Kermode & Mayo’s Take - What did Mark make of the BAFTAs?

Episode Date: February 26, 2026

Some exciting news—The Take is now on Patreon: www.patreon.com/kermodeandmayo. Become a Vanguardista or an Ultra Vanguardista to get video episodes of Take Two every week, plus member‑only chat r...ooms, polls and submissions to influence the show, behind‑the‑scenes photos and videos, the monthly Redactor’s Roundup newsletter, and access to a new fortnightly LIVE show—a raucous, unfiltered lunchtime special with the Good Doctors, new features, and live chat so you can heckle, vote, and have your questions read out in real time. Mark actually went to the BAFTAs this year IRL—and this week’s Take kicks off with a rundown of the winners and all the big moments of the ceremony, including of course some reflections on its controversy from Mark and Simon and from your correspondence. In celebration of Pixar’s 40th anniversary, Chief Creative Officer Pete Docter is our special guest this week. As the creative force behind some of Pixar’s most beloved films—including Up, Monsters Inc. and Inside Out, he joins Simon and Mark to celebrate the studio’s milestone birthday, and to look ahead to the release of their brand-new adventure, Hoppers. Featuring reflections on four decades of storytelling, a peek behind the animation curtain, and the secrets to making grown adults crumple into sobbing wrecks (in a good way). Mark’s Hoppers review is still to come next week—but first it’s another packed show with the Good Doctors’ verdicts on all the biggest big screen releases of this week. First up, the latest instalment in a horror institution, Scream 7, where the body count rises and we’re once again promised that this really is the last one of these films (bet it isn’t though). Remember what Mark thought of the last one? Well, you’re in for a ranty treat... Then there’s EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert—so anyone who knows how Mark feels about Elvis will know we’re in for a ravey treat. Plus The Testament of Ann Lee, a Shaker musical exploring faith, fervour, and ecstatic song starring Amanda Seyfried. You can hear her and director Mona Fastvold on last week’s show too. Finally, Sirât—the nerve-jangling desert-set tale from Oliver Laxe that is blowing minds left right and centre. Mark throws his hat into the ring. Plus all the usual delights of the Take: the box office top 10, the unpredictable and unbridled joy of the Laughter Lift, and your always-excellent correspondence. Thanks for listening! Timecodes 00:00:00 Show starts 00:15:21 Scream 7 review 00:24:54 Box Office Top 10 00:38:38 Pete Docter interview 00:56:49 The Testament of Ann Lee review 01:07:38 Laughter Lift 01:10:16 EPiC review 01:21:23 Sirât review You can contact the show by emailing correspondence@kermodeandmayo.com or you can find us on social media, @KermodeandMayo Please take our survey and help shape the future of our show: https://www.kermodeandmayo.com/survey EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/take Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! A Sony Music Entertainment production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts To advertise on this show contact: podcastadsales@sonymusic.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Here, Mark, what do the films die my love? I'm still here, and it was just an accident, all having common. This is a set up for another of those terrible laughter lift jokes, isn't it? Which I thought we'd done with for another week. No, this is no laughing matter. Okay, go on. Well, not only are they some of your favourite film recommendations from last year, but there are also all films you'll be able to stream anywhere in the world when you travel abroad, even in geo-locked territories. How's that, then? Because with one click, NordVPN can change your device's virtual location so you can access all the content that you need when you're abroad. And it only applies to those three films you name. That seems odd.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Well, no, that would be a strange business model. Indeed, you can stream anything anywhere. With NordVPN, you can travel the world faster than a private jet, minus the carbon footprint. Unwrap a huge discount on NordVPN by heading to NordVPN.com slash take. Plus, with our link, you'll get an extra four months free on the two-year plan, and it's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee. Check the link in the description. This episode is brought to you by Mooby, the global film company that champions great cinema.
Starting point is 00:01:07 From iconic directors to emerging otters, there's always something new to discover. Yes, and coming to Mooby in the UK, this February, we have the brilliant sentimental value by Yoakim Trier. We reviewed this when it came out. He's the guy who directed the worst person in the world. Film did really well at Cannes, won the Grand Prix, bunch of European awards and is now nominated for nine Academy Awards and eight BAFTAs. I think it's fantastic.
Starting point is 00:01:30 I think it's really moving, really exciting, really funny, but also insightful. And I think Yer Kim Tray is one of the finest directors working today. It's definitely one of the best films around at the moment. To stream the best of cinema, you can try Mooby free for 30 days at mooby.com slash Kermode and Mayo. That's Mubi.com slash Kermud and Mayo for a whole month of great cinema for free. we begin, a quick reminder that you can become a Vanguard Easter and get an extra episode every Thursday. Including bonus reviews. Extra viewing suggestions. Viewing recommendations at home and in cinemas. Plus your film and non-film questions answered as best we can in questions, Schmestians. You can get all that extra stuff via Apple Podcasts or head to extra takes.com for non-fruit-related devices.
Starting point is 00:02:18 There's never been a better time to become a Vanguard Easter. Free offer, now available, wherever you get your podcasts. And if you're all right, ready a vanguard Easter, we salute you. Is this another show from us then? I think it is. It says in the script, Bonomi ensues. It's easy for them to write. It is.
Starting point is 00:02:49 It's slightly less easy to create off the cuff, as it were. Although we are naturally full of Bonoamie. Are we? Yeah, I think so, aren't you? I think you are. Yeah, no, fine. I just, I mean, I thought I had a reputation of being grumpy. But no, I'm very happy to go with Bonomi.
Starting point is 00:03:05 Ask me what I did on the day after we'd done the recording first thing in the morning. On Monday for the BAFTAs. Monday, but Monday was, yes. What did you do? What did you do afterwards? So I went off, I did a screening, I did an interview. Then I came back. And then I did that program where there's a will, there's awake, the podcast, which you can listen to.
Starting point is 00:03:29 And it's going to go awkward. Anyway, it was good fun. and I did it and there is a contribution in it from you. So people should look out for it. For when the episode that's me drops, it's not just me. It is also you. And you did a very, very funny, well, strange thing. This isn't a spoiler.
Starting point is 00:03:49 You made a couple of very oblique exorcist references, which then made me think, have you secretly gone and seen it? And you haven't, because the whole point is that the joke would stop being funny if you saw it. And then I said to you, did you, did you use AI to get those references? I mean, how insulting is that? Please say, but, okay, now because of the look on your face, what did I reply? I replied in capital letters. I did not. I did not. All my own work. But then I said, well, how did you know that really obscure thing? Because it was obscure. It wasn't like a, you know, a famous thing from the exes. It was fairly obscure. And you said,
Starting point is 00:04:27 I know everything. Well, I just, I just did some work. That's all. I just did. I did some. I did some. Elvis work and some exorcist work. And from that, compiled a speech, which is a eulogy at your funeral. A eulogy at my funeral, yes, that's right. Because that's how the way there's a will as a wake program works. It's the thing is, you know, it's, you're meant to imagine that you have, that you've shuffled off the mortal coil and, uh, and are now going to, did it make you consider your life choices? No. Okay. It's just a, it's just a, just a jokey thing. Yeah, it's nice. It's Mel Gedwitch. And she was, she was, she's great. She was, she was, I was kind of quite nervous about it for him, but she's really good.
Starting point is 00:05:05 She kind of, you know, she puts you at you. She does what you do is that she puts people at their ease. All right, okay. What was the toughest thing she asked you? What's that Simon Mayo like? Yeah. I said, it's all an act. You know, the nicest man in radio is all an act.
Starting point is 00:05:19 It's absolutely horrible. Yeah. Okay. No, that seems entirely fair. Anyway, that's quite enough, Bono Me, for item one. Yes, that's it. Item two, throw to Mark for review line-up. So, Mark, tell us what's happening later.
Starting point is 00:05:32 Got a pack show in terms of reviews. We have a review of Sirat, A Testament of Anne Lee. Of course, I hope everybody heard the interview last week. Epic, Elvis Presley in concert, which is this just huge Elvis movie, and Screamstone. And we have a very, very special guest.
Starting point is 00:05:48 The man responsible for building worlds that make millions cry in a good way. We sit down with Pixar legend, Pete Doctor, the man behind up, Monster Think, and Inside Out. I mean, it's just phenomenal, what he, what this man has, created out of his head.
Starting point is 00:06:03 I know. With all this. It really is. And what about Take 2? Well, remember when I was reviewing Secret Agent, I said there is a documentary that ties in with Secret Agent called Pictures of Ghosts and we will review it next week on Take 2. Well, next week is now this week and we are going to reviewing Pictures of Ghost, which is the Claibor Mendozafeio documentary that he made about Receif, which is the area
Starting point is 00:06:25 in which Secret Agent plays out. And you can look out for our special episode celebrating women in film in partnership with the people at Vanguard. Now, that's going to drop on Monday, but that's on our YouTube channel. Okay. So if you just need another fix, then that's where we're going to be.
Starting point is 00:06:41 So there's a special show which is going to be on the YouTube channel from Monday. In Take 2, you get all the good stuff including five-question film club. Three questions, Emergency. Each week we pick a film that's on streaming services
Starting point is 00:06:52 and Mark tackles our five questions. Three questions, emergency. About it, and make you sound clever at the pub or annoy your partner with unsolicited film knowledge. Plus, as Epic is out this week, and we won't say this every time, but it's all the letters are capital apart from the I, because it's Elvis Presley in concert. We'll have further discussion on our top concert movies in one frame back, plus questions, Schmestians, in which we answer the question, why is Mark's spouse indoors?
Starting point is 00:07:21 Oh, it's Frank Wu's question. He understands she's a professor of cinema, but why does she not venture outside? Okay, okay, okay. So let's begin, as far as emails are concerned, with, where we kind of left off on Monday. Yes. And obviously everyone will be aware of the controversy that came out of the BAFTAs, which is a shame because there's lots to celebrate and lots that went very well
Starting point is 00:07:43 and lots of fantastic artists. However, let's just pick up on this story, Stephen Brisbane. A long-term listener, apparently previous correspondent of my address book is to be believed. I'm sure you'll have far too much correspondence on the topic of the unfortunately incident at the BAFTAs. I appreciated Mark's perspective from In the Room. As you'll no doubt I've heard by now, the slur was very audible on the BBC's two-hour delayed and edited coverage. As a British expat, my instinct is always to defend the BBC from what are generally unfair and disingenuous attacks. So it pains me to write this, but their broadcast was shameful.
Starting point is 00:08:25 They did not air the precautionary explanation that those in the theatre apparently heard, which Mark explained on Monday, and gave no context whatsoever before Delroy Lindo and Michael B. Jordan were on stage. To air a slur like this on delay around the country is unjustifiable, but the context made it much worse. No matter how well the actors handled it live, it's the BBC who chose to broadcast their humiliation.
Starting point is 00:08:49 Meanwhile, John David Sooner has worked so tirelessly to educate the public, is now subjected to horrible online abuse after what should have been a day of celebration for him. All of this was entirely preventable. with some minor edits and a thoughtful announcement at the start, an extremely upsetting situation for everyone involved. Stephen Brisbane, thank you. So we approached Tourette's action for an official statement.
Starting point is 00:09:14 So this is what they said. We are incredibly proud of John, that's John Davidson, and everyone involved in I swear. The film has already raised so much awareness about Tourette's syndrome and the daily reality faced by those living with a condition. The impact it's had on audiences, families, and those with the Tourette's community is huge. and we could not be more grateful for the support the film continues to receive.
Starting point is 00:09:34 However, we also want to address the negative comments that have surfaced following John's involuntary vocal tics during the ceremony. We deeply understand that these words can cause hurt, and we're deeply sorry to the black community for the harm caused, but at the same time, it is vital that the public understands a fundamental truth about Tourette's syndrome. Ticks are involuntary. They are not a reflection of a person's beliefs, intentions or character. People with Tourette's can say words or phrases they do not mean, do not endorse and feel great distress about afterwards. These symptoms are neurological, not intentional, and they are something John, like many others with Tourette's, live with every day. The backlash from certain parts of the media has been extremely saddening, particularly given how hard John works to raise awareness and understanding. What should have been a night of celebration for him became overwhelming and he made the difficult decision to leave the ceremony halfway.
Starting point is 00:10:28 through. This moment reflects exactly what I swear shows so openly, the isolation, misunderstanding, and emotional weight that so often accompany this condition. People with Tourette's manage their physical and social environments and symptoms on a constant basis. The price of being misunderstood is increased isolation, a risk of anxiety and depression and death by suicide. We hope that those commenting will take time to watch the film, learn about Tourette's and understand the experiences behind moments like these. Education is key and compassion makes a world of difference.
Starting point is 00:11:01 So that's from Tourette's action and thanks to them for that. Speaking to Vanity Fair afterwards, Delroy Lindo said that he and Jordan, quote, did what we had to do while presenting the award, but that he wished someone from BAFTA spoke to us afterwards.
Starting point is 00:11:23 And they didn't. I mean, they have now, and Bafter have apologised and explained and so on. Can I ask, can I ask a question? Yes, go ahead. So obviously there are two issues. There's the Bafta issue and what happened in the theatre. And then there's the TV issue, which is, I think, we can part because it's just so
Starting point is 00:11:42 unforgivable. There is no justification, and obviously it's a massive cock-up, which has caused enormous offence. No, but can I also add, it's not only that it's unforgivable and it is a massive, massive cock-up, as you just said. it was compounded by the fact that they did edit Free Palestine out of Hacchinaola Davis Jr's speech, but they didn't edit out the racial slur,
Starting point is 00:12:06 which is like literally if you were designing, you know, a cluster fruitcake to make you, to put everything in the worst possible context, they did. Yeah. So here's my question then. So put the BBC and television thing to one side. I think everyone agrees that that was just,
Starting point is 00:12:24 terrible, including the BBC. Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. Do you think that, given that we know all the things that the Tourette's action have sent us and anyone who's followed this story knows about this condition, do you think that someone from the organisers, maybe someone from BAFTA, could have had a conversation, should have had a conversation with John Davidson that went along the lines of, do you think that when Delroy, Linda, Michael B. Jordan,
Starting point is 00:12:55 stand up on the stage. Do you think it's likely or possible that you will insult them and use racial slang, racial swear words? Because if the answer was yes, I wonder if there was the second part of that conversation,
Starting point is 00:13:16 which is do you think you should not be there for that bit? Okay. Because the end result was that even though, we know about Tourette's, we know about the film and we, and I've just read out the Chirettes actually, the end result was two leading African-Americans stood on stage and had the worst words thrown at them. Yeah. That's, that's what happened. And that is inexcusable. And I wonder if a gentle and respectful conversation with John Davidson could have
Starting point is 00:13:44 sorted that out, I don't know. Okay, so there's two things. Firstly, I don't know, I don't have insider information, but two things I want to say. The first one is that in Steve's email, Stephen Brisbane, Brisbane. And Steve said at the beginning, look, I hate criticising the PBC, but in this case, they absolutely effed it up. The phrase that he used was that it's the BBC who chose to broadcast their humiliation. I just want to say that the way that they responded, the way that they reacted, isn't excusing anything, but the way they responded, the way they reacted was absolutely one of the most dignified things I have ever seen. And believe me, in the room they weren't humiliated. I mean, they may have been offended and outraged and all the
Starting point is 00:14:27 rest of it, absolutely, but they were not humiliated. They behaved in a way that was so far beyond, you know, it was like, it was so admirable. It was like, wow, you know, you literally didn't bat an eyelid because, you know, they did, as Delro Linda said, they did what they had to do. That's the first thing. The second thing is, the question that you're asking about, should the question have been raised as do you think this is likely to happen? presupposes that they, that, that presupposes that that was an issue that you knew of in advance. Now, I don't know. I don't, I have absolutely no idea whether there was any reason to presuppose that that might happen.
Starting point is 00:15:11 But given that he, no, given that, I mean, if you've seen, I swear, there's a thing at the beginning when he gets his MBE in which he, he, he ticks in the room and, you know, and something offensive about the monarchy in the room. The wider question is that clearly there was a risk involved. And the wider question is, was enough care taken to avoid, you know, to avoid that risk assessment? I suppose that's the only thing. I honestly don't know enough about Tourette's to know whether there would have been any way of predicting that that would have happened. And of course, you know, it's very easy to be wise after the fact. But it does appear, like when you ask the question, when you pose it in that way,
Starting point is 00:16:01 the answer is, well, yeah, there seems to have been some form of risk assessment failure. Because, as I said, I'll say it again, because it's the thing that I took away from all this, Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo behaved themselves with such amazing good grace that somehow in the room they almost, you know, managed to deflate. I mean, everyone was shocked by the word, and the way that they reacted was just like, wow, you know, that is unbelievable. But yes, there is clearly a question about should that situation have been allowed to arise in the first place. But I just don't know what the, if there's any way of knowing in advance, what's a trigger, you know, what causes anxiety?
Starting point is 00:16:44 Because, you know, I mean, I've spoken to John Davidson when he's not. not in an anxious state, and it's, you know, and that the ticks aren't happening at that time. Yeah. So I'm sure people will have their opinion. And this will rumble on. And if you want more on the Bafters, which was kind of like straight afterwards. It was straight after. And at that point, I didn't even know what, you know, as I said, I mean, because everyone in the room was convinced that, of course, it wouldn't be aired because there was a two-hour delay. It was five o'clock. Right. We knew that the Bafters didn't start going on television until seven. and when that shout happened,
Starting point is 00:17:22 it was like somebody, the person next to me said, did you hear that? And I said, I think everybody heard that. And it was like, well, okay, well, of course it won't be in the broadcast. And had it not been in the broadcast, we would be having a different discussion now. The fact that it was in the broadcast just basically turned a difficult situation into an absolute disaster.
Starting point is 00:17:44 That show is available on Patreon. I'm always interested to know what you think, correspondence at covenomeo.com. Okay, so there are some films which are out once we stepped away delicately from the Bafters. What's out there? Scream 7. We now know enough.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Just from the way you said the title of the film, we know what's coming, but please do carry on. Okay, all right. So directed by Kevin Williamson from a script by Guy Boussick, from a story by James Vanderbilt. So, okay, so I have to do some set up here because there's really no other way of doing this. So seventh installment in the Scream series,
Starting point is 00:18:26 starring Nev Campbell, who wasn't in the previous one because the offer that they made her, she felt was not consistent with the value that she brings to the franchise. So she was not there. Now she held out. Now she's back.
Starting point is 00:18:41 So both the previous screen reboots, five and six, one of which was confusingly titled Scream, was going to be Scream Forever, and then Scream 6, were directed by Matt Bett, Bette-Luette, Gillette. So what they did was,
Starting point is 00:18:59 they refocused the franchise onto this new group of so-called the core four characters, which was Melissa Barrera, Jenna Ortega, Jasmine Savoy-Brown, and Mason Gouding, as Sam Carpenter,
Starting point is 00:19:14 Mindii, Mindii, Martin and Chad Meeks Martin. During the premiere of Scream 6, the co-director said, you know, we want to be watching screen movies, whether we're involved or not for the rest of our lives. I don't, but, you know, everyone was very keen that this franchise was going to keep on going. However, those directors jumped ship in August 23, apparently due to scheduling conflicts because they were doing Abigail. then Christopher Landon, who made Happy Death Day, I think Happy Death Day too, stepped in. Then in November, and I'm sorry this is so industrial, but there really isn't any other way of explaining this film. In November, Melissa Barrera, one of the core four, was dropped from the new film by producers for comments that she made regarding the war in Gaza,
Starting point is 00:20:05 which they claimed had crossed the line into anti, or it was suggested by somebody to cross the line into anti-sense. Semitism, which was strongly pushed back on. It was then announced that Jenna Ortega, another of the core four, wasn't doing the movie either. And they said it was scheduling conflicts, but she later said the Melissa stuff was happening. It was all kind of falling apart. If Scream 7 wasn't going to be with the team of directors and those people that I fell in love with, it didn't seem like the right move for my career.
Starting point is 00:20:31 So now they haven't got the original director, and they've now just got the core too. At which point, Christopher Landon, who has been brought in to replace the original directors, he goes too, saying that this is no longer the film that he signed on to do. So then they go back to Kevin Williamson, who of course wrote the original Scream and whose previous directing experience includes making, teaching Mrs. Ting, which is not a film that you will remember, because very few people do remember. He stepped in to direct from that script.
Starting point is 00:20:59 And since they only had the core two left of the new cast, it's okay, what we need is legacy casting. Hence, we now have a film in which alongside Jasmine, Zawoy, Brown, Jason Gooding, we have Neff Campbell, David Arquette, Matthew Lillard, Courtney Cox, reprising their roles from previous films, and then, you know, a bunch of other people. So the new film, Nev Campbell is back, and there's a new ghost face killer who is now targeting Sydney Prescott, that's Neff Campbell's character, her daughter, Tatum, forcing, according to the publicity, forcing Sydney to face her past
Starting point is 00:21:37 and put an end to the killings once and for all. Yeah, right. It's Scream Generations. Here's a clip from the trailer. Who, Sydney? Did you miss me? Nice little town you found. You and you're a pretty daughter.
Starting point is 00:22:00 Reminds me of where we grew up. Well, you sure know a lot about me for another asshole hiding behind a voice changer. Oh, I'm not hiding. Yeah. So I went back to watch my review of Scream 6, just to remind myself who was still around. And when I did, when I searched it, there was an AI summary of my review, okay? And the AI summary said, Mark Kermode's review of Scream 6 suggests the franchise is becoming formulaic, stating that what was once interesting about Scream is no longer as engaging,
Starting point is 00:22:42 while acknowledging it is a in quote total scream with inventive kills he finds the metacometry stout no i didn't i said it was awful i i is just talking out of its backside what i said was i wouldn't say the franchise was becoming formulaic i said the franchise had curled up and died in a rotten heap some years ago and i had got to the point that i just wanted everything to stop i didn't know who people were. They were pulling people's masks off and there would be a face there. I didn't know who anyone was. Everyone who was dead wasn't dead anymore. People could get stabbed 50 times and then still get up and be fine and running around. And I never said, never said it was a total scream. Never said any of those things. So firstly, AI do one. Secondly, I don't think AI is going
Starting point is 00:23:32 to get that message by the way. No, it isn't fine. But, you know, it'll say Mark Kermos' review of AI said that perhaps sometimes it was a little bit, yeah, and the rest of it. over the years there have been so many killers, so many deaths, so many rebirths, that nothing, nothing, nothing matters. All that matters now is the process leading up to the film. All the arguments, the directors leaving, an actor being dropped, another actor walking out, a director leaving. That is the story.
Starting point is 00:23:59 Those are the plots of the films. We should stop anymore actually doing any summary of the screen plots because there aren't plots. There are just industrial notices. in the case of this, we're here again with that cast because of this torturous process of how we got from five and six to seven. And it's business as usual. So they're in-jokes. So we're a killer.
Starting point is 00:24:22 Oh, it's always someone you know. There's dead characters coming back from the dead. This time there is AI in the film, incidentally, which is partly why I was mentioning before. There's people getting stabbed in weirdly nasty ways. I mean, it's an 18 certificate film. But, you know, and it's the stabby. thing is, I mean, stabby, stabby, sometimes there's a kind of unpleasant edge to it. There are references to lesser known Wes Craigman. They bring up, you know, people under the stairs. And there's trick
Starting point is 00:24:48 questions about Jason Voorhe's again. And there's a discussion about final girls. There's a couple of sort of theatrical deaths. So there's, there's one which is a kind of sub-Argento thing on a stage with a trapeze flying thing. And there's another thing with a beer pump, which is a very clumsily set-up gag. But here's the issue. None of it's fun. None of it's gleeful. I mean, the thing with the first scream is it was a celebration. This is just like a tax return. It's just like doing accounts. It's, I, and I, I'm just astonished that we're still here. If I said this with six, if I had any idea when I did the first on stage with Wes and the cast when the first scream came out, that decades later, I'd be reviewing Scream 7,
Starting point is 00:25:41 and the only thing I can tell you about it that's interesting is how we got to the point of this cast and this director and this writer in this particular construction of things. Every time Ghostface appears, it goes, bang. It's not loud, loud, it's not quiet, quiet bang. It's, you know, noisy, noisy, bang, noisy bang. That drumbeat, bang, boom sound to make the jump scare work is so tedious.
Starting point is 00:26:05 It's so boring. And some of the, you know, some of the stabby stuff is kind of, if there was any joy involved in the way these things are staged. But in order to do that, you have to be a really good director. You have to be Dario Agenta. Orgenta. You have to be Mario Barver. Kevin Williamson is not any of those things.
Starting point is 00:26:28 And so I, and I'm not kidding, I struggled to stay awake. when the amount of stuff going on, I just struggled to stay awake. The only thing I thought when I was watching it that gave me any sort of joy is Matthew Lillard was actually quite good, and Quentin Tarantino is an idiot. Well, there you go. So correspondence at Kodemoa.com, screamate and inevitability. Absolute inevitability. We'll be back in a moment with The Testament of Anne Lee, Epic, Elvis Presley in concert, and our special guest, The Genius that is Pete Dock. Plus, we'll recap everything that's had in the UK cinemas in the box office top 10 and, of course, the always brilliant laughter lift on the way.
Starting point is 00:27:23 Okay, box office top 10, beginning with small profits, which is on the television, so therefore. Oh, yeah. But we did talk about it last week. Tom in Lester, after your chat about small profits, I watched all six episodes this weekend and felt compelled to share my thoughts. What struck me was how the show feels unique yet oddly familiar. There's a touch of afterlife, maybe a hint of the Queen's nose or Bernard's watch, but really it just carries that comforting spirit of old British TV where whatever happens, a cup of tea and a chat make things all right.
Starting point is 00:27:54 It was exactly what I needed. I'm in a turbulent moment with things outside my control, occupying too much headspace. Small profits was genuinely anxiety disarming, slowing the speeding traffic of my thoughts into one gentle country lane. It's never slow, the tight cast and lanky. are perfectly realized, and the homunculi even reminded me of Jason and the Argonauts, harpies. They're far less terrifying. I'm going to start Detectorists this week with Rosie, my dog, as she recovers, please wish her well. Do we, okay, yes, all the best to your dog.
Starting point is 00:28:27 All the best to Rosie. With Kate Dickey for Bond and hello to Jason, Tom in Lester. Okay. Kate Dickey for Bond is a great idea. Number 15, if I had legs, I'd kick you. Which I thought was terrific. Rose Byrne was at the Bafters and I walked behind her, but I was too starstruck to say, I think you're fat. Also, it must be very annoying. If you're at the Bafters, you don't want somebody going, hello, you don't know me, but I think you're really good. But I think, I like the film. It is like a panic attack. It is like a really, really anxious experience. A couple of people said, I can't believe that you referred to it as a comedy. I mean, it is comedic, but in that very
Starting point is 00:29:03 darkly kind of Safdi Brothers kind of way, and her performance is great. Duncan, who says he's from St. Evanage, which is probably Stephenage. Oh, okay. Unless there's a place called St. Evanage. Oh, that's very good. That's like St. Ockwell, isn't it? Or, you know, Clarm. Yeah, we're just making Stephenage sound slightly grand.
Starting point is 00:29:22 Yeah, St. Evidence, very good. Anyway, Duncan says, long-time listener here, usually happy to sit quietly on the sidelines. The Lamb of God episode remains a favourite, but after the week I've had at the cinema, I felt compelled to write in. My wife and I are frequent visitors. four films a month minimum, sometimes 12. Wow. I often go solo for the more cultural films, largely to spare her complaints about pretentiousness while I indulge in hidden meanings and artie flourishes. So a great anticipation I went alone to an advanced screening of,
Starting point is 00:29:52 if I had legs, I'd kick you. Sitting far too close to the front, a non-wife-approved seat, I settled in, relieved not to have my usual in-house critic beside me. But as the film unfolded, pot smoking estranged mother, water pouring from ceilings, invisible daughter, therapists, therapists, therapyizing therapists. I began to feel utterly out of my depth. One man several rows back was howling with laughter while I was still trying to work out what on earth was happening. I nearly fled, but having invested 45 minutes, I stuck it out, eventually deciding the seat
Starting point is 00:30:25 was the best part and watching the rest with intermittent eye contact. Strangely, though I'd never watch it again, I enjoyed recounting the ordeal. that cinema, confusion, escapism, and the odd film that lingers. Later that week, we saw no other choice in IMAX, wife present, both of us grateful for Jason Statham. Which is a sentence I haven't had before. Duncan from St. Evanage. Anyway, so he wasn't a fan.
Starting point is 00:30:51 Number 10 is, number 11 in America is, good luck, have fun, don't die. Yeah, I mean, I reviewed this last week. It's the Gaw Vibinsky movie that wants you to think that it's, completely anarchic and crazy, and the tagline is, you know, from a completely unhinged Gore Vibinsky. And I just thought it was far too corporate for its own good and basically just recycled a bunch of riffs that we've seen a million times before in other films that are all better. Josh in Norwich, the film was fine, a blend of Black Mirror and Groundhog Day with a premise that could have been more interesting than the filmmaker's ultimately allowed. Instead,
Starting point is 00:31:29 they dropped in a generic action sequence every 20 minutes, which started to feel like pure filler. Game night remains the high watermark for the regular people racing across a city on a mysterious mission. Genre. My personal hill to die on arrives near the end. No spoilers. The plot revolves around a quest to upload crucial data that will save the world. Sensible enough.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Sam Rockwell carries what looks like a USB stick for most of the film. But at the decisive moment, a character reaches for a cable, and it appears to be an H-Dict. A cable. A cable used for audio and video, not data transfer. In a film about AI and cutting-edge tech, this feels unforgivable. I suspect they avoided using a USB-type-A cable because realistically, our hero would be fumbling to plug it in upside down while the world burns. Otherwise, it was fun if flawed. P.S., I'm sure listeners will write in to say an HDMI cable does transmit some data and you could feasibly convert one to do so. I know, but it's not what it was made. or used for. And it was the wrong hawk, and he swam inappropriately. A bit apart from that. Thanks for the info. That's very good. On that.
Starting point is 00:32:39 Number nine is the moment. Which I haven't said. This is the Charlie X, CX, uh, mockumentary. I know a couple of people who've seen it said it's okay. So, um, I will go and see that next, next week. But it's, it's, I'm not know whether it's still going to be in the chart next week, but I'll go and see it anyway. A waste man is at number eight, which I thought was terrific.
Starting point is 00:32:57 I thought was very powerful. I, you know, it was, prison dramas are an interesting proposition because it is very easy to make a formulaic prison drama. It's quite hard to make one that jumps out. And in the case of this, it did largely because of the chemistry between the two leads and because it has, it really has the gritty feel that, you know, that it's, it's capturing that sense of claustrophobia really well. So now I thought it was a very fine movie, very fine indie film. The King of Old School on our YouTube channel says, an excellent. film. I have a friend who works as a prison officer. He mentioned he was rather impressed with the sense of realism this film projects. I like how the film gets to the point. It's a lean one hour and 30
Starting point is 00:33:38 minutes and also how brutal it is, similar to a film which would have come out in the 1980s, which no one went to see. Prison films are not new in cinema, but this felt refreshing, very recommendable. There we go. That's echoing exactly what I said and I'm completely on board with that. Number seven here, five in America is send help. Which I enjoyed enormously. It was funny when we're talking about scream. I said there's no sense of glee. There's no sense of joy. It just feels mechanical. Send help is the opposite. Send help is gleeful. And again, Sam Ramey is a great director and Kevin Williamson is no Sam Ramey. Number six is cold storage. Yeah. So, did we have any mail about cold storage? No, we do not have any mail at all. Okay.
Starting point is 00:34:21 I mean, I thought it was just like clunky and I had no hopes for it in terms of, I mean, this is it, this is its first week, this is it, I think next week it'll be gone. It's just, it's just not good enough. Okay, there you go. That's fine. Secret Agent is at number five, number 35, which is so good, so good. And if you're not a subscriber to Take 2 yet, then make sure you do subscribe because this week in Take 2, we're going to review the documentary that the director was making about Receif, which is the place that this plays out around about the same time. I thought this was just a terrific film because it was so many different genres all working together. Like it's something that sounds like it shouldn't. work, but it does. And it was an interesting bit of correspondence about, you know, we were talking about the severed leg, the legend of the severed leg, and there's a bit in the middle of it, in which there's this whole thing. And I said that apparently, you know, the press used this because there was press censorship at the time. And somebody wrote to me and said, yeah, it's actually more complex than that. It's that the police used, the newspapers used the severed leg as a way of talking about police brutality without looking like that's what they were doing.
Starting point is 00:35:40 So if the more you know about that political backstory, the more entrenched it becomes. David Kosul bunch of numbers on our YouTube channel, something I admired about this film when I saw it was that it seemed to be interested in keeping us guessing how it's all going to resolve. But then it manages to resolve everything in a way that does not grant conventional closure, that does not answer every question its narrative asks and does this all deliberately and in such a manner as to reveal its actual thematic through lines. It's really one of my favorites of the year.
Starting point is 00:36:11 Yeah, very good. Secret Agent and number five. Number four here, eight over there, Zootropolis, too. And when they got up to receive the Bafta, they were referring to it as Zootopia, and then they had to correct themselves and say, sorry, Zootropolis, because of language. Number three here, four in America,
Starting point is 00:36:30 is Crime 101. I'm a big fan of, and I'm glad to see that it is, you know, it's in the top three. I thought it was a great heist movie. I really enjoyed it, great performances, and it had, it was about something. So it was using the mechanics of a heist movie to actually be about something else, which is the way in which we judge our success by material goals, which don't make any sense at all. Goat is it number two? It's the American number one.
Starting point is 00:36:55 Yeah, I thought goat was all right. I didn't connect with it. it's an animation and I, you know, I'm an animation fan. It was certainly not a particularly interesting animation, but, you know. And number two in America, number one, our number one is Wuthering Heights. Barney Robson, principal clarinet at the English National Opera. Yes. An MSC in performance science says,
Starting point is 00:37:17 Dear Bath and Water, long-term listed from the days when podcasts were just a twinkle in the eye and production teams weren't quite as dazzling as they are now. I enjoyed Mark's review of Wuthering Heights, although I'm unlikely to go, being roughly 43 years outside the target audience and still recovering from the post-baving slurp in Emerald's previous offering. That said, your discussion of other adaptations reminded me of the great Bernard Herman and his only opera, an adaptation of the Bronte novel. It was a passion project for Herman who worked diligently on the piece in between film scores for eight years, recording it in London at his own expense, but never hearing it perform publicly in his lifetime. It wasn't until April 2011 for the centenary of his birth that Herman's Wuthering Heights
Starting point is 00:38:04 was finally staged in full, and it is fantastic. I tracked down a second-hand box set of Herman's recording on vinyl, as only fragments seem to have trickled onto streaming, and even tried to persuade the powers that be to put work to put it on. After all, it's an opera in English, but to no avail yet. Knowing you both to be fans of the genre, a mark loving the mesmerizing apeggios in Philip Glasses, Akunarton, and Simon a fully fledged opera enabler. Yes, you are an opera enabler. Perhaps the pod could launch a revival campaign.
Starting point is 00:38:40 Love the show, Stephen, always will. Barney Robson from the E&O. That's interesting. I didn't know Bernard Herman had done... I confess that I didn't either. No, I confess that I didn't know that either. And in fact, because, you know, Bernard Herman does feature in surround sound quite a lot.
Starting point is 00:38:55 on the subject of Wuthering Heights, the film. So I'm just looking at the current, so the budget was 80 million. So the current international box office is 157 million. The usual formula is that to wash its face, a film needs to do two and a half times its budget. So it's getting towards 160. So it's going to be, it's not a runaway hit. It's not a runaway hit. It's done okay, but it's not a smash hit.
Starting point is 00:39:22 It's not a flop. It's going to succeed. it's going to take, like I said, it's going to do fine, but it's not a runaway hit. There's more Wuthering Heights conversation in Take 2, if you have something to contribute correspondence at covenomere.com. Back in a moment, Mark talking about the testament of Anne Lee, an epic Elvis Presley in concert, and our conversation with Pete Doctor on the way. At Medcan, we know that life's greatest moments are built on a foundation of good health, from the big milestones to the quiet winds. That's why our annual health assessment offers
Starting point is 00:39:57 a physician-led, full-body checkup that provides a clear picture of your health today and may uncover early signs of conditions like heart disease and cancer. A healthier you means more moments to cherish. Take control of your well-being and book an assessment today. Medcan. Live well for life.
Starting point is 00:40:14 Visit medcan.com slash moments to get started. It's never too early to plan your summer story in Europe with WestJet, from rolling countryside to cobblestone streets. Begin your next chapter. Book your seat at westjet.com or call your travel agent. Westjet, where your story takes off. Okay, so let's introduce our guest for this week. He is the chief creative officer at Pixar Animation Studios Pete Doctor.
Starting point is 00:40:48 Oscar winning director of Monsters Inc. Up and Inside Out. Help develop the story and characters for Toy Story. I mean, already, this, you know, you think, wow. recently directed Disney and Pixar's Oscar-winning feature film, Soul, which is the last time we spoke to him. Yeah. Next release is from Pixar Hoppers on March the 6th and Toy Story 5 on the 19th of June.
Starting point is 00:41:10 So we'll play you a bit of the trailer for Hoppers, and then we talk to Pete Doctor. The traditional methods to understand animals just weren't working. But we've done it, Mabel. We created a revolutionary technology that gives us unprecedented. sent it access to the animal world. We call it hoppers. Huh?
Starting point is 00:41:32 We put this into this. Yes, yes. This into this. Mabel, be careful. And they were in the same den. No. I understand you. What's you doing like this?
Starting point is 00:41:49 This is incredible! Pete Doctor, Chief Creative Officer, Pixar. It's very nice to speak to you. It's actually, you've been on the show before. We spoke Christmas 2020 for Seoul. And it's nice to have you back. Before we go any further, when you look at Mark there, does Carl Fredericksen in Up spring to mind?
Starting point is 00:42:14 Yes, I love it. I'd just like to say that this has officially destroyed my life because I spent my whole life trying to look like James Dean. Then I went through a period of looking like Richard Nixon, and now all I get is, oh, Carl, from up. So thanks, Pete. Well, he was modeled after Spencer Tracy, so you could take that. That's a good repost.
Starting point is 00:42:33 Actually, I don't look like Carl. I look like Spencer Tracy. Pete, we're speaking on an overcast, rainy London Day. And you're in London as well. On days like this, do you ever look out of the window and see the rain and think, my, that's really realistic. They've rendered that much. You know, as I was animating on Toy Strzor, which came out,
Starting point is 00:42:56 30 years ago, I was working so many hours. I went home one day. I walked home and I came up to a tree and I touched it with my hand. To understand this story, computers don't have, everything can just go right through each other. And so that I could actually touch the tree was mind-blowing to me because I'd been working so long that I wasn't used to that. So yes, once in a while, reality does melt.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Yeah, so 30 years of Toy Story, 40 years of Pixar. Before we get into the nitty-gritty of everything, What are you most proud of for the time that you've been there? Well, I mean, in a way that we're just still around, period, is kind of a miracle. It doesn't happen. Very often that you have a success, much less two, much less three, much less, you know, we're on, you know, number 30. We've done 30 films.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Hoppers is coming out this March. And it's also just an amazing group of collaborators, people that work together. You know, no one person is the whole package, and that's why you have this group. that really needs to synergistically work together, and it's just been amazing. I mean, that's a little bit of a non-answer. Let's see, specifically, what am I most proud of? Up, let's just say up.
Starting point is 00:44:09 The Spencer Tracy-like character. You're welcome, thank you. That's there. So can I ask you a question about technology? In layman's terms, technology has always been really, really important for what Pixar has done. I know about render man. I've read about Menvi.
Starting point is 00:44:24 Can you explain what differences those technologies are making and the exciting ones for the future? I think in very basic terms, people assume animation is drawn, you know, and it was for, you know, hundreds, well, dozens of years. What we do is more like building them as little puppets, but in the computer. So it's three-dimensional geometry that then is rendered. Render Man is the software that makes a surface look reflective,
Starting point is 00:44:54 or matte or shiny or whatever kind of thing, or color you assign and so on, textures. The movement is all done in this software called marionette, which, again, it's a little bit like stop motion where it's easier for people to understand if there's a puppet, and I know it's gonna be here on frame 37 and 38, it's gonna be here, 39. Every frame's just a little different,
Starting point is 00:45:16 which is of course what creates the illusion of movement. And we just have amazing technology people, amazing animators, artists that all work, together all for the same goal of making a good story. When Pixar first, I mean, I remember very clearly sitting in an early screening of Toy Story, having never, ever seen anything like the digital animation that I was seeing, and feeling almost kind of like there was something hallucinatory about it because you couldn't quite figure out whether it was physical or you couldn't quite figure it out.
Starting point is 00:45:47 But back then, the message was, yes, the technology is extraordinary, but the story comes first and the characters come first. And it does appear that throughout the history of Pixar, that has remained the case. Are you still as committed to that story first, characters first, technology serving those two things? Absolutely. In fact, typically a film that you see from Pixar
Starting point is 00:46:14 will take about five years to make. And I'd say the first three, we don't even think about the technology. It's all about the story. And the story just continues to be honed and refined up until the very last frame is finished. It really, I think from that first film on, we recognized, hey, the visuals are spectacular and interesting and engaging for about 30 seconds. And then you get bored. And you want to have some story.
Starting point is 00:46:39 You want to have something that you're compelled to believe in, to root for, to yearn for. So it's, yeah, we think of ourselves primarily as a storytelling company. I hesitate to mention AI, but this seems to be the point to mention it. The thing about the toy story genius, which Mark has described because the story and the characterization and the voices, everything is so sparkling, and it's so funny and the music is great. But what it's about is, of course, what is it like to be a human? What is it that makes us human? That's what it's about. Can AI do that? Well, look, my experience with AI is that it's as though you took the average thing, put it in a rock tumbler, sanded all the edges off, and took the middle one out.
Starting point is 00:47:26 It's kind of still the thing, but it's so bland that it doesn't really have any distinctive features. Now, maybe that'll change. AI is progressing very, very fast. But so far, it's been an amazing tool for humans to use, but I don't think it's out in front. And I think it's something that we're using to help craft the storytelling, even the visuals. We used AI for a good 9, 10 years to help complete the frame renders. You have 24 frames a second. Each frame takes, it can take like 24, 30 hours to compute a single frame.
Starting point is 00:48:02 Only with AI, we're able to stop it after three and let it fill in the rest. So it's been very, very helpful for us. And I kind of think it will be. It's an amazing tool. And it's, to me, the technology tools are all as kind of like a new toy I get to play with. Like, what can we do with this? So when you came on to talk about Seoul, because I just listened again to the interview, the things that made me gasp in Seoul. I mentioned to you tears, fingers, and pizza were the things that made me gasp in that particular movie.
Starting point is 00:48:34 When we go to see Hobbers and Toy Story 5 and everything else, are there things that you can do now that you couldn't do before? It may be that you couldn't even do for Seoul. You know, it's funny. I feel like for the last 10 years or so, the technology has been such that we can kind of do whatever we want. It's really the artists who are going to put it across in some way that really reach and touch you in a specific way. So it's less about, ooh, no new technology allows us to XYZ
Starting point is 00:49:00 and more to do with the eye and the soul of a person that puts it across in some way that touches you. The year that Inside Out came out, that was my favorite film of the year. In any genre, that was my favorite film of the year. I thought it was an outstanding, just a wonderful piece of it. Not my favorite animation, my favorite film.
Starting point is 00:49:19 I remember seeing Monsters Inc. And thinking that put that thing back where it came from was the first time I'd ever seen an end credits gag sequence that was actually funny. And I wonder whether in your terms, do you think of the movies as movies first and as animation second? Yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 00:49:38 And we start to, weirdly, we think of the characters as real. I think of, oh, well, Sully wouldn't say that. You know, you start to know them as people. They live in your head in a very real way, which I don't know what that says about. I guess active imaginations. It's funny, they put that thing back where it came from. We were just thinking about that. We had done, I think we had written the line in the movie where Sully and Mike look over
Starting point is 00:50:04 and see other monsters staring at them, and he says, we're rehearsing for a play, yeah. And then Billy Improv, Billy Crystal, who is, of course, amazing to work with, improv, the little song that when then we thought, okay, we can do that whole thing at the end. Anyway, my point is just that you work with these amazing people and they add things.
Starting point is 00:50:24 And so the reality that's in my head is suddenly blown open by working with a great actor, a great set designer, a musician. It's such a joy. And when you're casting, those people, you are casting as actors rather than voice artists on you, because we've all seen animation in which there is this celebrity voice casting, and it's not necessarily the best voice, but it's because the person's number, but it does seem that you are casting the actors.
Starting point is 00:50:51 Yeah, our process that we generally still follow is we have a casting department that takes audio away from the picture, and so by the first time I hear it, I don't know who it is. I'm just listening, and some actors just have an amazing voice that springs to life in your head. Other actors use their face more or their body, you know, and so obviously we try to use the actors who just have a very expressive instrument there in the voice and Billy Crystal, a great example of that. But, you know, we've had the pleasure of working with so many great actors over the years, and they have brought so much. The characters end up changing a ton. So we typically, we've written them, we've designed them, and then we cast them.
Starting point is 00:51:34 So a lot of times people will say, oh, you know, Ed Asner looks so much like Carl Fredrickson. Well, he exists before he casts a film. But then, working with the actor, the character changes again. They start to expand. You get to use the language that this actor will bring or pauses and expressions. Because we do videotape them. We film them so that the animators have a chance to look at what expressions and gestures the actors and maybe use, borrow a few as they're creating the performance.
Starting point is 00:52:05 When you announced Toy Story 5, Pete, I think I was both looking forward to it, because I've watched the trailer, and scared, because the movies that you've created have been so extraordinary. And we've been fortunate to speak to Tom Hanks on the show a number of times. And he's talked about getting Woody's voice right and how little his voice has changed over the decades because he doesn't smoke and he hardly ever drinks and all that voice preservation, all that kind of stuff. What are you allowed to tell us about Toy Story 5 that will reassure us? Well, Toy Story 5, I think we've finally caught up to the present, which is it's toys meet tech. So this is obviously something we've been dealing with as parents, that you kids are not spending their days in these imaginary worlds that they've created. They're on devices. And the characters in the film have to face that reality as well.
Starting point is 00:52:59 So it's a challenge. It's a challenge for them. What's great is, of course, we have the whole cast back, Tom and Tim and, you know, a few new characters. We have this amazing Conan O'Brien plays a potty training boy. It's a digital, you know, a little device that helps kids learn how to go to the loo. And he is hilarious. So we just have a great cast. I think that's, to me, the salient characteristics,
Starting point is 00:53:29 of the Toy Story movies are the characters are really fun and rich and they have this wonderful relationship with each other and that's certainly true of this film and randy human yeah Randy's back he's writing a fantastic story he's done about 20 minutes i think so far and uh it's it's just so comforting you as soon as you hear it you're like ah we're back we're back i was going to say that what simon hasn't told you is that we've been doing our film review together for many decades And there was, when we were doing Toy Story 3, there was a lengthy section which was two old men sitting in a room reduced to tears and basically unable to speak because they were going, isn't the end of Toy Story 3, the story of all our lives, and then reading an excerpt from Winnie the Pooh. And then my children moved out and we all went, it's Andy's bedroom. How does it feel to have become part of the DNA of cultural conversation like that? It's crazy and such an honor and a reflection of ourselves. I mean, all the things you just mentioned are we've all gone through as people who've made these films.
Starting point is 00:54:36 Those toys have kind of lived our lives and you see that on the screen. I feel like it's so fun to be able to take the complexities of life and study it and put it into something like cars or insects or monsters and see it through just a little bit of a different lens and it really reflects back in a way that is louder, I think, in a sense than real life. It amplifies certain things. And I guess that's what, that's the goal anyway of art in general is to kind of just look around and say, okay, all this stuff that we just are not even really clocking, you know, a day goes by and you wake up and you, oh, I'm late and so on. When you look at a good movie, you're suddenly aware, oh, I'm living life, you know, in a way that you don't really experience on a day-to-day.
Starting point is 00:55:26 When we spoke five or six years ago for Seoul, as I recall, diversity in inclusion were not particularly a controversial. They weren't controversial subjects. And Pixar has been very clear in the way it draws its characters and the way that you've told your stories. Does that feel as though it's changed now, the political landscape that you're operating in? I mean, it's definitely been a journey.
Starting point is 00:55:48 When we started, we were a much more homogenous country, company and those of us who were directing were all kind of from similar backgrounds of you know suburbia of America and that has really blown open I think the the audience the people making the movies we're really trying to be constantly innovating and not telling the same kind of story again and again so what we're looking to do is find specificity you know find just the right character I You know, as you mentioned for Seoul, you know, as soon as we hit on this idea that we wanted a jazz musician, we thought, well, he should be African American. That's the one of the many amazing contributions that African Americans have brought to the world.
Starting point is 00:56:35 And so that then put a big onus on me and the rest of the team to figure that out and be very specific and accurate. And of course, we needed a lot of help for that. So, you know, we continued to do that. It's not about diversity for diversity's sake. telling story with authenticity and specificity that makes it come to life for people. And finally, if I may, Pete, you're from Minnesota. What should we be making of the news that's coming out of your hometown? Horrifying. It's horrifying. You know, I have friends and relatives living there still,
Starting point is 00:57:09 and it's scary times for everybody, to the point where we even worry about visiting, you know. Yeah, I hope things can get settled down. Pete, it was a delight to speak to you We haven't even mentioned hoppers, but anyway, I hope the next 40 years are as rich and exciting as the last 40. I do too. Thank you very much. And thanks for talking to me. The extraordinary beat doctor, who is very corporate, isn't he? And obviously, he has to be because he's friend of a corporation. But to have that on your C, all those movies on your CV is genuinely incredible. I think there was, I mean, we're obviously limited in time. The diversity and inclusion question, obviously he didn't answer because maybe that's making it that, maybe that would make life difficult. I mean, he sort of stated where they have been and where they are and how they have shifted over the years.
Starting point is 00:58:04 But obviously the whole point of the question was diversity and inclusion is actually now being made a very controversial subject. And if you pursue with that, pursue with that policy, then maybe you'll come under some kind of attack. Yeah, I mean, it is astonishing to think what's happened to America in the years since, you know, since this all began. Can I say that the one thing which surprised me slightly is he said go to the loo? I've just written that down. Exactly that. I didn't think Americans said go to the loom. I think he knew who he was talking to.
Starting point is 00:58:36 And so he used the English version. Go to the Lou. Do you know where Lou comes from? Waterloo. No, presumably. Nope. No, it's Gardi Lou. It's the French for when you used to, you know,
Starting point is 00:58:49 you had your bed pan, your bed pot, whatever it was called, you know, the thing that you've weeded in the night. And you'd throw it out the window. And as you threw it out the window, you shut out, guardie Lou, which is look out, you know, below. And that's where Lou comes from. Are you sure about that? I think I am sure about it.
Starting point is 00:59:04 You're now going to tell me that that's not true. No, no, no, absolutely. I absolutely don't know. But kind of Brian's character does sound like a hoot, actually. It does. It does. It was just funny to hear an American say, go to the Lou.
Starting point is 00:59:14 Worth mentioning, Mundo Pixar is on in London right now. You step into live-sized sets from your favorite Disney Pixar films. You become a toy in Andy's room with Woody and Buzz, speed into radiator springs with Lightning McQueen, and venture through the Monsters. This does, the Monsters 8 does sound like a press release. Alongside Mike and Sully,
Starting point is 00:59:35 features 13 unique Pixar sets in a 3,500 square meter area of immersive space, or 9 tenths of an acre in old money. MundoPixar.com for your tickets. That does sound like the kind of thing I'd have been being hounded for back in the day, but not anymore. And we're going to review Hoppers next week because it opens next Friday. Okay, and the exhibit runs until the end of June. Correspondence at cabaretomo.com.
Starting point is 01:00:01 Thanks to Pete Doctor for talking to us. So here's a movie that we have already discussed a little bit because we ran the interview last week, The Testament of Anne Lee. Yes, the new film from Mona Fastfall, director of that Jim Shepherd adaptation of the world to come, for which I think, did you interview Vanessa Kirby and Catherine Waterston? Or was it just Vanessa Kirby?
Starting point is 01:00:23 It was, anyway, it was either. I think it was just Vanessa Kirby. So Mona Fastfeld, also the partner of Brady Corby, with whom she co-wrote this film, and the pair previously collaborated on Child of a Leader, Vox, and of course the Brutalist. The star of this new film, Testament of Anne Lee, is Amanda, now, correct my spell,
Starting point is 01:00:43 My pronunciation, she pronounces it. Amanda Wright said Fred. So, say Fred. Cy Fred. Syfred. Syfred. It just, every inch of me thinks that's wrong, except that Amanda wants you to say Amanda Cyphred.
Starting point is 01:01:00 So that's what we will say. Okay, fine. So Amanda Seifred, who was on last week's show with Mona Fast Fold. If you haven't heard that interview, do go back and listen to it because it was a very, very good interview. So the film tells the, I mean, I have to say unknown to me, story of Anne Lee, Mancunian woman who became the leading light of the Shaker movement in the 18th century.
Starting point is 01:01:21 So the film basically follows her early revulsion about sex, which she thinks is the source of all sin, the birth and loss of several children, which provides a genuinely traumatic backstory to her own story, her initiation into the Quakers and then the development of the shaking Quakers, so-called because they seem to sort of convulse during the spiritual ecstasy of their services. And she was talking, when a fast-fold was talking about almost shaking the spirit out from the body, the movement to America on a crossing which nearly kills them,
Starting point is 01:01:59 the attempt to set up a new utopian society, the hostility from those around them who see them as witches and devil worships, it was not least because the shakers seem to believe that, Anne is effectively the second coming of Christ. So the joke that everyone made is, you won't like it when she's Anne Lee, which they didn't. Here is a clip from the trailer. For those new here who are unaccustomed to a woman preacher. Come near a to me. Christ's spirit first appeared as a man.
Starting point is 01:02:46 What has reappeared to fulfill the promise of the Christ's spirit. Second coming. As a woman. Our mother am. I have seen a tolls of people waiting for some America. We were planted great big tree with deep and solid books. So, I knew nothing of this story before the film. I think, did you know about it before seeing the film?
Starting point is 01:03:19 I did, I did know some of it, just because I did a university study of religious radicalism, which came out, the English. of a war, which is 100 years previous, but it's clearly spilling into this story. Yeah. Okay. So, all I knew was, as everybody does, Shaker furniture, a very, very, very nice kitchen wear. So the story is remarkable. What is more remarkable is the decision to tell the story as a musical. And you and I will have to have a discussion about this. I think that doing it as a musical makes sense because the convulsions of the
Starting point is 01:03:56 shaker service are like a form of kind of trancy dancing. I mean, there is a comparison, in fact, between this movie and Sirot, which we'll talk about in a little bit, which is to do with, you know, raves and, you know, sort of trancy rave dancing. You were surprised when the film burst into song and dance. I wasn't because I knew that it was a musical because you had contacted me after you saw the film because you saw it first and said, did you know it was a musical? And I said, no, no, I didn't. But obviously, by the time I went, to the film, therefore I did. But I thought it made perfect sense because I thought the whole thing is the way in which the gestures, the dance gestures are put together, is based on that kind of
Starting point is 01:04:40 physical representation of spiritual rapture, which happens during the shaker service. I mean, they take their name from the fact that there is this kind of this shaking, this sort of, like I said, this sort of trancy spasm happening that they, that they then, turned into dance. I think the choreography is amazing. And for me, it worked. Now, tell me why the musical element didn't work for you. Trancy Spasm, by the way, great name for a band. Yes. If I was going to set up some kind of ecstatic worship outfit, I assume there are some, trancy spasm would be it. Or maybe Trancy Spasm would be the lead singer. Maybe. I think the story is a fascinating.
Starting point is 01:05:26 one. And as I said, I had a bit of an introduction to this based on studying stuff that came out of the English Civil War, which was, as Christopher Hill wrote in his book, a world turned upside down. That's what had happened. And we're still in like the tail end of that. Yeah. So I do think all these religious radical groups are endlessly fascinating. And I've found that the dancing and singing just got in the way of it. And I've, and I've, and I've, and I've, and I've found it increasingly irritating. And I also, because Amanda Seifred has got such a great voice and we've heard us sing before, it all sounded too pure to me.
Starting point is 01:06:06 It sounded to West End to Broadway. Oh. And I thought, no, it would have been very kind of crazy and strange. And I don't think he'd ever answered that. I was messaging my brother because he studied the Shakers University. and he said that they, he thinks that the dancing was an alternative to sex. Doesn't sound like a great option really. But anyway, that's, that's, that's why.
Starting point is 01:06:33 Yes, I think there is something of that. And when I was talking about ecstatic trance, yes, there is, there is an element, which is that if you're going, if you have to have some kind of physical ecstasy, then actually that, that, that does make sense. I should say that, you know, on the subject of the thing, so the soundtrack is, is, Daniel Bloomberg was using original shaker hint. hymns as the kind of basis. He also wrote three original songs. And he said that it's one of the most experimental extreme projects I've ever done. And I didn't have the issue that you had about
Starting point is 01:07:06 it sounding West Endy. And partly I think that's because, so the choreography is by Celia Ross and Hall, who also worked on Vox Lox. And I was completely swept up in the physical movement of it. And I think the point that your brother made is actually a very good point, which I think is captured by that, by that movement. But it's interesting because from your point of view, you found it just alienated you from the story. And from my point of view, I found that it that it brought me in. And I suspect that that is going to be mirrored by audiences and we'll tell obviously next week when we get emails about it. But I suspect that people are either going to go with it or not. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:46 I think so. I think also, and let's forget just for the moment, the ridiculous. one and a half kilometers reference, which, you know, it's the wrong, it's the wrong bird, it's the wrong swimming stroke, it's the wrong unit of measurement. I'm amazed, I didn't notice that when it happened. I'm just, I'm amazed because that's such a honk. It is. It's sort of, what?
Starting point is 01:08:09 Hang on, stop the film. That Amanda Seifred's character, Anne Lee, I think her phrase was, you know, there is madness here. Yes. that she had been driven, for want of a better word, she'd been driven mad by the four children she had who died. Which led presumably to, you know, you can't have sex, whatever, and had no children, thank you very much. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:38 Because bear in mind they thought they were in end times. They thought the end was coming. All of these groups were convinced that it was the end of the world. Yeah. But if, I mean, I mentioned this in the interview, if you go around saying you are the second coming of Christ, you make it very easy for the authorities to say, cut that out. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:55 We're not having any of that. Thank you very much. Can we say on the subject of Amalasai Fred's performance? I thought it was one of the best performances she's done. I like her anyway, but I thought it was one of the best performances. She said in the interview that she struggled with the accent. I thought the accent was pretty good. We await the verdict of Mancunians who can write in and tell us just how convincing
Starting point is 01:09:14 it was. I'm sure that if your ear is completely attuned, there will be things that are wrong. but I actually thought she did a pretty good job. And she convinced me as, you know, as an actor, as a dancer, as a bereaved mother, as, and most importantly, as the charismatic leader of a group who think they have got a hotline to God, who think that she is the second coming, who think that the end of the world is nigh, and who are completely entranced by, I mean, it's hard to get those charismatic characters right. and I thought she did.
Starting point is 01:09:49 I thought her performance was terrific. And I agree with that. And who knew that there was Puritan porn? You'll have to see the film for details. But I'd be really interested to know what people think. Because as I said, for me, the dancing and the music, I found completely engulfing. I wish I still had the Scarlet show
Starting point is 01:10:10 because we would have played the whole soundtrack. For you, you found it alienating. And this is a perfect example. of all film criticism, all criticism is subjective. I'll be really interested to know what listeners think, whether they go with it or whether they find, as you did, that it was alienating. And it may well be that if I hadn't learned about them a bit, then I would have, you know, I wanted more of that. I wanted more of how this movement emerged and where it came from and an explanation of all that, because it just seemed like crazy stuff. But anyway, so the
Starting point is 01:10:47 Testament Van Lee is out correspondence at kerbanamayo.com adds in a moment. But first, Mark, I can see that there's a smile playing at the corner of your mouth because it's our laughter lift time. I see you jigging there to the music. I am. Hey, Mark, a real emotional roller coaster roller coaster. It's not your teeth that you have been today. It's an emotional rollercoaster on the laughter live this week. Do you remember Uncle Cecil, who became chronically addicted to the hokey-cokey?
Starting point is 01:11:25 Well, good news, he's really turned himself around. But I also have some very sad news. You know my pet ducks, Waddle De Niro and Duck Norris. No. Well, Duck Norris came down with something very nasty last week
Starting point is 01:11:40 and collapsed. So he rushed into the vets. We'll have to give me some space on this one. I'm afraid your duck is dead, said the vet. Are you sure, says I? Hold on a moment, sir, the vet says, and brings out a Labrador retriever, which sniffs poor little duck Norris and shakes his head.
Starting point is 01:11:58 Are you really sure the duck is dead? What's with the Labrador anyway? That's what I'm saying. Hold on, sir, says the vet. And in comes a moggie, would you believe? Who also sniffs the duck and shakes its head. And then the vet hands me the bill. 600 quid, I say, to tell me that my duck is dead.
Starting point is 01:12:15 Well, if you've taken my word for it, Simon May. The bill would have been 30 quid, but Lab report. and cat scans cost extra. Wow. Yep. It was a long run up. It was a long walk up the garden path to that front. Long run up for a very small hurdle.
Starting point is 01:12:32 Anyway, I needed cheering up after that, as you can imagine. So I watched... I think we all do. So I watched one of my... There's no way of saying this without it sounding pervy. Okay, so I'm just going to go for it. So I watch one of my special videos of German women doing handsstands. They really turn my friend.
Starting point is 01:12:52 frown upside down. Anyway, special videos of German women doing hands. What kind of world is this? Anyway, coming up in the last bit of the program, Mark is going to be getting very excited because, and we haven't talked about it, well, we talked about the film, but we haven't discussed what's going to be album of the week. What's the album of the week?
Starting point is 01:13:12 The movie of the week is going to be. But let me, well, maybe it'll be movie of the week and album of the week as well, because it's epic Elvis Presley in concert after this. Okay, it's time for what I think is going to be movie of the week. Epic, Elvis Presley in concert. Big E, big P, small I, big C. So this is the new film from Baz Luhrmann. This evolved during the research for Baz's 2022 biopic, Elvis Biopic.
Starting point is 01:13:50 And during that, he went looking for archive of unseen footage of Elvis from the 70s. Because there's always been this story that because there's the two movies, there's Elvis, that's the way it is, and Elvis on tour from 70 and 72, respectively. And, you know, there's outtake footage probably. Anyway, it turns out in the Warner Brothers archive, which is in a salt mine in Kansas. And of course, I knew this because when we were doing the Exorcist reconstruction stuff, that's where all the stuff is held. It's in a salt mine in Kansas because it keeps the moisture out of the air. There was apparently something like 70 boxes of film, 35mm, 8mm, and there was a lot of it to go through. And there was a lot of it to go
Starting point is 01:14:29 through. So much of it was without sound, so then there was the whole thing about finding sound, sorting sound, sinking sound. They also found a 45-hour-long interview with Elvis, audio interview with Elvis, which Baz Luhrman then decided could be used as a narration of sorts, because, as Lerman said, everybody's heard everyone else tell Elvis's story, but this was effectively Elvis telling his own story. So with the help of Peter Jackson's team who've done all that stuff with the Beatles restorations, he assembled basically a kind of montage tone poem that jumps between rehearsal and live footage and live performance, often intercutting between different takes of the same song, with a kind of recap of Elvis's
Starting point is 01:15:20 life but focusing largely on that period in the early 70s and to some extent narrated by Elvis himself. So here is a clip from the trailer of of epic Elvis Presley in concert. There's been a lot written and a lot said, but never from my side of the story. If you feel it, you can't help but move to it. You light my morning sky.
Starting point is 01:15:50 It's a new crowd out there. They haven't seen us before. It's got to be like the first time we go on. That's one of the secrets. Sorry, I'm just dancing in my chair to that, because I love that song. that song. So here's, here's the thing. One of the things that when people think about Elvis in the 70s in the Vegas years, they traditionally think of, you know, what's referred to as the Elvis
Starting point is 01:16:22 fat period. This is not that. This is Elvis at the peak of his performing abilities. I mean, obviously after the 68 comeback special, he had decided, which wasn't called a comeback special at the time, he had decided that he had this, this kind of, this desire to perform. And this is when he's absolutely at the top of his game. He's incredibly good shape. He's got the jumpsuits that look amazing. He's got, he's having an awful lot of fun. I mean, one of the funny things is the film is a 12A. And I looked at the thing about, you know, when they, when they describe what they've certificated it for. One of the things is drugs. He says, in a comic improvisation of the lyrics of a song, Elvis refers to morphine and marijuana, which he does. Rood humour. There's a bit when Elvis
Starting point is 01:17:05 picks up a bra that's been thrown under the stage during a concert performance and puts it on his head. And it's not rude, and it's not rude humor. No, no, I know. Really funny. But it's 12A. So they're just saying, you know, they're kind of explaining what these things are. He is having a lot of fun. He is.
Starting point is 01:17:21 More importantly, he is a showman at the head of his, you know, absolutely the peak of his powers. There's a bit when he does this kind of tap dancing gag and Sammy Davis Jr. is in the audience. You can tell everyone is looking at Elvis going, this guy knows how to put on a show. The stuff that I loved about it, quite apart from the fact that I love Elie, Elvis, and I love, you know, I love these performances. Firstly, the fact that I think what we essentially see is Elvis is a musical director, because he is conducting the musicians, he's the backing singers, even the audience. He's doing the kind of, you know, the karate moves that we all know about,
Starting point is 01:17:56 but he is absolutely musically directing the band, both in the rehearsals and more importantly on stage. And the way that the musicians watch him, I mean, they are just, they are focused on him in the same way that the orchestra will be focused on a conductor like Robert Ziegler, every kind of, you know, every gesture means something. It's like watching a Swiss watch or a well-oiled machine functioning in complete, it's absolutely magnificent. He is conducting the performances.
Starting point is 01:18:26 Second thing is the sense of epicness of epic. So the film opens in IMAX before opening in other cinemas. You remember that when Moon Age Day in the David Bowie documentary came out, one of the places that it was particularly successful was in IMAX because people loved the thing of seeing those Bowie performances on that huge screen. The film is designed to be overwhelming, and it is because the presentation of those songs is just so electrifying. Whether you like Elvis or not, I think you'd watch this, and it'd be like seeing Judy Garland on stage. It doesn't matter whether you like her or whether you like the songs. It's just that is an electrifying performance.
Starting point is 01:19:08 And I think that that kind of montage tone poem thing is, it's very Baz Luhrman. I mean, Baz Luhrman gets criticized for, you know, cutting between things and, you know, making everything overly busy. But actually what the film is doing when it's cutting between, you know, within a song, cutting between performances of the song, cutting from the rehearsal room to the live stages, you know, to different takes of it, what it's doing is it's showing you across a range of different areas, the way in which Elvis is in condescending. of this material. The way in which what Elvis is doing is interpreting these songs and conducting
Starting point is 01:19:41 where everyone always talks about Frank Sinatra's phrasing. They say Frank Sinatra was the great interpreter of songs. He could tell stories with songs. Elvis on stage in this period is a great interpreter of songs and he's leading the orchestra. And the stuff, I mean, just the, I hate the word banter, but the stuff between him and the backing singers is just amazing. The way that all the musicians are watching him and he is right there in the middle of it. I just thought it was fantastic. What did you think, Simon? I thought it was amazing. All of those things are true. My favorite bit of the whole thing is the fact that, first of all, it's happy Elvis. Yeah, happy Elvis. Having an absolute blast. And I love the, we see him being introduced to the
Starting point is 01:20:26 band right at the very beginning. And they're all obviously thinking, wow, it's Elvis Presley. But these are top session musicians. Oh, yeah, yeah. And it's wonderful to watch them. So the drummer is not looking at the drums. He's just watching Elvis because that's what you have to do. And you got the feeling that he could do anything. He might change something or introduce another bit of the song. And they didn't, if you weren't watching what Elvis was, yes,
Starting point is 01:20:53 conducting and telling you to do, you would have been left behind. Yes. And I might have mentioned this to you sometime before. The only time I've ever seen that in a much smaller, context was Ronnie Scots when Van Morrison launched the Avalon Sunset album. And he had on States with him an amazing band, Georgie Fame on keyboards, for example. Wow. And not one of them took their eyes off Van Morrison for the entire duration of the concert
Starting point is 01:21:20 because they had no idea what he was going to do next. But it's a joy to watch, isn't it? It's a joy to watch somebody conducting musicians like that. Yeah. So I thought it was really completely brilliant. And in the same way that the Elvis biopic with Austin Butler and Tom Hanks made me think, okay, that's what it was like. This should be a double bill.
Starting point is 01:21:46 They should be on together because on the one hand you get the fiction, which explains how Elvis became the phenomena that he became. And then you see the actual Elvis in concert. And I thought it was a stunning success, basically. We had a communication from Sanjeev, who, of course, is the great Elvis. I mean, Sanjeev's, you know, Elvis trivia puts mine in the shade. I know, and Sanj sent this message to both you and I. I did say to Sanj, is it okay if we quote some of what he said? Have you got Sanjee's message there? Okay, so this is, this is some of it. This is one of those texts, which is actually an email. Yes. So it goes on for three feet. So Sanjeev says, to me, this was about Elvis's resurrection, a return to live performance to what he felt.
Starting point is 01:22:30 he was made for. In a time before auto-tuned choreography, light shows and dancers, just a bloke in his band, as Elvis says in the film, playing the hell out of it. The connection with his band is backing singers and the audience precise yet loose, exacting yet playful, gave a striking glimpse of why he became the beamoth of an entertainer that he was. Lots of people are great, but few are original. From both the clips of young Elvis and early 70s Elvis, it is clear that no one before him moved quite like that. The upscaling technology of the images and sound had the same effect that Peter Jackson's get back
Starting point is 01:23:05 and they shall not grow old had, one of this simultaneously going back in time and feeling contemporary. I thought that was also brought to bear by Baz's direction, a modern edit on old material. As a fan, it wasn't a given that I'd love it. I just didn't want it to be awful. I was with someone,
Starting point is 01:23:27 not necessarily a fan and she loved it. Either way, it's difficult to ignore the voice, charisma and athleticism on display and then he ends up by saying the tragic note for me is that within five years of these performances he'd be dead but more than that this was also the last vestige Elvis had of hope. He talks about wanting to perform in Britain, Europe and Japan and that he hoped to make more movies at least better than the ones he'd done. Yes. And which is true.
Starting point is 01:23:58 And he does very explicitly say he wants to come to the UK. He does. Absolutely does, yeah. And one of the movies that he wanted to make that he wasn't allowed to because of Colonel Tom Parker, who, as I always say, was neither a Colonel nor indeed a Tom Parker, was the Star is born. So go see it because even if, as Mark says,
Starting point is 01:24:16 Mark is the Elvis fan, I'm kind of, yeah, I'll go and see it. But I was blown away. I thought it's a fantastic film. And as a companion piece to the Elvis movie, that he did a few years back, it's absolutely perfect. So boom. And as soon as he found all that archive, he must have thought, okay, fine, we're on to, we're definitely onto something here.
Starting point is 01:24:38 Anyway, you said it was very busy because there's another film to do. Yeah, so Sirat, which is the new film directed and co-written by French-born Galician filmmaker Oliver Lashire who made Mimosas and Fire Will Come, which we reviewed on this show a while back. So the title is an Arabic term, which refers to the Islamic Bridge of Sirat. that all souls must cross over hell on the day of judgment, it is described as a bridge thinner than a hair and sharper than a sword. Okay?
Starting point is 01:25:08 So the film won the jury prize at Cannes. It's Oscar nominated for Best International Feature. It's up against sentimental value, and it was just an accident and secret agent. So once again, that is like the great category. The international feature is always the most interesting category. St. Sergio Lopez, who played Captain V. in Pan's Labyrinth and was so magnificent in that
Starting point is 01:25:31 Kristen Scott Thomas film Leaving, which I love. So he is Luis. He's a father who arrives with his young son, Esteban, and a dog, Pippa, at a Ray festival in a southern Moroccan desert. The music, incidentally, for the film, is by David Latelia, who is known professionally as Kangding Ray. So he has a father, he has a photograph of his daughter who has gone missing. And he thinks she might be at the festival.
Starting point is 01:26:00 And we don't know much about her, except that she was an adult. Maybe she just broke off contact with her family. I'm going to play you the clip. I'm going to just tell you what is said in the clip, just so you can understand. Actually, it starts in English. So he says, do you know this girl? And they say, look, speak in Spanish, if you wish. He says, she's my daughter.
Starting point is 01:26:19 We haven't heard from her in five months. We've been told that she might be at this rave. Then the young boy, his son, says, have you seen her? Her name's Mar. They say, I don't recognize her. Sorry, no. Do you know her? No, I've never seen her.
Starting point is 01:26:30 And then one of the rave who says, listen, there's going to be another rave in the desert. And he says, another rave says, yes, another rave. After this one, maybe she'll be there. Here's the clip. You know this girl? You know this girl? You can't speak of Spanish if you want. It's my daughter.
Starting point is 01:26:52 It's my ica. I said, for five months, that we know we've got to find her here in this So this is this other fiesta. Have you seen? It's a Marr. No, I'm not you know
Starting point is 01:27:10 you know I don't know of nothing. A bit, there's other fiesta in the desert. Another fiesta? Just after this there, there's another.
Starting point is 01:27:22 A little festival, this other fiesta, this other rave is happening far deeper in the desert, much harder to get to. And they're kind of surprised when he starts to follow them in his minivan, which they say, it's not going to make it. Meanwhile, soldiers arrive and start trying to move people on. And there are news reports that a conflict has broken out, and it looks like it's the beginning
Starting point is 01:27:45 of World War III. So the ravers, with Lewis and his son and his dog in tow, evade the soldiers and head off on these fairly perilous roads to nowhere. it. So for a while, the film plays like a kind of cross between sorcerer, wages of fear, and Barbet Schroeder's 1972 film La Valle, the valley, the valley obscured by clouds, for which Pink Floyd did the soundtrack. In La Valle, the story is that there's a French consul who joins this expedition in Papua New Guinea and ends up sort of searching for this paradisial hidden valley where, you know, along the way, the shackles of civilization are abandoned
Starting point is 01:28:26 and they're looking for this kind of utopia. In Wages of Fear, in Sorcerer, you've got this desperate group of men driving these trucks through incredibly inhospitable and often unearthly terrain where death lurks at every corner. In both films, the protagonists seem to be on a road to nowhere
Starting point is 01:28:45 into the kind of heart of darkness. And in the case of this, that is what is going on, although the actual nature of the quest is far more kind of a bleak, and I think, honestly, rather more hollow. Now, the further more hollowed. Now, the further that Lewis goes on this road with his son and the dog,
Starting point is 01:29:00 and the more trippy things become, mind-altering drugs, impromptu raves, I think the narrative starts to fall into self-indulgence. And then there is a problem. Now, bear in mind, people love this film. People have been very profoundly affected by this film, and I'm in the minority with this. But I have an issue with it, which is that halfway through, something really terrible happens.
Starting point is 01:29:23 and I don't think the film has any idea how to deal with what the terrible thing is. And instead, what it does is it just meanders inconsequentially in the wake of not knowing how to deal with this thing. Now, you could argue that one of the points is that the characters don't know how to deal with this terrible thing that's happened. I think it's that the film itself doesn't know. Then, in its third act, the group wander into a minefield. and things take a turn for the absurd. Now, I think that the intention of the sequence is meant to be a metaphor for the randomness of life and death
Starting point is 01:30:03 and the serrat of the title, the thing about the bridge over hell that is as sharp as a sword and thinner than a hair. And I think what the director is trying to say is something about the way in which, you know, you have to abandon, you know, certain things about life in order to be reborn and in order to really fully. I think that's what's going on.
Starting point is 01:30:24 You know, the life after death, not actual death, but the rebirthing thing. But I have to say to me, the dramatic conceit and the way it was dramatized was more absurd than absurdist, and they are different things. So it's not so much that it's a sort of divine comedy, is that it's an unintentionally funny joke. Now, I may be very shallow, and I absolutely understand that people have been profoundly affected
Starting point is 01:30:49 by the film, but honestly, by the time we got to that third final act, I had disengaged from the characters because the inability of the film to deal with the midway tragedy in any proper way meant that I just had started to see it as a film. I just started to see it as a construct. As I said, I know that other people have made comparisons with cult classics like, you know, as a risky point. I know that it can. Everyone went nuts about it. I thought it was, in its later stages, an example of a filmmaker getting high on their own supply. I mean, a film about people getting lost in the desert off their heads on, you know, hallucinogenic substances, searching for the meaning of life in a base bin.
Starting point is 01:31:31 And I found that indulgence troublesome because I think the film did not know how to deal with the thing that happens halfway through it. And I, this is a perfect example of how Wes Craven once said about, no, not Wes Craven, Toby Hooper once, not Toby Hooper, John Carpenter, once said to me about horror movies. He said, the thing with horror movies is if you, you have to get onto an edge of terror. And if you lose the audience, you lose them big. And there are things in movies that just you lose, you just lose the audience. In my case, the halfway, the midway point tragedy lost me. And I found the, I found the final act, as I said, more absurd than absurdist.
Starting point is 01:32:14 Others will not feel the same way, but I'm not buying it. Correspondence at cobenabere.com. Let us know what you think. That's the end of take one. This has been a Sony Music Entertainment production. This week's team, Jen, Eric, Josh, Heather and Dom, the redactor with Simon Paul. And if you're not following the pod already, please do so wherever you get your podcasts. Come and join us on Patreon for all the good and juicy stuff.
Starting point is 01:32:36 Quick hi to new ultras, Mark Field, Daniel Tuck, and Sam Larry. You're all very welcome. Mark, what is your film of the week? Elvis Presley. Yeah, I mean, I'm a big fan of Testament of you won't like me when I'm Angley, but it is absolutely epic Elvis Presley in concert. Back next week, look out for a special episode celebrating women in film with our partners at Vanguard ahead of International Women's Day. That's going to drop on Monday. That'll be on YouTube. I will bestow a year's ultra membership, as I appear to have acquired this gift. To our correspondent of the week, I'll say it's Barney Robson,
Starting point is 01:33:12 who's our clarinetist from the ENO, who was telling us about Bernard Herman and Wuthering Heights, which is, I think, one of the Wuthering Heights is that we have not discussed, nor has anyone else. Nor has anyone. So thank you, Barney. And we'll be back next week with your actual Martin Cloons. How about that?
Starting point is 01:33:30 See you then.

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