle.
Yeah.
But it is like, it is defying, I would say, some Hollywood, you know, kind of like plotting sort of mechanics.
It also feels like Tom Rothman maybe consciously played goalie to prevent people from
noticing this earlier. Right, right.
And then like the movies like deep in post-production,
the bills are getting sent and they're like, you're telling me
there's no woman at all in the movie.
He's like, well, a Brazilian lady has an umbrella
for five seconds.
Yeah, and they say hi to her.
Yeah, he smiles. He's like, no, she smiled at me.
That shot is in the trailer, which is hysterical.
Yeah. Like, they clearly were like, can you put it in the trailer?
There's, there's, there's, uh, there's going to be a colonial romance.
The film was going to come out in June.
Yes, I remember this. We were wanted more time for
so they push it to November.
That does mean that their lunch gets eaten by
Prior to the Caribbean or whatever, you know, like...
Which comes out in July.
Although that was obviously another film
that the studio was like, why the fuck did we
make this boat movie? We're about to be in
so much trouble. Like, there was this...
I remember in the lead-up
to that movie, it... Pirates? Yes.
It was a curse of pirate movies.
Well, beyond just, are
they really fucking going to make movies out of rides
now? We had no idea how bad things
were going to get. That things would be based
off of... We were pretty... Movies would be based off things that had
even less of a narrative.
Snihiffy about shit at the time.
Right. But there was also this like Disney spending $150 million on a pirate movie.
Every pirate movie has flopped for the last 40 years.
And I remember trend pieces that were like, here's everyone who has tried and failed to make a pirate movie since the 50s.
This is a losing effort.
So the fact that then Pirates the Caribbean, this is where I argue the movie got a little fucked by it,
is that the fact that Pirates the Caribbean overperformed so wildly,
then made people go like, oh, the boat curse is gone.
Right.
Yeah, I mean.
But a rising tide did not raise all sharks in this case.
Right.
I think this movie would have been viewed as more successful had Pirates of the Caribbean not raise the tide, the stranger tide.
Definitely.
Because it makes 93 domestic 2-11 worldwide and it gets 10 Oscar nomination, which I'm sure Fox was fairly happy about.
It wins Best Director at the Baptist.
Is that right?
Here we're one.
Is that so?
Yeah.
He beat Jackson.
I'm not steeped in the financial business.
of Hollywood.
But I would imagine that at that box office, given the amount of investment and the difficulty
of making the movie, everyone except Tom Rothman felt like, fuck, we just escaped by the skin
of our teeth.
I think a little bit.
I think the Oscar nom's...
We did it.
Let's move along.
I think the Oscar Noms made it a kind of like, well, look, we made a prestigious,
well-received movie.
So, like, okay.
But no, no one is like, yeah, you're right.
He won best director.
I was surprised to see that.
Yeah.
This movie also had, like, an incredibly well-selling DVD.
No, that's the thing.
Even as much as the cult grew over time.
No, no, no.
There was that, like, immediate two-disc kind of.
This is one of those film school in a box DVD releases with every detail about the making of the movie that sold incredibly well.
But I think, yes, it was sort of like, Tom, we let you do this one time.
It did not make fuck you money where the argument is over.
It would have taken fuck you money to continue.
you making these movies?
The other part of it is, right.
Everyone had a difficult time making it, and Peter
Weir and Russell Crow notoriously were always
kind of budding heads.
I think, I mean, there's nothing in the research
about that, but I have heard
occasionally that Russell Crow has a bit of a strong
personality. Yes. And of course,
right, Hock, Ethan Hawke did say later
in life, like, I think working with
Jim Carrey and Russell Crow, like, really
broke Peter's back a little bit.
And Johnny Debs is the other one.
On Shantaran, which doesn't happen.
Right.
But that he did two years of development on Shantaram.
Oh, that Ethan Hawkech quote.
Shantaram.
Yes.
So the year is.
I will say, no, a couple people who have worked on this movie have off the record,
sent DMs to myself and other people involved with the podcast and have shared Russell Crow anecdotes that I'm not going to share here.
But just a lot of like, have you heard that story about this fight they got on?
It feels like they were just constantly locking horns.
And this is a moment where Russell Crow feels unstoppable.
It is his apex in terms of that power.
Yeah.
Because, like, this movie does, like, Beautiful Mind doing so well.
Yeah.
It's like, wow, can this guy do anything?
Did he almost win two best actors in a row?
He almost did.
Yeah.
And then, like, Mastering Commander does, like, good, but okay.
Because, and, like, the posters is his face.
Yeah.
You know.
Then Cinderella Man similarly was, like, definitely a hit.
But not a mega hit.
He wanted.
He also never gets an Oscar nomination again.
And this year, people were like, he's on the bubble.
He might make it to the five on the strength of the movie.
Didn't happen.
Cinderella Man, it was.
was like, he maybe gets in there just because everyone loves Russell Crow and got all these precursors.
Doesn't get in.
Never gets close to an awesome.
I would say he never got even close again.
I mean, his best performance after this is obviously nice guys, which he's so incredible.
But it's also the turning point where you look and it's like Noah's 2014 and 2016, he shows up in the nice guy looking like a grizzly bear.
And it's like, this is who he is now.
That's who he is.
Noah is 2014?
2014.
So much later than I remember.
That's his last.
earlier than I remember.
Proper, like,
Russell Crowe starring in a big hit movie.
And it's the end of the
four of what we're talking about,
of him being the last of kind of the old school epic movie stars.
Because, like,
the year after Nice Guys is the Mummy,
where it's like,
you are second banana to cruise here,
like at best.
And then, like,
he just enters the phase he's in now,
which begins really when he plays Jorrell in Manist's year before.
Which is the year before.
Yeah.
But, like, of like, yeah,
you play dads,
mentors, villains.
if you're the lead, it's a trashy movie
like Unhinged or the fucking Exorcist one
or the other Exorcist one.
Oh, I never saw the Pope's Exorcist.
Well, the Pope, I figure he probably
hires a good one.
He's a little, those things are a little different.
It's kind of like when the Pope needs
a really, really nasty exorcism.
Is the other one called the last Exorcism?
It's just called The Exorcism.
He did another Exorcist movie, like within two years
of the Pope's Exorcist.
That's about him playing a guy
who plays an exorcist
in movies, an actor, and then gets drawn into a real exorcism.
He needs to make a third now.
He can't just stop it, too.
It's not the same character, though.
It's not a largely unrelated film.
Different, relatively forgotten movies.
He's a guy who works all the damn time.
Yep.
It's like, it's not like Hollywood's forgotten about Crow and it's not like Crow's forgotten
about movies.
No.
He works constantly.
And he still will be in big things.
It's still kind of mean.
something to be like and Russell Crow in a movie.
Right.
Shall we set the sales?
Yeah, no. Okay.
So the year is 1805.
Napoleon is master of Europe.
Only the British fleet stands before him.
Oceans are now battlefields.
This is not important to the movie, really, but like this is set basically at the sort of
peak of Napoleonic power, 1805.
Like, it is possible that Napoleon is going to conquer essentially the world.
if you know what I mean.
Like, you know,
him losing the Battle of Trafalgar.
And by colonial extension, the world.
Right.
Like, this is Napoleon being like,
I'm going to conquer the United Kingdom.
And he loses at the Battle of Trafalgar.
And that's sort of like when...
That was kind of his Waterloo, right?
Well, his Waterloo is actually the Battle of Waterloo,
which happens 10 years later.
I know.
I just want some credit for Scotty Pippening you on that one.
Great joke.
Thank you.
The Napoleon, of course,
continue for 10 years.
Like, they keep fighting and all that.
But, like, this is sort of the moment.
where it's kind of like, is this it?
You know, is Britain finally going to get conquered?
Because Britain had stood on Concord for 700 years, basically.
We're on about 28 guns, 197 souls.
This is true.
They are in the northern coast of Brazil.
They sure are.
It sounds like a lot of guns and souls, Ben.
It's actually kind of a small ship.
The surprise, obviously, is pursuing the Privatier Acheron, the French Privatier.
And privateers are kind of shady.
They're pirates, basically.
They've been contracted by governments.
Licensed pirates.
Unfortunately, I think I might have been a privateer if I was alive of these days.
I have to admit it.
I think, John, with all respect to your skills and your experience,
such as they are.
As a boatsman.
As an able seaman.
I do think Ben would do the best of the four of us if dropped into this time.
Oh, I agree.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I'd be, what do we have to do?
I'd be grabbing a cannibal and cannonball and running to the side immediately.
Right.
I would know immediately.
I'm thinking a little kid for always being nice to me and then jumping off the side of a ship.
Yeah.
That's what I'm doing.
I'm like, immediately.
I'm like, point me in the direction of the fucking cannon.
Yeah.
I'm ready to go.
Right.
Right.
I would not want to be near cannons.
Cannon man.
Yeah.
Cannonman.
What kind of.
You want to light it or do you want to shove the things down?
I want to light that fucker.
Yeah, right?
I think if a wormhole opens and Ben gets dropped onto a ship in this era,
he is within six months the king of a country.
Probably so.
Probably so.
Oh, you think he would rally the men?
I think he could rally anything he fucking wanted.
I think he would know how to talk to these people in a way that we would fail.
We're on the boat.
Just throw a dirty joke out.
It's creaking in Corona.
I just want to say something.
Like, we see Killick getting an egg out of, like, these little pens that clearly have the chickens in him.
Well, this is what Peter Weird does so incredibly.
This guy.
We see these two boys.
Set some fucking tables in his movie.
You know, it's the middle of the night.
So, you know, the midshipmen are in charge of it.
Like, Aubrey's taken, you know, taking some rest.
You know, so we've got Hallam and Killick and, you know, the kids.
Can we talk about the creeks and grounds?
The sound of the film is unbelievable.
Mr. Hodgman, this film gets 10 Academy Award nominations.
Unfortunately, this is the same year as Lord of the Rings, Return of the King.
Yeah.
Which was just everyone basically decided.
That's right.
We have to reward the trilogy.
We're giving this.
They spilled their able semen over that.
It's a clean sweep as Stephen Spiel works.
Yeah.
It dominates basically all categories.
Bad luck for the surprise.
There's a Jonah award.
This wins cinematography and sound mixing because those are two of the only categories
Lord of the Rings isn't nominated in.
Oh, really?
Yes.
I still don't know why it wasn't nominated for sound editing because Lord of the Rings has very good sound editing.
I don't really know the answer to that question.
Yeah.
But this did win that.
The sound in this is unbelievable.
It jumped out to me really fucking hard watching it this time.
It's vital.
Well, one of the reasons I think it is so impressive in the sense that it leaves an impression is that these boats have no engines.
And so it is the balance.
of silence and sound and the alien feeling of hearing those sounds because it is not something
that most people have experienced being on a ship of that size.
It is also...
It is also very important because the reason Hollam is being summoned to the, you know,
front of the ship at the start of the movie is the other, the watchman is like, I think I heard
a bell.
Right.
He thinks he heard a ship's bell.
Like, he didn't even see a ship.
Right.
He just heard something.
And they're kind of like,
you know, all right, what is this?
He says the lead, if you please.
What's the lead?
So then the lead is literally a big hunk of lead at the end of a very long line.
And there's a depression in the bottom of it.
So imagine like it looks like this can of cold brew coffee.
And there's a little depression in the bottom of it.
And when you want to know what the surface below you is like, you drop the lead.
it hits the bottom of the ocean floor wherever you are.
It tells you how deep it is.
And when you pull it up,
the condition of the floor is like it picks up dirt.
Right.
You like dirt, right?
Sure.
This is ocean dirt.
Wow.
And it might be gravel.
It might be mud and shells.
This is when you're anchoring.
You need to know what the condition of the sea floor is.
So that you know, first of all, how deep it is.
So you know how much anchor road to pay out?
The answer is five fathoms.
Five fathoms in this case, and a fathom, I think, is six feet.
I couldn't tell you.
I mean, I love that they show you them calculating knots later on.
With knots.
The fucked up way they had to do that where it's like there's three, there's the, the, the rope with the knots tied in it.
And then a guy doing this and a guy.
Work in this movie is crazy.
It's messed.
It's incredible.
It is perhaps the most impressive rope work ever done.
What's the left and what's the right?
Gordon Starboard.
Excuse me.
At this time, it would have been Starboard and Larboard.
Oh, is that so?
Yeah.
That's kind of.
That's kind of stupid.
They changed it to port because they're like, we don't know what we can't hear what you're saying.
And help me out here.
Forecastle, how do they say?
Foxel.
Foxel.
Like the way, like what, why they do it?
Why they do it, I do not know.
But yes, the front of the boat is called the forecastle, but you spell it F-O-A-Postrophes C, apostrophe S, apostrophe, L-E, which is sort of pronounced foxel.
Or sometimes they spell it forecastle, but you still pronounce it foxel.
And the top, and the top-top, map.
is called the top gallant, but they call it the tegallant.
Now, is the stunt.
Is the poop deck what I think it is?
No.
It's one of my favorite Simpsons lines.
When Homer joins, he's like in a submarine.
Remember that episode?
It's kind of like when the Simpsons is starting to get stupid.
Right.
Homer can do anything.
Right.
Exactly.
And will.
Is the poop deck what I think it is?
And like the admiral guy is like, I like the cut of your jib.
And Homer's like, that's a jiff.
May I say a thing about the sound?
Of course.
When Ben Marie and I went to Los Angeles last summer
for the American Cinema Tech friend of the fest,
we went to the Academy Museum
that has a room to try to explain to you
the art of sound in movies
where they show you like a 15-minute featureette
with Peter Weir shot like two or three years ago.
It's using behind-the-scenes footage from the time of filming,
but it's him speaking more recently
and all of his team explaining the art
of sound design in a movie using this film.
It is a thing that I think is exclusive to the Academy Museum was made for them.
And they have all these signs saying, like, you can only see this here.
But the thing he said that has stuck with me was he had his team.
You know, they went to the books.
They looked through all the books.
And any time a sound was described and said, like, that's what we got to replicate, right?
Let's really get into the specifics of what he is trying to evoke of these noises.
they sort of put together a test sample,
kind of,
here's sort of what we're thinking
is the soundscape for this movie.
And they show it to him,
and he's like, that's fucking great.
I love that.
Keep going, awesome.
And then they work on it,
and they refine it,
and they bring it back to him,
and they show it to him.
And he's like,
I think the last version was better.
And he said the realization he made was
that they had,
with the extra time,
and giving it, you know,
doing the real version,
had worked really hard to justify every single specific sound.
They looked at every element on screen,
and they were like, we have to account for that and that and this
and the timing and this and that.
Versus the rough pass version they did was just sort of like,
these are the kind of sounds we want to have circulating around.
And he was like, when it became too justified
and you were trying to account for everything,
it was cacophonous and it didn't work.
Right.
There was something kind of expressionistic to the feeling
of what they showed me the first time,
And I was like literally just go back to that version.
Delete this new file, go back to that, and do the rest of the movie that way.
So it's kind of freestyled a little bit.
As much as it's like based in a lot of research and with intentionality,
he was like, don't worry about completely matching on-screen action.
Yeah.
And, you know, like, again, this is an completely,
world is pretty alien to our experience in this year.
And in a sense, you have to be impressionistic because
a lot of the sounds that
they might have been larding up the
soundtrack with
would be sounds that the sailors had
stopped hearing long ago because it's
idle background chatter to them
whereas the sound of a bell
in the distance.
You hear the bell.
This is one of the things.
He comes out, Harlem can't defend
himself. It's an early example
of him not having a bit of a backbone
where he's like, well, I saw
shape, maybe. Over there?
And Aubrey's like, okay.
Well, you did, you beat a quarters, but
did the right thing.
Everyone's winding down.
And then, like, Aubrey does the one, like,
one last look.
You know, right?
You know, like, he's almost done.
And he's like, mm.
And then you just see the sail for, like,
one second because it's being lit up by the cannon.
And it's like, you don't hear the canon.
No, which is such an incredible.
That's in the books a lot.
He really talks about, like, in the books,
like the sound, the way the sound would hit after the can of fire.
Tends to travel faster than sound.
So you see the muzzle flag.
in the fog, and it's just so,
it's such an incredible way to open a movie
where you're learning so much in such a,
in such a...
Let's see them all go to action now.
Yeah. And, you know, you're learning so much
about how this world works
in a completely non-intrusive and non-screenplayy way.
Not only learning about who Harlem is immediately,
the efficiency and the economy,
which we are introduces and guides the eye
in a way that is not...
To give you an example, some thing.
It is really sweet.
You see guys start to man the cannons, right?
You get that.
You see the guys in red coats.
Now, Ben, have you noticed that there are some guys, and Griffin, everyone, you know, in red coats on the ship?
That's the army.
They live on the ship, too, but they're not in the Navy.
They're kind of their own thing on the ship.
Right, Marines.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like, they're for fucking invading shit, you know, for battle.
So most of the crew on a ship like this would be gunner.
your pals
because it takes
three or four guys
to operate a single
cannon
and there are
28 of them
so they're all
sleeping in those hammocks
above their countenance
because the ship
was just packed with these
guys
and then they're the sailors
but they're not
like deal with the sails
yeah they're in the navy
but they're not trained
hand-to-hand combatants
necessarily
the Marines are the guys
who have the you know
bayonets and you're the
yeah and they're the ones
who literally beat to quarters
When you call Beaked Quarters, one of the Royal Marines bangs a drum.
He beats the drum.
And Quarters describes the rhythm that he beats, which alerts the whole ship that they're going to battle stations.
Aubrey, you know, he's like run up her colors.
One of the kids is like, yes, sir, yes, sir.
You know, they're putting up it.
And then Killick, I love this, gives him his hat.
Yeah.
Where it's like, okay, we're going from like, we heard a sound mode to hat mode.
Yeah.
You got to put hat on now.
Shit's fucked up moments on the ship.
Yeah.
Ship happens.
And then the guy goes like this.
And what's on his hands?
So the, oh, the tattoo, hold fast.
What is that?
Who's that guy?
Who's that guy?
He's the guy who gets the dent in his head and then gets a coin and becomes the dread profit of the ship.
Correct.
What's his name?
I forget his name.
He's obviously my husband and best friend.
Right.
But I don't know his name.
Why don't you get that tattooed on your fingers, David?
That's a really good question.
Hold back.
Yeah, that should be your first tattoo.
If you were ever going to get to tattoo, I feel like it would be that.
I think it would be that.
I think it might be that.
I think it might be a little.
bit stolen baller given that I am not a naval person.
This, hey.
I don't think I really have enough of a sort of sea, you know, history.
I think it's a general enough term.
You can say, you naval.
You did it for a different reason.
You can get a little saltier.
You can just say I like holding things quickly.
You know, I'm going to scam you up to Maine one of these days.
I'd love to.
The point is, the ocean is a metaphor.
I'm trying to think, well, this ship is England, of course.
And I also heard that oceans are now battlefields.
I think this ship is England is technically a metonym.
Right, right.
I'm out.
So they get their ship rocked.
And it's like very, their ship and their ship rocked.
And it's very intense battle sequence.
People get bloody.
People die.
Obviously, you know, boy loses a limb, all this, right?
All this insane stuff happens.
We're introduced to Maturin where he basically like clears all his shit off the table.
Because it's like, I'm going to be operating on people.
put sand on the floor.
Yeah.
So you're not slipping around
on the blood.
So fucking crazy.
And also the water.
And yet there's also this kind of
like everyone's kind of calm.
Like you know what I mean?
Like I'll tell you I was not calm.
I mean, this is just their,
this is their daily life.
This is their job.
They train for this moment.
This is bad.
It's not their daily life.
But it is bad.
They're weekly or maybe they're monthly
or maybe their yearly life.
And one of the things that I love about this
movie is that unlike any other ship movie that I've ever seen, whether that is a sailing ship,
a motor ship, or a spaceship or friendship.
When you're in space or at sea in that ship, the world is small.
You're constantly running into other ships.
Sure.
There are aliens coming this way or that, whatever.
And this movie really captures the vastness of the ocean and, frankly, the absurdity of their mission.
And that a lot of times it's just going to be another day on a creaking ship.
It, like, their mission is to find the, what do they call it in English?
The Acheron.
Yeah.
And then it's Acheron in French or whatever.
But it's like this French privateer has been harassing ships.
Go get them.
Yeah.
And you're basically up and down the coast of Brazil.
Right.
Yeah.
You know how big the Atlantic Ocean is?
I don't know, like 20 to 30 feet.
It's like, yeah, maybe 50.
The idea that you're going to find this thing is itself insane.
And if it turns out that the Asheron.
hadn't been looking for them too, apparently,
or at least spotting them and wanting to get them.
The idea is that, as they sort of allude to,
is like the astronaut knew where they were going to be, essentially.
Right.
Like, that's what they're kind of guessing at.
Because he's like, they came upon us in the fog.
Right, right.
It's incredible.
And the idea that they're even going to find each other,
to even bother having this battle,
is like, it could take weeks or months before it ever happened.
And those slow speed chases, it's like it conveys,
not only the size and the isolation of this wooden world they live on,
but also I think all of this humanity,
this is what I was thinking of as those cannonballs were coming through, right?
All of this human ingenuity that goes into building the ship and manning the ship
and sailing the ship and everything.
It's all packed into this microscopic dot on the ocean.
I love the way they portray the maintenance of it too.
Yeah.
No.
It's so interesting and not a thing I really have ever thought.
And you look at this ship and it's like every, every inch of it is this amazing piece of human craft work.
The molding in the captain's in the captain's day cabin.
It's like, and it's all getting blasted to ship by these cannonballs.
All this work has gone into making this thing.
And only French people do that.
Human ingenuity and murderous intent.
British Navy, they would just say, could you please stop?
And people would.
You know, they never fired cannons at anybody.
I was thinking of this during Gallipoli, too.
Nine dead, 27, just to tell you.
is the count.
What happens in Guillaifalue?
No, just like,
the senior officers
who you see at like the top of the hill
watching the young boys do the basic training,
you're like the ornateness of their uniforms,
this sort of like lost notion of
the military has to look really fucking fancy.
Sure.
Like there's the battle we're waging,
but also it's like we want to impress people
with our class.
Yeah, you've got to have nice uniforms.
We want to beat their asses while also
seeming more sophisticated and cultured.
place the whole fast guy's name is place uh because it's when they're looking at the casualties after
you know you know we're in casualty mode now they drag the boat essentially away with rowboats
what is casualty mode mean like it's just like after the fact like they're they're counting you know
you see the guy who's like pumping water out you're counting the casualties yeah um nine people are
dead maturen walks aubri around and he's like you know place has got a fucking skull fracture or
whatever he probably will die turns out he doesn't they go see blake
Max Perkis, whose hand, his arm is messed up.
And matern says, like, I know you know this boy's father.
Right.
Like, I'm doing everything I can.
Like, I don't know.
Does this character show up in the books later?
Is this a character from the books?
Blakeney.
In your memory.
I do not want to mess up anything here.
I know I'm sure there are, and there is, there is, of course, an Aubrey and Maturian
Wiki that I can consult for this.
So let me check.
William Blakeney.
Yes.
He is in.
the movie.
That's it. He's created for the movie.
That's what I thought. That's what I thought.
I mean, I think there's a lot of characters like this.
Well, good job.
I don't know the full extent.
I think the O'Brien fans generally
think positively of this movie because imagine
how bad an adaptation could have been.
But I'm sure if you are intensely nerdy
about the books, the movie is, it only can do so much for you.
Mitterin has never does any spy stuff in it, blah, blah, blah,
you know, they never go to shore.
You never understand.
the complex nature of being in the Navy
and how your money, the money you made was based on like the boats
you captured and the treasure you got, basically.
That's why they keep talking about the prize.
Yeah, the prize that we're going to get.
If we capture the answer.
It's not about like making a salary.
It's all like you earn your keep by like fucking up other shifts and stuff.
Like it's such a crazy system.
You're canoning on commission, Ben.
But you're getting rum too.
Yeah, but you know why they drink rum.
Because they get fucked up.
Well, that's true.
Because it's fucking boring.
Because, like, you could keep fruit in it and stuff, so, like, it would be, you know, it's sort of nutritionally good, but I think also, like, it would last, right? Like, isn't that the whole thing with rum? I'm not a rum guy, I will say. I like a teary-
I'm rarely getting a rum. Yeah, time to time, but I got the only context. Yeah, I'm kind of the same.
Who was the ship's mixologist on the surprise? I mean, it's the guy with the wax. I feel like we both going to the same. I feel like these days. It's the guy dressed like Ryan Reynolds and if.
Imagine if you were like, what's your drink and you were like rum?
Like I would just be like, what do you mean rum?
Straight rum?
Yeah, what do you ever write?
Rum on the rum?
That's a good point two.
Sure.
That's so, that's like sugar.
It's so gross.
That's what I was going to say.
It's the same with Tiki drinks where you're like, anyone who's drinking rum is combating
rum with so much sugar and fruit.
Right.
I mean, like, if I'm at pool side, I guess I'll take a rum drink.
But do people, I'm sure, the answer is someone, yes.
But like how many people sit at a bar and go, like, can I have four fingers of rum neat?
I mean, there's a eight.
Maybe I should see what happens.
Yeah, there's straight rum.
And there's like spiced rum and all that stuff that's like, that stuff's not.
Well, we should, of course, parisoleet.
They certainly, they're keeping the cardi business over there.
It's easy to go, yo-ho-ho mode over there at the Sunken Harbor Club.
So then everyone gathers.
And they're basically like, look, we rock.
We love, you know, we love to be on the H-H-H-Row.
from a surprise, but like the ship that just beat us is a better ship. It's bigger, it's faster,
it's more powerful. Like, we cannot try to like engage this ship. It's very important, I think,
to this movie because it like lays out Aubrey and Matern's a relationship immediately,
where Matern's the only one who's kind of like, I mean, pardon me, but like, are we not
on something of an aged ship? Oh boy, does Russell Crowe get mad at that.
It is the best, it should be Crow's Oscar clip for the Oscar.
he should have won for this film,
because obviously this film should have won every single Oscar,
including best actress.
Yeah.
They should have given it to the Brazilian umbrella lady.
Well, Anna Pac-win, whose role is impactful,
even though she doesn't speak.
Or the boat, right?
Or the boat.
Yeah, the HMS surprise.
He says, would you call me an aged man of war doctor?
And materns, like, oh, he's like,
surprise is not old.
No one would call her old.
She has a bluff bow, lovely lines.
She's a fine sea boat.
I want to say all this weatherly, stiff and fast.
Very fast, if she's well handled.
then he touches it,
touches the boat,
says, no, she's not old,
she's in her prime.
It's the best line
ever delivered by an actor.
Is this your version of the
he loves to pull the cork monologue?
Absolutely.
Just like the love,
he like touches like a sort of mantle
and then he kind of picks it
one of the wounds.
Well, that's the thing.
There's like the fireplace
has been shattered.
That beautiful hand-carved mantelpiece
has been just had a fucking
cannonball shoved through it.
But it's just that like
where everyone
kind of like, I think we need to refit.
I think we need to go to a port and chill out.
And Aubrey's like, yeah. I mean, Mr. Byrne's like, yeah, isn't this
boat old? And Aubrey's like, this boat is
not old. Neither am I. Like, and we can do whatever we need. And he's
worked on this boat for
many years. You see that he
carved his name into it when he was a midshipman
or whatever. And he says his blood is
probably 13 or 14 or. Right.
The idea would have been like, he's been on
other boats. He's like served other commands
and all that stuff. But he's come back to it
because, yes, he loves this boat.
In the books, I believe that's how it goes.
See, the HMS surprise is his main boat.
It's not the only boat that he's on.
Oh, really? He's got a couple sideboats.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, you know, and sometimes he'll, like, capture a foreign boat,
and then he has to run that boat for a bit.
Really?
Yeah, I mean, that happens in this movie where, like,
they capture the Acheron, and then James Darcy gets put in charge of it.
Because then you would just be like,
now we're going to call it the fucking HMS British sausage.
Yeah.
You could just change it.
Yeah.
And just be like it's our boat now, bitch.
Call it the banger.
Yeah, exactly.
The HMS pie and mash.
Should people be allowed to do that with Chippalata?
Should people be allowed to do that with cars now?
HMS Bavril.
Okay, with cars.
What do you mean?
If you beat someone in a fight.
Get your car?
Then you're just like...
You seize the car surprise.
Yeah, and you get to call it, you get to rename it, whatever you want.
Wouldn't people just be fighting each other all the time?
Maybe it's better than what we have right now.
Is it?
Maybe.
I guess I'm just describing a Mad Max waistloon society.
It would be real might.
versus right situation
would break out of me to
suggest this, the man without a driver's license.
Why am I trying to will this into existence?
I don't know. You want all of
America's bullies to get cars.
Yeah. Then
you have Blake knee's arm getting amputated.
Tough stuff. Yeah.
You're the bravest patient I've ever had.
I love that. And I just love that it is routine.
Yeah. It sucks, but it's like, Nelson,
it's part of the thing why they keep talking
about Nelson is Nelson didn't have one of his arms.
And I think one of his life. Like, Nelson
He got chewed up.
He beat Napoleon, I think, with one arm and one leg, and a peg leg,
and then the other arm was just this.
No hook?
Maybe he had a hook for, you know, eaten.
I'd get a hook.
I would have like a fork.
Not only did Nelson defeat Napoleon with one arm,
but he kept the arm that had been amputated and tied it to his back.
Is that true?
So he defeated him with one arm tied behind his back.
Okay, there we go.
I'm just locked in on Ben on this one.
He was playing it so straight the first half.
He was just for Ben.
And then he gave it up with a grin as the punchline came in.
But I was really buying the performance at first.
I kept thinking about just because of my broken brain.
Hodgman, do you remember the Steve Martin medieval barber S&L sketch?
Oh, very, very vaguely.
The Adora of York maybe is what it's called.
He had a funny haircut.
Yes, he had a funny haircut.
And the bid is that no one fucking understood medicine in medieval England.
And so he's the barber, but he's also the doctor and people come over.
And he's like, time to amp.
You know?
Throw some leeches on it.
It's the same four things
or someone's like, I got a headache.
And I got the sniffles.
Let's amputate.
And I was thinking about this during
this movie, but especially
in this amputation scene,
where I think they do such a good job
of characterizing and a lot of it's
in Bettney's performance as well,
that this guy is a very good doctor.
This is the best guy
you could possibly have.
Tending to you,
even at a time where so much is unknown
and the technology is limited.
Because Griffin,
the following scene,
is the brain surgery scene.
And that's when all of the guys
are gathered and they say, like, he wouldn't look
at you for under 10 guineas on land. Like, this is,
we got a real guy here. He's not some
surgeon. But isn't he a vet?
Well, and if you should know, he's a
naturist. Okay. So,
he's a surgeon, but also
he's very into Charles Darwin and stuff, you know,
type stuff of, like, cataloging
animals. It's a separate hobby. I don't know who he is
in the books. He's also like a polyglot.
He speaks like every language. Yeah.
The impression that I got from his character in the movie is that he's a naturalist,
and he is using this opportunity to travel the world.
Yeah, and to see shit and to catalog.
And that's how he sort of earns his keep on the ship.
But that's the core tension between him and Aubrey,
and it comes up in the movie over, is Aubrey's like,
I serve the fucking king.
No, but it's like, I'm, you know, his majesty's navy.
And Merturn's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, when can I please look at more Beatles?
And Aubrey's like, our orders are to kill the French.
And he's like, they'll always be Frenchmen to kill.
But this beetle is only here.
Yeah, but Materan does also make the case that it's like, well, yeah, but maybe you shouldn't do this anyway.
Not just because I want to go see stickbugs and turtles.
No, there's a crucial moment in the movie that we'll get to.
Where he says, like, are you being too prideful?
And that's the classic, you know, any fucking Star Trek has that too of like, there's the one guy who can say like,
Captain, we all follow your rank. We'll do whatever you ask.
But are you being, you know, are you taking this too personally?
But there's a relationship between Maturin and Aubrey that is different from Kirk and Bones.
It's different from anyone else on this ship.
They have a marriage.
They have a marriage.
And that's when they're playing the cello and violin together.
That's their, you know, that's their whatever, lovemaking.
Do you know what's really interesting about you making that comparison point?
Miclosol.
All of it.
Yes.
Miklisal of the San Francisco Chronicle at that time gave this film one of its most negative reviews, because it was pretty widely acclaimed.
His whole angle was on his protectiveness of the books.
Sure, right.
And he specifically was like by removing the mature and spy thing or not making it deeply textual.
You're feminizing him, I think is, I read that review too.
Well, even beyond that.
The same conclusion, I think that you're getting that.
This was his exact wording.
their interaction takes on a preening quality
reminiscent of the interaction
of the Star Trek characters
four or five movies down the line.
Yeah, but I took that to mean a little bit
sort of like too cutesy
like when Scotty is speaking into the Macintosh mouse
and he goes, computer, like that kind of
one of the funniest thing ever happened.
No, I agree, but I just kind of feel like...
How does he say nuclear again? What is it?
Oh, Jesus. He says it funny.
Yeah.
And he doesn't matter.
Don't worry about it.
That is, voyage home is a movie.
I showed it to a friend recently.
Nuclear.
Nuclear.
It's a lot of Ws.
Sorry.
Voyage home.
No, I want to look it up now.
Yeah.
I'll look it up all you're saying.
No, it's right.
It's nuclear vessels.
It's, it's a Wessles.
I knew there was a W.
That's just one of those.
You show it to a friend who's like seen Star Trek, but maybe not it.
And you're like, and they're like, and what's this one about?
I'm like, oh, there's some Klingons.
Oh, there is?
Well, actually, no, not really.
They're on a Klingon ship.
What do they have to do?
They travel through time.
Oh, okay, to fight Klingons, fight.
You have to save the whales.
Meet a lady and save some whales.
And mainly we've got to get these characters back to vibe with each other,
and that's about the end of the movie.
Like, you know.
I mean, we did these on Patreon,
in deepest darkest pandemic,
but it is fascinating to look at the box office spike on four
because it was the one movie where they could just market it
and be like, you don't need to have seen any fucking Star Trek.
You get it.
You know the cultural osmosis of these characters.
And you get a fish out of water thing.
And if they show up in San Francisco in the 80 comedies,
And a comedy will end.
Semi literally fish out of water.
Because they pull that whale up.
This is true.
Okay.
So you see like there's all this stuff that you have to watch the movie a million times to really care about.
But like when they start playing the violin and cello for the first time, that's the ship has been healed.
You see Killick also cooking.
He's making these like kind of grilled cheesy things look really nice.
They look really good.
He's got that shafing dish.
Right.
And he goes like, they go scrape, scrape, scrape.
You know, but like that to me is like, like basically him acknowledging like, all right.
they've made up like there. And then the boat is, the boat is, the sails are fixed. The boat starts
moving again. The statue is repaired. The statue is repaired. Blakeney, he gives, he survived
the imputation. He gives in the book with the Nelson stuff and he's like, I fought in one of these,
you know. Order has been restored. Right. And you see Aubrey writing a letter to his bride,
fiance, Joseph, you know, like somebody, you see a little, right, they both got ladies.
Core ongoing love interests in the book. Right. And you know, you see a little picture.
Yeah. It's not really remarked upon after that. That's when the boys come in and say, we saw the
Acheron being built. We've knocked together a little model for you. And what a knocked together model that is.
It is pretty good. They get an extra restaurant room for that. Even though it was intended for Saluton Day.
That's right. We'll drink wine for Saluton Day. Do you guys have Saluton Day plans this year?
Or do you try to just kind of play about year? I've stopped up rum because I don't want to have to drink wine again.
What if Trump was like, we're bringing back Salutin Day? Not enough saluting in a
these days. David, the chances, and we're not recording this episode very far in advance.
The chances that will happen before this episode is released, 50-50.
Just saw Master's Groot. Why are they saluting all the time?
We're going to make oceans battle films.
This is when the film's incredibly compelling Oscar-winning actress,
a lady with umbrella makes her appearance.
This movie has woman. We all ask who is woman.
That really awesome. It is a cool sequence, though, where it's like, right, they're kind of in paradise.
Like, they're in South America. People are, like, paddling up and trading
like mangoes. They're off the coast of Brazil.
Like,
I would be 100%. Ben,
you would do this. You would buy a monkey.
Yeah. Right? Like some trader
comes up and he's like, I got, I would have been like, how much for the monkey?
Definitely. I'll give you, you know,
what do you want? Like a bag of rice? Like, what do you know,
what have we got around here? Whatever? He has a little vest.
Right? Because monkeys have a little vest.
Give him a little vest. This might have been pre-vests.
That's the story of the, you know,
the bounty, right? The HMS bounty is like they reach,
they reach to the South Pacific.
island. They're like, what the fuck are we doing on this boat? Like, we are so far away from
everything we know of civilization. Why should we continue to follow these horrible rules and be
flogged? And that's the other reason that there were royal marines on the boat, too, which was to
prevent mutinies. Ben sent us, there were six saluting days a year, at least at this time, it seems,
for the Queen's birthday, to mark the restoration, so the King Charles II, so the, you know,
the resumption of the British monarchy, the King's birthday.
To mark the king's coronation.
Jesus.
To mark the king's accession.
Jesus.
And then just for November the 5th, remember the 5th of November.
Gunpowder plot.
After this, after the trading,
you have, in my opinion,
the greatest sequence in any film ever shot,
except for it's tied with all the other sequences in this film.
Right? Tied number one.
To wives and sweethearts, may they never meet.
It's the dinner. They're having dinner.
Just, just, just,
what movie does this?
A lesser of two evils?
A dinner scene?
Every, just all, it's like,
My dinner with Andre.
True.
Moussont actually has, because he's a chef,
there's a good amount of.
That's a pretty gross dinner.
It's a cockroach in it.
This is true.
Have you rewatched Mousand recently?
Not recently, but I remember that scene is burned on my brain
because as a kid, I was so grossed out by it.
Wow.
It's good.
It's a great secret.
It's a great secret.
It's a great thing.
Green card too with BB Newark.
Well, we definitely have seen green card.
That's a really good dinner movie.
That's what I'm saying.
Oh, right.
I'm just saying.
Just great charm of the board for you.
There is something very beautiful about this dinner scene.
It's just beautiful about this movie.
They had a big battle sequence.
Then they play the cell and the violin.
And then I feel like Hollywood would be like, all right, can there be a swordfight or
something?
He's like, no, shush.
They're going to tell jokes at dinner.
Aubrey's going to make a check off joke.
Exactly.
Well, I mean, I think it also speaks to the fact that in their, the pace of their lives
was very different than we could ever possibly imagine now, which was there's a lot of time
sitting around.
They can't even binge watch.
They can't Netflix and Chill at all.
They don't have a single streaming, sir.
No, wait, wait.
They don't.
Well, no, no, no, Peacock?
No, they don't have Peacock with ads.
They couldn't even dream of getting the supersized
fan edition episodes of the office.
Can they watch Sticktown on Hulu?
No, John?
No.
It's still available.
On land, they could.
I hate to tell you this.
They couldn't.
And this is going to scare you even more.
What's that?
They didn't have the option to read or listen to
vacation land in any format.
Not even in paperback?
Not even in paperback.
Not even Harbaugh.
No, David.
They didn't have
heartback.
They didn't have
fucking medallion status.
What about the audiobook?
No.
That's why I said or listen to.
But what if they opened a time tunnel and John read them the book through the time tunnel?
They'd be thrilled.
Why do you think I was out on that schooner looking for a time tunnel?
This is when the youngest, you know, because like basically it's like...
The hold was packed with copies of vacation land and paperback.
Aubrey said to Blake me, I served with Nelson, right?
So then the second youngest boy,
you know, forget his name.
Call me.
Is like, can you please tell me about that?
And I just think
Crow rocks this. It's so hard.
The way he like, you know, says, like,
the first time he spoke to me, I'll never forget his words.
And he said, you know, he like builds it up
and he says, he leans across the table and he says,
could I trouble you for the butter or whatever?
The salt. The salt. Yeah.
Aubrey, may I trouble you for the salt?
It's so funny. They all love it.
I love it. I'm sitting here laughing.
I'm going to
say something. The date I'm on, she's probably like,
you know, put a blanket on. She's just
got that sleeping cap. She's
asleep. I'm fucking Nelson
in The Simpsons watching Hank Williams.
I do genuinely love how long of a walk it is to lesser
of two weevils. It's such a long walk.
Because then he tells the serious Nelson's story
about like how Nelson said like the zeal of,
you know, service kept him warm on a cold night.
And you see Maturran going like, give me a
fucking break. And he's like, I know, I know.
It sounds absurd. You know from another
man, you would call it pitiful stuff,
but with him, I believed it.
Hey, you know what? To Nelson. To Nelson.
Horacea Nelson, the greatest.
Hodg, I feel like you were about to say.
Well, I was just going to say the lesser of two
weevils joke deserves its own conversation.
And then he's like, that's a long walk.
Then he's like, weevils.
In the style of two Jarvises.
And Maturin's like, they're the same.
They're a fucking weevil.
He's a frigid dork.
He loves animals. He gives the Latin name for them.
He's like, you have to choose.
Curly cue.
Krolius or something.
And then, and then
Matern puts on his legendary,
conty little glasses. Perhaps the
concierge's little glasses ever worn in
a movie ever. He originate. He might have.
They're so small. They're
like comically tiny. Yeah.
They're so good.
And he's like, oh, fine.
I pick the big one.
And it's just, I mean, the way, if
you watch Crow, this scene should be
just studied second
by second. Yeah. Is laughing.
like, because he's like, I've got, he turns to someone.
He's cat, and then he's like, there I have you. You're completely dished.
I should say that to you all the time.
You're completely dish.
Can I ask?
In the service, you must, one must always choose the last.
May I ask for something from our community of listeners?
Of course.
Can someone please make a super cut of this lesser of two weevil scene with the crowd response
from Bernie Max deaf jams?
I mean, everyone also does freak out.
Cut it into when, when Anthony Mackey shows up in, uh,
end game.
Yes.
You know,
when everyone starts,
when he says,
Avengers Asimble or whatever.
But I want the raucous laughter
when he puts the glasses on.
They start tittering,
but it doesn't explode until,
don't you know,
we must always choose the lesser of two weevils.
What is the preparation on these weevils?
They just live in the ship's biscuits.
Yeah,
they're in the biscuits.
Sure.
Yeah.
They're not being served as food.
Is that what you mean?
Yeah.
Yes.
The biscuits,
I guess,
are what I'm kind of fixated.
The hard tack?
Yes.
Tell me about this.
It's basically flour and water and salt, and it's dehydrated, and it lasts forever.
It looks aggressive.
It's like a puck.
Yeah.
I would say hard tech.
I've never had hard tech.
I feel like sometimes if you go to those like naval museums or whatever, they'll be like, you can try hard tack.
Have you ever had hard tech?
I've never had hard tech.
It kind of makes Mata look, you know, like very moist.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
I hear it's a little more palatable when topped with some weevils.
Oh, sure.
And then soaked in some rum.
Yeah.
I share your admiration for this scene, David, and I would say, if I were Peter Weir watching
Russell Crow's performance, I would say to myself, I'm glad Richard Burton's dead.
A hundred percent. Yes. I don't think Richard Burton. I love Richard Burton, I guess. I mean,
I mean, I've seen many, but he's good. He doesn't quite have the humor. Like,
he doesn't have the humor. Crow is such a sweetie in this movie, but not in the way that it feels
like too cutesy or anything. Do you know what else I would say if I were watching this scene be shot?
I'd say, Jesus, cock, that's a hot, hard attack.
Hey, thanks for the callbacks.
You're welcome.
I mean, the humor is exactly right.
And the warmth and the childishness.
Right.
He's a 40-year-old man, which is old at the time.
They're a bunch of boys.
But he's still a child.
Yeah, he's a troop leader.
All they do is fucking hang out.
These boys, they got to entertain each other with real.
All they do is fucking hang out.
They don't fuck and hang out.
No.
There is, well, wait a minute.
I think they did a lot of that.
I mean, famously, so Nelson died at the Battle of Trafoger.
He was shot by a sniper.
He was, oh, I thought he was fucking.
Well, famously, maybe you don't know this.
His last words were Kismet, Alfred.
Kismet, of course, being the word for, you know.
Love.
More fate, I would say.
Right.
Fainted love.
But most people think that he actually, sorry, not Alfred Hardy.
That's what I was double-checking.
Hardy.
He was talking to Captain Thomas Hardy.
Most people think he said, kiss me, Hardy.
Oh.
And that's why Alfred was so mad because he wanted to kiss him?
No, that like the words got changed to kismet because at the time no one wanted to acknowledge that, of course all these men had.
Well, you know, I was thinking very like these relationships.
Whether we or someone put in the picture of that moment when Aubrey is writing to his female acquaintance,
when they show the picture just to sort of in a backward way tell the audience, don't worry this guy.
is not gay. Their relationship with his relationship with Maturian is not a real marriage. It's a
sea marriage. But sea marriages were real. And they were often quite intimate. And again,
it speaks to the isolation of the wooden world that they were in because they were beyond,
this is why there was so many superstitions because it was so dangerous to be on board. But also,
you were moving, I just read a little novel called Moby Dick. Sure. It's pretty good. That novel
really conveys how
the crew of the Pequod,
which is a much smaller crew
because they don't have gunners on it,
it's a whaling boat,
and they'll be out for years,
and they are so far beyond
the reach of civilization.
They're outside of the eyes of God.
And they become a society
that is completely different.
And so all kinds of taboos on land
were broken at necessity or pleasure,
whether it was cannibalism or mail into the sea or whatever.
Yeah.
You're sleeping in a hammock.
Yeah.
with 40 other guys.
Cool.
Having a jacket.
This sucks.
Do you think they just had
like a jacket corner?
Jack and booth.
Yeah.
I would hate to be the bottom bunk.
Yeah,
they called it the head.
Or hate to be like
the 24th guy in the jacking booth that night.
It's like waiting your turn to go in the jacket booth.
The booth is like filled to the brim.
Come on.
Aim out to the sea.
Jesus.
Fill it.
Have a little window or something.
I don't know.
Go Mitch style.
You know.
Into the shower.
Yeah.
And I think that the clear marriage that is very coded, you know, sort of hyper-traditionally, heteronormatively, you know, husband and wife between the two of them.
You know, Aubrey's the warrior and Maturin's the caring nurturer of the son and blah, blah, blah, blah.
I think it could have made a, if not the chronicle reviewer, but other reviewers is a little confused and uneasy.
And I'm not saying that that's a reaction that I had or think.
It came into focus a little bit more, like, why some of the people who love the books be like,
you got to have that guy do his spycraft, because otherwise he just seems like a nagging wife.
And I need to know that he docks, and when he docks, he docks.
Right, exactly.
But I think it's such a beautifully portrayed relationship.
I agree.
Of friendship and something deeper than friendship.
I mean, you just invoked a great novel that you've been reading and how it.
Do you and Messiah?
Well, Moby Dick is the one, specifically I was talking about.
and how it kind of illustrates the way these ships become their own contained worlds
where the rules of social interaction are rewritten.
It reminds me of another serious, sober work of seafaring that I look too often.
Muppet Treasure Island in which they are on the ship for so long they catch cabin fever.
Yeah.
And it forces them to do like a kind of flamenco number.
They all suddenly get like banana hats.
That is a film I saw in theaters.
Yeah.
I don't think I've seen since.
Great movie.
I do remember the cabin number.
fever number.
I'm sorry I can't play with you
on this road to two
weevils that you're taking me off.
Are you going to be left out?
Huh?
Of shipping or ship related movies?
Cabin boy.
Good point.
Another example.
A highly realistic.
Yeah.
They capture it.
We're studied it a lot.
In addition to the like 12, 13 year old
officer cadets that were the midship
and they also had literal
children boys.
Well, that's the joke of cabin boy
much like Get a Life is like
what if an adult man was doing this thing?
Right.
You didn't see them in this, though, I don't think.
No. Sims, what were you about to ask?
Can't remember.
The Akron surprises them.
It's fine.
And, you know, so they get sounded sort of, you know, ambushed in a way.
The surprise is surprised.
He doesn't like that.
But then they pull the whole maneuver.
An Asheron in French means irony.
No, it doesn't.
No.
The Acheron's like the river of woe or whatever.
It's like from antiquity.
I don't know, you know.
But then like, then they kind of maneuver around.
They do the thing where they put the little fake boat out.
They create the illusion with like a miniature version using the lanterns.
Right.
Because even though they're separated by great distance.
Right.
Yep.
And even though they're both moving probably at about 10 miles per hour would be the top speed that they could get.
10 knots, 11 miles per hour.
They get up to 12.
They're inexorably going to catch up.
The Asheron has longer guns.
It can shoot farther.
Right.
And so they're going to die until Aubrey has this smart idea.
What if we pretend that the poop deck is actually further back than it is?
Good shit.
That's good shit from the poop deck.
And then they catch them.
Then they have them.
Then they have the drop on the Asteron.
And they're going to get them, but they get then the storm happens.
Which like, I guess this is the other major action sequence of the movie.
And it is awesome and super intense.
It just has no gun work.
It's all waves.
And also to your earlier point, this movie doesn't have a,
a villain.
Even in like an abstracted way,
a sense of like,
I got to get revenge on this guy.
Which I love.
Because that's life.
It's like they wouldn't really know
who were on these ships.
I mean,
I do like that Aubrey has that moment
where he's like,
did I kill this guy's kid or something?
Like, why does he hate me?
Sure.
But like, he's obviously just imagining.
He's like, I don't know.
To me,
you're saying about people
who were complaining or nervous
about the fact that there wasn't
an antagonist.
And what makes this movie special
is that the antagonist
It's a complete mystery.
Yeah.
And it's like, it's accurate to like the idea.
There's a bit of a...
Obviously, there's a big twist at the end.
There's a nice little twist.
It's a saucy little twist.
It's a saucy little twist.
It's a cheeky little twist.
It's a cheeky little twist.
It's a soused head cheese of a twist.
There's this moment...
Which it is how South Hogs face, sir.
There's a moment where a maturin says like, he fights like you, Jack.
A kind of like, you're not so different moment, right?
But obviously, like, when they're pursuing him, the storm gets them.
They have to give up because they, like...
the fucking mask gets tried, you know, like they have to cut the mask off because it's like turning into an anchor.
There's the whole sequence there.
Right.
You know what I'm talking about.
Well, yeah, because the, all right.
Well, that's where we're at.
I know.
Okay.
The guy dies.
He can't swim back.
Yeah, what's his name again?
Rawley or something?
He's that beautiful guy.
He's one of the two guys who pop in and get the extra rations of rum for showing the model of the Asheron.
And he is, he is in charge of the top mizzen mast.
Yes.
You see the other, it's warly, I think is this name.
You see the other guy crying and like putting away his stuff and all that.
But so then the top mizzen mask.
So there are three masks on this boat.
It's a three-masted sailing ship.
Square rigged, not four and aft, Ben.
It only really gets speed when the wind is directly behind you.
And their first mass is the four-masks.
The middle mast is the main mass.
The aftmost mass is the mizzen-mas.
He's on the top mizzen-mask.
He's standing on what's called the fighting top,
where maybe he's talking on the crossrails,
but he's on a platform way up there.
And he's trying to bring in the sail
because that sail is how you move the ship,
but in bad winds, that becomes dangerous.
And he can't get it up, so to speak.
And that's why Hollam has to climb up
and help him and fails to do so.
And does he, is he kind of, he's cowardly.
Does he sabotage and really actually lead to that sailor's death?
He thinks he's responsible.
I guess so.
I mean, he didn't sap, like, he should have been up there, right?
He was scared to get up there.
And you know what?
It's scary.
It's fucking scary.
I wouldn't go up there.
I have not, I did not fly.
This is how quickly I wash out of the British Navy.
They're like, all right, welcome.
You're the fourth son of some Lord.
I'm like, hello.
And they're like, go up that thing.
And I'm like, I'm not going up there.
What are you talking about?
Yeah.
Do you have like a chair I can sit in?
I mean, conceivably, if he had gotten up there, he would have been able to help.
What's his name again?
Worley?
Yeah, sure.
help Worley, furl, get, you know, get rid of that sail.
And so the wind couldn't take it and pull the mast apart.
Right.
It just snaps the mast off.
So after that is when Matern sits down with Auburn, is like, are you being too intense?
Can I tell Ben one more thing about the mask?
Yes.
It's a really good instinct, by the way, deliver all this to Ben.
I think it's really smart.
Thank you.
It's like you're trying to sell Ben on going on a boat.
Well, it's going to pay off.
He may be the only one of the three of you that I could probably.
No question.
Press gang into coming to Maine.
because you've got these children and you've got this life.
You've got a life too.
Do I, though?
But I'm up that way often.
Yeah.
With my wife's family.
There we go.
This is true.
I would love to come visit you.
The boat's maybe the bigger ass.
You climb up.
To climb up, you climb up, you know, that thing that looks like a ladder.
You know, so the mast is held up and held in place by stays.
So two long lines that go from the top to the front and back to the stern and the bow.
And then shrouds, which are lines that come down to the sides.
That's how it stays up in tension.
And the shrouds on the sides are, they've ladders built into them called rat lines
because you climb up like a little rat.
And then you get to the fighting top, which is a platform about two-thirds up the way of the mass
where the sharpshooters would stand and shoot.
But to get onto that platform, you have to climb around it.
And sometimes the boat is tipped over and you're basically upside down.
It's really dangerous.
There's a trap door to go through more safely, which is called the lubbers hole.
And if you climb through that.
Right. Yeah, I'm definitely a landlabor.
I like boats. I like being on the water. I'm not opposed.
It's just, I'm more of a sort of like,
everyone else do that. Is there? Where's the, you know,
portable DVD player, you know? Right. I would say I do not
like being on boats and I do like portable.
There's a reason. I could make drinks for people.
Yeah, that's why. That's why Killick. Killick is his name?
Yeah, that's why he's one of your favorite characters, right?
He's got a very specific job. He likes grilled cheese and South Touse Fog's face and all that.
So then, like, Materan calls Aubrey out.
Aubrey admits, like, I have at this point exceeded my orders.
My orders are to try to catch the thing off coast of Brazil.
We've, you know, we've been chasing it longer than I need to.
And they're faster, too.
And they're going to make it around the Cape to the Pacific.
So then he's like, all right, you know what?
Killick make a delicious map of the Galapagos Islands out of jelly or whatever the fuck.
What is it?
Who knows?
Yeah, I mean, it's some kind of oiled jellies.
Yeah, it's like a jelly.
And essentially it's like, we can go to the Galapagos Islands.
We have a whaling fleet there.
I think the French will be heading there anyway.
We can try to regroup.
And good news.
See you, Mr. Materan.
Maybe you can look at some animals.
That's a lot of Los Angeles.
That's why he's in the business.
There's a lured.
Penguins and shit.
This is alluded to in the movie.
But I'll ask Ben,
do you know why whaling ships
and ships of the line and warships
love to go to the Galapagos?
Something to do with the stream?
Well, you could get fresh water there,
for sure.
You could reprovision there.
Or I guess I'm saying
the like,
the stream of the ocean.
No.
They wanted to go.
There's a specific reason,
which is tortoises.
Tortoises were good food
on these ships.
Oh, sure.
Yeah, because you could,
you could keep,
you could take a bunch of tortoises
off an island.
I guess they don't spoil.
They don't spoil
and they don't drink water
and they don't eat.
Okay.
And so unlike that goat and cow
you have on board for milk,
you saw that in the table setting
in the beginning.
you could take a stack of tortoises
and put them down there
and just kill them as you went.
And they're kind of fun.
They're like funny.
More that they're just less annoying to...
I personally think they need up your resources.
I personally think that 100-year-old tortoises
taste taste taste taste and I think I should be allowed
to eat as many as I want.
That's why you're constantly trying to.
But no, no, it's true. You're right.
I mean, look, they were...
That's why the whaling fleet would go by there.
They were not ecologically conscious.
And then the privateers were going after the whaling fleet because they were packed up with very, very valuable sperm.
So this is the moment.
I already alluded to it.
They're about, like, Materan is dolled up.
He's got his house coat.
He's got his straw hat.
He's got his little, like, cravat neckerchief.
Have you never dressed like that for Halloween?
No, I probably should, although I think I might just be, you know, escorted to an insane.
Weirdly, David does dress like that for sleep.
Those are his versions of pajamas.
The birds.
I want to see those.
Chops on the
baby.
And they pick up some guys, right,
who are like,
you know,
who have information,
right?
Like they're,
they're whalers.
They're a whale.
They're,
the survivors of a whaling ship
that was captured by the Asheron,
the Albatross.
And Jack's like,
we got to fucking go.
Let's go get it.
And they have this fight,
which I really like,
because, like,
materns sort of right of like,
you're,
you know,
you're too crazy.
You know,
you're too obsessed with the act around
and we don't need to do this.
But Merturn's also totally.
also totally selfishly like, I want
to stay on the Galapka's islands.
I want to look at penguins and stuff.
And it's very emotional
and well played.
It is mature and kind of,
he does kind of act like his wife is yelling at him.
Like it is kind of the vibe where he's like,
you know,
duty, please, you know, we must.
And so
that's, but he does get to,
oh right, right, right, that's when Blakeney gets him the beetle.
He's like, if nothing else,
I found a cool beetle. Can we like,
cataloged the
and that's sort of the beginning
of their bond.
Yes.
I like all the
shots where
it's the perspective
of the telescope
yes.
And seeing the
different animals
and the discovery
of the iguana
that can swim
the way that all
just plays out
basically alluding
to evolution.
Yeah.
It's awesome.
Right.
And the iguana
is the swimming
iguana where he's
like they don't swim
all these fucking
iguanas.
I think it's one
of the few
non-documentary films
to ever shoot at the Galapagos.
Indeed, they shot at the Galapagos, which have a very weird terrain.
Well, David, I wouldn't know because I've only ever seen it in the movies.
And this is like, oh, yeah, remember when the movies used to take you places?
Yeah, it's true.
Well, maybe we should go.
Wait, you can't come to Maine and now you're pitching a Galapagos expedition.
Oh, we can go to Maine, get on your boat, sail to the Galapagos.
Where are they?
You know, you've got to go all the way around America.
Look, you're the captain.
I get at requirements of the service.
It's just, huh.
But then we have the Jonah plot, right?
Then they are, their wind is gone.
It's hot.
They're not moving.
They can't get into action.
And the boys start being mean to Harlem.
Because they consider him that he sort of cursed the ship.
Well, and also he may or may not have been directly responsible for the death of Worley.
And it's the Worley's best friend who particularly takes a hatred to Harlem and refuses to salute him.
And at one point, you know, Aubrey
like punishes someone who's not nice to
Harlem, right? To maintain order. He doesn't
sort of checks him. As far as where they're at,
the storm was around the
horn. Yes, they've gone around South America.
They're on the other side. So they really are.
They're now on the other side. They're on the far side of the world.
Because the Nauticus Islands are
off the coast of Ecuador, although by
off the coast, hundreds of miles off the coast of Ecuador.
There's this great fight that he has with
Maturin. I love their fights.
We're obviously like, I have to
preserve against a mutiny and materns like,
these fucking guys are in this like wooden prison.
They've been like pressed against their homes.
And he's like, you can talk to me that way,
but I really hate it when you talk about the service that way.
Like, Aubrey's like, you know, I really like being in the Navy.
I know you think it sucks and just want to look at birds,
but like it does rock.
And they're both right and they're both wrong.
Yes.
Because he is absolutely chasing the Asheran for pride.
Men must be governed.
Often not well.
I admit, but, like, they must be governed.
And Materans, like, you know,
that's what every sort of, you know, dictator says.
It's a great fight.
I just love that the movie has room for all of this.
Yeah.
The Jonah subplot, like, is the first thing
you would be told to lose, I feel like.
You're telling me the movie stops two thirds of the way,
like the action stops.
And we just focus on, like, a side character,
having, like, a psychodrama, basically.
Like, yeah, it becomes a psychological thriller.
And it ends, like, so perfectly and so,
sadly with him just like, does he grab a cannonball to go down?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And just holds it all the way now.
He's like, you've always been nice to me anyway.
I find it emotionally affecting that things sucked so hard in this time that basically
you would learn to become the best doctor alive in order to get on a boat in the hopes that like
once a year they'd let you go look at lizards for two hours.
Yeah, man.
And the fact that he does become this good event.
a doctor and clearly take so much pride in it. I mean, who knows the fucking order of his study?
He's good. He's, he's, but I'm saying the, the natureist thing feels like his real driving.
That's his passion. Totally. Yes. But me invoking the fucking S&L sketch earlier, it was the,
the thing in the, in the amputation scene is without acting like metatextual or like he's a
fucking time traveler, I think Bettney somehow portrays the delicacy of like looking at this
kid and being like, it sucks that this is the only way I can do this. It sucks that all I can offer
you is a stick to bite on. You know, I'm kind of the best there is, and none of these options are great.
Yeah. This is always going to hurt. And if I see like 20 of my men injured, I might only save three
of them. And that's a pretty good ratio. Yeah. Yeah. Then, Jonah dies. Okay. Time for action to begin
again, right? No. Return gets shot. Yeah. By a guy.
trying to shoot an albatross.
An accident. Truly.
And kind of an...
I mean, I hope he did eventually shoot that albatross
and put it around his neck.
Yeah, it's kind of a Dick Cheney situation, right?
Or he's like, fuck, I didn't mean to shoot you.
It's embarrassing.
And worst of all, a little bit of shirt got stuck
in the wound.
That's the fucked up part.
There's this great moment when Aubrey's like...
Because they spot the Acheron, they could try to catch it.
And Aubrey makes the decision like, no, we're going to stay here.
We have to take him to the stable ground to do the surgery.
But he's staring.
at the cello, like there's a shot where he just looks at the cello standing there.
It's like he can't operate without maturing.
Like he knows like, I am not going to survive if he dies, like essentially.
Like I need my other half.
I need my sort of better temper, all that stuff.
And I would argue that the, you know, I don't think this is his primary motivation,
but the crew kind of also need a doctor too.
Well, this is the thing because the other guy, the assistant, is basically like, yeah,
I'm pretty good at operating.
I do barf at the sight of open wounds and stuff.
The fact that matern has a pretty shaky hands.
Essentially, you see him checking, watching a YouTube
about how to perform surgery.
Matern knows how to remove bullets with shirt.
With shirt.
Mature knows the only way he's going to survive
is for him to do the procedure himself.
And no one fights him on it.
The fact that he says it and everyone's like,
yeah, you're right.
This is the, I can't believe Bettney
was an Oscar nominated thing.
Where it's like, you're telling me in the middle of the movie,
he does surgery on himself with a mirror.
Right.
Like, like.
But it's pointing out,
this was a weird supporting actor.
It was. Like, the Oscars were also just
dumber back then. I feel like they're more
lenient to newer actors than
performing, you know, I don't know. Yeah.
But good news. What does this mean, John?
Oh, he gets to go out there.
They're on the fucking islands. He gives him the gift.
I mean, that's a really beautiful
scene of Crow
fucking trying to act like he's not
as softy and being like, no, we were going to
stop here anyway. I didn't do this for you.
I just chose to tell them and
I didn't actually want to capture that both. Bring you out in a
fucking stretch.
or walk you around one time.
It's all good.
It's all good.
You think that Aubrey got a little pissed off
like three days after they
stopped chasing the Asheron
and he just got a bullet
out of his own belly that he's getting up
and walking around all the time.
Maybe I'd be like, okay, maybe we should get back on the ship.
I wouldn't have done this whole ceremony.
No, but it's...
I thought you were injured.
It's the weird fate of it though,
because that's how he finds the Acheron.
Right.
Because he's on the Galapagos.
That's such an amazing...
He's measuring tortoises and he's got his...
I like he has this like...
A box that he looks into the ocean with.
right? Like the sort of like spy box that he can use to look at fish and shit.
This is, I've got the time quite. It's an hour 40.
Like what Fox support.
Rothman, I assume, is watching again like me like Nelson watching it.
Rothman's out there going, can we stretch it out?
Can we make it?
Other exactly like, do we need the iguana measuring sequence?
Is there not a boat for them to fight?
Well, I mean.
I hear the Jack Sparrow like fences with every member of the gas
that fired to the Caribbean.
Right. And also like, well, certainly, you know,
It's a slow burn, but it's going to lead much like the Weevils walk into an awesome showdown with him and the other captain.
No, he boards the ship the guy's dead.
But he's not.
Oh, sure.
But yes.
You're right.
I mean, like, the final sequence is very intense and rocks in a theater and all that.
But, like, it is not right.
Aha.
Like, Captain Frenchman and then like a big sword fight across the deck of a boat or whatever, you know, all that stuff.
I mean, I'll just say this real quick about, you know, and.
Revisiting Peter.
And another...
Sorry, one more thing.
Oh, yeah.
In the Glock goes, they find the Akron.
What else do they find, John?
A stick insect.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Which gives Aubrey the idea to disguise his boat.
And that's how they capture the Akron.
That's how they get him.
See, it all, like, you need this is a breathing organism.
This ship, all these people with these different needs and interests.
It's a wooden world.
It's not a prison.
It's a world.
If he wasn't listening to all of them, he wouldn't be making, like, the evolved decisions.
Because they're privateers and they're greedy.
Because they're not just engaging.
with other, you know, naval ships,
they're also going after private citizens.
A hundred percent.
They'll rate anything that looks like a price.
Right.
One of the things I've noticed rewatching
some of these weird movies
and seeing some of them for the first time.
He isn't so, like, it's, yeah,
Tom Rothman is like, yeah, more,
more Galapagos, please, or whatever.
Right.
But Peter Weir is so patient as a director.
In all his phone.
Yeah.
It's just, and there are definitely moments
and witness, certainly in hanging rock,
where you're just like,
oh yeah, I guess nothing's going to happen.
Right.
And then all of a sudden, something will happen.
And you're involved because he's deep doing the characters.
The beauty of it is that he's not sitting there, and all of a sudden, the Asheron comes
around the corner and it's huge.
Sure.
He sees it and it's tiny, but it's close enough.
And that he can go into battle hair mode.
That's right.
Oh, look at that.
Let the locks flow.
You bring up the patience.
It is one of those things that I often think about, and we are choosing to kind of just
like step away, right?
and even that his last film becomes an independent film
and one where he needs foreign financing.
This is the last time he works with the studios.
I think he just sort of saw, like,
they're not going to let me do this anymore.
Even if it's not, I'm making a $100 million epic,
which he was one of these guys who liked being able to level up
and work with those resources.
It's also just like, no one lets studio films
have this kind of patience anymore.
And it's a patience that runs across,
his small, intimate dramas
to his giant epics.
And maybe one of the reasons
that people don't think about,
oh, Peter Weir all the time,
or like the Peter Weir style movie
is, and this is not a discredit to his talents,
but he wasn't all that uncommon
in commercial filmmaking at the time.
Sure.
Like the opening sequence of,
you haven't covered,
well, you have covered Green Card by the time
this goes out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But, you know, like,
that opening sequence with the kid,
drumming in the subway.
Yeah.
It has nothing to do with the plot.
Yeah.
It's just a creation of a mood in a world.
He does it in this movie too where it's just like little building moments of like,
here's what life is like in little tiny five to seven second vignettes.
And we used to see that kind of stuff in movies all the time.
He was always, there would just be a sequence of like, here's New York City.
Here's a guy hale in a cab.
I mean, it's opening a dog day.
Exactly.
But right.
And now it's the Netflix thing of like every movie has.
to open with a helicopter overhead shot of the city
and then immediately into either an action sequence
or some kind of big comedic set piece
or the beginning of the plot.
You know, I mean, they have all this fucking data
that's like, if something huge doesn't happen
within the first 90 seconds, everyone's going to flip away.
And even in theaters where it's not like the risk
is someone walking out of the fucking theaters
the thing they're concerned about,
you do feel like that concern dictating
the edits of these things,
even if it's just inevitably this thing's
going to go on to fucking streaming. You're saying he's not, is, is he, was he less unique in the
moment than it feels like he was now? I think he's a master of that. I think also,
but I also think it was not unusual. No, his uniqueness was his consistency, I would say. Yeah.
And also the versatility of genre, of size of tone. Yeah. There are very few people who I think
made this transition into the studio system and just basically stayed true to their,
standards and their ethos and didn't slip.
Because you compare it to like Wolfgang Peterson,
who like goes from making like his very serious movies
to making like top level popcorn
to then making shitty popcorn.
Like the arc from like Das Boot to perfect storm to Poseidon
is what often happens to these guys.
At some point,
they're just fucking picking up the checks.
Yeah, we maybe saw it come in and got out of the way.
Maybe.
To tie it back to a moment to a master and commander, a movie that I believe David likes.
Yeah, I've heard that.
I think that one of the things that's very beautiful about it is that the natural patient pace of a Peter Weir movie marries so quickly with the necessary patient pace of sailing a ship in Napoleonica.
But it has a completely different mood than we would think of it.
What happens when they engage in battle?
Shit pops off.
It's what I, like the craziest part of all this.
It's like so much of your life is.
what you're talking about is the careful, like, how do we maneuver?
And then it's like, when we're next to them, everyone has to go insane.
Right.
You see Killick going insane, like, during the battle.
Like, there's one of the other chefs is, like, beating someone up with a pot.
Like, it's, like, hitting someone over the head with a pot.
Obviously, I already mentioned, you know, you see Blakeney, a little 12-year-old blakeney just boarding with a gun.
Well, isn't his mission to release the whalers?
Yeah, but first he's in charge.
So that's calom in the other ones.
Oh, sorry.
No, first he's in charge of the boat.
Remember, he's like, oh, I don't get to be in the boarding party.
He's like, no, you're going to be like in charge of the surprise because we're all, which is an honor.
But then there's that moment where they're so close and they both start pointing, like both boats are pointing the cannon right at each other.
And Blakely's like, we have to fire first.
Like, you know, we, you know, they're going to blow our hole in us.
He's a good commander of the surprise.
And then he says, arm yourself, we must board them.
He's a little child.
And you see Maturran like grab a gun and cock it and I'm watching it right now.
It's so exciting.
And I love what, I love that Likney says that because, A, he appreciates that it's necessary because he's smart.
But B, he gets what he wants to do anyway.
He's like, yeah, you know what?
I am going to fucking board that boat.
The assistant doctor guy, the cowardy, he's not a coward, but the grossed out dog.
He has that moment where he stops a cannon from being fired by putting his hand in between the fuse and the like the trigger.
Oh, and it hurts.
It's so good.
Almost slapsticky moment.
It's so good.
Materan picks up a sword and starts fucking with it.
It's so exciting.
It's the greatest thing
that's ever happened.
Like I said,
it's tied with all the other scenes
for a greatest scene
in a movie.
But yeah,
Calhamy is sent,
is tasked with going and
rescuing.
Yeah, getting the other whalers
out of the
Albatross.
Right.
That will put the odds
in their favor.
It gets more guys
on their side.
And that's when it's over.
And then Aubrey
sees the surgeon
who is actually the captain,
pretending to be the surgeon,
operating on the captain,
who's probably just
some dead guy.
They put a coat on.
And he says, he told me to give you this sword.
Yeah, that's what happens.
And it's great.
You don't know the twist for a while, obviously.
There's the, what's his pants dies?
The sweet boy.
Palmy dies.
And he doesn't sew through the nose for him because he's asked for that.
Remember, Blakeney asked Blakeney, or Blakeney asked him earlier.
They get sewn up in their own hammocks.
Also, the guy who looks like a blobfish dies.
Love that guy so much, the master.
Oh, yeah.
You know, he gets shot in the head.
The master of sales.
Love him.
It's great.
It's just the right balance of like triumph and misery, right?
Like, it's sort of like, this is life at sea.
They bury everyone.
They say their names.
They sing a little song, right?
All that stuff.
Would you want to be buried at sea?
No.
Okay, fine.
He gives James Darcy.
Okay, great.
Really?
Ben, break the tie.
Yeah.
Cool.
We're deciding for all of us.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, we all have to do it.
We're giving Ben Power of Attorney.
That he gives James Darcy the Acheron.
Right.
He's like, take that to Portman.
Says Jarvis, take the Acheron to Valparaiso.
And then we have the moment I already freaked out about, which is Aubrey realizes like, oh, shit, no, the captain's still on the ship.
Right.
We have to go get them.
We can't stay at the Galapco.
Sorry.
Once again.
Your bird's flight list, not going anywhere.
Funny line.
Right.
Billion dollar gross.
Right?
Yeah.
The greatest thing that's ever happened.
And then they fucking start playing their song.
Then they jam out.
Because what else are they going to do?
While they're going there, it's going to take time.
I was going to make a joke that the mid-credit tease was that they're building a white maturon.
And then I remember that in the section where he's been shot, he basically does become white maturon.
He does go kind of white vision.
He gets, yeah, gray T mode.
Yeah.
That's funny.
Thank you.
David, how do you feel about this movie?
It's my favorite movie ever.
I love to watch it.
I try not to watch it too much.
Because I do, as with all my favorite movies, I try to kind of like, let it be special.
Yeah.
So it's like every year or so.
How many times do you think you've seen it?
Like 20?
Sure.
15, 20.
Yeah.
Right?
Like a good amount.
You don't ever put it into an Assassin's Creed style rotation.
I don't think I do that.
That's a Ben thing.
I was hearing about that.
In college, I did that.
In college, I would have the movies to fall asleep to a little bit more.
I don't really do that.
I try to cycle through them.
I don't know if you do this as well.
It sounds like you didn't with this.
But in the same way that I, like, held off on rewatching this.
because I was like, I should make it fresh for when we do the episode.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There were certain movies I look at where I'm like,
I'd love to watch that, but there's a good chance we cover that in the next two years.
I definitely do that, correct.
And it would be nice to make that feel a little more special.
I'm never going to be.
I arrived as Griffin finished watching the movie.
Look, my memory at this point, you're fresh.
I'm fucking Dory.
You're usually trying to do it pretty soon.
Shit seeps out of my brain so quickly.
Right.
That I feel like the specificity of thought I need to be as close to have just finished.
finishing the movie as I can.
We mentioned the box office.
We did.
We'll play the game in a second.
Can I ask you a question before the box office game?
I know you're going somewhere.
No.
I'm going to the box office.
And you're leading and you're captaining the ship.
So I don't want to take us off course to go to my Galapagos Islands.
The overall question is what's the new thing you've seen in it since you've seen it so many times?
And then the prompt might be, how does this depiction of war compare to the depiction of
war in Gallipoli.
That's interesting.
It's got the similar thing in Gallipoli of,
it's about like a brotherhood of man a little bit,
right?
And then you don't really know or see your enemy.
But like, right.
But in Gallipoli, I feel like it's a little bit more like,
you know, watching it,
if you have even the barest understanding of history.
Like, these boys have no idea what they are in for.
They have been drafted into a war that is pointless.
They are being drafted into a, you know,
battle that is the famously worst thing
that anyone ever tried in World War I basically.
Right.
Like one of the biggest disasters.
Right.
So you kind of have this kind of like,
innocence is dying here.
I don't find that with Master and Commander at all.
No, not at all.
I mean,
this is like,
you know,
it's not something to be proud of,
but like this is part of the lifeblood
of this,
you know,
of this empire, right?
It's like these people.
Obviously, World War I was a not,
was a particularly
modern war in a way
that people didn't understand
even when they were joining it
because of the kinds of guns
they were using, basically.
It was just much more fatal war,
even though the brutality of war is depicted
to a degree in this movie as well.
But it's also like, as you mentioned,
the triumph is there too.
So it's kind of, it's a romantic film
when it comes to this.
Hugely romantic.
And Maturian is right.
There is no reason to necessarily go after the Acheron
after it.
No, what?
This is not some movie about like,
I mean, he gives the great speech where he's like,
do you want Napoleon to be your king,
like, where they're all fired up about it.
And it's like, yeah, sure.
In the broad sense, Britain didn't want to lose to France.
Yeah, but this isn't even a French naval ship.
This is a, this is a, they're contractors.
Yeah.
You know, they're not going to invade England.
The astronauts not going to invade England, nor are they going to continue hunting for the surprise necessarily, unless they disguised themselves.
Hodge, I got a question for you, turn about his fair play.
I know you've done a great job of explaining and selling Ben on the specifics of life on
movies and boating.
Yeah.
And obviously your experiences with boating are different than what is depicted in this film.
Slightly.
Are there specific things in this movie that you feel like, wow, this gets it right in a way I haven't seen before?
I mean, no way a truly able semen.
Not even like on technical details, but like on feelings and experiential.
I mean, I think that it is profoundly creepy to be sleeping on a little.
a boat that makes no motor noise.
This is a reason I don't trust boats.
That I think it captures very well.
I mean, the depiction
of what you do
in order to make a boat like this
go is, to the best of my understanding,
experience, and reading very accurate.
I think that's very cool.
Because it required a lot of
intelligence and ingenuity and that sort of thing.
That thing where they have to escape into the fog
and they don't have enough wind, so they get out the boats
and they pull.
You've been there?
how you would, no, but that is how you would maneuver
of one of those boats, you know, like, particularly
a square bent, so a square rigged
boat. Okay, all right. I'll tell you.
I'm getting so
hungry, and we got to play the box. I understand.
Thank you for, thank you for letting me
talk a little bit about it. But if I may,
please, we've reached
the end of our discussion of this film.
Oh, yes, oh, Jesus, Friday, forgot I have a piece of paper.
It's appropriate to honor it
appropriately.
safe and sound at home again
let the waters roar jack
safe and sound at home again
let the waters roar jack
long we've tossed on the rolling main
now we're safe ashore jack
don't forget your old shipmate
B'u-r-r-r-r-r-ri-io
Take it solo David
Me? No, no no no no no no
It's got your name all over it.
I don't even know this part.
We were not prepped for that.
There was no editing.
We just jumped into it.
Did they say this other part?
I don't remember this other part.
Oh, yeah.
It goes on and on.
We have the self-same gun.
Quarter deck division.
Spinger, I unloader you
through the whole commission.
Long we've tossed on the rolling main.
Now we're safe ashore, Jack.
Don't forget your old ship.
Did you look this up?
This is called Don't Forget Your Old Shipmate, this naval song.
Do you know what makes Ben best in the biz?
I mean everything, but go ahead.
99 out of 100 producers would have just texted that to us.
And Ben printed it out.
And I think it mattered.
I think we locked in right away.
Absolutely.
Do you think it's mean when they're a little mean about the nice singing voice of Harlem?
Yeah, I think it's mean when they're mean.
I feel like it's a little mean.
I mean, they're not like that mean, but they're kind of like...
There's a moment before he sings, so this is when he joins in on farewell,
and adieu old Spanish ladies.
And they go, you're a little pitchy dog.
Yeah, that's, yeah.
But right before that, the cruis thing, before he joins in,
you see him sort of gamely tapping his hand to the beat and he's really offbeat and it's so touching.
All of the characters are real people.
Thanks for...
Oh, no.
Play it along with...
Thank you very much.
Griffin, an extra ration of grog for Ben.
It's November 14th, 2003.
Master Commander is opening to $25 million, number two at the box office.
Now, I do know what is number one because the Wikipedia entry,
there was a sub-entry of accolades and awards received by Mastering Commander.
I was just trying to look up the award situation.
In the opening paragraph, it says the movie was considered disappointment coming in number
two behind Elf.
Is it the second weekend of Elf?
How much is Elf dropped from his first weekend?
It went up. Did it not?
It did not go up.
At least according to the numbers, which everything feels a little unreliable.
I remember it having a minuscule, well, I remembered it going up, but it's like...
It goes up in its fourth.
There we go.
I knew it went up.
It has dropped 15%.
Yeah, crazy.
So Elf is number one at the box office with 26 mil,
mastering around right behind it, 25 mil.
Right behind that is a movie that has dropped drastically.
is a movie we've covered on this show.
It's dropped drastically.
It opened against Elf.
Yeah.
Elf has now taken number one.
It has dropped to number three.
It opens number one.
It is an action sci-fi sequel.
Oh, it's the Matrix Revolution.
Yes.
Whereas Reloaded had done so well.
Revolution opens big, but drops out very fast.
Elf was so fucking huge.
There's something that feels representative of it being like the thing that
master and commander has to open against.
in that that was just like,
we got Russell Crowe doing Gladiator on a boat.
Isn't that like automatic 40 million opening weekend,
like adult fucking entertainment?
And it came in soft at the same time
that Elf came in so much hotter than anyone was predicting.
I'll say I first watched Master and Commander with our son.
I don't know if he remembers ever seeing the movie.
But our son and my wife was the whole human being in her own right,
we'll watch Elf every day together
if they're allowed to.
Yeah.
I mean, Elf is a,
I watch it every year movie.
It has stood the test of time.
Every day, I'm saying.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's the only,
I would argue,
it's the last holiday film
that basically has been canonized.
Uh, yeah, absolutely.
It's good,
it's good.
It's an excellent movie.
And now,
John Favro is bringing us
The Mandalorian and Grogu.
Uh,
and I cannot wait to meet those two guys.
Number three is Matrix Revolution.
Number four is,
It is the animated film.
A thousand three.
Oh, it's Brother Bear.
Brother Bear. It's one of only two I haven't seen.
Brother Bear and Wish.
Right.
Number five.
And as we may return to this box office game one day.
It's a film we will cover.
It is new this week.
It is opening to $9 million, which is not good.
It is a fun movie.
It's Lune Tunes back in action.
I could have gotten it with fewer clues.
Is this where to put this movie?
It feels like a summer, not a November.
I guess they're hoping for a Thanksgiving family.
thing, but like it just kind of feels like everyone's like,
we'll just see Elf. Right. I think
they had no idea Elf was going to be that big.
It is crazy that it's also
Elf was New Line and this is Warner Brothers.
Like they opened against themselves.
I just think the expectations
for Elf were really low where it was
like, if that movie makes $50 million
we're going to be thrilled.
And instead it opened to 40 and then
had like those
tight spandex legs.
Because Elf ends up at like
170, 180? Yeah.
Yeah, no, I think they fucked up on the release of this,
but it also, like, Warner Brothers treated that movie with resentment.
Well, we will cover it.
Master and Commander had a Jonah on board.
Let's just say it.
Yes, truly.
It was so charmed, but it is so cursed at the same time.
Joe Dante has talked about this where, like,
he would get into studio, like, note meetings on the Looney Tunes movie,
and they'd be like, now Bugs says this line, what's up, Doc?
What does that mean?
Does he need to say that?
Oh, boy.
Where he was, like, getting noted by people who didn't understand
why they were even bothering to make a Lumenitin's movie.
Nothing is better for creativity than people justifying their jobs.
The movie is kind of about that in a lot of ways.
It's like a movie of like development execs being like, does this suck?
Now, do we fucking hate the Looner Tens?
Now I will never see it.
No, it's really good.
It's him.
I will not see a movie about movies ever again.
It is a movie made.
Sentimental value was the one exception.
It is a movie made with contempt for an industry that is overthinking everything.
and not understand the value of these characters.
I'm officially in my weird dad phase
if it's not about sleeper trains.
Sure, we hear you.
I think you would love back in action.
They go to Area 51 and it's Joan Cusack
and she has all the great robots.
What else is on the bike size?
Number six of the box office is love, actually.
A movie that is a war crime?
It's not good, but it is...
That is a movie that our daughter
makes us watch every Christmas.
Yeah, horrible every time.
She has extremely good taste in movies and television.
That is emotional abuse.
But she really loves that movie.
A lot of people love that movie.
A lot of people love that movie.
A lot of people,
voted for Trump. Not accusing
your daughter of voting for Trump. Oh, no, she's
a maga. Oh, sure. Maga and
maha. Thank God. Number seven of the box
office is scary movie three.
Which has made $102 million. Was a big hit.
Yep. Number eight is the
definitely not embarrassing movie. Radio?
No. Whoa. Everyone walked out
of that with their heads held high.
Number nine is new this week as the
Tupac Resurrection movie, which is a sort of
like, pseudo documentary.
Yeah. Right. You know, kind of. I think
briefly had the highest grossing
documentary crown or was close to it.
And then obviously the next year,
Fahrenheit 9-11 comes out.
Hey, Ben.
He just went to the bathroom.
When he comes back from the bathroom,
I'm going to teach him out of anchor.
Number 10 of the box.
Well, he's about to anchor in that toilet.
That's right.
His Mystic River.
He might do it wrong.
Mystic River.
I never saw it.
What's it up to at this point?
Which has made $45 million on its way to 90.
Yeah.
So it's going to have a very long run.
Yeah.
Well, the thing about it is they save everything for the
Bluper reel, but they are great.
Oh, my God.
All those scenes are so funny.
Is that my daughter in there?
Oh, I fell over.
I don't know.
Yeah. That's the box office.
We will, I guess, yeah, do this again one day when we do Joe Dante.
Because, right?
That's a-we got to do it.
I'm about to get keel-hauled by David, but I just got to say this one thing.
Please.
Now I'm done, so you guys can just chat.
Just what, you know, I have a better answer for you vis-a-vis my experience on the C's.
Sure, sure.
And what I think that this movie captures, and I think is part of what the movie is all about,
is the powerless.
literal and figurative of being on a sailing boat.
Totally.
You have some control,
but you have a lot of no control.
And how much control is overcompensated in,
in uniform and in ritual and in everything else,
because they know that it will fall apart
if there isn't discipline, right?
But also you are at the mercy of truly unseen forces, the wind.
Yeah.
And if someone else has the wind advantage,
they're going to win the battle.
And if it dies, you're be calmed.
and it's this collision of a sense of control and complete lack of control.
It is very tense, even if there isn't a love interest or an antagonist, traditional antagonist.
That is an excellent point, beautifully expressed, and you have finally given me words to explain why I don't like being on a boat.
You just described exactly why I don't like it.
Powerful and powerless in that you have a bunch of fucking responsibilities and rituals to maintain,
which to me sounds like a nightmare, and also you don't always.
ultimately have that much power. If you ever wanted, and Ben, I'm inviting you as well.
Yeah. The wonderful comedic actor and improviser and just straight up great actor, Mark Evan Jackson.
He also has the same bug. Oh, sure, the boating bug. The boating bug. And he is a partner in another
120-year-old wooden sailing schooner called the Grace Bailey.
Wow. Jesse Thorne and I are going aboard in June for four nights to lead a Judge John Hodgman
sailing cruise.
Truly.
It's, I think, sold out.
Okay.
But the Grace Bailey
is an amazing experience.
This is interesting.
To sail on.
Mark is on it sometimes.
I'll be going back on it eventually.
I'm not refusing the experience to be clear.
It's really, really great.
And, you know, I would invite David,
if you want some master and commander type experience,
this would be a really fun experience.
The Grace Bailey, sail Grace Bailey.
Yeah.
Now, Ben, here's what you do.
What's that?
Do they have cannons?
They do not have cannons.
I'll still go, though.
But you'll like this because these schooners,
particularly, the Mary
day was purpose built for passenger
travel in the 60s,
but the Grace Bailey and a bunch and
five or six other ones, they date back
to the late 19th century when schooners were
the tractor trailers of the East Coast. There were
no roads, there were no railroads. So you wanted
cargo moved around. You would
fill up a schooner and move it along the coast
up and down, etc. So it would carry
tar, rum,
coal, paperback
copies of vacation land or whatever. And if you wanted to stop
the schooner, here's what you do.
Any kind of boat, first of all, you drop
the lead to see what the quality of the seabed is, then you drop the anchor, right? And if you know that it's
five fathoms deep, for example, you're going to want to let out at least three times and up to
seven times that amount of what's called anchor road. The closest to the anchor, it's all heavy
chain because it's not the anchor that keeps you down. It's the chain. I love it. But you got to pay it out
longer because there are tides. Because if it was too short, it would potentially, it would break.
there would be too much tension.
You put the anchor down and then you lay,
essentially you're laying the chain
down along the seabed
for a length of time.
And it's that weight that keeps you.
If you were just holding onto the anchor,
it'd pull right out.
That makes total sense.
But yeah, I love when you see,
there's like one in Long Island City.
There's a huge anchor,
but then there's also the chain with it,
which is so impressive.
It's a fucking massive.
And that's how you do it, then.
So cool.
What's a coxswain?
Coxswain sits when you're, it's a rowing thing.
That's for a racer.
The Coxwin is the little guy who sits at the front of the boat.
So I could be a coxswain.
Yes, you could.
You are the actual perfect bill for a coxswain.
You have to be really loud.
You have to yell.
Oh, famously, I can't do that.
I think you can do it.
Billy Boyd.
He's the Coxswain?
That makes sense.
It's also the steersman of the boat.
And like a, like a coxon in when you're rowing, when you're, you know, what is it, crew?
You know what I mean?
They usually choose little, you know, smaller people.
Yeah.
To sit in the back of the boat and call out the strokes.
Yeah.
That's what a coxon is in a rowing crew.
And similarly in Napoleonic War times,
you wanted a smaller coxon to steer the boat,
and that's why they had hobbits to it.
Got it.
Okay.
So I'll be your coxon sometime.
I definitely think the worst job is the crank guys.
Well, the worst job is Pegboy,
but we're not even going to get into that.
It's kind of, that's,
There's not even an argument there.
Ben, the other way they would move the boat
if they didn't have wind, you're going to love this.
They had a smaller anchor, and they would put it in one of their sideboats,
and they would row it way out in front of the ship,
and then they would drop that anchor way out in front of the ship,
and then the ship, those crank boys would crank the capstan around
and pull the ship to that anchor.
That was another way you would move if you had no wind.
Sure.
Which they, I think at one point,
have to do that at the first battle scene.
Yeah, they have the boats tow it.
But in this case, it would be like throwing a grappling hook
and then pulling yourself along.
Or they would tie themselves to a tree
and then pull themselves up
if they're near land or whatever.
So cool.
You understand how four and aft sales work?
What?
Thank you all for listening.
Please remember to rate review and subscribe.
Hodgman, anything you want to plug?
Well, the foreign aft sale is something I'd like to plug.
incredible means of propulsion that uses the Bernoulli principle of differentiating the air
vacuum. Essentially, it works like an airfoil. So, never mind. Also, I would recommend plugging
any leaks in the whole of your ship. There you go. There we go. I'll tell you what, I'll plug
my substack, hodgeman.substack.com. Well, look at that. Because you get news and little musings for me,
but you also get me reading Moby Dick aloud in a terrible main accent, chapter by chapter.
I've been going, I'm only about halfway through, so the good stuff is yet to come.
And if, and obviously, I don't want to get people's hopes up too high for something that may never happen.
But if, for example, Vacationland ever were released in paperback, I assume that Substack is somewhere where it might be announced.
Yeah, you would learn about that probably at Hodgeman.substack.com.
But you also get to listen to me read Moby Dick aloud in a terrible main accent.
not a joke.
Perfect.
It's a long project that I enjoy.
Tune in next week for the way back,
we're finishing Peter Weir
with her buddy Alex Ross Perry
who comes in calm,
civil, balanced.
I honestly, I remember that being a fun episode,
but can't say I remember what happened.
I can't remember anything.
Yeah, like, I mean, I guess we probably
litigate a bunch of stuff with Alex
because, like, that's usually how it goes.
Right.
He explains how there only ever been
two good movies in history.
And they're both Super Mario Galaxy.
God, he was coming in hot with those galaxies.
He really was like, yeah, he was, yeah, I think he was trying a little hard, but...
No, I think it was natural.
It was easy and organic.
Anyway, tune in for that next week.
And as always, what's the number one boat fact that you didn't get to share that you came in locked and loaded with today, John?
talked about ketching and talk about anchoring.
Kedging is when you like get really close to steering the ship, but you...
That's right.
Cool.
It's, uh, there's a nautical term called gooning.
Yeah, sure.
And glazing.
Yeah.
And only the ablists of seamen are capable of all three.
Yeah.
And it creates some more semen in the process.
Yep, that's how it happens.
That's how it happens.
And that's how we end our episode.
Yep.
