Blank Check with Griffin & David - The Mosquito Coast with Sean Fennessey
Episode Date: April 19, 2026We all have those moments where we just want to disengage from conventional society. We often yearn to go "off the grid." But, would we ever want to go to the Mosquito Coast? HELL NO. Sean Fennessey... joins us to chat about Peter Weir's 1986 film that tests the limits of Harrison Ford's likability to the extent that Ben Hosley would describe it as "anti-smile." Allie Fox is a bad hang. The Mosquito Coast? GOOD MOVIE. Listen to Griffin and David on the Big Picture Watch Harrison Ford on Conan spoil Star Wars 7 The Great Railway Bazaar Read Roger Ebert’s review of Paul Blart Mall Cop Read Rembert Explains America: Burning Man Forever Listen to The A24 Podcast: A Bigger Canvas with Martin Scorsese & Joanna Hogg Dive into the Hogg-verse with Davis piece on Joanna Hogg Watch Ham Hat 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)
Once I had believed in father
And the podcast had seemed small and old
Now he was gone
And I wasn't afraid to love him anymore
And the podcast seemed limitless
I mean yeah well I wasn't like
Oh Griffin better do this line
No last line of the film
Now I will say the tagline for this film is
Uh huh extraordinary
I think potentially one of the best taglines
It's a good tagline it's a good poster
It's a you know it's very interesting
very intriguing.
Okay.
Tell me the tagline.
The tagline is,
This coast sure be biting.
No, it's not like that.
As I said, one of the best taglines ever.
Itchy.
Ready to get Harrison Ford.
This summer is getting itchy.
Scratch, scratch.
No, he's...
The tagline is,
how far should a man go to find his dream?
Ali Fox went to the mosquito coast.
Line break.
He went too far.
That fucking rules.
Just to see this poster
where you're like,
Here's Harrison Ford, arguably the biggest movie star of that moment.
There's an article I read up when this film came out and people were pushing back against it
where they called out that Harrison Ford starred in more of the highest grossing films than any other star in history.
Not just at that moment, he had a greater percentage of the all-time top 10,
but no one had ever dominated an all-time top 10 to that degree.
And this poster is just Harrison Ford looking not great.
I mean, he looks how does hell.
He looks all right.
But the point is...
Yeah, wearing glasses.
He looks concerned.
This is the guy who's unflappable.
And the poster is he looks a little out of sorts.
Mm-hmm.
And he looks rugged.
And then the tagline's telling you, this guy fucked up.
This movie should have made $8 trillion off the pitch of Harrison Ford fucks up.
There's no world where this movie makes $8 trillion.
Of course.
No, this movie is designed to make people angry.
I had never seen it before.
I love this movie so much.
Well, this is a real much.
real perfect movie.
Sean, I think you and I are going to bond on a lot of things.
I think this movie is great to be clear.
I don't, it's not like I'm contrarian.
Are you both?
Have you met this guy?
Yeah, this is, this is the wavelength.
Are you psychotic?
The wavelength that Sean and I, yes.
The answer is yes, the wavelength that Sean and I share.
Ben texted us this morning and said this movie, let me find the exact quote.
I believe it was this movie is anti-smile.
Anti-smile.
It sure is.
Which is true.
I thought of this when you were describing the tagline.
If the poster featured Harrison Ford smiling,
rather than that be amused kind of half grimace.
Would the movie have been a hit?
If there was more...
No, there's no where this movie is a hit?
The wry, sarcastic charm.
It would have...
If we're just talking poster and the movie isn't changed?
Maybe it makes a little bit more.
It would have opened better and people would have been angry.
If there were exes over his eyes, so we know from the start that this motherfucker
dies...
Whoa!
It's we're what three minutes in?
We've spoiled the film.
God damn.
Ben's quote, our finest film critic, Ben Hosley.
God damn this movie, a nasty bastard.
That's true.
And David said it's not a feel good film.
Maybe don't move to the mosquito coast.
And Ben texted it's anti-smile.
I truly would never.
Not even for Harrison Ford.
Now my opinion is,
that doesn't make it any less true a film, Ben.
There are so many articles from the release of this film that are fascinating
where there are like notoriously press shy Harrison Ford
has pounded the pavement for this movie.
He knows this one needs selling.
Like, yeah, this isn't exactly like,
we go to the coast and you'll have to find out what happens next.
It's got to be more than that.
And he didn't want to like, whoa, why is Leo doing TikTok video?
Why is Leo on the big picture, one minute?
He didn't want to miss sell it.
He didn't want to trick people.
But he was like, this is a tougher film.
I'm hoping I built up the credibility with my audiences.
And then when the movie comes out and he's like, critics savaged it.
And he felt betrayed by the critics.
Yeah, he was mad that it didn't get a fair shake from them.
He was like, I thought you guys might at least get it.
And that he felt like they were saying like, I'm not buying Han Solo doing this.
And he was like, this is a movie that needed you.
And it's a challenging movie.
And you're all going like, how dare he try this?
But the interesting fact when they're talking about, at the time they said it was the only movie he made that didn't make back its money.
He says that, yes.
He says that.
Which means it must have like, right, not even succeeded on home video or whatever.
Even by the mid-90s, he still says it is the only movie I starred in that didn't make back.
Because it's not like frantic was, you know, cleaning up.
No.
But it did pretty good business.
Yeah.
It was just much more conventional.
It's more of a thriller.
Like straightforward thriller.
And he's going out there and he's defending it.
And in this article from the Hollywood Reporter.
they say that it got a B-minus cinema score.
So you're like, it's not like the people who saw it, hated it,
as much as no one wanted to see it.
A B-minus cinema score is really bad.
That's bad.
I'm not saying it's good,
but I'm saying if you put a smiling Harrison Ford face on the poster,
this movie gets F.
Should we do the 1986 episode of the Big Picture
where the mosquito coast has just come out
and it's made $1.8 million and it's got a B-minus
number score.
And we're like, God damn it.
This is why we can't.
have nice things. No original storytelling,
no literate adaptations
of thoughtful men exploring the world.
I think it's not even that, Sean. I think
it's you and your quiet focused mode going,
I just need to accept that VHS
has arrived and Sima is not what he used to be.
So depressing.
Well, I just want to shout out.
Well, what's our podcast?
Who's our guest? And then I want to say something.
This is Blank Check with Griffin and David. I'm Griffin.
I'm David. It's a podcast about themographies,
directors who have massive success early on
in their careers and are giving a series of
blank checks to make whatever crazy passion projects they want.
And sometimes those checks clear.
And sometimes they use the checks to buy a town and rebuild civilization from scratch.
And try to make a ice machine.
Good.
The size of a like house.
Ideas.
Boy.
In the jungle.
Good ideas.
This is a mini series on the films of Peter.
And then when a militia shows up, they're like, it's okay.
I'll trick that.
It's like, hmm, I bet these guys are afraid of ants.
Allie Fox did nothing.
Oh, wait a second.
To be clear, what I love about this movie is not that.
What I love about this movie is that Ali Fox is one of the most fundamentally broken.
You like it's a peer into the soul, not because you're like taking notes.
Although I want to explore if there is any goodness in his ideas.
It's a, it's the question.
It's more like what's the temptation, I guess, right?
Like, well, yeah, like the temptation of the goodness.
Yeah, obviously.
Like, what is there?
Ego maniac.
narcissist, but
I think...
Getting older,
a couple of things,
a couple things are sparking.
I kind of feel like his analysis
is correct
and all of his actions
wrong, if that makes sense.
Well,
maybe I'm painting
too broad a brain.
Is it too soon to go to this place?
It's too soon to go to this place.
We're going to get there.
I promise you we're going to get there.
David, what did you want to say?
Did you mention on the films?
Yeah, thank you.
It's called Podnick at Hanging Calf.
As I didn't know.
that. Today we were talking about what is
this first proper blank check movie?
Certainly his first Hollywood blank check.
Sure. The successive witness
is immediately rolled into
I'm tying myself to
Harrison Ford. It's the passion project
I couldn't get made right before
WISN, I can now get made. Successive
Witness movie star plus
the, you know, building
credibility of his Australian films, which
had almost gotten the movie made before,
all put together to make a
very
Huff movie about an unlikable person doing something largely negative and unsuccessful, I guess.
And the movie ends with like, yeah, that didn't work out.
You know, like, which is, yeah, not something you can easily pitch in a boardroom.
What did you want to say?
Sean Fantasies our guest.
The great Sean Fantasy from the big picture.
And our friend, excuse me.
I know, but I'm so happy to be here for Podnick.
Podnick.
Podnick.
That's good.
Now, I wanted Podster and Cass
and cast mander the pod side of the cast.
How many times are you going to bring this up?
Every episode, basically.
And David said Podnick is the funniest word I've ever heard.
Which I think is funny.
Well, that explains it. It is.
However, I do think there was a case for Podless.
Yeah, but you see, this is, there's a, to me, a fine balance between two short, which
what you're doing, and kind of like, the joke is just the length.
I said, let's go as hard as we can.
We're rarely going to get an opportunity to put in two pods and two casts.
I don't like it.
I think it doesn't roll off any tongue.
I also don't like that Master and Commander
has a subtitle. I think that's a huge
mistake. What about...
Well, they're building a franchise.
Have become battlefields.
Yeah, but then, okay, well,
now we're just throwing rules out the window.
Right. You know, that's what, right. We can say that.
That's what it was at the live show.
It was, it was blank checking the big picture.
It was. And we were on the pod battlefield.
We were in the best. Okay, so that's what I wanted to talk about.
We did a live show with you guys,
where we did a draft.
It will be six months old by the time this comes out.
Right. You can watch it.
Sure. And we did a draft, and we wise
did New York movies and played to the crowd, all that.
But the initial plan, before it was going to be a live show,
had been that we were going to do 1986 films.
In studio.
Oh, interesting.
That's what I'm saying.
Okay.
And that's my birth year.
But it was also basically like one of the available years.
One of the last ones.
Exactly.
One of the last big ones that we haven't done yet.
And so I was like, hell yeah, 1986.
I think I watched 30 movies from 1986.
Sure.
Like to prepare for this draft that did not happen.
Now, now we may do it eventually.
We had the New York idea and you got upset because you said I've already been grinding.
I was just so deep in 1986.
We plan to do, I would love to do a draft for you guys every year for as long as we possibly can.
I love the year drafts because I like the scarcity.
Like I find that the best format because like in terms of the gamesmanship, it's the most interesting.
New York draft is the opposite sort of gamesmanship where it's like, pick of the litter.
There's a million movies.
What route do you take?
Right.
Like I would say, you know, but 86 was going to be recorded and New York was always going to be live.
So I said, you guys want to come to do the live show.
Exactly. But you're right.
86 is a really fun year.
And when does Mosquito Coast go in 86?
I think it might go, but it would be a later choice.
Would you draft it in drama?
Well, it ain't a comedy.
I haven't prepared for 86.
I guess no spoilers for future draft.
No comedy. No Oscar wins.
Not a blockbuster.
So, yeah, it's only a couple spots it goes.
I mean, you could sort of call it a thriller.
It's a kind of a stretch.
Wild card, or if you did an attempt at rebuild.
building civilization from scratch category.
I think it would definitely go there.
I might draft it.
It's very possible.
I have a lot of affection for this movie.
I feel like this is a Sean movie.
Not that it's not anyone else's movie,
but it's definitely a Sean movie.
Yeah, it's not, it is deeply imperfect.
And Ben, I understand.
I understand exactly what you mean.
It is an anti-smile movie.
I love an anti-smile movie.
I love a movie that is essentially a confrontation
with something that is under the surface of,
human existence, which is
we are fucked.
We are so fucked.
So with you here. But this movie makes me
want to punch it in the face.
I think it kind of wants that, right?
I think it does want that. And what
the author of this book, how he feels about
Ali Fox, too, I think is an interesting part of this
and why the filmmaker is interested, why Ford
famously a curmudgeon with a bit of a
down look on society, the world,
to his own success is all really fat.
All these smart, thoughtful guys arriving at this project is interesting to me.
It's very interesting.
Ben, you often say when we cover movies in which someone finds a bag full of money
and their life spirals out of control, like many of the Cohen films we've covered recently,
that if you were in that movie, everything would turn out great and it would end with you
owning an island.
Now, how do you think you would have handled the circumstances of mosquito coast?
I know they're different because you're not given the money in the first place.
But the design is almost the same.
It would burn down immediately.
The town would be burnt in hours.
You're not municipal.
Like, it's like that's not your direction.
I'm not a planner.
If you were in Mosquito Coast, things would have gone worse.
Yes.
I would smoke one cigarette and then it would just go up in flames.
And then it'd be like, all right, let's get out of here.
But you're also, you're not an ideologue.
Like, if you meet Spalding Gray, I mean, not Spald and.
Andre Gregory, not Spalding Gray.
Spalding Gray is another movie I watched recently
for Sean's podcast.
Killingfield. Or no, different one.
Well, he is in the killing fields, but no.
Stalding Gray is in Stars and Bars, the forgotten Daniel
DeLuis film. Oh, wild.
His only pure comedy.
Yeah, giving a performance I might describe as a touch broad.
Fair to say.
He's a horny Southern judge.
Yes.
Classic Spalding Gray typecasting.
Yeah.
Well, Daniel Day Lewis is like, oh, who, whoa, well.
That's his whole performance.
Yeah, it is Daniel DeLewis trying to be Hugh Grant in what, I don't even know what the, in my cousin Vinnie.
That's essentially the framework.
Yeah.
And then Hugh Grant said, Doc Holley.
Hold my logger and made Mickey blue eyes himself.
It does feel like, but Daniel Day Lewis does start some bars.
It's probably like, eh, that didn't work.
And then sees Hugh Grant's early.
And it's like, right, that's not a string to my bow.
Right.
He's got it.
Anyway, yeah, you would meet
Andre Gregory, the priest,
and you'd be like, yeah, you seem like,
you can run things, like, yeah.
I don't want to be in charge here, like, right?
Like, yeah, you got some ideas.
I feel like you, this is a thing
that's been replicated before
in other places.
Whereas Ali is like, you guys got an infrastructure,
go off.
You are a false god, you know, like,
Ali just sees, he sees like a stop sign,
and he's like, I won't stop.
Like, that's just his vibe.
This country used to,
go.
Stein can't run my life.
Ben, would you kneel before God, though?
No.
I mean, God used to kneel before America.
I am not religious at all.
Because that's what Andre Gregory wants, right?
He wants you to bend the knee to him and to
Jesus Christ.
I just feel like Ben just wouldn't have the where, like the sort of
energy to be like,
now, fuck you, man.
You wouldn't get his riled up. I feel like.
No, I guess, I mean, you're making a great point.
I find the.
missionary practice problematic.
You get quite a history there.
Yes.
Of problematic.
More of a reverse cowgirl kind of game.
Ben,
I feel like you get very...
I really like that, actually.
We need to call that out.
That's a...
Hey, 100 comedy.
Social breakout.
Yeah.
You get riled up, Ben, when people disrespect you.
Sure.
And you get riled up when you come up against, like,
injustice.
Yeah.
But I feel like if someone is
arguing ideological points with you in this way, you're just like, I don't have fucking time for this.
If I'm in the jungle and I'm sweating and getting bit by mosquitoes, I think I'm also just going to be like, I can't do with this.
That's the thing with this movie is I'm not going to the jungle.
I will never go to the jungle.
There's no way.
It's not a climate that appeals.
No.
Mosquito coast.
I'm not.
The penguin coast?
Maybe.
I mean, as you put it right there in the title, you're identifying my least favorite kind of insect.
I don't like mosquitoes.
creature on the planet?
Quite possibly.
I hate mosquitoes.
They love me too.
It's the worst.
They love me.
And you know why, Sean?
Because you're so sweet.
Thank you.
Thank you for saying so.
I think it was gross when gross would say that.
When you'd like complain about being bit and they'd be like,
that's because you're so sweet.
You honestly made me feel gross.
It's disgusting.
Or they're like, yeah, you taste good.
Like, shut up.
19896, I just have considered 1986
in more depth than
like other years recently because of this.
And you're talking about
about Harrison Ford major movie star.
I do think he might be inarguably
the biggest movie star
at the year this comes out. Because
the sort of, you know,
Stallone's moment is waning.
Schwarzenegger's moment has not
like totally solidified.
Willis is in, uh,
before, we haven't got to Willis yet.
Cruz. Eddie Murphy is curdling
slightly. Cruise is just beginning
with Top Gun is this year.
Yeah. So like Cruz is on. I think at this moment,
I would argue it's not close.
At this moment, it's inarguably him.
And this is a movie where, what were the top three movies of 1986?
Top Gun.
So, cruises, again, beginning.
Platoon, which wins the best picture.
And Crocodile Dunn D.D.
Crockadal Dundee doing this well is kind of a like, we don't have any stars right now.
Is this guy one of our three biggest stars?
Yeah.
Maybe we throw in with Kroc?
Yeah.
Two things happen in the 80s for him.
One, obviously, you've got two Star Wars movies, two Indiana Jones films.
Right.
He has locked down that specific.
thing. But I think witness is the clincher.
I was going to say this. That's the thing. That's the thing. And we talked about it confirms this.
That's the thing. It's him having two franchises under his belt and then being taken seriously as an
actor and his serious adult drama playing if not like a blockbuster, surely being a hit.
It's kind of like it's that moment that happened with like Jennifer Lawrence where you're like,
she has Silver Linings playbook and the first hunger games in the same year. You're telling me she's
unstoppable. It's a really good comparison. And he, I think, is doing.
doing something in this next stretch of movies that is pretty admirable that great stars do.
Where they get passion projects, interesting filmmakers, they bounce between genres.
You know, his next few movies, Mosquito Coast, frantic working girl goes back for Last Crusade,
and then presumed innocent regarding Henry.
That's a really interesting run of movies.
Not all them work.
No.
Only one of them to me does not work.
Regarding Henry?
Yeah.
But I love that movie.
It's bad, but I do love it.
Written, of course, by Jeffrey Abrams.
JJ.
A little JJ.
He, I saw some interview with him where he said that he really likes working with directors two times.
That he feels like to a certain degree making a movie with someone he's never worked with before is to test out whether they can do a second one.
Not that the first one's a wash, but that he likes being able to hit the ground running and have that built-in language.
And a lot of what you're talking about there, it's like two wiers, two nickels, one, Polansky, you know?
he obviously does three Spielbergs.
Two Pollocks.
Yeah.
Like he would double up on people.
And all of these are, you know, once you get past Spielberg and Lucas, they're like grown-up
directors.
They are serious, grown-up directors.
It's interesting how.
Nois too.
His 90s, it's not like his stardom wanes and he makes hits.
Yeah.
But the movies get worse.
And he has a lot of bad movies.
He has a couple of bad stuff.
The second half of the 90s is a bit of its steep fall.
Yeah.
But also, the second half of the 90s, the Star Wars movies get re-released and like Han Solo is renewed.
Like even as the movies are falling off, his stardom is almost more solidified, at least in terms of like Hall of Fame iconography.
I also, there's an interview.
Maybe it's for Return of the Jedi or Empire Strikes Back, I think, where they're interviewing the three stars and they ask them what your first feeling was when Star Wars hit, right?
And, you know, Hamill has some G-Wiz, like, I can't believe it.
I grew up watching these movies.
I'm a star now.
There are people around the block.
And they ask Ford, and he just rubs his hands together and goes, let's get to work.
And they were like, what do you mean?
And he was like, I was like 37.
It hadn't happened.
It happened overnight.
I said, this is my moment.
You know, and he's got Star Wars movies lined up.
He's going to get Indiana Jones lined up.
But this run we're talking about the start of it feels like him cashing in.
what he saw in his eye the moment Star Wars hits
is like, so you're telling me I can get movies made now?
I know exactly what kind of movies I want to make.
I know who I want to work with.
I know which characters I want to play.
It got delayed a little bit in him having to fulfill sequel obligations.
But like, this 80s run is let's get to work.
One of the things that I like about this movie
from this kind of metatechial perspective
that we're talking about it from is that it reveals
that when you are a movie star
you are still in a cage.
In all of his films,
he is either desirable,
heroic, or wrongfully imperiled
except for this movie.
This is the one movie
where he's just kind of a heel.
He's wrong.
Everyone knows he's wrong.
He's wrong from the start, too.
Yes, it's about a descent into madness,
but he's basically no good from the beginning.
Yes, and we are meant to follow him closely
and be engaged with his journey.
Like Helen Mirren, you know, well, I'm sure we'll talk about it.
She does nothing to do in the movie.
No, it's him and it's Phoenix, or the two prospective characters.
We covered Robert Zemeckis's What Lies Beneath many years ago now.
And that movie, the juice of that movie was, you're going to go into this so confident
that there's no way Harrison Ford could be the bad guy.
And when he turns out to be like epically, you know, absurdly villainous,
that movie like electrified people and it was a massive, massive hit.
And it's a last five minutes reveal.
Totally.
And that was like, you can't get away with this.
But that's like a fun house movie that can have that construction be entertaining to people.
This feels like a movie where the public's response to it was, I'm confused.
Am I supposed to be rooting for this guy?
Because it's Harrison Ford that rather than saying like, oh, it's interesting that he's playing a guy I don't like, people were confused where they were supposed to line up.
And I think part of that trickiness, what makes him so good in this role, but what must have just absolutely befuddled to everyone is so much of Harrison Ford's thing at this time is I seem like an asshole, but I actually care.
See, that's, okay, so that's the thing that I also think is really interesting about the movie.
I don't know Harrison Ford personally.
I've certainly seen him on talk shows and in interviews.
I don't think he has the same ideas as Allie Fox.
I do think he's not that far temperamentally from Allie Fox.
He has a slightly anti-social vibe.
He likes to fly plane and live in ranch.
And crash plane.
And crash plane and smoke mountains of Ganja.
Which I don't think Allie is doing that, but like...
He could use it.
There's a world where Ali should be doing that.
Exactly.
Like, that should be a weed dad.
Yeah.
He's an inventor for fuck sake.
He's the most weed dad ever.
Man, I heard a story from a film production driver.
I forget what movie it was on, but who had to pick up Harrison Ford every day and
said one day he was late coming.
at the house and he was like, I can't find my bong.
Give me five minutes.
And then he came out five minutes later
with a sauce pan.
And he was like, what are you doing? He's like, hold on.
And he took the lid off the saucepan.
He sucked up.
Hell yeah. The smoke.
That's awesome.
But he was just like, you don't understand
how much weed that guy is taken in a day.
Well, you certainly hear.
Then there's these moments with him now,
like there's the famous David Blaine video
where you see kind of like,
because he's always, he's a good,
crank on, like he's a good crank on a
publicity for and all that. He plays into it.
He enjoys it and he's very
funny. The thing where Josh Horowitz
right, is it Josh? Yeah, he's asking
about Red Hulk. Our president. Our president.
Nothing but respect. Yep.
You know, about like, do you feel silly? He's
like, the money, you know, it's
gone. Like, I watch
The Slansky bits. Yes.
I watched, have you ever seen, I assume you've seen the video
of Allison Hammond interviewing him for Blade Runner
2049, where
he's with Gosling and you can
until it's like early morning in London.
He's doing fucking junket shit. He's not
interested. And she's so
delightful and funny and
silly. And you watch him wake
up and be like, wow, I like this woman.
You know, the moment where she says
so, you know, when you want to,
when you're off this movie, what do you think?
How much? And he goes like,
show me the money. And you're just like,
there he is. He's a silly guy.
It is. I think now he plays into
it as a bit. And I, you
look back at all this press service.
for Mosquito Cust talks about how
press shy he is, how private
he is. And then you watch the actual
interviews and he's measured,
he's open, he is so
fucking articulate, he's not
like doing some De Niro like Mumble
thing, but he's not doing
like movie star razzle dazzle. He's
speaking as if he's like Gorgh
Vidal. Like he's speaking
in this very measured, thoughtful way
and I think that confused people
and it was received as he's cold
because he's not smiling and telling stories about
cranks. And now he realized, I can just lean into being a crank and people find it funny.
My favorite forward interview moment ever, it's after Disney acquires Lucasfilm. And, you know,
part of the announcement is Disney buys Lucas film episode seven. And he goes on Conan to promote
whatever movie he had coming out, like a month or two after that. Yeah. And he says, so there was,
Cowboys and aliens are big news recently, Disney purchased Star Wars. And Harrison Ford like looks over his
shoulder, like, plays like, am I allowed to say anything?
You know, KG. And he's like, now I'm sure you're being told not to say anything, but just
to incentivize you. And then Conan takes out like $1,000 in cash, hands him like $10,000 bills.
And he's like, does this make you want to say anything? And Harrison Ford, like, grabs the money
quickly, counts it, shoves it in the inside of his jacket pocket, and then, like, casually
leans into his chair and goes,
I,
uh,
I hear they're thinking about making another one.
And it's really good.
Destroy it.
The audience lasts for a minute straight.
And the fact that he can now lean into,
I'm a grump.
I hate everything and I love making money.
And that no one thinks he's an asshole that it's like,
it scores him brownie points.
Yeah.
He earned it.
I mean, he's freaking Harrison Ford.
He's,
he's in 20 movies.
you're like, God, I love this movie.
But that's a great way to be.
But this has always been the thing of people saying like,
oh, he's no nonsense, he's this and that.
And then everyone who works with him is like,
he cares about acting so much.
He cares about the movie so much.
It's all this cover.
It's what makes him a star with fucking Hans Solo is the moment he comes back.
I think he's also just a, he's gifted actor,
probably an underrated actor.
Yeah.
Didn't really get a lot of opportunity.
It wasn't challenged a lot because of the work that he was best known for,
but a very shrewd movie star, a good picker of,
projects.
By and large.
Until that late 90s...
It dips.
It dips for everybody.
And it's the classic late 90s.
It's the classic movie story thing of like, Harrison, you're getting older.
You don't automatically match up with your female leads anymore.
Like, you know, it's like, where do you go with this?
And then stuff like random hearts is him being like, well, Pollock.
So I just saw that for the first time last year.
Right.
Your favorite movie of all time.
And I had a nice time with it.
Sure.
Because it is largely representative of the canard that I'm all, all,
of us say all the time about they don't make them like they used to.
But they really don't make them like that movie.
That movie is a very strange, morose drama about two sad people.
That still costs like $60 million.
Yeah.
And the hearts are random.
I was going to say, hell random.
It's random as hell.
Yeah.
It's not a very good film.
The movie is pretty random.
It's actually a big inspiration for family guys.
Yeah.
People forget the giant chicken is like third build in random hearts.
Actually, third build is Charles S. Dutton.
This movie sounds pretty good.
Carry on.
You haven't seen it?
No. I know the twist. It's fine. Or whatever.
That's the least interesting part of it. He's just a sad cop for two hours wandering around New York trying to figure out what he should do with his life. And it's like a real test of his late period stardom. And he couldn't really hold on to it, you know, six days and seven nights. Like these movies where he's trying to touch all the different strains. He's trying to like, oh, maybe can I working girl it again? You know, can I Indiana Jones it again? Can I Jack Ryan it again? And he can't. You know, that moment has passed.
There's a run that because Fugitive is obviously like the best movie ever made.
And then after that it's like he did clear and present danger does well.
Yeah.
Not a bad movie.
But then it's like Sabrina mistake.
Devil's own mistake.
Yeah.
Air Force one, not a mistake.
Great idea.
Sure.
Everyone loves it.
It is so funny that this movie he has a moment where he says, get off my land.
My mosquito coat.
He says get on my end.
I know, I know.
Six day, seven nights mistake.
Random Heart's mistake.
What Lies Beneath?
Good pick, but he's, you know,
he's sort of secretly supporting.
Big hit, though.
Big hit.
Huge hit.
K-19, The Widowmaker, mistake,
Hollywood Homicide mistake.
And that's when he finally clocks.
It's like, what am, I'm two for ten here.
Yeah.
I think I'm going to stop being a leading man in this way.
Hollywood Homicide is the first time.
I think he looks embarrassing.
Right.
He's like, what the fuck am I doing it?
It's not just that the movie flops.
It's that it's like, this looks silly.
Why did you do this?
what's with the earring, you're dating Ali McBeal.
Like, everything about it suddenly it was like,
is Harrison Ford like lame dad having midlife crisis?
Yes.
He lost his cool.
And then Firewall is forgotten,
but is this transit moment to like,
he's more playing dad,
older generation.
And then like,
it's like from then on he is grandpa,
Crystal Skull,
you know,
morning glory,
Cowboys, right?
It's like, now he's the old guy.
It's grandpa, but the other part of it is, I'm going to do Blade Runner again.
I'm going to do two more Star Wars.
I'm going to do two more Indiana Joneses.
But Crystal Skull starts there.
Yeah, but then it's like, extraordinary measures, morning glory, cowboys and aliens,
42 Enders game.
You know, like, it's like, it takes him a while.
Also, I think Force Awakens is when he's like, fine.
A lot of him being number two on the poster behind a newer.
Daniel Craig, uh, fucking, of course, Brendan Frazier and his.
Yeah.
So powerful.
Just like weird choices.
Um, yeah.
I mean, I remember, I've invoked this so many times, but it's just such a distinct memory, my broken brain.
Asa Butterfield and me, the big two.
I think he's the future.
Uh, my dad and I walking by a billboard for random hearts and my dad just going, that's going to be a big hit.
And I was like, why?
And he went, because Harrison Ford's in it.
And I was like, that's how it works.
Like certain stars, no matter what they do.
And yet that was a moment where it was like, it's proven wrong here.
I have invoked this before, and one of the previous times we've talked about Harrison Ford,
but his inside the actor's studio is amazing.
I'm sure I've seen it.
I can't remember.
They get into Mosquito Coast, and Lipton asks him the thing that people love to ask him,
of like, do you feel like you're stuck in a gilded cage?
That your level of stardom and iconography and the blockbusters have become so big
that there's certain things the audience won't let you do as an actor.
And he, like, is very measured about it.
And he basically says, like, I was very proud of that.
movie and it was something I wanted to do. And it was very clear that the audiences weren't going to go with me there.
And I adjusted. And I'm never going to complain about the fact that people like me doing other things in movies.
Right. Like he has an answer that's basically like, I have no sour grapes over this. I tried. I'm not going to be an asshole about like, oh, they want me to be a different kind of A-List movie star.
But it is clear that I think, and this is maybe where things start to fall apart a bit in the 90s, is post-mosquito
coast, he's like, got it.
Notes taken.
I want to challenge myself.
I want to push boundaries,
but I've identified a thing
you don't want me to do.
And, like,
working girl is an interesting swing,
but it's safer, right?
Like, other things like that,
I think by the time he gets to the mid-90s,
he's like, I don't know what I'm trying
to prove anymore.
And it's too early for him to do the grandpa swing
where he can really shake off
the shackles of his persona.
We don't need to spend, like,
three hours on his last,
his 90s movies,
but I do think that Sabrina the devil's own
6 days, 7 nights, random hearts are really instructive
because they
We all do okay.
Sabrina made 88.
Yep.
Devil zone made 140.
But it stays and 7 nights made 165.
Random hearts made 75.
Who directed 6 days, 7 nights?
Right.
Right.
Right.
And so, too, paula's.
The tupeculas and the two pollocks.
It's kind of like this kind of, right.
You're going back to the guys who were 80s, you know, big shots
and are now getting a little.
long in the tooth.
But he is not able to...
One, the material is not as good, right?
So, Witness probably makes a somewhat similar amount of money
as those movies, relatively speaking,
but it's not a forever movie the way the witness is.
No, and you compare the interviews for those films,
the interviews for Witness, Mosquito Coast,
working girl, what have you,
where there does not seem to be the same animating passion of
this is what really spoke to me in this script
and why I really wanted to play this character.
Right.
They feel like, yeah, that feels like good material.
Yeah, an adult movie.
Good lineup of people.
Yes, my audience will respond to this.
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Here is a quote I found in that same piece where he is pleading audiences to consider the movie Mosquito Coast after being ransacked by critics.
He says, the job of acting is the same in every film regardless of the.
material. It's storytelling and logical steps. In a good script, it is fairly easy because you have
ideas to chain yourself to. Otherwise, it's party tricks. There are a few complications to the
characters of Han Solo or Indiana Jones, but the demands of playing either of them are no less
difficult than playing Fox. In many ways, a character with as much experience as Fox is allowed,
is easier to play. You need only to note the variety of his emotions. That is one of the best
descriptions of acting
in an unpretentious way I have
ever read. That is
so like just fucking
cut through the bullshit brass tax
this is what it is. And
explaining the two sides of what he can do
well without putting
greater importance on either.
He's clearly very smart.
He's smart. He knows who he is.
And what he can do. I'm going to open the dossier.
But to me, I do think
the big question with Mosquito Coast is
is Harrison Ford two
sort of inherently Harrison Forde
to play this guy.
Like when you look upon...
It's a William Hurt part.
Right.
Like, you're kind of like, I'm not sure I believe
that Harrison Ford would
be so kind of like, you know,
amoral or sort of, you know,
unfeeling towards his family.
It's just like he's Harrison Ford.
Like, can he pull that off?
I buy it and I think that innate tension
with his persona gives this movie
an extra electricity for me.
Obviously audiences.
And I guess critics,
like we're kind of,
I don't buy it, I guess.
I think he's just a really good, angry actor.
That's, he has so many great moments of being angry, and this is a very angry character.
And I, get off my plane as an angry moment.
I think it's playing with, you're watching him and going, this guy can't actually believe
everything he's saying in that Han Solo way, right?
Surely at some point, if his children and his wife plead with him, he will break with
this act.
And I think that gives the movie a really interesting.
dramatic tension. I agree. Do you know who we're
originally wanted to... Well, let's open the do
do. Let's let David tell us
because these are the conventions of your podcast.
Thank you. Author Paul Thoreau,
uncle of Justin. Yes. Indeed.
Who later played Allie in Apple TV Plus's
The Mosquito Coat. I tried to watch this.
I didn't. I did not.
Did you know there are two seasons and 17 episodes?
This is my question. I'm like, this movie I think is good,
but it's a tough hang at two hours long.
Why on earth would I want this?
stretched to TV. David, I have a piece of news that is going to make you slam your own head against the best.
I will go ahead. There was a quote. Let me see if I can find it here from. I thought you're going to say season three coming soon. Yeah, right.
It was Neil Cross, the creator of the TV show, the guy who did Lufa. Yes. And Tom Bissell was the co-writer of this series. He was a wonderful writer.
In a 23 interview with Deadline Hollywood, the original novel's author, Paul Thoreau, hoping for a third season that would segue into the,
The events of his novel praise the series.
The two seasons that exist...
It's all set up, baby.
All laying runway for what happens in the book and this movie.
The classic prestige TV thing of,
we all know Mosquito Coast, right?
What if it takes 50 hours to get to the starting point?
From my, like, kind of glance at, like, what the episodes were, yes.
I think, like, season one ends with them kind of getting to the mosquito coast.
Yeah, but there's so much stuff in it.
I mean, I was reading about it last night that's like there's a hit man who's after,
Allie and the CIA
is involved. It's just so... Very
exemplary of, you know, what went wrong
on that side of the... Give me a
hundred random hearts instead of
one...
Pressing...
...could not agree more.
But Paul Thoreau
starts working on this manuscript.
The book, the novel was published in
1981. It is a time
of course existential crisis
in Malays for America,
Jimmy Carter,
you know, interest rates going crazy.
embargo and
you know,
it's morning in America,
that's what you mean.
Well, no, it wouldn't be
morning in America until this movie came out.
And of course, Ronald Reagan, as noted on the
Wikipedia page, did watch this movie.
I wonder what he thought of it.
It's dusk in America.
It's dusk in America.
And Thoreau says that like
the sort of encroachment of Japanese
business, I guess, was a
big thing. Obviously, that's a thing in this movie.
I remember that as a child. That feels so quaint
now, but like that he's like, yeah, you would
look at your coffee cup and it would say
made in Japan or was always
automakers. As a young kid in the
80s, I very vividly remember my parents
at the dinner table talking about
the incursion of Toyota and Honda
and what does this mean?
So he creates this character
Ali Fox. He sees him as
a quintessentially American character
that's basically like, I hate the government,
I hate what's happened, I want to buy my own town
and figure it out.
Jones Town, Jim Jones.
Good guy.
Yeah, great, a lot of ideas. Big, big
idea guy. Yeah. Would have been a
great podcaster. Can you imagine?
He had some strong ideas. If he had just gotten that out of his system
in the podcast space. It would have been the gym sphere.
A-oh. Obviously, the
Jim Jones experience? The Jones Town
massacre is 78, I think. So it's a, you know,
the idea of trying to create your utopia in the jungle and it all going
wrong is fresh
on his mind. I do like this. I think it's a little bit of a riff, too,
on like Brook Farm and utopian societies
from the 1800s, which is a
rabbit hole if you were interested. And I
will be starting a utopian society
in 2026. Haven't whittled
all the details down, but
you know, let me know any ideas.
Sims City. That's my pivot.
Yes, Sims City is on route.
Yeah.
What do they have there?
What do we do there? Is it a
commune style? Or we all
have, we all do the same job? I'm just thinking
of things I want where I'm like, naping,
Who's in charge of tweeting?
You know?
You can do that.
Sand with place.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Subs.
Super Nintendo.
Just like, what do I want to do?
Nothing.
I'm just imagining David being grilled.
With friends.
I can't respond to that yet.
I can promise you there will be fries.
Right, right.
Yeah.
Running water.
We love that.
So he goes to, Thore goes to Honduras and China also.
I guess just trying to sort of take stock of things.
An American author called Maritz Thompson.
He meets him in Ecuador.
I don't know.
You know, a lot of stuff.
I'm not going to get into all this.
But he is right.
He is like focused on like the book will be from the perspective of Ali's son, not Ali.
Like this needs to be, you know, not a completely, you know, just like you're in the brain of this man thing.
Like you're sympathetic to him.
No, you're watching this man go down.
this path. The rights get picked up immediately, pretty much, by Salzanette's Company.
It's a hugely celebrated novel. Exactly. And Salasenet's Company had done Cougars Nest and
Amadeus, so they're, you know, riding high. He won two of his eventual three best picture Oscars.
Right. What was the third? English Pearson? Right. I think it's Zance. Yeah, sorry. Yeah, sorry. Saul's
Zanz. You're right. Like ants. I always, yeah, yeah, yeah. Sylvester Slum. Paul Schrader. A great
identifier of quality prestige material.
At that time.
Absolutely.
And was Milos Forman's guy.
It was like this guy knows how to pick him.
Yeah.
And also he knew how to pick the Hobbit, which he owned the rights to for a very long time.
That was an easy check to cash for a while.
His name's on every one of those fucking things.
Yep.
He made up a contract and he sat on it for 25 years.
Paul Schrader.
Heard of him?
Yes.
Another normal fella.
I guess I must have known that he wrote this at some deep,
recess of my brain and yet
when the opening credits hit last night,
I was rubbing my hands like Harrison Ford. Let's get to work.
Obviously, of course he wrote this movie.
Exactly. It appeals.
Obviously, he has fully transitioned at this point
to mostly directing,
writing directing. Oh, okay. You meant
at this point, not present day. He takes
this on, however, only to write.
He wants to make Mishima
that's his sort of big, he has just done
cat people. And so
he does like it, though. In
2021, he says Fox's
All-American Hustler, the con man, the
Donald Trump character, the sawdust preacher.
Say that in 2021, though. He didn't say that in
82. Oh, okay. Okay. He could have said it
in 82. Peter Weir, who
has made Picnic and Hanging Rock
in the last wave and is looking
to pivot out of that. We talk about
this a lot on witness, that he maybe was going to
direct the thorn birds, which eventually turns
into a
television miniseries.
Has your living dangerously already happened,
or is this kind of contemporaneous? Okay.
But, well, no, it hasn't happened when he's circling the thorn.
That's my question.
Right.
That's post last wave.
Yeah.
That's his first dip into should I do a Hollywood thing.
Instead, no, he goes and makes Gallipoli.
You're of Living Dangerously is a co-production with MGM.
So Hollywood's entering.
He reads Mosquito book.
He just, mosquito book.
And he just loves how bizarre it is.
He loves how this is like a Shakespearean protagonist, right?
Like you're just watching him like crack.
Right.
It's an incredible setup for a moment.
And it's like, to him it is like, he's like,
it's like an American
Macbeth or whatever, right? Like, it's just like
the unraveling of a man, but this very
American kind of man. Yeah,
yeah. And so, he's
into that and
he likes the idea of a Harrison Ford
or someone else. He mentions
like John Wayne, Steve McQueen, like taking
some American guy. Playing with
someone's hero iconography.
Yeah.
Super cool.
brings it
Paul Schrader
obviously done
the screenplay
they all chat
we're basically
sticks to Schrader's
script
like he had some ideas
to futs with it
but I think he ended up
like you know
basically using what he was given
he printed a pamphlet
of Ali Fox's
rants from the book
that he titled
The Thoughts of Allie Fox
I guess
just to sort of get into that vibe
Allie Fox
another guy
who could have gotten a lot
out of his system
with a podcast. And to get to what Griffin was
queuing up, Jack Nicholson is the early and very
logical choice to star in this film. Now, Jack Nicholson,
audiences like watching him spiral. Jack. It is
appealing to watch Nicholson do anything, especially
when the behavior is bad and the psychosis is high. And so
I think this movie doesn't work with him as much
as it makes sense because he's almost like
too charismatic, too compelling,
and to watch his life spiral
just becomes like jungle shining.
Here's a weird thing about this movie, though.
I would argue Harrison Ford's character
is more or less
consistent through the entire movie.
At the very beginning of the film,
the piss and vinegar and all the speechifying,
he's basically the same guy at the end of the movie.
He never really moves off of any position.
He doesn't do that thing that you're talking about,
that Nicholson does, where over the course of
100 minutes, you watch a guy go from normal to completely insane.
You know, the Witches of Eastwick style meltdown.
Allie, like, all the way through his death is a true believer in himself.
It's more than anything.
Right.
This guy starts at 100 and he refuses to give up a single percentage point, even as he is
faced with evidence that he is wrong.
You know, that's the common slam that I disagree with on Nicholson's casting and shining is
that that guy is too.
baseline crazy for a movie that needs to be built around him dissolving.
And I think the magic of Nicholson is he can start a movie and you go, that's the most guy
I've ever seen. And then he finds a way to add more.
That's why Shining's so good.
But I also think, right, it's he would.
There's too much eyebrow work going on in the first 30 minutes of Shining.
Nicholson, just tone down the inherent malevolence of whatever you are doing.
If Nicholson was playing Ali Fox, he would be ratcheting.
Yes.
He wouldn't stay at the same level
where the point is this guy's unbendable.
He would be going crazy.
I think he'd be good.
He's a good act.
I'm not saying he'd be bad.
I think he makes a little more sense
in the early 80s than he does in the mid-80s as well.
I'm just making the case for why I think Ford is the perfect guy
because you've already set out this question of.
Right.
Well, they considered him perfect, but Saul Zantz.
Zance?
I thought it was Zence.
I don't know.
Is it Zance?
I don't know.
Who knows?
I'm all trying to remember the pronunciation.
basically Sharon Stone.
For some reason,
thinks himself
like as like a kingmaker for
Nicholson, he's like, I made your career with
Kooker's Nest. At Kooker's Nest at this
point is like 10 years old.
But one of him his first Oscar.
I know, but like Jack Nicholson has gone on
to, you know, continue to succeed.
And so he lowballs him
and Nicholson's like,
fuck you. Like, you don't get to
lowball me just because like you made a good movie
with me a while ago, right?
And so it turns into an ego thing.
And of course, what does Harrison Ford get paid?
The salary Jack wanted.
So it's all silliness.
Schrader calls it a pissing contest.
Schrader also says it obviously would have been a much better film with Jack.
So I guess we know where Schrader lands on this one.
Well, that's because Ford has been publicly critical of the script that they ended up making.
Right.
Which is not the script he thought they ultimately should have made.
Paul Schrader doesn't strike me as a kind of guy who grinds axes.
I don't know what you're talking about.
But while this is all happening,
the film falls apart, obviously,
and Weir goes over to Witness,
which is this like GoPicture
that has Ford attached,
that has producers,
that has studio, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah.
They hit it all.
Witness gets made, rocks.
But like halfway through filming Witness,
Weir starts like...
Weir's like, I got this thing I want to do.
Yeah.
And Ford's immediately in,
goes to his reps.
His reps are like,
you shouldn't do this.
And Ford is undeterred.
He's like, I like this guy.
I like this character.
I like Weir.
I want to go.
A lot of the stuff I'm quoting is from an article that was on The Ringer in 2021, by the way, Sean.
Oh, great.
And Ford, you know, and we agree, they don't want to be completely slavish to the book.
They think in the book, Fox is crazy from the beginning.
They think they should build up to it.
Now, I am not sure they succeeded at that from going.
I agree with what you guys are saying where I'm like, he's pretty crazy from the start.
He's just very ranty.
He's got all these tough thing.
He's philosophize.
Jason Alexander is like, get me out of here.
I don't want to deal with you anymore.
She sounds like to end her very effective.
Yeah, he's good.
Yeah.
Ford says, found him more right than wrong in what he was saying.
There's the complexity of the family story, the relationship between a father and son and husband and wife.
There's humor and pathos.
I mean, like you say, Ford's very good at talking, like, in an emotional and complex way about the work he does.
He loves Peter Weir.
He says he's got vision, you know, like, that's great.
and he calls himself an assistant storyteller.
He's like, I'm the person who calls for logic
and applauding kind of determination
to have all the cards on the table.
This is what I was about to say.
We talked about this a lot in witness
that he really thinks of himself
as a storyteller first and foremost,
and that's his main function as an actor,
especially since he usually plays
the steady guy at the center
to help carry the audience through the story.
I would argue this is the first time
he is playing a character
where that is not his primary responsibility,
where his primary responsibility is
get this guy right?
Because in a certain way,
Phoenix is carrying the story more
weir is really carrying the story.
Phoenix is carrying the emotion.
Yeah, right.
The audience is not being carried by
Ali Fox in watching this film.
So, it's a movie where the villain is the hero.
It's very uncommon.
It's very uncommon, especially, obviously,
for a Hollywood movie starring fucking Han Solo
and Indiana Jones.
The crew is mostly Australian,
and this is something I think is worth noting,
both Weir and John Seale agree
if Harrison Ford wasn't American,
he would be Australian.
They're like, he's just got a very Australian vibe.
He wants to sit in a deck chair.
He wants to like, you know,
drink beers with the mates, you know what I mean?
Like, it's just kind of like an Australian
without actually being from Australia.
Harrison Ford suggested River Phoenix
thought that he looked like him as a young man
and had liked him and like stand by me
and shit.
Helen Mirren
had only done
one Hollywood movie
which is 2010
normal movie.
I guess Excalibur
was released by Warner
Brothers but was
British.
Yeah.
And that was all shot
and Britain and all that.
So she's kind of like
a little overwhelmed
and starstruck
and like Harrison Ford
this is intense.
And you know,
she wants to
she envisions herself
as like beautiful
and floating through the jungle
and Peter Weir is like
no,
you're not going to wear any
makeup bro.
Like this is a dirty movie.
They shoot it in
Belize in Central America.
And especially back then, I think Belize
was pretty off grid.
And so it was like a long, sort of humid,
kind of tough shoot, but Ford looks back on it
really fondly. He's like, I had a wooden yacht. I mean, I don't know.
But Harrison Ford's thing is just like, I had a vehicle, right?
You know what's notable about the timing for him? He's not yet
a father.
It hasn't had any kids
So who did he have kids with?
Melissa Matheson.
The next year.
He has five kids.
Yeah.
Total.
Is that right?
Am I getting that right?
And then if you think about shrinking seasons
as his children, it's even more children.
But is he, how old is he when this movie comes up?
43?
44?
Let's think.
Yeah, about, yeah.
About that.
Yeah.
44-ish.
No, I'm wrong.
I'm wrong.
He's got an older son at this point.
Okay.
I misspoke.
Because he has kids.
He has two kids in the 80s,
and then he has one kid with Colissa Flockhart as well.
He had, all right?
I'm going to give it all to you.
He had two kids.
Okay, two kids.
With Mary Marghart.
This is sort of like way pre-fame in the 60s.
It's with Melissa Matheson.
He had two sons in the 60s.
Then he has two kids with Melissa Matheson,
a son and her daughter in 87 and 90.
And then he did have a son with Callista Flockhart in 2001.
So he does.
So he is in alley mode.
Yeah.
And he is not Alan McBeal.
He is daddy.
He is daddy.
We talked a lot.
I had sunglasses somewhere I was going to put him on.
We talked a lot in our witness episode with your co-host Amanda Dobbins.
Wait, what?
We'll delete it.
We'll delete it.
I'm sorry.
I'm so sorry.
You?
What?
I'm so sorry.
Is that the hottest he's ever been in a movie?
And we basically landed on that or working girl.
I'm shocked to hear that that was Amanda's day.
Yeah.
He's not obviously appealing.
in the same way in this film.
He does look fucking good.
He does.
He looks pretty good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
His hair looks good.
The glasses work.
Yeah.
He's just a very strong man.
Yes.
You know, he's not, he's not, he's not diesel.
He's just a strong man.
You know when you met a man in 1987 and you're like, this guy, he's got some strength on him.
Broad shoulders.
He's got some, there's some significant arms.
He's just a sturdy guy.
This man's held lumber.
Yes.
In his hands, you know?
He knows what a power saw feels like.
He knows how to crash, a plane.
That's true.
He really knows.
Weirdly, weirdly, weirdly,
close to that one.
You know, they shoot the film.
As Sean was alluding to,
there's a lot of push and pull over, like,
to what extent did they just shoot the script?
Weir's always very like,
oh, you know, I like to discover stuff on set.
And, you know, like, I guess that's sort of the debate
of authorship here.
But, you know.
I mean, Schrader makes this a Schrader movie.
Like, Paul Theru's writing.
He's one of the great travel writers of all time.
He wrote this great book, if you have not read it, called The Great Railway Bazaar.
It's considered one of the foremost travelogue, nonfiction, journey movies ever.
He makes his name by being a white man from Massachusetts who goes to Africa, goes to Singapore,
goes to all over Europe, travels the world, writes about his experiences in this very forthright,
but emotional way.
A lot of his novels are like this.
They are emotional pragmatist novels.
And Paul Schrader is not an emotional pragmatist.
He's the opposite.
He is a person of extraordinary outsized biblical intensity.
And so there is this clash in what the story is meant to be
and how people felt about the novel and where the movie ends up,
which is, you know, it's one of Schrader's underground men.
Like, that's ultimately what this movie is.
So if we view, like, the spectrum of Thoreau, it feels like,
is creating this Ali Fox character as like a shadow version of himself, right?
Interrogating his worst fears of who he is and what he's doing,
entering these other cultures and then reporting back to other people.
And that the most curdled version of that is going,
I know how I could do this better.
I could just do this.
And I'd have it all figured out.
And even that scene where they go to the home of the workers
and he's showing the kids around and he's like, look at this.
They live like kings.
we can do this, right?
This weird kind of like exoticism and like putting them on a pedestal in a way that is condescending in its own sense.
It feels like Thoreau is like litigating his own concerns about where do I stand on this.
Yes.
Right.
That's why it's written through the eyes of the child.
Right.
Then not within this specific world, but as you said, Trader is a moleman.
He's an underground man.
And he is someone who digs in and spirals into things like this.
This is not his world.
but he more closely represents the psychology of someone like an alley fox.
And then Weir is all the way on the other end of Thoreau being like,
I actually have objectivity and distance from both of you.
And Weir is really good at looking at different cultures,
budding up against each other with a sense of distance.
And Ford says that one of the things he loved about Weir is that he finds that a lot of times
the best filmmakers at making films about America are the ones who are on the outside.
Well, the other weird thing that you guys, I'm sure we'll be getting to in this series is that most of his best movies are about the relentless power of the natural world.
That, like, getting stuck somewhere or stuck inside of something, you cannot beat Mother Nature.
And this is a movie that ultimately becomes most interested in that in the third act.
I haven't read this novel, this Therun novel.
So I can't say how much fealty there is.
But to me, that's what weird brings, which is there's a fucking typhoon happening.
and there's no one better suited
to putting that on screen
than this director at this time.
But you take those three interests, right?
You take the moleman,
you take Harrison Ford's...
Harrison trying to subvert something with himself.
Yeah, make a new persona for himself.
And you take this great naturalist
using this text that is like
meant to be, I think a movie about how
when you're a kid,
you think your parents are heroic and perfect,
and then you turn a certain age and you realize
they're as full of shit as anybody.
That's the core emotional turn of this book,
which is a great idea that I think most people can relate to.
It just so happens that rather than like your parents
getting a divorce or moving to a new city
or changing jobs or losing their job,
he moves them to a different country.
This guy is about as full of shit as you possibly could be
and the world calls his bluff so fucking hard.
So it becomes an exploded version of what you.
you're saying. I just have to bring this up because the quote is really funny. But Ford talking
about his opinion that like foreign directors often comment on America better than American
directors. And he said, you know, the problem you get into is you work with foreign directors
and if they don't have a handle on the language, then what they gain in perspective,
they're losing the ability to communicate with the cast and crew. And he said, but Peter doesn't
have that problem. He's Australian. And they speak something close to English.
Which is a great ford joke.
Good ford joke.
Griffin, David.
Yes.
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So graciously, he
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Oh, very nice. Humblebrack. So he
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Oh, cool. Let me look these
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Yep. And then he also got a lilac shrub. A lilac shrub.
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Yeah.
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And they look great.
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And I have one last thing to say.
Please.
Life is like a box of chocolates.
Forest gum.
Very good.
Thank you.
David? Yes.
Hmm.
Great.
See what I'm doing?
You're stroking your chin.
Yeah, you know why?
What are you pondering?
Just this time of year
forces me to rethink what's in my closet.
Oh, my goodness.
Rethinking the closet for the spring.
Do you want fewer things but better ones like pieces that are well made,
but easy to wear all the time?
That implies that I'm good at getting rid of stuff,
which is not accurate.
But yes, I do want better things.
Quince!
Quince!
They make high quality everyday essentials.
You know, usually I go to Pamela Adlon when I want better things, but you're right.
I should check in with the fine folks at Quince.
Premium materials, like 100% European linen, insanely soft, flow-knit, active wear, fabric.
Men's linen pants and shirts are lightweight, breathable, and comfortable.
Should I have a linen shirt era?
Hot linen summer?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm also, I just, you know, I live in mortal terror of something that's even 1% American linen touching this flesh.
and I'm so relieved to hear.
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Their flow-knit active wear is moisture waking.
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And their prices are 50 to 60% less than similar brand.
How's that possible?
They work directly with ethical factories.
They cut out the middleman.
You're paying for quality, not brand markups, and everything's designed to last and make getting dressed easy.
I'm wearing Quinn's socks right now.
Tell me about these socks.
They're just nice.
Yeah.
What can I tell you?
They're nice and soft.
What else you get lately?
Actually, maybe I need to restock it.
Oh, I need some of this flow knit stuff.
Might be time to stroke your own chain days.
Because it is starting to get warm.
It is.
Right?
Yep.
So don't you think maybe I should like...
We're both men who sweat.
This is true.
I think it's a linen.
I think it's a hot linen summer.
I'm really loving this idea.
I think it's the right move, Sims.
All linen.
Head to toe linen.
But you know, you know, you tell you got to iron it.
But maybe I'll give a shot.
Linen shoes.
Linen shoes doesn't sound too good for these New York.
City streets.
Get a linen laptop case.
I have news for you.
Rumpled, wrinkled linen is in.
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Yeah.
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Andre Gregory,
pretty brilliant
casting choice
in my opinion.
Yeah, he's really good.
My dinner with Andre
the first movie he's in,
period.
He's obviously not someone
who had,
I think,
designs on having a movie career.
He's an avant-garde
theater guy.
Right.
And then he has
this weird
art house breakout.
And by the time
he gets to the 90s,
it's like,
can we plug Andre Gregory
into demolition man
and shit?
But this is a
really smart place
to put him.
him. It's a different character
than he is, but it's using
his same ability to talk
with authority.
Yeah, he had been in
Author, Author, The Forgotten
Al Pacino Arthur Hiller movie.
Author, author! He's in
the Goldie Hawn Cocktail, Waitress
Congressional Scandal Film Protocol,
also somewhat forgotten.
Yes, written that Buck Henry.
Right? And then this. After this,
he does Street Smart,
which he's good. That's a decent movie.
He's John the Baptist and Last Semptation of Christ, normal performance.
I really love that movie.
Paul Schrader also took a pass at that one.
Well, you wrote it.
Yeah.
I mean, well, I guess the Bible first.
He took a pass on the Bible.
Quick dialogue polish on the Bible.
He's a good counter to Ford.
He is charismatic in his own weird way, but in a very different way than Harrison.
It's not movie star energy.
No.
He's a ready, narrow, hector.
It's intellectual titan energy, yeah, which he was able to translate well to movies.
But, yeah, the film starts before we even get to Andre Gregory with he's an inventor.
That's Ali Fox's deal.
What's the math?
He's got six patents and three more pending.
River Phoenix is laying it all out for us.
I thought it was nine patents, six pending.
I think that's right.
He's trying to build an ice machine that he has dubbed Fat Boy.
And he is just kind of a tough hang.
he goes to the hardware store
and starts yelling about how things are made in Japan
where it's like okay buddy
it's not fucking anyone's fault
like have some human compassion
of blank track incredibly normal guy
he's very angry about the phrase
have a nice day
which I enjoy
that's a great thing to get mad about
but if that's what you're gonna
how are you gonna just draw a breath every morning
but this is what I think is fascinating about watching this movie
for the first time last night
is the targets are different,
but in so many ways it feels like
this movie must have been presenting a character of like,
look at our creation.
We've imagined the least normal,
most wound up man in the world.
Even when he's right, it's annoying, right?
And you're just like, I can't imagine
someone being this fucking on their high horse all the time.
And then you're like, the targets are different,
but he has so much of a similarity to today's, like,
Fox News, poison person.
and getting upset about, like,
they don't even say Merry Christmas at Starbucks.
Sure.
Like all of his weird grace.
So deep in a whole, Ben, what do you want to say?
Somewhat triggering for me,
because it does remind me of my dad in a very particular way,
which is that he always would just spout off about people who drove luxury cars.
But in a tense way where he'd be like, fuck this BMW driver.
I hope he crashes because, like, the guy who cut him off.
Right.
Mercedes Lexis.
He goes a little...
He just was like...
He jumps up on the rage scale.
Monologue about how, like,
anyone who drives these cars is a piece of shit.
And I remember being a kid being like,
dude.
Not to generalize.
My God.
I do feel like everyone's dad has at least
one thing like that where you're like,
why are you so wound up about this thing?
Can I tell you what my dad says?
Yeah.
My parents split.
My dad got remarried.
Married a lovely woman named Colleen.
Colleen loves
Bruce Springsteen.
My dad will not accept
that Bruce Springsteen's nickname is
the boss. My dad
is like, he's not the boss, I'm the boss.
I swear to God, my father
has said that out loud at least a dozen
times. Yeah.
So he's just like,
no one, but I can be
the boss? I think he's like what makes
him the boss. The boss of what?
I think he's
genuinely rageful about this
idea of him. It's a very, I mean, it's a very, I mean,
it's daddish.
How do you feel about the wrestler?
Boss man?
The big boss man?
From Marietta County?
Yeah.
I think he's a problematic figure.
Yeah, didn't he like wear a crop uniform?
Believe he hit people with batons in the ring.
What about the...
Oh, interesting.
That's what coming back to me now.
I think he probably wouldn't work now.
Isn't the heel?
Isn't the reason?
I only know this because I've been reminding me about the movie.
The very good Scott Cooper movie would...
That's so...
I think of the big boss man
movie.
Yeah, I'm writing a big boss man.
Got Cooper's doing big boss.
No, it's just...
They call him the boss because he
did their taxes and
shit and finances.
And so the East Street band guys
would be like, all right, boss.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, and then eventually
that just became the shorthand of like,
are you okay, boss? Like, you know, it just...
It's funny.
Yeah. They weren't like, you're the boss
of America's
sincerity and integrity.
It's like, you know, it was just like,
it's just like, oh.
boss man over here.
My dad is like this with tattoos.
Oh, he doesn't like tattoos.
If he meets a person with tattoos, he can't get over it.
He's like, why did they do that?
Or what does it mean?
Like, what does he focus on?
It's like a dingon character.
He'll describe someone as like, they look so funky.
It's all the tattoos and the thing through the nose.
And he describes them like as if they are like mutant, like Mad Max Wasteland for it.
Right, right.
But I think Ali Fox is, what if your dad was like?
this about every single thing.
That's the thing. He can't
it's overload. It's just
gas, like pedal to the metal
constantly. Because he's already
complaining about one thing
when Jason Alexander hands him the Japanese
pipe and he's like, we're shifting.
I'm taking the off ramp. Now I'm angry
about this. Like he's interrupting
his own rants with other rants that
present themselves. There's a moment
where he's like, I can shop somewhere
else. You're not the only game in town. I'm like,
if you're like this, how are you
let into any store.
Yeah.
Like at a certain point,
surely don't people go
out of here, buddy?
Like, no.
There's a very subtle
cut to Jason Alexander
when he enters the store
and he underplays it
beautifully, but he has that air of.
Yes.
Just a little...
But for every person that reacts that way,
and we've already invoked
Jim Jones and Joe Rogan
in this discussion,
but there is a massive appeal
of a philosopher king.
Somebody who
comes in and says, I have a really defined worldview, and I am charismatic and propulsive in
delivering the way that I see the world. And join me or don't, but if you don't, it may be at
your peril. That's a very effective leadership philosophy, not one that I practice, but one that
is very appealing and actually makes sense as a lead character in a big story. Now, Ali Fox is not
charismatic, but Harrison Ford is charismatic. So even him leaning into the worst of this character,
charismatic enough for the audience to pay attention.
You throw out William Hurt,
who's probably a better literal interpreter
of this character at this time, right?
And it's right at the peak of his...
Yeah, this is in his wheelhouse of the type of character he plays.
But I think if it's William Hurt at the center of this movie,
five minutes in, you're like, well, fuck this guy.
He's a bad hang.
I know he's wrong.
There's just enough Harrison Ford Magic
for an audience to go, like, can he pull it off?
even when the guy's annoying.
And I think it's what I've already said,
that, like, you're like,
what is he going to kind of come to his senses?
William Hurt, you're like,
the guy's never going to learn.
Yeah, and the movie was D-O-A
because the word of mouth is so bad
because he doesn't.
Right.
I mean, I do think fundamentally guys,
as much as where, you know,
like, it's like, there's no version of this movie
that is much more successful.
There's a version where, like,
is better acclaimed by critics.
And it makes a little bit more money.
But, like, you still see this as,
this is like a sort of a $30 million ceiling movie.
There is a way to make it a more successful movie,
which is at the moment post-typhoon,
when mother says we could walk up the beach to Cape Cod,
if he says yes, and builds a boat that gets them back.
And the movie ends with them sailing.
And if the movie ends in that way,
it makes twice as much as it's a big of a movie.
Instead, Andre Gregory has to murk him.
Just absolutely lay waste of him.
Yeah.
Like, you don't want to go out at the hands of Andre Gregory.
No.
That's not good.
Pretty lame.
Although in the book, his death is very different.
Oh, how does he die in the book?
He doesn't just die on the boat.
He is picked to death by vultures.
Oh, that sounds awesome.
Which is a recurring theme apparently in the book that he keeps saying, I hate vultures.
And he kind of-
I hate vultures too, by the way.
Fucking vultures.
Get off.
But he compares the vultures.
Oh, my God.
Who likes vultures, but he also.
Like the vultures of society and, you know, drawing all these illusions.
And then he is literally picked a little on the nose.
A little bit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I like that within the movie itself, Gregory is charismatic in a way that he is not.
Yeah.
When you're saying inside the movie.
Yeah, sure, sure.
This sort of like philosopher king, like he's able to fulfill that in a way where even
though he's actually has, you could argue less on his mind and less to represent.
he is able to sell it more convincingly to people.
His ideas just don't need to be sold to the audience
because it's just Judeo Christian values.
That's what he represents.
And the idea of the missionary as in theory, benevolent figure,
but in practice, maybe a little bit more insidious like Ben was saying.
You can auto-complete.
You can fill in the blanks and knowing, yeah, both silos of that.
Martha Plimpton.
Is quite good in this film.
When she bad?
Never.
This is the start of her.
River Phoenix relationship?
Yeah, I believe so.
So she'd been in the Goonies, which the year before, right?
That's kind of her breakout, right?
Yes.
Was there a TV thing?
No, there wasn't.
Like, that was her breakout.
No, I just feel like there was another film I'm forgetting.
There is, there's like this movie, The River Rat with Tommy Lee Jones.
But, like, you know, I don't think that was a very big movie.
Her breakthroughs.
What if there was a river rat?
Exactly.
I believe it's her.
Yeah.
I think I'm not sure.
And then she popped up on family ties at some point, but that's all.
This is basically the immediate follow-up to Goonies.
She's also in, Sean.
Running on Empty.
Well, that's true, which she's very good in.
But no, she's also in Stars and Bars.
Our favorite movie that we keep invoking.
The cast of this movie is fucking insane.
Griffin, I, look, Joan Cusack, Keith, David.
Griffin, you will listen to the big picture episode I did about this months ago.
I run through the list just being like, how could this movie be bad?
Rockets Red Glair?
Rockets Red Glair.
The possible murderer of.
of Nancy
Sputgeon is in it, yes.
It's an insane collection of people who are great and the movie sucks.
I feel like I invoked it on our president draft episode on Big Pick.
But have any of you seen First Family?
I want to say it's the only movie that Buck Henry directed.
I was going to say Buck Henry, yes.
I haven't seen it.
I think it's its only directorial work.
But that is a movie I put off watching for so long.
Unless, like, he has the director credit on Heaven.
Oh, of course.
His only solo.
Yes.
I put off watching it for so long
because I had only heard horrible things
and it's the ultimate.
It is a White House comedy
where the first family is
Bob Newhart as president,
Madeline Khan is first lady,
Gilder Radner as their daughter,
Harvey Corman, Ripthorn, Austin Pendleton,
Fred Willard, Richard Benjamin,
supporting cast,
written directed by Buck Henry.
You put it on,
within 10 minutes,
you're like,
this is the most rancid shit
I have ever seen.
It is deathly,
unfunny and racist.
It is all about them negotiating
with a fictional African nation
and the second it's represented on screen
you're like, holy shit, all of this is wrong.
And all the funniest actors
you've ever seen are like
mirthless, anti-smile.
So it is not a hidden jammer. It does suck.
Is Stars and bars like that?
Yeah, kind of. Stars and bars is...
It's not like deep... It's broad
in its caricature of the South, but it's not offensive.
It's not... It's stars and bars is just D-O-A.
It's just one of these things
where you're like, I don't get it, but yeah, oh,
there's no way Metcalf, yep, she's not doing
much either, like. But Martha Plimpton's
character in both of those movies is somewhat
similar, where it's like, this is
an underage, teenage
girl who's drawing our lead. Yeah, so
a precocious girl. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
which is, obviously,
she's, Martha Plimton is
Keith Carradine's daughter,
she's, you know, related to George
Plimpton in some way, you know, like, she's got this
sort of precocious vibe anyway.
But in this movie, she's got the tomboy thing.
She's got the Jessica Love.
joy thing going on.
She is the reverend's daughter.
And she's like a little bit of a rapscallion.
For sure. I love Martha Plimpton.
I think if you want to go to the bathroom.
What a line that is?
Yeah. That's something she says.
Yeah.
But I think I might.
All right. See you later.
Ben. Ben, think of us when you're in there.
Just to set up a little bit more, though,
you know, Ali Fox, right?
Not only does he hate everything he sees,
but he also thinks like the world's about
to end maybe. He keeps talking about
nuclear war. He tries to
to build the ice machine for a farmer.
That ends up with everyone screaming at each other.
It feels like any time he gets a job
and sort of descends into recrimination.
It is such a good scene where the guy is like,
you know, and he's getting all high and mighty
about what he did well and how he's not respected.
And the guy just stops him in his like,
I agree that you're a genius.
That's why I hired you.
You're unbelievably good at what you do.
But this right here is your fucking problem.
You make everything overcomplicated.
this is 10 times more than I asked for,
and now it's like misfiring.
And you're being a dick about it.
So, I mean, this is extremely obvious,
but the modern day equivalent of Ali Fox is Elon Musk.
Yeah, sure.
That this is an inventor.
This is a brilliant person.
This is a person whose social and moral ideas are pretty nuts.
And for you said, like increasing,
conspiratorial and bizarre.
It does not matter how smart you are.
That doesn't make you good.
That's a, that's an interesting idea.
But that the driving force is, I have identified problems in our society, and I think I am the only one who knows how to fix them.
And I swear to you, I'm doing this for your good.
Right.
And he is smart, but he has no other applicable or sort of demonstrable skills, reasons to be doing what he's doing.
He basically dropped out of school.
Right.
And then he's basically like, hey.
Some of our greatest minds.
No offense to anybody who dropped out.
It's more that, like, it indicates a lack of follow-through for someone who imagines himself as...
Oh, and he doesn't want to play by rules.
I was going to say.
I read it more as...
Can you imagine the fights he was getting into his professors with mid-class every day?
And you're like, and how did he get a lady?
Oh, he's Harrison Ford.
Right.
So that's how he did that.
But he decides to just...
He tells his family, like, hey, great news.
We're leaving the United States.
We're getting on a barge.
Andre Gregory and Martha Plimpton are going to be there.
and we are going to fucking mosquito coast, baby.
I've identified where to be.
We're going to make ice there.
People are really going to want ice there.
It's the immigrant employees at this construction site,
who he starts, like, coveting.
And he buys a village,
and he's like, this rocks,
and everyone else is, like, we're doomed.
It's not looking great.
Immediate escalation of get off the boat,
look, it's great.
And everyone's like, uh,
and then a day later, he's like,
better news.
I have no money now, but I own a town.
And the town looks even worse than the place they landed the boat.
Do you guys watch Survivor?
No.
I watched the first, like, five years religiously and I've not in two decades.
No.
This scene has big Survivor energy.
I can do this.
What happens is all the contestants arrive on a boat to an island.
It's now been Fiji for whatever 10 consecutive years.
But prior to that, they would travel all around the world and go to different islands.
And they get off the boat, and it's obviously this diverse collection of people,
men and women from all walks of life, different ages,
and they arrive at,
they get broken up into teams,
and they arrive at their individual camps,
and their camps that are entirely undeveloped.
And they have to build.
They have to build their camp.
They have to start pulling, you know,
branches down and trees and palm fronds.
And they always come in really bullish,
with so much energy.
Yes.
This is actually easy.
This is better.
Yeah, it's good.
We know distractions.
Here we are.
Yeah.
And inevitably, by the end of episode one,
there's one team at least that's in over their skis
and they're kind of fucked
and then over the course of the next six episodes
that tribe gets radically dismantled
and they're screaming at each other right yes
and this is that this is that yeah
the arrival at the town
and it just sucking so hard made me think of
the National Lampoon vacation movies kind of
you're right it is very much that vibe
of look at the hotel room I got us
reveal bad hotel room
you're right and like everyone else is
like, oh my God.
The journey to Wally World is like a very,
very mild mosquito coast kind of thing.
But talking about like recognizable,
relatable dad energy, right?
The game with Clark Griswold is he knows this isn't good.
And he's in such deep denial.
He cannot surrender the idea that he's fucked up this vacation.
And so he's lying to all of them to try to make it true.
When Allie sees show.
than the city for the first time, the town for the first time. What's so compelling is that you're like,
this guy 1,000% believes everything he's saying. Look it. It's incredible. There's nothing here.
We get to start from scratch. It's like the dream to him. It's very convincing.
Which I, you know, I spend too much time thinking about this, but I have a belief, it's not unique
to me, but it's one I've been holding on to very strongly, that a lot of these people who, like,
are absolute devotees of of Musk, of Trump,
of many of these kind of like,
I don't know, demagogue.
Fascist assholes.
Yes.
That part of it is there,
and it's connected to this fucking like paleo diet shit
and let's roll back restrictions on everything,
that these people do to some degree want to like reset the clock.
Okay, so this is something that I did want to speak to you guys about
because I'm not going with you to the mosquito cuts.
No, I'm not, well.
Just a trip.
Just a little truth.
One live show.
One live show.
Jungle draft.
We do have ice.
Ice is available.
At least there's ice.
Big ice.
Although, how flammable is your ice building?
No.
The thing that I...
Medium.
You use the ice to put out the flames
created by the ice machine.
There's a kernel of Alley
that I relate to.
Which is a thing that is hitting me
very hard now at the stage of my life.
Which is I do fantasize a little bit
about leaving it behind.
A big time.
I am a little bit like I have signed up for a lot.
I've been doing a lot for a long time.
And how much of this do I actually like at all?
I'm detecting a lot of too many projects from you.
You know, like where you're always like...
It's my own making.
Yeah.
It's my own problem.
I blame no one but myself.
But when you are like that, when you live like that for a long time,
and I've been living like that for about 10 years,
there is a part of me that is just like,
It doesn't have to be Honduras.
It could be a small town north of Seattle.
Right.
That sounds lovely.
Is there a way to shrink my life by control?
Yes.
Which I think is like, yes, that is the relatable part of this, which is, and when you're
in that kind of state, you get so hypersensitive to all these other indignities of civilization.
That's exactly it.
And society.
Everything else gets more annoying.
Culture, which admittedly, it's our fault.
Those things aren't working well right now.
Right.
Right? And you're like, okay, so I've opted into too many things that I'm now having regrets about.
And then there's all this other shit that I never had the choice to opt in or out of that drives me fucking crazy.
The impulse makes sense. And I do think a lot of the anger that causes people to follow these kinds of like insane motherfuckers is that they are speaking to some level of can we burn it all down.
Right. And even like Make America Great again isn't about like can we go back to 1965.
But I have no urge to change.
We're cavemen better than us.
I have no urge to change society or even compel
anyone to join me. It's more about my own
personal thing. Same. I just want to disappear. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. In a cave with a good
home theater system. Yes.
With all of my Blu-R-Fi. And I would
like to go with Helen Mirren.
I too.
Great choice. Sure. Why not? River Phoenix.
He's a fun hang. Yeah.
RIPP. Now, the cave.
Like, you know there's not going to be air conditioning.
Well, okay. Let me finish.
And this planet.
Ain't getting colder.
No.
No, it's not.
The cave has central air.
Oh, I forgot to finish my thoughts.
Sure.
There is neither sand nor grass.
Griffin, you are the least outdoorsy guy.
Yeah.
So living off the grid is really just not for you, I feel.
Are you going to make a fire?
How are we cooking food?
Sean, are you outdoors?
Electricity.
If I had to be, I could be.
But it's not appealing.
I would like a mid-century modern home.
That's what I actually want.
I can fuck with that.
You know, that sounds nice.
With Central Air sounds useful.
Yeah.
Are you sure?
I'd like, can I get a playroom for my child?
But also, well, this is the main thing.
It's also right.
You have a kid who might be like, hey, a River Phoenix situation of like,
I might not be completely interested in what we're doing right now.
Like, I might have other, you know, feelings and needs.
No.
So how quickly do you go like, well, you can't go back?
There's been a nuclear war.
Yeah.
Which is the card that Ali plays.
He does.
Another thing that's upsetting about this movie is we're,
seeing the story from the perspective of River Phoenix,
this guy has too many kids.
And the more time you're spending in his son's head with the narration,
seeing things through his son's eyes,
you're remembering like,
he's got other kids.
He's neglecting who are younger,
who are less capable of processing this,
whose heads we're not even tuned into.
Yeah.
And the book and the movie are like a pretty gentle social commentary
on gender roles and families.
And the fact that mother is this like quieted person
who has to go along with everything,
all of his hairbrain schemes.
And just make the dresses for everybody.
It's why this movie's very upsetting.
You're watching a family get abused
by this parent
who is lying to them
after forcing him into a situation
they don't seem that interested in.
And, uh,
yeah, it's like he hates
Reverend Spellgood or whatever.
What's this? Yeah, Reverend Spellgood
for being a zeal.
and for, you know, leading a mindless flock or whatever it is, you know, he thinks spell good
stuff too.
But that's what he really hates is that he has followers.
Well, right, but you're doing the exact same thing, buddy?
Just left exactly.
You're just doing it only to your family because no one else wants to hang out with you.
Right.
This guy's got a drive-in.
Yeah.
He's got people driving in to hear his words.
See, my thing really living off the grid is I don't want to live there off the grid.
I want to live on the grid because it has electricity.
Well, I was going to say, you want to live in the literal grid at the world of Tron.
Oh, that would be nice.
Bi-Digital Jazz.
I'm going to see Tron tonight.
You are?
I was going to go Monday, but then I went to go see Marty Supreme.
Right.
I, of course, stuck to my principles, and I entered the grid.
But mostly for your Oscar watching.
Yeah, right.
Of course.
I was just hearing so much Lido Buzz.
Yeah.
You know, it's a...
You liked it?
Well, it's a fucking dumb movie, but it does look cool.
It has white bites in it.
It's visually well executed.
It's got all this.
Tron stuff.
We'll be six months old by the time this comes out.
I'm happy to hear that it is watchable.
Can I spoil a plot point or do you want to go in cold?
I mean, I'd rather going cold, but we're potting.
Let's just pod.
A thing it does that Legacy didn't do, and I love Legacy.
I think Legacy's kind of an awesome movie.
Joko.
Joe Co.
And I also think Legacy predicted the future of all corporate art.
It's showing you what will happen.
If Jokko does Fugitive, are we excited?
He's doing Miami Vice instead, right?
Down the line.
Kind of.
Yeah, that's interesting.
I mean, it's like, great.
That's a vehicle for a thing you can do.
And it has to be a kind of a technocrat version.
Right, like where the vehicles.
Yeah.
He loves vehicles.
What if it's Tron, colon,
fugitive?
That sounds good.
A thing that it does that is pure
nostalgia bait, you know,
is that it goes into
1982, Trump.
I saw a little bit of this in the trailer,
and it's the first thing in a year of marketing
that has gotten me a little excited for this movie.
Yeah.
Everything in that sequence is, again, like I said, it's just nostalgia stuff, but it is so visually well executed that I kind of had to tip my hat to it.
And of course, that is where you also get Jeff Bridges just burping.
You know what I mean?
Like, Jeff Bridges just being like, yeah, I am your one legacy character at this point.
So I will participate.
But you're going to get now Bridges.
Is he carrying a big barrel, those three Xs on it?
No, but like, it's truly being like, I'm like, I.
you're doing it. I'm like, this is so far
from Kevin Flynn. Isn't it in the same
universe as legacy? It is.
It's a direct sequel to legacy in ways.
They like point to a picture and say
like he's off doing his own thing.
This is my favorite. He was in the mosquito coat.
It's truly that. It's like Garrett Hadlo
does we know, vanished into the ether with
Olivia Wilde. They are not really a part of this movie
at all. They have a podcast. And now
his company is in the hands
of Greta Lee. Yeah. And
who's the villain from the first
you know, the British guy.
I know, but what's the character?
The guy. David Warner's grandson is
Evan Peters.
So is Evan Peters playing
Killian Murphy's son?
Because remember, killing Murphy is set up as Stark's.
Killing Murphy is not acknowledged.
Evan Peters is playing Jillian Anderson's son.
Okay.
But he is a Dillinger, much like one.
Yes, he is in that.
He's from the red guys.
Right. Stark Industries, but Dillinger is the...
But you know how, like, Tronon, it still boils...
down to the blue guys are good and red guys are bad.
And like, just so you can be sure of that,
Evan Peters is in a very red room when he's doing his
villainy and so on.
Should our bit for 2026, I'm not saying we're retiring Red Hulk.
Uh-huh.
But listeners being like, well, I know they record these episodes
months in advance. It's very funny to listen to June
episodes that still have Red Hulk talk because they've just seen it or
whatever. And then I've seen our listeners get excited as like,
it's October. Red Hulk's still in the combo.
Right, right.
They're not giving up on him past relevancy.
It wasn't just that it was topical.
Should Tron Aries be our new added?
We continue talking about Tron Ares for two years.
Yeah, please.
Let's talk about Tron Ares.
I mean, you gotta get a bucket.
We got to.
I'm sure there will be a very elaborate bucket.
There are many.
The arcade machine, the cabinet.
Cool.
There's a bucket that's fucking Aries on the cycle and each wheel has its own popcorn.
I'm getting this fucking bucket tonight.
You're getting a bucket?
Yeah, of course.
Put that in my suitcase?
Absolutely.
One of the big...
The arcade one?
Which one are you looking at?
Let's just look at the bucket.
Come on.
David, let's look at the bucket.
I was just going to say
one of the big plot points in Aries is, of course,
Jared Leto, an actor we all adore.
Normal guy.
Right.
And a guy we adore.
And Ali Fox.
Right.
Plays an AI called Ares.
That's sort of like a, you know,
kind of militaristic.
AI?
Yeah.
What's that?
He's a program.
Awesome intellectual is what it is.
And,
the big plot arc of the movie
is that he starts to become self-aware
and more human and disobey his orders,
right? Can you believe it?
There's the popcorn bucket.
I looked at it. I'm getting it. But then
did you see the cycle one? Yeah.
Where the popcorn, it goes in the two spaces?
Yeah, I'm going to see this movie, and then
my wife and daughter land at 9 p.m. tonight. So imagine
the motorcycle and the arcade
cabinet being there waiting for her at our...
She-rah's going to ride that thing. Oh, my God.
Does she ever? Really more
a motherboard situation right now. Motherboard
has big Tron vibes, though.
Motherboard is the tech team in. Yes, she does.
Do you know that I've been sending Sean's daughter
Heman Toys? I did, yeah, I know we've touched
on it. Kind of a men she move. Kind of a men she
move. Great stuff. But just
to finish my point, Jared Ledo,
at his current level of acting effort,
if you guys can reflect on his recent.
Right. Is totally fine
playing a robot, essentially.
Uh-huh. It's not so good
at the, ah, human emotion
is beginning to enter, right? Like a
My feelings are emerging.
That's an issue with the film, I would say.
Another issue is that Greta Lee looks like she wants to just like drink poison the whole movie.
You know, everyone's just kind of...
The letter thing is bewildering, though.
Like, we've known.
It's because...
I know.
We've known.
This project's been in the works for like nine years.
It's like a $200 million movie.
And Ledo's been attached the whole time.
And I feel like they've just been like, can we get you?
And he's like, no.
I saw a recent interview with him, recent October 2020.
not recent next summer when you're listening to this,
where he said, and the timeline's crazier than I thought,
they write a more direct Tron legacy sequel.
It was initially, I think, right,
like more tied to Tron Legacy.
There was a part they offered him in that.
He said, no, I'm not interested in this,
but this side character you have of Ares,
I think is interesting.
And then that project fell apart,
and then they rebooted it, went to him,
and said, what if we start the script
from scratch, and that's the main
character, and it's you.
So it's not just that, like, they wanted him
and he'd been attached for so long. And they figured out
what to do for him. He wanted to play Aries.
Him passing on it, reset
the entire project, and they
redeveloped it around his
taste. That's fucking
nuts for a guy that no one
likes.
A man living in a perpetual
mosquito coast. It is
truly. I will say,
and look, this is somewhat of a spoiler.
but not really.
Don't worry, guys.
Because, again, you're not shocked to learn
that Ares becomes more human.
By the end of the movie, he's
gone from, you know,
robot, like your program red guy
to more of a Jared Lido
in real life vibes.
And I said that he looked like
a sentient feather earring.
That is really the vibe.
It's just like, it's like,
ah, right, what emerged was Jared Lito.
He got me all geeked up for this right now.
Can't wait tonight.
Jared Ludo.
I mean,
Bucket, sitting by myself
in A&C and New York.
city. Is this?
Because the film looks like it's going to kind of do
okay. It's going to do the classic Tron of like, yeah,
it opened to like 40 million and like, that's all right.
Tron just always makes a little less than it needs to.
It's a little less than we hoped, but it's not a flop
between 17 and 27 years. We'll get one more.
Yeah. But like, I was
I was about to say, and to bring it full circle,
so then are we done with Lido? But I forgot that he's playing
Skeletor in fucking the E-Man movie.
Yeah. So we're never quite rid of this guy.
I'm fucking pumped for Masters of the Year.
I am sure.
Travis Knight, not bad.
Funniest moment of CinemaCon by far with Amanda in April,
which will now be one year hence.
You and Matt Bellamy crying and Amanda just being befuddled.
But just as soon as they show the logo, I was like, God damn it.
The sword looks right.
And she was just so embarrassed.
Also, all the other casting and that is great.
Alison Brie and Indri and Indris Elber are kind of fucking spawn on.
They're perfect.
I'm a big Veronica from Riverdale fan.
She's in...
Melamendez is Tila.
Yes.
A very important character.
Tila huge in my home.
Tila rules.
Idriselba's going to play like kind of like a dad guy.
I don't know anything about He-Man.
Don't say kind of a dad guy.
He-Man is the originating character for my interest in my genre storytelling.
It is the first thing that I fell in love with.
I mean, you know what it is for me, right?
What?
I don't know.
And I'm just wondering if you know.
Oh, oh, not what He-Man means to you.
What was that for you?
No, He-Man doesn't mean anything to me, sadly.
Trek?
Sort of, but no.
X-Men.
It's very much, sure, right.
Yeah, like, that was the first thing for me where, like, my six or seven-year-old brain was like,
I'm engaging with a property, with a world, with a bunch of characters, not just with, like, whatever, a simple narrative.
I like X-Men.
I can't wait for them to kind of ruin it.
Them to do, like, pretty good.
That was okay.
Yeah.
Like, right?
Like, that's sort of the same thing.
ceiling there? I just, yeah. I don't, I don't, I don't have much faith in their ability to do anything
anymore. I think they, I, no, I see, I have total faith in their ability to produce something that
is pushing my, like, kid buttons and, you know, elicits like a six out of ten response. I think the
big, right, like, they'll be in the costumes, they'll, they'll obey the comics a little more. And so,
but I think we're living in the wreckage of this issue, which is the more they do that, the more they
create a cul-de-sac where there's no actual space to move forward.
Possibly. I mean...
This is the Deadpool and Wolverine problem.
This is them hitting hard, like, who can we bring back?
How do we make them look more like the cartoons?
This is where X-Men 97 kind of fucked them.
Arp and I talk about this a lot, but they clearly thought X-Men 97 was like a throw-off
for the nerds.
And then that's the best-received thing they've done in like five years.
And now they're like, fuck, this is what people want.
This is not forward-thinking.
bringing all the old people back
and putting them in Jim Lee costumes
is going to be really exciting for Doomsday
and is going to fuck them in terms of resetting X-Men.
I mean, I agree that it's, yeah, it's risky.
Because they're doing a double pop of,
hey, remember those actors from 20 years ago
and remember the comics and cartoons from 20 years before.
James Marston's in the Jim Lee Cyclops costume or whatever.
So then when they put Patrick Schwarzenegger in a new costume...
Yeah, it sounds good.
We're all going to have...
I think I'm going to mind because all those...
guys are old. I'm like, I need the
latex to be tighter and brighter.
This is my whole thing with these movies. I'm not going
to see Marsden as
like, whatever, 90 Cyclops
and be like, great, 10 more
of these. I'm probably going to see it and be like,
I'm glad Marsden put the costume
on and I'm bidding
him a fun farewell. He's going to take
away from the next cyclops though. In the
same way that like Jackman
re-uping, you're like at some point
someone else is going to play Wolverine.
If it had been, he was off
the court for 10 years and then a guy gets to come to it fresh, it's fine. But bringing all these people
back for one last hurrah just reminds you. And then they're bringing them back in the way that's like,
and this is what Fox wouldn't let them do 20 years ago. And now all the new people are going to have
to exist in the shadow. It's the same thing as all the theories that like is, is Downey Jr. Doom a
a multiversal thing. And at the end of it, there will be a new neutral doom who is the actual doom
in the Fantastic Four universe. And I'm like, well, then that doom sucks. I don't care.
But you're doing hypotheticals.
All these things, though.
Who knows?
Right.
I don't know what they're going to do.
This is going to see very quaint when he cuts this out of this episode.
Because.
Keeping it in.
Is that movie coming out next year?
No, two years from two years.
Yeah.
Like a year from like Christmas 27?
Right, right.
It's still a long time.
So is...
No, it's Christmas 26.
It's Cito Coast to Thanksgiving 27 and then X-Men.
Ali Fox! I need you to distract Thanos.
Didn't they push Dunezday, though?
Doomsday is Christmas of this year, 2026, when this episode is coming out.
And Spider-Man is next summer?
Is summer 26?
Is this summer, Griffin?
It's 2026.
My birthday movie of 2026.
And those are the only two things they have next year.
I believe so.
By next year, I mean this year.
This year.
Right.
But those are two big things.
Yeah.
A new Spider-Man movie and Avengers Doomsday.
Yeah.
Those are, it's about as big as they got, right?
I mean, yeah.
So, I'm thinking about that doesn't work.
I think I'm going to see him.
I'll check them out.
I think I'll see him.
When's the last Marvel movie you saw?
Well, I just had COVID.
I'm going to pee for this.
A couple weeks ago.
You have COVID?
No, a couple weeks ago.
I just had COVID, though, somewhat recently.
When you go to the bathroom, think of me.
And so normally I'll just binge and catch up on the Marvel franchise.
Every time you get COVID, that's what you do?
No, just any time I'm sick.
I'm sorry.
You just got to work it through your stuff.
That would create some odd association.
with the Marvel brand.
I think those are already the kind of associations
Ben has. Okay. Yeah, I mean, I just
I'm someone who...
Phases and variants are very tight in his mind. I find
it to be junk food and it's just
like something where I can shut my
brain off and just
spend the next, you know, half a day
watching all these movies. Who's your favorite Marvel
superhero? Whoa.
That's a... In the movies
or anywhere? Can I pitch it
a possibility? The Punisher?
Where are you out on the Punisher?
Ben loves the Punisher.
See, the Punisher.
Though, is too, like, Republican.
Now, now he's been claimed by the wrong people.
I feel like you grew up loving Punisher.
I've read some Punisher comments.
You invoke the Punisher's van a lot that you like that he has a van?
Yeah, he's a man. I'm a big friend of the van.
It's just full of guns, though.
Yeah, I know.
But it's still, it's cool as hell.
It's cool as hell.
He's got a skull.
The skull.
Yeah.
Yeah.
One of the great logos, the Punisher, Frank Castle.
And he's got a fucking trench coat.
But you know who Ben's number one guy is.
Spawn.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
But it's number one.
I was happy for you guys.
Ghost Rider. Ghost Rider, which is sort of like,
Oh, Ghost Rider, yeah, is very hotly.
He's so Haussie. Yes, okay. And are they
circling like a new ghost rider or something? Like, I feel like that comes up very so often.
Once a year, they're like, Ryan Gosling is definitely playing Ghost Rider and then nothing comes of it.
Can I say who my favorite villain is? Please.
Juggernaut. Yeah. And I don't think they've really captured Juggernaut.
You didn't find Vinnie Jones getting the gestalt of Juggernaut?
He's got to be huge.
I mean, I remember him being large in the film.
I need his ass to be fucking giant.
I need him to be like nine feet tall.
Deadpool 2 has a giant...
He's very large.
Deadpool 2 has a giant CGI juggernaut that I would say
kind of sucks, but does get the size.
I forgot about. I really forgot about it.
I still more beefier.
Well, I don't think Ben saw Deadpool 2.
No. I did.
And you forgot already.
No, I just...
It didn't live up to...
It was my expectation.
Are you fully up...
Deadpool, too, good.
Deadpool, good.
Really?
Yeah, you forget that, Sean.
I genuinely am in pro-D Deadpool.
Yeah.
I feel like it's one of the only comic book movies
that actually got the comic right.
Does nothing for me.
No.
Although, I will say, and Ben, you're going to have to cut this out.
I don't like any of them. Right, yes.
I've heard, like, a crazy industry rumor.
And maybe this has come out by the time this episode has come out.
No, I don't think you should say this kind of stuff on Aircraft.
If it hasn't come out or it's proven false, by the time the episode's released, we can cut it out.
I'm really stressed out.
I've heard the Deadpool knows that he says.
in a movie.
No. That's crazy.
That he knows that he's read the script.
He knows there's an audience watching him.
He knows what studio is releasing the movie and which studios they have acquired.
Does he know who runs the studio?
He knows who runs the studio.
I think the better way to put it as I've always put it.
He knows the notes they're going to have.
He knows that he's played by an actor and what other movies that actor's been.
Does he?
Does Ryan Reynolds exist in the same universe as Deadpool?
Sean.
Are you?
I know you're sitting down, but sit down twice as hard.
Sit into the.
ground somehow. Ryan Reynolds not only exists, but Deadpool has some thoughts on some of Ryan Reynolds'
previous career choices. I swear to you. Deadpool 1, he knows he's in a movie. Deadpool 2, he knows
he's in a cinematic universe. Deadpool 3, he knows he's been added to a new cinema. Like,
those are the evolutions of like the Deadpool myth. Right. Yes, he knows he's in a multibor.
And in Deadpool 4, he will have a podcast. He will. Great. And he'll take us all down.
Good. But yeah, I just met Red Hulk. So you're fully up to date now. Yeah. You saw Thunderbolt.
Yeah, which was fine.
And has there been something since Thunderball?
Fantastic Four is no one.
On Disney Plus yet.
You haven't met the Fantastic.
You haven't taken your first step.
No, I haven't.
That is, I do have to say, one of the worst subtitles of all time.
I know we hashed out that movie on a couple of Patreon episodes.
Did it relate to the film very much?
Yeah.
Is it Galactus's first steps on Earth?
I was so ready.
I thought the dumb thing at the end of the movie was going to be Franklin taking his first
steps and that's why they called it that.
And they don't even do that.
would have been good.
But like, given what we've learned about that movie, it would have been something.
It feels like maybe that was in it and they cut it out.
Like, they cut out a lot.
Maybe the last hour was steps.
Right.
David, yes.
You like to cook.
Yeah, I love to cook.
You make food for your family.
Yep.
How much time does that take?
You don't have an hour.
Too long.
I don't have it.
I don't have it.
David, I'm too busy.
You don't understand how busy I am.
I need a complete meal that I can digest in 30 seconds.
That's the prep time I can a lot.
Yep.
Well, how do you?
solve this problem.
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What kind of stuff are they giving you, okay?
They give me a couple different form factors.
There's a lot of stuff.
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Uh, there was, there was a big bottle that I could mix stuff in, but they were also canned.
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My gosh. This is the black edition ready to drink. Yes. I got those chocolate peanut butter flavor. That's like sort of the
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But then you also got these daily green multi-vitamin drinks.
Oh, and you love those.
You love a green drink.
The RTDs, the ready to drinks.
It's a big tall can.
You put it in the refrigerator.
I'm not good at remembering eat my vegetables.
But these things taste pretty good and you just knock it back.
No, but that, I mean, like, are you liking them?
I feel like you often really like the, yeah.
I genuinely have made this a part of my morning routine.
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I should balance the diet in that way.
Let's open up the fridge.
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The Mosquito Coast is a movie about a man who hates the type of conversation we're having in this room right now.
Oh, you don't think Allie would like the MCU?
Stop talking about when I rocked out.
It's an absolute sin to accept the decadence of obsolescence.
Why do things get worse and worse?
They don't have to.
They could get better and better.
We accept things that fall apart.
That could be Ali Fox on America in the 1980s or me on the MCU.
It is very similar.
The tone's a little different, but the words are the same.
Just like, make me a grilled cheese sandwich, dad.
I'm hungry.
I don't want to deal with you.
I think Ford is like so goodness, and it is tied to what you're saying,
that he's one of the best on-screen yellers.
And even when he's not fully raising his voice,
he's so good at saying the thing with intensity and the pointing.
You definitely believe, as much as this guy's tough hanging to begin with him,
he is not bullshining.
Like, he believes what he thinks.
Right.
Like, he's deep in it.
To the end of the line.
He's not just some constant.
artist who's like, yay, I actually just wanted to live on the mosquito coast and this is how it
justify it. He thinks this is what he has to be doing. It's what makes the movie complies to me.
And he thinks he has to lie to his family eventually about like the world. It's what makes the
performance work. I think you see in Ford that he plays the calculation in his mind.
It's a three second decision of, I'm going to tell them the world has been nuked. And it's not,
you know, John Lovitz liar panicking. It is like... Now, Lovitz in this role is an interesting concept.
Yeah, see.
Yeah. Decade of obscency.
Yeah.
Nuclear war.
Yeah.
Go to Honduras.
Made in Japan.
Yeah.
A missionary, you see.
That would have been good.
You would be good.
It's in those three seconds, I think Ford plays, this is actually the only move.
And this is the best thing I can do as a father and as a husband.
He's derange.
but he fully believes is to the benefit of his family
to tell them that the outside world
is no longer an option.
So I rewatch the Siskel and Ebert episode
where they reviewed this movie
and they had a fairly...
Ebert was very negative on this film.
He was very negative on this film.
They had a...
It may come to surprise you to learn
that they had a tetchy exchange
about the film.
What?
And...
They lived on the mosquito coast.
Ebert out, right?
Ebered out because he finds this
to be a very unlikable character.
He found the whole movie
just like a sloth.
He said Ali Fox as a bore.
He praised Harrison Ford for doing his job well,
but was like, I don't want to hang with this character.
Good performances that looks good, but not a good hang.
Siskel's, Siskel likes it more.
He doesn't love it.
But he is compelled by the idea of noble wishes gone astray.
That there is something.
Yeah.
Him looking for, and he, as he often did,
directly connects it to the,
optimism and hope in the movement of the 60s.
Sure, of course.
And saying like, is it curdling?
Yes, there's something.
And Ali Fox, you could see as a man who was probably educated at that time,
as someone who's, you know, participating in various social movements,
and there being a lot of hope about what could happen in the world.
And I kind of liked that reading.
I hadn't thought about the movie in that way.
And, you know, I think also Siskel is just doing a little bit of performative jousting
for the sake of the cameras, which is something that happens sometimes.
Wouldn't know.
But that does help me
Accept him a little bit more
You know that he's been a bit broken by
He actually does believe that this
Commercial Hellscape
That America is transforming into before his eyes
Is completely corroding his soul
And driving him to the brink of a kind of madness
I don't know if it makes him a fun movie character
But it makes him a more acceptable person
But that's Ebert's thing probably of like Ebert did
At the end of the day
Have that Hollywood brain of like
But, you know, you're not keeping me involved in the story.
This isn't entertaining enough.
I wish he was more of a mall cop that I could.
Fucked up my own show.
Just go right ahead.
Just take as long as you want.
Roger Ebert's four-star Paul Blart Mall Cop Review, where he's just like,
am I crazy?
This movie's good.
Why do none of you get this?
And he talks about the cinematic, the visual language of Paul Blart.
He's like, this is made by a real filmmaker.
Who made it?
I can root for this guy.
I think it's Steve Carr maybe.
Okay, I wanted to defend
Eberra. He gave it three stars, not four.
But he did call it.
He did, this is a great lead by him.
Paul Blart Mallcup is a slapstick comedy
with a hero who's a nice guy. I thought that wasn't
allowed anymore. And I sort of know what he
means in terms of like, it's like
the very dirt baggy brat pack guys
or sort of kings of comedy then.
The Rogan, you know, Seth Rogen,
Juddapital, you know, that's... And Paul Bler is like,
yeah, this guy's fucking... He's a mall cop. He just
wants to protect them all. He's all.
Yeah. He's all.
John Candy movie.
Yeah, that was Kevin James' thing.
The headline of this review is Lone Rider
of the Purple Segway.
I like it.
I like it.
Ibert popping off.
Should Daniel Craig someday retire?
I'm supporting Kevin James for the next James Bond is his kicker.
I don't know where I am with him on that one.
But excuse me, the paragraph leading into that is
Paul Blart emerges as a hero and something else, colon.
Kevin James illustrates how lighting and camera angles can affect our perception of an actor.
In the early scenes, he's a fat,
Slub, but after he goes into action, the camera lowers subtly.
The lighting changes and suddenly he's a good-looking action hero, ready for business.
This is a little bit like Roger Ebert seeing the train coming to the station and being like,
whoa, I think it's coming into the movie theater.
It's like, Roger, yes.
We know you can shoot guys more heroically or less heroic.
Well, why does he feel this way?
The next sentence might illustrate it.
He demonstrates what fat men have been, have secretly believed for a long time.
May have just given away the game a little bit too much.
A little bit.
Much like as I love to cite every review that he ever had of a Jennifer Lopez movie.
She's like, there's something about this lady.
I can't put my finger on it.
She's got something.
But I want to put my finger on it.
I can't put my finger.
It would take two handfuls.
Full bear claws.
You know, that is interesting that you say that too, because Raj, historically, a boobman.
You know, but just that's, and if you read his work closely,
as I have. Certainly.
He, not just the female form.
Of course, an admirer of the female form.
But he, he like, the man likes breasts.
That's what I'm saying.
But I think to continue Sims' analogy, the first time he saw Jennifer Lopez on screen,
it was like the caboose backing into the station.
And suddenly his worldview was rewritten.
Sean, to throw out a fantasyism.
Uh-huh.
I think what you've identified is part of what I really connect to in this movie.
One of my go-to, I'm locked in thematic strains of stories is what you're saying.
The kind of idealism gone amok, right?
And especially if it's coming from a place of like a semi-earned jaded frustration with what is wrong.
And I think a lot of other movies that attempt this kind of story, the stakes are lower, right?
it's something like a movie I love is Tucker a man in his dreams,
which is like...
Great movie.
Pretty similar movie.
Absolutely.
In much gentler form, but you're watching someone just not get out of his own way.
But I think there are a lot of movies like that where they pick a very small,
earthbound prism of why do cars have to suck?
What if a guy tried to make a better car and this is how the world knocks him down?
And that's really easy to get your head around, right?
and then there are things that abstract it
like Megalopolis and Synecdochee, New York,
where it goes into the fantastic,
and you get to become more allegorical.
And what I like about mosquito coasts
is it feels like something
that would be a true story,
while the stakes are about as high as they could be,
the fact that it is not a true story
and is a pure fictional invention
makes me not feel as uncomfortable
as I would probably feel
if I were watching this movie
knowing that real people died or whatever.
know, but yet it's like the scale of his ambition is so grand that I just immediately get sucked
into that even if I'm never on his side. I like that kind of idea. I do think that there's
something about a movie like this coming out at this time that also felt very unacceptable.
Because if you look at the, if you look at a lot of the writing about the novel, it situates
it in this long arc of kind of...
historical American wayward men.
You know, it's like, it's Robinson, Crusoe,
and so's Family Robinson, but then it's also, you know,
Heart of Darkness, Walden, Moby Dick.
Like these, there are all of these figures and all of these worlds.
And, you know, those are complex, at times,
unlikable protagonist figures in those stories.
And that's not really what Eddie Murphy and Mel Gibson were up to by 1986.
That's not what the American movie star was expected
to pursue. And so I think that there's like, there's a lot being held against it because it refuses,
even with the biggest star on the planet, to give you one ounce of fun, of the fun that Roger Ebert wants from the movie.
I also think the anti-heroes of this era were also rooted in fun. It was a sort of like, wouldn't it be fun to just be able to like fucking take a machine gun to the baddies for conflicts to be this clean.
cut for you to be able to be the guy with the snarky one-liner, you know, even as there's a rise of
these guys who are not playing conventional clean-cut hero, it is more the raging id of like
throttled masculinity.
Yeah, Travis Bickle, right?
Travis Bickle is crazy.
So we can just, we can assign his insanity to his actions.
And Travis Bickle is a cautionary tale that within 10 years turns into like the sequel
Rambo.
Right.
Where now it's just pure power fantasy.
Right.
And this is not that.
This guy's an asshole.
And he's wrong.
But he's still somebody's dad, you know?
He's still just like kind of a dude.
You know, he's not a, he does ultimately do very destructive things and pays for it.
But two thirds through the movie are like, this guy's a little pretty nuts.
But like, he is still.
He is human.
Someone's family man.
He remains earthbound.
And he does not ever become like avenging anti-hero.
He's fucking handy too.
It's impressive.
Early on, it's working.
He's handy.
Right.
But so he builds the ice machine to get us, you know, through the pot a little bit.
It's the cornerstone of his new society.
We're going to have ice.
We can supply ice to others.
Like, it's working.
But when a bunch of, you know, essentially armed men from a near village show up,
he's not great at the whole interpersonal stuff.
No, never has them.
Exactly.
So he goes for, hey, guys, you got to leave.
There's a lot of ants everywhere.
that doesn't work.
So then he pivots right to
I'll freeze them to death in my ice building.
Yeah, he considers going
full on Mr. Freeze mode, which is
has rarely worked out for anyone.
Least of all, Mr. Freeze.
True.
Often a sad ending for that man.
So true.
It's a pretty bad.
Pretty bad scheme.
Yeah.
It's a, it's a bad fucking scheme.
It doesn't really work out very well.
And he doesn't consider that the
destruction of the
centerpiece of his new civilization
could be problematic. It is the other
part of this movie that I find
pretty topically
currently powerful
is the notion of these guys
who are like, if you just let me in there, I
know how to fix this. I have the right
ideas and they start out with three
ideas and then the first conflict
happens. The first thing
they have to adjust from their original plan
and they short circuit.
Yeah, it's also that thing too of like
the ultimate freedom idea, right?
And then what ends up happening is there's some kind of violent conflict,
and it immediately kind of all falls apart because it's just inherent to human nature.
He's also gone to a place where everyone kind of wants to do their own thing.
And that's hard, it's hard to coexist with other people trying to do maybe a very different thing.
Also, his, you know, the thing that is revealed clearly in two different ways is that
this is ultimately a very pampered middle class American.
You know, that this is a guy who has no idea what he's getting himself into.
And that includes encountering militia force in a land that he doesn't understand and also nature.
And those two things combining.
And he thinks that those things will work in his favor, that there will be space to move in a land where he's not encumbered by the modes of society that America has built.
But also that he's like, I'm a smart guy and I know how to make ice.
So I'll be able to handle it when we have mosquitoes.
But he doesn't know, he doesn't know shit.
the whole thing is that
everybody who thinks they know what they're doing
and that they should take over
are full of shit.
Agreed. Also, much like
Survivor, people get off the boat.
They look great. They're all shiny.
They're TV ready. Then, like,
day three, they unlock a new kind
of rugged hot. And they're like,
oh, I don't have to give in all these conventions
of Western beauty. I'm going on natural.
They've dropped the baby fat.
Right. By day 10, everyone looks fucking horrible.
And it's not just that, like,
their skin's bitten up and they have a
weird inconsistent burn and they're like body weight is getting distributed in weird ways,
but also they're like behind the eyes.
Everyone's losing it.
I've had six scoops of rice in 90s.
This is one of the most handsome movie stars in history at the peak of his hotness.
And you have the same thing where he starts out and you're like, man, this dick is kind of hot.
This asshole is kind of compelling to look at.
And like day three, you're like, the dirt kind of looks good on him, getting a little rugged.
And by the end of the movie, you're like, this guy's uncomfortable.
Yeah, everyone's ass is stinking.
Oh, it's a real stinky butt movie.
This is a stinky.
I bet it smell nasty in their movie for sure.
I do, no matter where I go, I need plumbing.
I need hot water.
Again, guys, I am with the least off-grid folks around, including me.
Just a small town.
Yeah.
Toilet situation.
Like Japanese toilet.
Right, exactly.
You need a toilet that like stings to you and heats you.
Sean, what you're talking about is.
in its arms. The mass New Yorker going to Hudson Valley, Adirondex, where, you know, like,
go farther away, though. I want to make it impossible to go back to from whence I came.
But still in the contiguous United States, you know what I mean? Well, then it's never going to be,
like, I can drive, hop in the car and drive to a screening room in Beverly Hills where I spend
way too much time in my life. This is my exact same fantasy, except I know I could never actually do it.
I don't, I'm not going to either. But that's why we're talking about it on a podcast.
I would say I'm more, I'll go to, you know,
the countryside, the woods, the rural places in there.
And I'll...
Could you outdoors it?
What are we talking about outdoors again?
Well, you ask me.
Okay.
So, like, you know, and I rent like a cabin, like, you know...
So we got heat, we got running water.
How do we camped?
I don't like camping.
I haven't really camp since I was a teenager.
Camping's fun, guys.
No.
I don't mind people who camp, but it's just not really my thing.
And it is my wife's favorite thing.
It's like, it is the...
Did she grow up doing it?
Like, is it a nostalgia thing?
Yeah.
She's much more outdoorsy than.
I am. But I
it is one of them, you and I
are so similar in many ways, but the
beach and camping are two things where I'm just
like, they should be exploded from the planet.
I have no idea how
these things are so popular when you do
this. No, no, well, it's not like your wife's
making a little bit. My wife, thankfully, not a huge beach
person. I live in California and I imagine
you go to the sun.
This is what's so funny about Sean, I love the beach.
I spend as much time on the beach as I can.
But Sean, you live in California,
in L.A. Los Angeles. And I live very
far away from the beach.
Right.
Right.
And I know there's all
people that I'm like,
do you get to the beach
and they're like,
the beach?
What?
It's like an hour
from where I live.
I had friends trying to convince me
to go to Burning Man.
I think people attempt
every couple of years.
And I was talking about it
to my girlfriend.
You would actually die.
I would be done.
I was saying to her,
I was like,
you know this as well as anybody
who spends a lot of time with me.
The three things I care about
the most in the world
are sleeping in a proper bed,
having a shower with no limits,
and a real functional toilet.
And if you take those three things out of my ecosystem,
I collapse.
I basically can't exist with two out of three.
If one of those things is in peril, I'm fucked.
I would never go to...
Here's my quick Bernie Man story, okay?
I was an editor at Grantland in the 2010s,
and my friend Rembert Brown did a series
called Rembert Explains America,
and he drove around America,
and he went to just different places.
So he would go to a giant thimble,
and he would be like,
why is this thimble in Iowa?
But then he would also go to more well-known landmarks.
And one of the stops on his trip was to go to Burning Man.
And he went to Burning Man for a few days.
And he had been filing these pieces,
these kind of long, digressive blog posts about his journeys.
And I was an editor of, frankly, too many writers at that time.
But I was writing, I was editing a lot of raw copy every day.
So I was looking at thousands and thousands of works every day
trying to get them on the internet.
And Rem filed his piece via text message with no punctuation.
Yeah.
Only Rembert, because he was at Burning Man.
Sure.
There's no internet.
There's no laptops.
Nothing works.
You got to get the sentiments out there as quickly as you can.
He wrote it in a note on his phone and copy and pasted it and sent it to me.
And I spent three hours formatting this Godforsaken piece.
Yeah.
And just because of that, I would never even consider going to Burning Man.
It makes perfect sense to me.
I track that logic so cleanly.
I mean, I have friends who, you know,
go to Burning Man and evangelize for it.
I also am like, no, thanks.
But that's really funny.
But isn't tripping kind of would be fun
and when they do the effigy burnings.
That feels like very like...
Isn't Burning Man?
Such a wicker.
This piece is so really long.
Yeah.
Yeah, you spent three hours formatting it.
Dude.
I mean, they're all that long.
God bless Rem.
I love Rem.
I loved working on that project with him.
But that one in particular,
I was like, Rem, can you please?
Can we just delete this?
Like, do we really have to do this?
And he was like, I drove out of here.
Isn't Burning Man kind of coming out of the same instinct that drives Allie Fox?
But how do we build this in a way that is actually communal and with like the world's strongest bowling alley bumpers?
I was about-
Well, but the thing with Burning Man that, at least as I understand it is all about community because it's all about, you know, doing it all together.
Allie doesn't have a community vibe to me.
He doesn't really want to be with other people.
Let me refine this.
I'm not saying this in a way that is critical of Burning Man.
I think that I get is for other people.
But it's more that I feel like when the people I know who love it, wax about it, right?
What they're speaking about is the same kind of fantasy that Ali Fox has in a certain way of like,
what if we just stripped all of this back?
And we got back to how we're supposed to behave, right?
And Burning Man is much more animated by like fun and love and drugs.
is in all this shit.
But it is the idea of like,
can we just have our alternate version of society
for like 10 concentrated days and then leave?
It's also, you know, become a playground
for incredibly rich people.
But it's the same kind of thing
and the part of why it's been able to survive
is that it only has the ambition of existing
for a week and change a year.
Rather than being like,
what if we actually found a new country?
My fundamental thing that I was going to say, by the way,
is right, you know, you got to up to say,
I rent a cabin. I'm drinking coffee. I'm sitting on the porch. I'm like, this rocks. I love.
I like one part of what you said. Exactly one part. Yeah.
You know, I should just move up here, the simpler, just a little slower. It'd be great.
I still am like, I mostly would watch movies and cook food. Like, it's not like I'm like, I would work the land.
Like, I still want to mostly do the things I like to do. But I think I'm just like, no, this is, I'm being dumb.
Like, I think I would get bored. I need friends. I need a lot of social interaction.
You know, like, what I get from the city is what I need or whatever. But I have, um, I have
the fantasy. I have zero mosquito coast fantasies. I never want to go to the jungle. I have spoken
to enough filmmakers who filmed in the jungle to know that the jungle is never your friend and you
cannot conquer it. Every guy who goes there is like, I think I know how to deal with the jungle and
then they leave being like the jungle kick my ass. But David, yes. And this is relevant to our podcast.
I'm with the dossier in front of you. Jungle to jungle. Tell me if I'm wrong about this.
Please. This in many ways seems like one of the least dramatic jungle shoots.
of all time.
It doesn't seem like,
to Peter Weir's credit.
I mean, they call it long,
hot and humid.
Like, I don't know that it was like pleasant,
but it was definitely not disastrous.
Every other jungle shoot I have ever read about was disastrous.
As you said,
everyone comes out of it and goes.
It's not your classic,
like,
we went 80 days over Budge,
over schedule,
like, you know,
things like that.
But most of them are like,
fine.
Right, we tried to kill each other.
James Gray is like,
that was a disaster.
I ruined my life.
Peter Weir is used to filming in the Outback and harsh conditions or whatever already.
Like Peter Weir strikes me as someone who can, you know, handle an outdoorsy, rugged shoot.
I just think this film has an incredible sense of place.
I think especially the sound in this film is so effective,
the kind of like atmospheric soundscape of the land and the quiet.
And then when that is interrupted and the photography is so lush,
they're using their location so well,
that about halfway through,
I stopped myself and I was like,
wait, these things are always impossible to film,
and they are always accompanied with stories of
four people had heart attacks,
we were kidnapped,
my dad drowned to death.
We heard gunfire or town over, whatever, yeah.
Every version of this we've covered,
but also like some of the most famously terrible production stories in history.
You know, it's predator and it's sorcerer
and it's apocalypse now and it's Lost City of Z,
all of these. The best case scenario is we lost our minds. Nothing horrible in a demonstrable way
happened to us from the outside, but we all went insane and it was impossible. And this movie is
like very steady in what it's doing. Yeah. To wrap the plot, like to get back to the third act
of the movie, we talked about the, you know, ice machine blows up. Right. The Geronima.
Right. The true pivot point into like sort of irredeemable madness is they
get to the coast, like you say, and the family is like, thank God we can go home.
And he's like, uh, there is no home because there's a nuclear war.
I just heard.
You guys aren't allowed to hear about it.
You know, like, and then we're just in full cult of personality madness.
We're in the final stages of Jim Jones, like passing out.
His performance is great in that sequence.
Yes, it is.
Really, really, really scary.
Really scary.
We got to call up Mr. Hattie, too.
Mr. Hattie, the great Conrad Roberts, uh, who's in like, you know,
You know, one of a million things, right?
And, yeah, he's, he's sort of a force of sanity to some extent.
Yeah, he really empathizes with the family.
Yes, the kids.
But it's trying to also not go against father.
Right.
Right.
And there's a, you know, all of that is a picture of the paternalistic approach that
America had to Central America at this time in history.
I mean, this is like at the tail end of Iran-Contra.
it's a long history of trying to navigate and invade
and manage the governmental role of all these countries
that are near our borders.
All of that is a very purposeful, intentional stuff
that all comes from through,
writing through the way that he sees societies operating
outside of the United States of America.
And Ali, you know, we're drawing all these illusions
to these present-day figures.
Like, that's not a mistake.
That's obviously a huge part of this
is that Reagan 80s,
the thing that Ali thinks he wants to get away from,
he entirely represents.
I think Weir's worldview as a filmmaker is, like, more than anything defined by how hard he interrogates the relationship between the indigenous and the settlers in his homeland.
You know, that it feels like especially of the Australia New Wave, he is someone who really drilled down into that.
Oh, yeah.
And even when he—
That's all over the last wave.
Even when he moves away from it being the explicit subject matter, it feels like all of his films are animated by that clash of.
two different communities,
ideologies, people forced
to share the same space, that whole kind of
thing. You also have Butterfly McQueen
in this? Yes. It's her final
film? She would have been, she was quite
old, right? Yes.
1911, so she's in her sort of
late 70s. Yeah.
She lives another 10 years. She lives
84. Yeah. This is her first
Hollywood production
I think that
played theatrically since
Duel in the Sun. That seems
correct. She's been, she does
a lot of TV. Which is 1946.
Yeah. And she's, you know, she's
incredibly important historical actor
who's in Cabin in the Sky
and Mildred Pierce and all these movies.
But she's
an icon. Yep. It's not a big role.
A vowed atheist.
Butterfly McQueen is.
Thought it was funny to play this role. Right. Not Miss
Kenwick. No, is
a devotee of Christ. Right, because
they end up back with spellgo.
Spell good is the, you know, back to me.
Which is, right, the ultimate insult to Alley.
The thing is of this movie.
Yes.
I'll do it myself.
And he has built a compound and this thing is like, right, this is the ultimate insult to Allie's sort of intellectual vanity or whatever.
He, you know, wants to destroy it.
It goes from just like, no, I want to do my own thing or I want to live a certain kind of life to like, no, fuck this guy.
I hate Christianity.
I hate what he's doing?
What are you going to do next, buddy?
Just start, like, blowing up every church you see.
Like, it's like, it doesn't make any...
I mean, whatever.
He's crazy.
Yeah, but it's also, it's some cause fallacy at this point.
There's no...
This guy can't dig himself out.
Like, how many times has Harrison Ford died on screen?
Great question.
Adam Driver Merckson and Force Awakens.
Spoilers.
Just absolute saber through the chest.
Sean, we went to see that movie
the last night that the Ziegfeld was in operation.
So true.
with my parents
and a bunch of friends
and my mom went to the bathroom
during Han Solo's death scene
and I like tried to stop her
and she went and she came back
after it was over
and the movie ends
and she goes,
it's weird that Harrison Ford's
just like not in the last half hour
at all.
They just kind of forget about him.
Why Chewbacca gives Leia
a big hug or whatever.
Oh no, he doesn't.
It's a,
it's a,
Ray gives him.
I know this is like coming
into another team's clubhouse
or something,
but I still think that death
works so well.
I think that's,
I just for you watch that movie because I'm doing my thing right now.
And there's parts of it now that do, I mean, the episode nine hurts so much of that whole enterprise.
Yes.
But all the Ford stuff in Force Awakens is bananas.
I think it's so good.
I think it totally works.
I think he's so good in it.
I think that death works.
Yeah, works great.
The stuff that doesn't work in that movie is not the stuff that people tend to point at.
Oh, really?
What do people point to?
Or what, you know, like, they point at that, the legacy characters, the Mary Susan.
shit. Like, there's the four obvious complaints
where I'm like, guys, those aren't the problems.
The problems are the like, J.J. Abrams,
he built a bad infrastructure thing.
Yeah, I mean, it's the foundations of the house.
100%. It's all to me because
Kazden wrote all the solo
stuff. Like, and it's, he just
knows that character, like,
fucking inside and out. And it
just feels like the other films.
And not everything, even in Force Awakens,
feels like the other films, even though it kind of
looks and sounds like it. But that
stuff to me just, it's,
the same emotional intensity colliding with fantasy stuff that I think is so good about those movies.
I like when Maz Kanata calls Jewie her boyfriend.
I like her.
She's good.
On The Witness 4K that Arrow put out.
There is a daytime morning talk show interview that I referenced a bunch of that episode
because it's funny watching Harrison Ford having to like not be actively uncomfortable.
And he's talking about expanding and trying to do other things.
And then she goes, what about Star Wars 4?
So first of all, I like that she calls it Star Wars 4.
That would make sense.
Right.
And he's like, no.
I think we're done with those.
And she's like, but 20.
And he's only a year or two removed from Jedi at this point,
which is a movie he didn't like making and, right, you know,
had nothing to do in it.
He goes, I think we told that story.
Three is a good number.
We completed the arcs of those characters.
I'm very proud of them.
I owe George Lucas my career.
But he's respectfully like, you know.
And he frames it as, but the story is done.
We said what we needed to say.
And the last I've talked to George,
I don't think making another Star Wars movie
is really in his purview right now.
And if you see that movie,
I'm taking a lot of orders from Teddy Bears
for most of it.
Yeah, I'm looking at Teddy Bear butts.
It's Teddy Bears going like,
you know, get over that hill.
Okay.
Please kill me.
Whatever this guy says.
I can't wait to show Alice.
Jedi.
That's like,
EWalking awesome.
Oh my gosh.
So then the reporter goes,
you say that now, of course.
Right.
15, 20 years from now.
Not incorrect.
Time has passed.
It's smart person.
Right.
And he just goes, no.
Yeah.
And she goes, no, and he goes, nothing's going to change my mind.
30 years later.
And I'm like, oh, things like this are why he built the reputation of he hates on solo.
He hates Star Wars.
He never wants to do it again.
But then it took 30 years and $20 million and Kazden and everything.
It's also just a smart way to keep your quote up.
If you say you'll never do it, you know it's going to cost more to do it.
That's just good business.
I watched him give this reaction where he just says no plainly.
And you're like, he's not an accurate.
Fawkes spiral.
He's just like, no, I actually just know there's nothing they could do to convince me
and make another Star Wars movie.
And then he says, by the way, I'm going to still keep doing Indiana Jones.
We're scripted a new one.
We'll do one of those in two years.
This is one of my favorite things, especially about big-time movie stars.
It's true of some actors, maybe many actors, but particularly big-time stars.
They're on screen and they perform and they show you the most, the deepest, most vulnerable
parts of themselves whilst performing.
But the ones who are really good have no desire to truly be.
understood. And I feel like we live in a time and I certainly feel this way about myself where
everyone is desperate to be understood, to be heard and to be told. I get it, man. Makes sense.
It's going to be okay. We're in it together. And movie stars are like, you don't know shit.
Yeah. And I'll lie right to your face. The real true movie stars, yeah. I mean, I think about it all
the time, but it was the A24 podcast when souvenir was coming out.
Sure. Marty and Joanna Honk.
Correct.
Big two.
And he asked her, like, how are you dealing with this kind of press cycle?
You've never had to do this much for a movie before, right?
And she's like, God, I hate it.
He's like, it's the worst, right?
And she goes, how do you put up with it?
They ask me these questions.
They want me to explain the movie and explain myself, and I don't want to do that.
And he goes, here's what you do.
They ask you, you don't shut them down.
You give them something else.
Yes.
Which I was like that's the-
I have received that many a time in my career.
How do you not feel like you're being cagey and,
and read like you're holding back
Right, don't just say nothing
But if you don't want to answer the question
Right, what's some other piece of information?
I have never been
More excited
And I guess wrong-footed by a director in an interview
Than I was with Joanna Hogg
When I did my whole
What's the last great thing you've seen thing?
She was like, I'm not answering your fucking question
She's like I ate a good sandwich yesterday
I gave you something else
You know what I fired up last night?
Heat
I love heat
Yeah, I remember directed by Michael Man
I was like, what's pumping my fist?
Really, Joanna Hogg?
And she was like, yeah, and, you know, talked about it, you know,
smartly for five minutes, but that just goes to show you.
I had a great time interviewing the Hogster.
She's cool. Yeah, she was cool.
You went out wild.
I did, and I referred to the Hogverse with her because it was eternal daughter.
So I'm like, at this point, we're getting versy.
Phase one.
You know, we're entering a verse.
True.
Face 2. Dad.
No, I bring all this up to say.
But still told us winded.
Yes.
He's told him with a mustache.
I bring all this up to say
that I think Ford had this reputation
of he's not giving us anything.
Right? He's holding back
and he's not offering up an alternative.
I think once he realized
he could lean into the crank bit,
it became a very successful version
of give them something else.
There's a game I can play now
that feeds into an idea
of what public persona Harrison Ford is
that still actually guards myself.
But you hear modern stars
always cite Harrison Ford
as the person they wish they could be.
not just as an actor, but as like a public persona.
Movie stars all the time, while they were on press tours, revealing way too much of themselves,
are like, I just admire the old school of like Harrison Ford.
You keep to yourself.
You're not doing a thousand interviews.
You're not letting people know.
And no one can do that anymore.
And I also think it's fascinating that you're like, he is really the prototype for our modern movie star.
The modern movie star model is based off of having a Han Solo.
and if you're lucky, a Han Solo
and in Indiana Jones
in your back pocket, right?
And it's just like, you're set.
You're set, you can always go back to them
and then you do the other stuff.
The problem is now the guys
don't do what the other stuff,
or if they do the other stuff,
it's like, I'll take a tiny 10-day supporting role
in a small indie thing
to flex myself a little bit.
But they're not cashing the movie star value
on building an entire vehicle
that's difficult outside of, like, DiCaprio,
who's also the last guy
who still kind of does this.
For as much as we like to talk about
whatever 26-year-old he's dating,
we don't really fucking know anything about him.
And he's elusive.
No, there are a couple of guys who I think
operate in a similar way.
Like, obviously Adam Driver is like this.
I think for the most part,
Ryan Gosling is like this.
You know, whether you like him or not,
Chris Pratt is kind of like this.
He doesn't really give you any of his interior life.
But then you'll get a glimpse and he'll be like,
ooh, bless to that, please.
Again, like, if you remove the subjectivity
of the movies that they make,
like he is a kind of restrained star.
No, I agree.
And I feel like Ford has, like, complimented Pratt a lot.
Pratt will make the mistake of doing the, like,
I need to comment on people getting upset about an idea of me that's wrong.
And I want to tell them that they don't know me.
But I won't put forward anything else.
Right.
Which it's like...
And I'm not mad.
I'm not put in the newspaper that I am mad.
You can't do that.
I agree that he's a little bit unknowable,
but he keeps making it feel like he's hiding.
something, which is where you fuck that up.
Of course. And yeah.
Let me ask you guys about one Harrison Ford movie.
Please.
Have either of you seen Hanover Street?
No. What is that?
Okay. Oh, is that the one with Amy Irving?
This is early. This is Leslie Ann Down.
Okay.
Post Star Wars. It's pre- Empire.
Pre-emper. It's Peter Hym's film.
A Peter Himes film from 1979.
Set during World War II, a pilot falls in love
with a British woman
and
it's like a classical
1947 style
post-R-W-W-2 movie
and it's a
beautiful, I think a beautiful film, very underrated.
It was the big discovery
when we did a Big Harrison Ford episode
around Dial of Destiny.
I forgot to call it out
in the witness episode,
but my favorite moment
maybe in the history of Big Pick
is when Amanda is just like,
you know, playing grown up
through the whole Hall of Fame
and then you say witness
and she goes,
Greece!
She's just been waiting to yell.
This movie,
actually the energy that he's bringing to witness, I think, starts here.
It's like, it is his best pure romance film.
And it is one of the only films that is like Mosquito Coast
that is sort of like, I didn't see that one.
You know, like I skipped that one or I missed that one.
And it's post-Star Wars.
It's not, you know, and it's not a tiny movie by any means.
It's a big old period piece, war film.
And it's really, really good.
and I never see anybody talking about it ever.
And so I'm always looking for someone to say, like, have you checked that one out?
I mean, you know, in 79 he does Hanover Street Apocalypse now and the Frisco Kid.
Like, he is drafting off of the Star Wars success in a big way.
And nobody's fucking seen that movie.
Is there a steel?
There's, I don't even think there's a Blu-ray.
Is there a Blu-ray?
It's not even a Twilight Time?
Out of print?
It looks like there's merely a DVD.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
I probably would have acquired that if I could have.
You can get a DVD-2 pack with Hanover Street and Randolph-Rey.
and random hearts.
Hey, there it is.
I'll say it again.
The beginning in the end.
My forelorn Harrison Ford.
Yeah.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Emo Ford.
I do just, I love him so much.
Just to conclude the film, Andre Gregory shoots his fucking ass and they go upstream.
And he's like, all right, are we, you know, as he's dying, Helen Mirren kind of lies to him.
And it's like, yeah, yeah, we're getting to where you want to go.
And then a thousand vultures descend upon his body.
To your point, is there a version of this movie in which he goes,
My Family is Right, Here's a Boat, Let's Sail Back to Mainland, to Civilization.
Instead, this movie is his family sails off with his dying body.
And you're like, where are they going?
How are they going to get there?
And also, in five minutes, they're going to be with a corpse of a man who fucked them up.
And they're heading back.
Kind of happy?
They're kind of happy.
Kind of.
Kind of?
Yeah.
He's a time.
hang.
Like, there's a sense of relief.
Yeah.
But she lies to him.
Yeah.
And that they're heading back where they're going to America.
Yeah.
They're getting the fuck out of it.
I know, but that's a tough journey they have ahead of them.
Yeah, but they're going to be okay.
Helen Mirren will be a waitress or something.
They'll use his dead body as a paddle.
Yeah, fucking chop him up.
Chop him up.
Make a stew.
No?
Pack them in ice.
Send him home.
We covered all the Indian Jones movies.
I covered all the Star Wars movies
We haven't...
Excuse me, we have not turned
the dial of destiny yet
You're right, I'm sorry
That's the one we haven't done
Will it be about time?
Why not?
Why haven't you done that yet?
I mean, we haven't done Mangold
I guess we could.
Yeah, right, of course.
We just tied it up
I forgot, it's not Spielberg.
Sure is it.
Yeah.
You can tell it's not Spilberg
is not very good.
Yeah.
No, I like James Mangold.
I like James Mangold.
I just think that film is not very good.
Yeah, I agree.
I honestly liked it.
It's got a couple things.
I like it.
I don't regret liking it.
I think I like it more than Crystal Skull.
I'm putting that out there.
I like Crystal Skull.
I know you guys like Crystal Skull.
I don't really like it very much.
I think both of them have stuff and fatal fundamental errors in their conception.
And for me, I like slightly more of Scull than Dial.
Oh, and Skull to me is just so much better.
Skull has a point of view.
And Dial of Destiny, I felt lacked one.
Very similarly to the, if they had done this conversation.
I think I said this already,
but if Indy stays with
Archimedes in the past,
I couldn't agree.
I'm like, this movie is amazing.
That's the ending.
This is an amazing way to end this franchise.
I'm so with you.
I'm like, the cowardice of that movie,
is that ending for me
is the only reason to go back
and make a fifth one.
I just,
I thought that would have been clever.
I got excited.
Perfect for when they were...
Guys.
Again, look,
I will argue for this one more time,
which I hate to do.
because I don't like the movie very much.
The whole point of the movie is
Indiana realizing he does have
something to go home to. If he
he's saying, I have nothing
to go home to, I want to stay in the past.
The movie ends that way. It is
a bizarre ending to Indiana Jones
is great and it's brave.
It's brave. The whole point is that
Karen Allen is like, I know life sucks and I know
you're getting old and I know Mutt Williams
died in Vietnam, Rip.
Like, we saluted service. But you
cannot simply just like turn into a Grecian urn, bitch.
Come home with human beings that you love.
This is why maybe we like the mosquito coast and you don't.
But I do like the mosquito.
I think it's a very good movie.
I think it's a very successful movie.
I just don't think it was a commercially appropriate movie.
Wasn't a good play.
Yeah.
I think this movie's great.
I mean, in a way.
I weird.
It's a movie I like to rewatch.
I have talked with people a lot in the last couple weeks about Eddington.
Uh-huh.
I think something about one battle after another, like knocked Eddington
back into people's minds, as you said, when you guys covered.
A lot of, a lot of months ago.
Right.
Like, that is like weird.
Their conversation.
They're too, like, how do we process the last five years movie?
And like, I, Eddington hits harder for me because it is a better reflection of my
worldview.
And I don't find the ending of one battle after another false or pushed.
I buy it completely.
And I, in fact, think it's kind of a miracle that they landed on a Titanic-esque ending
that makes you leave the theater.
feeling good for a movie that should just end in Bummerville
in terms of everything it's built for itself?
One battle? Why would it end in Bummerville?
A lot of bad things are happening in that movie
and continue escalating over and over again.
Right.
And theoretically, you're like,
the resolution of the central emotional conflict of the film
should not be able to solve the external realities of the world
in a way where wherever they've landed,
things are still bad.
And they came up with an ending
that makes the resolution of the character's inner lives
feel like a triumph for us, the audience.
This is very interesting to be Griffin.
Okay, go ahead.
Like Old Rose going back to the fucking Titanic
and you're like...
Gosh, there's so much I can't say about this.
I'm trying to think of what I can say.
What can't you say?
Just because I know what the original ending in one battle was.
I know a lot of other things.
But here's what I can say.
One battle is being called like a movie of the moment
and being described as like a perfect representation.
because it's got these migrant detention centers
and it's got this, you know, society
in the enthrall to fascism.
Right. But it...
Like, the levers of fascism are easy to pull in it.
Right. It's not like it works perfectly for Mr. Lockjaw.
No, but...
Mistakes are made...
Mr. Lockjaw is just a functionary inside of a bigger structure.
Exactly. Like, he's able to use certain things.
Exactly. So,
there are things in a...
Curmal Locker. Really resonate with the world right now.
for the record, you could probably hear this on all the episodes I've done about the movie,
but that is not what makes the movie to me at all.
Like, I actually don't, I think that stuff is very well executed and very smart and beautifully rendered,
but like, I don't care about that stuff as much as I care about the characters, the sense of humor,
and then the kind of meeting points of those two things.
Eddington was made specifically to do what you just said.
Which is supposed to be literally, here's how it felt in 2020.
Yep.
That is not what Paul was.
is doing. I am so
loath to revisit 2020
in any way. Ben and I saw that together
and I'm just like,
this is going so far past
poking a bruise. It has like pushed its
finger past the layers of skin.
It is like scratching nerves.
If we're going to go this deep and this
thorough and really interrogate it, I'm all
here for it. It's the ultimate
feel bad movie. It ends on a
conclusion of probably just beyond
fucked. Everything's bad for everyone.
And I watch it and I'm like, I think this movie's pretty
honest, you know, this makes sense to me.
This all rings true. But it has a sense
of humor. It does. Eddington's very funny.
But the humor is rooted in, like,
calling out things that we all
tried to. Eddington is very much
like the data center will win, right?
Yeah. Like, you know, and that's great. And I love
Eddington. I think it's awesome. I think it's a great movie about
2020. One battle isn't really
about 2020, though, because this movie
could have been made 20 years ago. It's about
how, like, no, no, we don't
give up. Right. Like,
we have children. We have.
new generations.
They have new perspectives we don't understand.
This will continue probably over time.
The whole fucking magic at the ending is that he's using a cell phone.
That he's like, I guess I should engage with the world.
I guess I should belong to whatever's happening here.
And I should let my daughter go figure it out.
But also it's her time to be in charge of this.
And it's not like she's going to go save the world.
She might go get in trouble.
She might die.
But like it's like there's an optimism of like, I need to wake up again, right?
Like that's the magic of it.
Can I say one better?
Where isn't it?
And of course, Joaquin is like, you know, which I love as well.
It's very funny.
One battle spoiler warning for people who have not seen this movie is spring of 2026.
I had someone text me.
Like, hey, can you explain me?
I don't know if I'm just dumb or, and I didn't get this or the movie isn't doing this.
Right.
And you were like, the Christmas adventure.
No, what are good and right.
They just want to get rid of street trash and punks.
No, that, you know, you have the emotional.
reunion of DeCaprio and Chase Infinity.
Father and daughter, right?
Will Bob and Willa.
Cuts to Terminator Lockjaw.
Then he's Christmas adventured
off the face of the board
and then you go back to the resolution
of everything you're saying.
But truly the first time I saw that movie
when Penn gets blasted in the face,
I was like, love that.
And then when he's alive,
I had this momentary twinge of like,
are you sure, PTA?
That was a great ending for the character
that gives me the real ending.
And I was like,
sorry for saying anything.
of that.
Trust you, boss.
I won't talk again.
I agree with your read on the ending scene, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But this is more what I want to identify,
that the text was,
explain to me how they're just able
to return to normal society.
Everything Lockjaw put into motion,
wouldn't that not be solved
by just taking Lockjaw off the board?
And I said, there are a couple interpretations I have, right?
You're like, the machinery is already.
He has created this fault.
flag operation to find them to track them down to make up the story of what they've done.
He sicked all of the power of the military against them.
Even if he's off the board, how are they okay?
How do they just go back to the same home and reset to the same life?
And I said, you can either accept it as that is just a device of the sort of level of
farce that the movie has reached at that point of like it can be represented in a battle
between two people.
or, you know, my inner plot justification of that is basically at some point they identified the mess that Lockjaw created,
that it was driven by his own personal vendettas, that it was an abuse of power.
The Christmas adventurers say that.
And that they cover up everything for everyone.
Absolutely.
They are saying in that meeting where they're going to take him out.
They're like, and now he's like, there's the line that one of them repeats where he's like, they hit the school.
where you can tell that they're like, this is too much exposure for us.
This is all this mess for no reason except obviously he wants to be a Christmas adventurer.
The question then, we understand.
You walk through dark tunnels to get to this meeting.
Right.
This is a very secret.
With you on that.
The question on that just becomes, why don't they wipe the two of them out as well?
Because, like, they don't care.
I mean, like, that's my read.
That's my read.
Yeah, I mean, I think that the French 75 doesn't interest the Christmas adventures at all.
Not one bit.
They don't view them as powerful enough
to fuck with them.
Of course not.
The First 75 is like defunct at this point, right?
It's sort of like a loser.
He's not going to make any change against what they're up to.
And that is a huge part.
I mean,
that to me was also a huge part of the point of the movie
and that I think actually makes it somewhat more
philosophically in connection to Eddington.
And I think PTA is definitely like,
the forces are still more powerful than you.
You can have hope, but they're way bigger
than what we can do in ways, right, you don't even see and all that.
And AI, big tech occupy the same roles in those two movies.
And the difference is that Eddington ends with a guy who you've watched
Mosquito Coast himself into chaos being like a vegetable in a bed,
having to watch his mother-in-law get fucked.
He's the mayor!
It's like even the bad guy lives in hell.
We're all fucked.
And one battle after another is like, these two characters have each other and they've learned
something from this and they have a good perspective
and they live to fight another day and you can't give up hope.
The needle drop at the end of Eddington
is so good. There's a lot of talk
about the needle drop at the end of one battle which is great, very
recognizable, but the Bobby Gentry song
Courtyard, which is so haunting
as you look out onto the AI center
and you're like, Ari is really good
at a final song.
But also the use of fireworks
and that and the Maria Carey's song
and Beau. Do we think One Battle
has one best picture at the time this episode comes out?
This episode will come out.
April 19th.
Do you think so, Sean, you've seen Marty Supreme,
which we saw.
There are no crazy release date changes for new releases.
We'll be able to vet this very cleanly in six months.
But I did, having just seen Marty,
which is the last big player.
Yes.
Which I don't think is the best,
I think we'll be nominated for Best Picture,
but it's not a contender to win.
That's, you know.
Timmy seems to be whatever.
I think Shalameh is a very good chance to win.
We're recording this two days after the first screening of Marty.
I didn't go and went to Tron.
I think that.
Marty and sinners will siphon votes from one battle that they will not siphon from Hamnet.
Well, I haven't seen Hamnet yet. I shouldn't be so dismissive.
And I've seen Hamlet and I like it just kind of feels like one of the things for the Oscars are like,
we have our finger on the pulse and it's saying Hamnet.
Yes, I do.
I am already preparing for that nightmare scenario.
Hamnet.
Well, the nightmare scenario was last year Amelia Perez.
That would have been the fully mystery.
Like Hamid appears to be a well-regarded film.
See, that actually would have been better, at least from my emotional state,
because it would have been so absurd that we could be like,
this doesn't matter.
Like, this is complete nonsense.
Conan comes out and he's like, well, there are no more Oscars.
When Green Book won best picture, I was cackling.
I was like, they had an opportunity to do the funniest thing.
Yes.
You're in the hellscape and it's just like, let's dance together.
And Amelia Press would have been that times 10.
It would have been.
This is more like, oh, yeah.
There's like 30 of these in Oscar history.
I was about to say it feels like a very obvious Oscar choice, right?
Yes, it does.
And you know, Amanda and I have been saying that there is a little bit of saving private Ryan, Shakespeare and love in reverse.
But Shakespeare and love is funny and charming and has kissing.
And it sounds like Hamlet is one battle after another.
I know, right.
Is that one battle is the Shakespeare in terms of type of movie.
Right.
Hamnet is the Spielberg in terms of her.
But it has Shakespeare.
But he's over.
Saving Private Ryan was the boomer masterpiece.
big scale and saving
they're like the fun house mirror image
yeah because Hamlet I haven't seen
it but it's not that big scale of movie right
and I don't again like don't hate it
and it's not the villain of the year like I do
think that that's going to happen pretty quickly where like the bros
are going to be like
Hamleth what the fuck dude and there's
there are some beautiful things about Hamlet
but it winning over the three movies
I named that I would be very
I would be unhappy I also
I don't need a second best picture in five years
I also think that
the people I've spoken to have seen Hamnet
I've not seen it yet
Hamlet
who are the most resistant
the most cynical about it
No Ham Hat the birthday boy sketch
That's best picture worthy
Absolutely put it up
It never got a theatrical release
Could you do a limelight
And have it qualify this year
Now carry on carry
The people you know who have seen Hamlet
And are the most allergic and resistant to it
Are like and yet I cannot deny
The fucking last five minutes
Yeah last 20 minutes is
powerful stuff.
There seems to be a last 20, last 10, last 5.
Doesn't she just fire off that fucking Max Richter
track again, though?
That does happen. To me, that is, I mean, obviously
that, as the wallpaper music,
that hits hard, but it's
just, there's
some staging that really works well. I haven't read the novel, I also
didn't know it was coming. I'm pumped for it because I
like Shakespeare. Yes. And if
you do, this is a good movie about liking
Shakespeare. Now, I don't like children in peril, though.
Well, that's, and that's,
what I'm a little worried about.
I have some bad news.
You might have a tough go of things.
Mosquito Coast does...
Also, as children in peril,
although they all pull through.
That is the happy ending of the movie is the children are...
The right guy dies.
And River Phoenix gets to be indie because of this movie.
Exactly.
Did we even say that?
For sure, that's why that's the connection.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
He and Martha Plympton Day for years,
and that leads to them both being in running an empty together.
A movie I adore.
Great movie.
Back in the conversation?
Because of one battle.
Very similar, yeah.
This film, and we're going to do the
Oh, oh, oh, one piece of news breaking on deadline.
I want you guys to hear her to her.
He's divorcing her husband and wants to get dinner with me.
No, he appears to be happily married and Anouly has a baby,
and they've got a great Nuna stroller that I've seen them parading around in paparazzi pictures.
A Nuna.
A Nuna.
Rava?
I think it looks like a Rava to me.
Now, love Rava.
I personally, I have a baby Zen.
I'm a city guy.
I needed a lightweight stroller, but we have a baby Zun as well.
They're great.
A double?
Well, though.
Our double stroller is a, I forget what it's called.
I mean, that thing.
There's no lightweight double stroller, unfortunately.
We got about as lightweight as you get, but it's a,
Sersher Ronan will be playing Linda McCartney in Sam Mendez's The Beatles,
a four-film cinematic event.
That feels like something she doesn't need to do.
I was going to say, the casting seems appropriate,
but does she really need to do that?
The big four, I get it.
Those are plum rolls.
No disrespect to the late great Linda McCartney.
Little overqualified.
That must tell us specifically what era were in then.
Yeah.
But although I think maybe will each film be in a different era or something?
I thought that was the idea.
Maybe it's over a long period of time.
I thought it was, I thought they were going to.
Or is it like Zerica, you have to play them all together and they all sync up for film.
Yeah, Mike Myers is playing all four.
I hope each movie is one unbroken two-hour close-up shot of the same conversation.
A continuous conversation.
You got to see the next three to make sense.
of this.
It's just the meeting
where they try to name the band.
And so you watch the wringle one
and he only says something once every 25 minutes.
He's like eating a sandwich.
Oh, this is good.
Okay.
Octopus is good.
Don't do the box office game.
I need to pee.
Okay.
Oh, okay.
Should we talk while he pees?
Yeah.
And Sean,
why you're in the bathroom think of me.
Griff, have you seen,
you've seen any other sort of fall films yet?
I don't think so.
You know, I'm a...
Yeah, your Blanky's ballot remains, you know, it's just going to start to gather steam.
But I'm saying I'm a plebe. I go see films with the working people of America.
Or occasionally you get invited to a fancy screening.
Yeah, occasionally.
For a while.
Not that many, though.
No, no, not that many.
No, I feel like...
What's the worst film you've seen this year?
That's a good question.
Mr. Peanut's sitting very happily at the bottom of my list.
I still have not visited the electric state.
Believe me, man.
You're going to fire that movie out.
and be like, yes, I know it will be bad, but like it's an action movie.
Like, it'll be watchable, like, right?
It'll, and it's like, it will be really hard to focus on it.
My bottom list, I feel like I did some reorganizing recently.
My bottom film I have right now, I got a pretty tight bottom five.
And I'd say the order of these five is a little interchangeable.
Can I guess the Jurassic World Rebirth is down there?
It's absolutely down there.
Mm-hmm.
No disrespect to our president.
Is our president down there?
No district our president.
Right now I have Brave New World in the dead last spot.
It's a tough one to defend.
Where I was even like thinking between Jurassic World and Brave New World and I'm like,
Jurassic World is well shot.
Yeah, it looks right.
Like Brave New World looks bad.
This is true.
It has nothing I can recommend.
I'm not even like, you know who's good in a supporting role.
No one scores it.
Ford's better in it than anyone else.
And yet I wouldn't be like he punches through.
And then the rest of my bottom five is Sneaks, the CGI animated film.
Oh, with Talking Sneakers?
Correct.
I haven't seen that one.
Martin Lawrence plays an old-timer sneaker in a performance I would describe as awake.
Good.
I'm glad they got them awake.
Snow White is in my bottom five.
That's in my bottom five, too.
No district for our queen, Rachel.
And then Alto Knights.
Ah, right.
I haven't checked in with those nights yet.
That's my real, like, terror bottom five.
That was my, and Sneaks, I will admit, I had perverse fun,
watching, but I cannot pretend it is good in
anyway. The other four I was
like, clung my eyes out.
The other four are like
major corporate art that failed,
you know? Yes, yes. For sure.
You guys are doing bottom fives of 2025?
Yeah, I just asked him when he had down there.
I had to do something in the bathroom.
What, best actor
field of this year? In the
1980. I know Ford never had a shot, but I would
certainly not. Put him in. But he got
he got a, I think he got
like a Golden Globe nom maybe, didn't he?
Because they wanted him to show up.
Yeah, I mean, that was through gridded teeth. I can't
believe you would say that the Golden Globes would behave in such a
craven manner in the 1980s.
It looks like it got Golden Globe nominations for best
actor and best score. Maurice Scharer,
who also did a wonderful score for a witness, which I feel like we didn't
shout out of enough. A very scinty witness score.
The Oscar nominees that year, it's a good year.
This is the platoon year.
Sure. But Charlie Sheen does not get a nomination.
As Charlie Sheen would put it, I won best picture at 20 and I
wasn't even warm yet.
It is a phrasing, I think.
think about all the time. I won best
picture. Well, you know what phrasing I think about.
Flip the menu. Flip in the menu. Do you hear that?
Charlie Sheen talking about experimenting with the
sexuality, sexuality.
He flipped the menu. He said like, I flipped the menu.
Which I just thought was perfect.
He spent hours looking at the front of the menu and you go,
what else is on the back?
You haven't watched the dock, right?
No. Flip in the menu is a 10 minute conversation.
That sounds good. And he is hot committed to that one
metaphor. He never goes off of it. It's good.
And they're like, so what
kind of things did you do with men? And he's like, well, you know, on the back of the menu,
there's desserts. Like, he just, everything is filtered through the menu. We saw the poll
quote of the menu thing and we were obsessed with it. And then it's so much better the way it plays out.
I got to watch that. I got to flip the menu. The Oscar nominees that year were Paul Newman for
the color of money. He wins. He wins. Bob Hoskins for Mona Lisa, who was sort of the critics pick
of the year, a wonderful performance. And he was always arguing that in any other year he would have.
I'm a one, mate.
Yeah.
I'm Super Mario.
I thought it wasn't for the careers for the performance.
I'm going to get King Cooper.
Yeah.
It's good to talk.
Mushroom makes me a little taller.
Just a little bit.
Yeah.
Like, Guizalmos related to me.
Does that make sense?
I think so.
Neither one of us is Italian.
You got Dexter Gordon for round midnight.
It's a really cool nomination.
And that's kind of a cool movie.
You know, right.
I like that movie a lot, but it sticks down a little bit.
He sacks it up, baby.
This guy's playing in that same.
Yeah.
William Tarbignet, great director.
Like, it's cool that that movie got acknowledged.
William Hurt for Children of Alessar God.
So I think this is his third nomination in, like, three years?
It's broadcast.
Spider Woman.
I think it's maybe Spider Woman, then, children, then broadcast.
I can't remember.
But he's in his hot period.
He's just one best actor the year before?
Yes, correct.
And then James Woods for Salvador.
Really good performance by a normal guy.
A Z-Channel nomination.
That's part of the big narrative of that doc
is that that movie came out and flopped
and then found such a second life
within six months on Z-Channel
that it was the big surprise
that that got in there.
He's excellent in that movie.
He's an amazing actor.
Do you not feel like there's...
But I would sub-out.
You know, I hurt, get, you know, whatever.
Get him out of here.
Do you not feel, like, to some degree,
we talked about,
despite him being totally deserving
of that nomination,
there was something a little condescending
in the Academy being like
congratulations Harrison Ford.
We take you seriously now that you're not
doing little boy shit, right?
With witness. With witness. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're like, we're giving you an Oscar not just for the
performance, but for thank you for growing up
and being like an adult, serious actor.
And this is like, no, no, two adults.
Truly, and then they never nominate him again.
They never nominated again.
My question to that is, when would they have?
The fugitive's the most obvious one.
You know, that's the one where it's like, well, that movie got a best
picture nomination. You know my argument.
What is it?
Best supporting actor Morning Glory?
I need eggs from a chicken.
I, you know, his clearest Oscar bait is regarding Henry.
That's the film.
And that movie didn't go over.
It didn't go.
Like, all my Fordnoms are like end with mosquito coast, I think.
And my spreadsheet.
I just gave him the credit for Han Solo and Indiana Jones and all the shit.
There's a credit for.
Up until that point.
And then it feels like witness, they're like, congratulations.
You've entered the room.
And on mosquito coast, they're like, no.
your place. Go back to just
being a matinee idol. My nominee's
that you're a Hoskins and Newman plus Kurt Russell,
big trouble in Little China. Cool.
Jeff Goldblum and the fly and
Ford. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, you do put Ford in there.
Yeah. Great. Great. I respect
you. I like Gene Hackman
and Hoosiers that year, but
that's another kind of like... Never been a Hoosiers
guy. I really
love the first half hour of Hoosiers.
Yeah. The rest of it, I'm like, it's good.
But like, just the whole like
guys in a barn, it's five in
the morning. All that shit's good.
Despite, you know, working for Bill Simmons for like 15 years, I just had never been into
Hoosiers. And Bill likes Hoosiers, but I feel like...
He respects Hoosers. At a time, he loved it. He has pointed out its many flaws many times,
but I think he has a big relationship to it. I like that movie. And, you know, that's a weird
one, too, because Hopper was nominated that year, but not for Frank Booth. He was nominated for
Hoosiers, but he's good in Hoosiers. He's good. He provided them with a safer nomination
option. Yes. But Frank Booth would have been an absolutely sick. Dement.
went into the cool shit.
Very true.
The box office...
Yeah.
What's it?
No, I was going to say
the box office,
this movie did not perform well.
No, it did not.
It opens on Thanksgiving,
which I'm not sure how I...
I'm not sure about that decision.
Yeah.
Do you like that decision?
I think Thanksgiving release didn't mean the same thing
it meant back then that it does today,
but I suppose so.
I think that's more of an Oscar confidence.
Right.
It's also, of course, it's, you know, limited to release.
Yeah.
But so it's not in the...
top five, of course.
I'm just saying it's not like in 86. They were like, we're hoping
Mosquito Coast clears $60 million for the
five day. No, they were not.
It's number one at the box office. But it's not a movie
the family is going to want to see together.
And I think we might have done this box office because number
one is a movie we covered on Patreon.
It's the fourth film in a beloved franchise,
which is sort of the biggest hit
this franchise has had in a minute. It's Star Trek for
The Voyage home?
Wales. Wales. San Francisco.
It's Star Trek for Plummer
or is that three? That's six.
Six.
Lloyd is three.
Christopher Lloyd.
Okay.
And four is the one where they go back in time to San Francisco and there's whales.
Yes, of course.
Right.
Four is a little sort of pleasant.
Our wicked ways.
Like, you know,
four is a movie that anyone can see without really any knowledge of Star Trek required.
Four is a fish out of water comedy.
It's good.
Okay.
It's not my favorite because it's the least sci-fi.
It's six I love.
Six rocks.
Sean, do you know the story of how they landed on the premise for four?
Eddie Murphy, under contract at Paramount,
talks about how much he loved Star Trek
and that he'd like to be in a Star Trek movie.
And they're like, fuck, what's a premise
where we could have Eddie Murphy with the Star Trek Bridge crew
doing his modern day?
He can't be in sci-fi mode.
So they were like, oh, they go through a warm hole
and come back to 80s San Francisco
and Eddie Murphy's there with them.
And then Amy Murphy was like,
I don't want to be the fucking fifth lead in a Star Trek movie.
And so they rewrite his part to be the mom from seventh heaven.
who is their present-day San Francisco ally and becomes a love interest.
But that was meant to be Eddie Murphy.
And Eddie said, I'll make Pluto Nash.
Well, Eddie said I'll make the Golden Child, which is his 86 movie.
Not a good film.
Not a particularly good film.
Watch it for the first time recently.
Yeah, more like the Michael Richie would happen, bro.
Bronze Child.
It used to be beautiful.
It's a weird move from Richie.
Number two is an animated film that is not produced by those cowards at Disney.
Is it a bluth?
Yeah.
Is it the Rats of Nymn.
It's not.
It's the second film, I believe.
It's not land before time?
I think that's third.
I can't remember the order now.
It must be an American tale.
It's an American tale.
So it's so funny you bring this up because my...
There are no cats.
As we are recording, my wife and daughter flying to New York City from Los Angeles.
They're going to see that big green lady out their window.
They sure will.
And my wife said, can you send me all the letterbox lists you made regarding
Alice. So there is a public
list of all the things that she has seen
and then there are a couple of private lists that are
things that she could see at some point.
Vetted possible Alice movie. I think this
will work for her. My
wife loves Anastasia
and wants to show it to her. We have not yet done it.
We haven't done any of the blues.
I was about to say, Anastasia like all
Bluths, it's just a little scarier than those
Disney movies. It is. Just a little more intense.
So I made a bluth
letterbox list and I was like, where do we
go first? Is it
Is it American Tale?
Is it land before time?
I think it's one of those two.
You start with tightening.
Of course.
No.
She's a huge Damon head, though.
So that'll really fill out her Damon film.
And many drivers.
She loves the Joss Meaden pass on anything.
An Edland.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We, uh, and then I did realize she has seen Thumbelina.
Oh, that's right.
Which kind of stinks.
That's a bad one.
Yeah.
Sought in theaters.
American Tale is kind of scary, though.
Much like Killing before time.
It's just a little scary.
It's also emotionally intense.
Yeah.
It is.
It is.
Yeah.
But I saw it when I was a kid
and I fucking loved it.
I loved in America.
Yeah.
You maybe,
do you start with Fival
going west?
Do you go west first?
That's so confusing.
We're like,
we're Sergio Leoning
in reverse, right?
It's like,
you gotta go once upon a time
in America first.
She hasn't met,
then you got to go west.
She hasn't met Fival.
She doesn't have the reference base.
I definitely saw West first.
I did too because I think it was in theater
a little younger.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Number three of the box office
is a film we've covered
as well,
and I already mentioned it.
It was one
the biggest hits of the year.
We already covered it?
Yep.
On Patreon.
Only on Patreon.
Normal app.
Normal app.
Something went awry?
No, we're just being insane in COVID.
Okay, so it's a COVID commentary.
Yep.
It's not aliens.
No, 1986.
I mean, aliens is 1926.
I guess.
Yeah, thank you.
86, COVID insanity.
It's Crocodile Dundee.
Maybe the best single day of
podcasting we've ever done.
We are riding high and then we are
nuts.
It is like...
What was the other episode
that day?
Crocodile Dundee in Los Angeles.
We did the whole trilogy
all in one day.
I think we used to do
a little bit more.
Basically,
birth of the first child.
My memory is that was one
of our last records
A before your daughter
was born and B
before the COVID vaccine
was announced.
So it was right at that
kind of threshold of like
is it another year of this?
The woke vaccine to be clear.
Right.
And we were like,
let's just knock out
all three of these.
in a row over Zoom and we lose
our fucking minds.
First one's good. Have you seen it? Crocodile Dun D?
Yeah, of course. I mean, have you seen it lately, I guess.
Not since I was 14, but I remember enjoying
it quite a bit. Very enjoyable. First one still hit. Two I've seen
and thought was okay. Two New York.
Two opens as well as any movie
has ever opened. Especially with dynamite.
It's incredible. In the Hudson River.
That's right. That's enjoyable. And then it becomes his
bad Rambo Rip.
Right. And it barely has jokes.
That's the origin of that's not a knife. That's
No, that's the first.
That's the first one.
They run on the subway.
They don't, do they run it back on the subway?
They run everything back.
Yeah.
Okay.
But everything iconic happens in the first movie.
Nothing iconic happens in the second movie except fishing with dynamite in the Hudson River.
Did you know that famed fantasy football expert Matthew Barry wrote Crocodile Dundee in Los Angeles?
But we definitely covered that.
Yeah.
We did.
To the point that I was like, is Wikipedia misleading?
Nope.
It's accurate.
Like, is this a broken link?
Those episodes also led to one of Ben's greatest ideas.
a key Ben should be running Hollywood.
Why is he not in every development
moment? We're during
Crockettled Doddee in Los Angeles, which is based
around him having a young son. Ben said,
why isn't his son a knife?
Just a giant knife.
A knife with legs and arms.
That sounds like something that
Sora can make for you ready.
Yeah, exactly. Now, easy.
No, we want that handmade quality.
I assume Sora is like the new head of Ampest
by this point.
Number fourth box office is a re-release.
of a Disney film.
I assume it's Sean's favorite film of all time.
I know this as well.
You assume it's Sean's favorite?
So that's a backhanded joke?
It's a backhand.
Yeah. Song of the South?
There you go. That's right.
In 1986, Disney decided we need to hear the song
again.
We...
What, no jokes now, Griffin?
No, this is what I was going to say.
I've never seen this film. I've never seen this film.
I've only seen Zippity Doodah,
which was included on a VHS.
I've seen that I had that was like a compilation
of songs.
Couch Potato video.
had a ripped Canadian VHS
and I would be like, what this movie?
And they would be like, stop asking the question.
I'm almost dirt.
I don't know when the Disney channel started,
but I can, I feel pretty confident
that we taped this off the Disney channel.
It's probably, you know, was...
And it was still being re-released.
In the 80s.
Right. It just never got an American home video release.
Right.
It did in other countries, I saw a bootleg.
It is straight up available to rent at Video Tech
on the east side of Los Angeles right now.
Yeah.
I feel like...
And doing that doesn't put you on any kind of list.
I haven't done it, so I wouldn't know.
But I'm just telling people that if they would like to, they can.
Drew McQueenie shared a story recently on Doe Boys about Michael Jackson stealing the Laserdess copy, the video store he worked at had.
No, I was just going to say, when I went into my memory palace, I was trying to think of a good example.
But the fantasy joke setup of forcing the opinion on the other person on Mike.
Right, right.
You do it to Chris a lot.
This sort of like, CR, congrats on Jimmy Kimmel getting kicked off the other.
Finally, you're trying to...
Big week for you.
Please don't demystify all of my moves.
I only have three.
Just keep those tight.
Ben, if you can just carve that out, I'd really appreciate it.
I've got very little to go on these days.
Good moves.
Number five, the box office, we've also mentioned it one best actor this year.
It's a legacy sequel.
Color Mine.
Yep.
Which is really good.
It is.
That is a movie that I spent my whole childhood thinking was bad or kind of whatever,
because its rep was like, yeah, they gave, you know, Paul Newman an apology Oscar.
You had to make a sequel to The Hustler.
Marty was, and then you watch it, and you're like, better than basically any movie that exists.
It's the most five-star movies I've ever seen.
I know we've been going for a while, but I now need to ask this question.
Okay.
What would Harrison's color of money be?
Obviously, it's not a literal legacy sequel because he's done those and those are side-pop.
He's done every legacy sequel available, right?
I'm saying, what is the movie that would make them go, fuck, we have to give Harrison Ford the Oscar?
John Book.
It's a good point, though.
Like, bring book back?
I'm like, what is the type of role?
Who would he work with?
Is there an existing figure, a fucking, like, piece of littering the movie?
Trinking the movie.
But doesn't it have to be witness because he already played this character?
Yeah, I'm moving the legacy sequel.
I mean, oh, okay.
Well, then it's something else.
But, I mean, I guess you're talking about him working with a real director on a non-legasequel thing.
Right.
He's become the king of the legist sequel.
So I'm putting that.
aside. I'm more saying the feeling of color
money coming out and people being like, what are we
supposed to do? Not give him the Oscar?
I do think that 42 is probably
as close as he gets to that kind
of thing. And he's like a 20-layer
ham sandwich in that movie. And that movie is
like just okay. I'm
the president of the baseball.
President of the Dodgers.
I expect you to not. I just feel like
every... He's like you weren't that locked into the movie.
Branch Ricky.
This big fucking bushy eyebrows
and the gar. He's way over the
Hoping it on.
Yeah.
Also the top 10.
You've got the Chuck Norris, Lou Gossett film Firewalker, a film I've never seen, a canon film.
You've got Francis Ford Coppola's, you know, fairly underrated Peggy Sue got married.
You've got Soul Man.
Chris's other.
I mean, Sean, you, Chris.
You were making a joke that I would make it Chris, but of course, now I will make it at Griffin,
which is, of course, a movie that you would like to reclaim right now on the podcast.
Before we recorded, you said, you know, I've been thinking about 1986 and the,
and the landscape of films
and what made me laugh when I first saw it
as I was rediscovering.
It won't let you have a soul, man.
We all know that Paul Newman stole
C. Thomas Howell's Oscar.
Number nine, stand by me.
A film, I will admit,
is sort of similar to the Goonies for me.
I have never been able to really get into it.
So funny you say that.
One of the other podcast that I did this week
was the New York Times book podcast,
and the subject was
non-horror Stephen King Film at F.
Was it with Gilbert?
It was with Gilbert.
It was a super fan.
Of course, Gilbert, one of the world-renowned Stephen King experts and a mutual friend of
ours.
And Gilbert kind of set up the episode by saying the exact same thing.
Because for me, I don't really care about standby me that much.
It's not a big movie for me.
It's just, yeah, it's just one of those things where I'm like, well, I wasn't there.
I wasn't there for this movie.
And I wasn't there for the nostalgic era it evokes.
I don't think, I think the kids are good in it.
Right.
And I think it, like, strikes the correct tone by and large.
But it's definitely generational past those things.
I think many people, our age and younger, have claimed it as their own after discovering it for the first time.
It's tender or whatever.
Just, yeah, never good for me.
But talk about a fucking River Phoenix.
You know, 100% River Phoenix is happening.
He's really good in that movie.
And then number 10 is Top Gun.
The biggest movie of the year.
Yep, absolutely.
And when this was released, Top Gun was number 10 at the box office.
Top Gun was released in May.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a different time.
We used to be a proper country.
We used to be a proper country.
We used to be a proper country.
So, yeah, of course,
mosquito coast,
you would think
made nothing,
but actually, you know,
it ends up,
well, no,
$10 million.
Yeah.
It's not very good.
No, 14, 14 domestic total.
Yeah. So, yeah, pretty bad.
And it costs 40? No, it costs like 20-something,
but still, like,
I think they could not recoup
recoup money.
Like, you know.
Which is fine.
It's okay. Harrison Ford tended to make really
successful films and
Weir goes on from
this to dead poets or is there
something in between?
No. It's dead poets. Yeah.
Who's doing dead poets? Do you guys know?
Nia da Costa. It's already been recorded. We can call that because it's in the
can. That's a spoiler. Is that a big movie for her? Yeah.
It's a big movie for her and she went to a boarding school
like that. And wanted to be a poet.
Really? She did want to be a poet.
Yeah, we get into all of it.
It's a good episode.
Okay.
It's very literal.
We had fun.
We've been potting so long.
And I'm sorry, Sean, you've really been subjected to a lot of us this week.
No.
I know you enjoy it.
And I've been delighting in it.
I know you enjoy it.
But this is the final of four recordings that I have done with your extended universe.
Yes, exactly.
No, I'm very, I hope that your listeners are okay with a divorced and double-exposed big picture situation.
Well, I was like, thank.
This actually is timing out well in that the live episode we did has published,
and then my episode that I did on Big Picture will come out soon.
And then these will come out six months later.
So it's like, you know, it's not overloading it.
And then it's Big Picture Week on Blank Check.
And then we got to, what are you doing next solo?
That's a good question.
Let me get back to you on that.
Okay.
Think about it.
I might see one.
I might look ahead of the release calendar.
But yes, no, there will be a back-to-back big picture run on this podcast six months from now.
Right.
If you wanted to do a deep dive in the Harmony, Corinne, I'm down.
Deep dive like into how so
How so how we could just like go through
The new stuff?
Where you out on kids?
I'm obsessed.
Okay.
I bought him the umbrella, the hardback.
For listeners at home, they can't see me, but I'm gyrating.
Okay.
Where are you at on Beachbum?
Beachbum is like fun.
Hasn't stuck with me that one.
Like it feels very like
I've like been smoking weed all day.
And let's like, let's just hang out.
Okay, here's the big question.
Where are you at on Baby Invasion?
Okay, someone recently, because I was talking shit on it, I, like, haven't really watched any of his, like, weird VR AI, whatever.
Edge Lurd.
Yeah, exactly.
I haven't watched any of it, but someone was like, listen, he's always been a cutting edge filmmaker.
Give it a chance.
Watch the films.
Don't just, like, just don't regurgitate what everyone else is saying.
But there definitely comes a point where when, if that's your thing and you're getting older, you might not be able to do it anymore.
Like, beyond the cutting edge.
I know.
Yeah, it just might not hit in the same way it would maybe for someone who's, you know, Gen Z.
I do think that any Edge Lord production commentary from you guys would be amazing.
Amazing.
My head hurts.
Agrodrift commentary.
They're like, I am the world's greatest assassin.
Have you seen that?
Has you guys seen Agritriff?
I have not.
If Edge Lord, if Edge Lord runs its course soon enough, we could just do Edge Lord as a Patreon.
Assuming it doesn't.
I haven't seen Baby Invasion yet, but I saw AgroDrift in theaters.
And it was an experience.
It was an experience.
Very good.
Okay.
So Harmony Corinne, that's what you want to do.
With love.
Okay.
Those films are like not available.
Yeah, it's true.
It's really hard to see a lot.
Gummo is in the criterion collection now.
But, you know, Julian Donkey Boy, where do you get that?
YouTube, baby.
YouTube.
That has to be coming from someone at some point.
Yeah, where's my dogma box?
My dogma steal.
Seriously.
Where's my criterion issue?
Oh, well, dogma I was going to say.
We know where to buy that.
Dogma. Dogma. Abitagma.
Umbrella. Beanie included.
Thank you for being here.
This is so fun.
Everyone should listen to Big Picture
and Harmony Corrin Month coming to main feed soon.
Absolutely. Yeah.
A true deep dive.
But Ben's solo episodes.
We're not going to be on.
You and Amanda both on vacation.
I'm doing a Raftery miniseries this year.
You let just let Ben go off
about Harmony Corinne twice a week for a month.
I'm just doing popper, just rambling.
Yeah, I'll talk to Bill Simmons about that.
I'll say this.
This is far off.
Can I do the fucking Masters of the Universe episode with you guys?
I would love nothing more.
I think we got to do that.
When is that due out?
June.
That sounds so good.
Okay, so let's say that.
Booked.
Thank you all for listening.
Please remember to rate review and subscribe.
Tune in next week for Dead Poets Society.
with Neida Costa.
Yeah. Queen of the Bone Temple
herself. You'll have seen it. You'll have seen it. You'll have moved in.
Bones. And as always.
I'm completely blanking.
What are the best bits we've done in this episode?
Everyone's just on their laptop now.
Yeah, just spend three hours. Come on.
I hope the listener thinks of me when they're going to the bathroom.
There you go. I mean, look, honestly, they do.
Because it's a podcast. And people listen to a podcast while they're
It's heard music.
Langcheck with Griffin and David is hosted by Griffin Newman and David Sims.
Our executive producer is me, Ben Hossley.
Our creative producer is Marie Barty Salinas, and our associate producer is AJ McKeon.
This show is mixed and edited by AJ McKeon and Alan Smithy.
Research by J.J. Birch.
Our theme song is by Lane Montgomery and the Great American novel, with additional music by
Alex Mitchell.
Artwork by Joe Bowen, Ollie Moss, and Pat Reynolds.
Our production assistant is Minnick.
Special thanks to David Cho,
Jordan Fish, and Nate Patterson for their production help.
Head over to blankcheckpod.com for links to all of the real nerdy shit.
Join our Patreon, Blank Check Special Features for exclusive franchise commentaries and bonus episodes.
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This podcast is created and produced by Blank Check Productions.
