Pop Culture Happy Hour - One Battle After Another and What’s Making Us Happy
Episode Date: January 23, 2026One Battle After Another earned 13 Oscar nominations - including best picture, best director and a lead actor nomination for Leonardo DiCaprio. In the action-thriller, DiCaprio plays a washed up ex-re...volutionary searching for his missing daughter while raging against the machine. In this case, the machine is unabashedly racist, xenophobic, and corrupt. Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, the ensemble also includes Sean Penn, Teyana Taylor and Benicio del Toro. Today, we’re revisiting our episode about the film that originally aired in September 2025. Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopcultureAmazon supports NPR and pays to distribute some of our content.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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Aside from great performances, you never quite know what you're going to get with a new Paul Thomas Anderson movie.
Sometimes it's a twisted romance or a loose coming-of-age tale or even a sprawling epic with biblical implications.
His latest feature is one battle after another, and this time he's in action thriller mode.
Once again, he's in fine form.
Somehow this is Anderson's first time working with Leonardo DiCaprio,
who's playing a stoned-out dad searching for his missing daughter while raging against the machine.
the film just earned 13 Oscar nominations
with Best Picture, Best Director,
and the lead actor nomination for DiCaprio.
So we thought it was the perfect time
to revisit our conversation,
which first aired in September.
I'm Glenn Weldon.
And I'm Aisha Harris,
and in this encore episode of NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour,
we're talking about one battle after another.
Joining us today is freelance film critic
and programmer Monica Castillo.
Welcome back, Monica.
So glad to be back for this one.
Lovely to have you.
So one battle after another stars
Leonardo DiCaprio as Bob, a washed-up ex-revolutionary living quietly with his teen daughter Willa.
She's played by Chase Infinity.
One day, his past comes back to haunt him, Colonel Lockjaw, that is his actual name,
he is the officer who effectively dismantled Bob's crew of militant activists some 16 years earlier,
and he's tracked him down and is after Willa now.
He's played by a very colorful and very sinister Sean Penn.
Bob seeks help from what's left of his old group, the French 75,
He's also aided by Willis Karate instructor Sergio, played by Benicio del Toro.
And the ensemble also includes Tiana Taylor as perfidia, Beverly Hills.
Again, these names, Chef's Kiss.
She's playing Bob's Love and Willa's Mom.
One Battle After Another is streaming on HBO Max, and Glenn, I'm going to start with you.
How did we feel about One Battle After Another?
We loved it.
I mean, this movie is really clear-eyed and immediate and urgent, and it's ridiculing an ideology.
that is, as they say, in the news right now, which is white supremacy.
And I'm not particularly proud of this, but I know that if this movie had been made even as recently as last year, if it had come out then, I know me.
I'd be sitting here on this podcast, bloviating about fiction of villains.
I'd be like, I don't know, guys, you make your villain a white supremacist.
That's like making your villain kill puppies or club baby seals.
It's so cartoonishly evil.
It's so unbelievably evil.
It's like you don't have to put in the work as a filmmaker to make a layered characterization because you,
can count on the fact that literally everyone in your audience is going to agree that they're
horrible people. That's why, frankly, back when the ending of Breaking Bad came out, it didn't
hit as hard as it could have because it's all about, this shows all about moral gray area,
a good man becoming a monster. But then at the very end, they go, oh, you know what's worse
than a monster is literal Nazis. We can all agree. Literal Nazis. It felt like a cop out. This
doesn't because white supremacy isn't a radical fringe notion. It's back in the public square.
It's public policy. And that's,
ridiculous, and that needs to get called out and ridiculed. And that's what this movie is doing
and not for nothing, having a great time doing it. I mean, given the subject matter, this
should really come off as kind of strident and polemical, but it really doesn't. It's fun
in every way that Eddington isn't. I had a great time at this. Yeah, Sean Penn is sort of
the locus for this racist, xenophobic, all of these things. Yeah, he's the face. He is
hamming it up. And I don't mean that in the derogatory way. He seems to be having
maybe too good at a time playing this character.
He's been waiting his whole life to play this kind of villain.
He's so good at it.
It's so scary.
I didn't recognize him at first, and then I realized who it was.
And I'm like, neither did I.
Oh, God.
Oh, my God.
I also really loved it.
I was super on board with it.
I think we sometimes take Paul Thomas Anderson for granted because, of course, he's
such a great filmmaker.
Of course he's going to give us something good.
And then we come to this movie, and not only does he push himself and really try
different things, both visually and narratively,
It just feels like everything works together so precisely, very entertaining, completely riveted.
I can't believe that he just, like, grabbed onto that third rail of like, let's talk about politics right now and made an exciting thriller out of it.
Yeah.
I mean, one of the best sequences in this movie is a car chase that I really want to single out.
I got to see this in IMAX.
And I felt like I'd never seen a car chase that good before.
I mean, it was eye-poppingly beautiful.
So shout out to Anderson.
and his cinematographer Michael Balman, who he worked with on Lickrish Pizza.
So they're back together again.
And it is just incredible, just so inspiring.
I also went back and visited some of Anderson's previous works,
then getting to see like little threads of things throughout his career that he's bringing back for one battle after another.
There's a beautiful, it's just a little scene of just like a camera on top of a car door that's being closed at the same time.
But it just feels so exciting.
Yeah.
And it's borrowed from Punch Druck Love.
You know, the kinds of painterly compositions that he uses for the master is also here on display.
He's just so good at what he does and he comes out swinging.
I mean, it is a master class firing an all on cylinders.
I can't say enough great things about this movie.
I think we're going to be talking about this one for a while.
Yeah.
I love that you talked about the car chase scene because it really is.
I mean, there's not really, and you can't really give away a car chase scene.
But, like, I do find it fascinating that it takes place in the desert.
and it's the hillyest desert I have ever seen.
And I've driven through a lot of desert.
A lot of it is flat.
Or if you're driving through it, it's very slow ascent.
It kind of felt like French connection, but in the desert because it was just like so many hills.
It's like, what is happening here?
But it's so well-paced and so well choreographed.
This movie comes in at almost three hours, and I did not feel those almost three hours.
Not at all.
I agree with so much of what you both have said.
I have a couple of small nits, and they keep this from being.
a great movie for me from a very good.
But I think that Leonardo DiCaprio,
we've kind of seen him play a sort of character like this
and like once upon a time in Hollywood.
I feel at least in the second half of this movie,
you know, when he is very just kind of checked out
and washed up, as we've said.
But it's fun, it's funny.
There's a whole sequence where he is trying to charge his phone
while also trying to remember a code that he got 16 years earlier
to identify himself in order to get help from the French 75.
What time is it?
You know, I don't remember that part.
Let's just not nitpick over the password stuff.
Look, this is Bob Ferguson, all right?
You just called my house.
Let's cut the...
I need the rendezvous point.
What time is it?
The secrets goes on for a very long time, but it is great.
It's so well-sustained.
And you have Benicio del Toro playing with it and just being cool.
That's what Benicio Del Toro is really good at.
I just found this really, really fun.
I do want to kind of talk about the way this movie does incorporate the more topical and very of the moment's issues.
Because at the center and what I think most of Anderson's focus is on like this relationship between Willa and Bob, father and daughter, and then, of course, Colonel Lockjaw and this kind of triangular thing.
But then it opens with the French 75.
this radical group, infiltrating and freeing detained immigrants. And we see that happen again
later on. We see what's happening in the way that people have to feel like they're forced into hiding.
This movie has a lot of tunnels and a lot of like walking to places, both sinister but also
liberating. I kind of want to pull a little bit more on that and how you feel Anderson
weaves those in and sometimes takes a backseat, I think. And I wonder how that works.
worked for you. I'm curious.
Well, what occurred to me is that this movie's understanding of counterculture radicalism
is more layered than it appears on the surface because DiCaprio is so, he's doing so much
that he kind of steals focus.
But if you grew up anytime after the 60s, your understanding of what the 60s counterculture
was was, if you think about it, it was dictated entirely to you by the culture that the
counterculture was trying to counter, right?
So history is written by the winners and 60s.
Radicals and revolutionaries have been portrayed in mainstream culture forever as hippies, burnouts, losers, you know, dismissable.
So DiCaprio represents that archetype. Now it's not 60s radical culture here. It's more contemporary.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah. But his character is a loser. Even when his group experiences a win, as it does in those opening scenes you mentioned, he's a raw nerve. That's my favorite DiCaprio. You mentioned once upon a time in Hollywood. We also see a bit of it in Wolf of Wall Street. He's feckless. He's insecure.
You tell me if you think this is a stretch. I think he's the audience surrogate.
Oh, yeah.
When we catch up to him 16 years later, he's gone complacent with weed and booze and TV and watching the Battle of Algiers.
And the film's world is very specific.
It doesn't seem to be at first, but it is because the world he worked to prevent has come to pass.
And it literally has.
In the world of the movie, which is maybe the most pinch-un-esque little filigree bit that's kind of staying in the film because it's a very loose adaptation on the Thomas Pynchon novel, Vineland.
Because it's not white supremacy writ large as a cultural reality.
There is this very specific white supremacist's.
secret society. It's strongly implied that it actually runs the damn country. And so, you know, that's when you kind of recalibrate the Lear de Caprio character because he's not paranoid because people are actually out to get him. So he's not paranoid. He's just perceptive. And I think if people think of that secret society as a cop out, which I would have even a year ago. I mean, in drama, in fiction, you need to particularize and localize what you're fighting against. 250 years of systemic oppression needs a face. Right. A face you can punch. And this film, smartly,
In the end, I think, this one was filled with very punchable faces that I wanted to see punched.
Yes, including Tony Goldwyn, aka Fitts from Scandal.
Oh, yes.
Surprise, surprise.
I also can relate to, you know, the need or like the sort of like malaise that sets in after so many years of trying to fight the power.
It gets really exhausting.
And maybe you just want to live life.
Maybe that's all you have the bandwidth for.
You know, there's been so much conversation over the past few years since, you know, the Black Lives Matters movement.
different things like that. How do you sustain a cultural momentum like that in these kinds of
movements in these grassroots organizing? And what happens next? Is this a lifelong thing?
Or like, how do you make it a lifelong thing without necessarily burning out? Because burning out
is a real reality for a lot of folks. And especially for as much activism as like Leonardo DiCaprio's
character takes on. He's, you know, really involved with this countercultural group. And then all of a sudden,
you know, he tries to, you know, go back to life as a lot of a lot of a lot of, you know,
a civilian and it turns out that you can't always go back.
So that's a very, you know, real discussion and reality that, you know, happens in countries
the world over, let alone, you know, what might happen here.
It was an interesting sort of tension there to see like, yeah, you can tap into the movement,
but you can't necessarily always quit it.
Right.
Let me lay all my cards out on the table, which is that the more I've mulled over on this,
the more I've come around to, this is very, very good.
I want to watch this movie again.
Same.
I think to your point, Glenn, about how it really kind of captures what it means, like,
when the revolution is no longer sexy, like it's sexy until it's not.
You know, eventually most, if not all, revolutionaries find themselves in their older age,
whether it's actually the system breaking them down or just getting older, maybe getting a bit more conservative,
things just change.
And I love that aspect of this film and how seriously it takes it.
I think for me where I was wanting something a little bit different, and it's always a gamble to argue that a movie should have been this when it's not because it's like you have to judge what's on the screen.
But I do think the movie does give me something that I wanted more of.
And that is, you know, this idea of Tiana Taylor's character, Perfidia, and what exactly her motivations are beyond just being a black woman?
That's not his focus.
And I wonder, is it because Leo is a bigger name and is a white man and he just understands it more?
Like, the whole white supremacy stuff I was totally on board with.
I wanted perfidia.
That part of it felt a little surface level for me because it kind of rushes by really, really quickly in the first, you know, act of this movie because we're in the past and we're seeing them before they've had their daughter.
And she's such a fascinating character because she is kind of like a,
a Pam Greer in the 70s.
Like she is depicted as like this revolutionary like black power figure,
but then she's using her sexuality and actually like gets off to some extent on like wielding a gun and on having this sort of power.
And there's even a moment where they're robbing a bank and Jungle Pussy, who is the rapper who plays a character named Jungle Pussy in this movie.
And she's part of the Front 75.
At one point she says like, I am what black power looks like.
And I was like, okay.
I guess what I wanted more of was like a little bit more of an understanding of what that revolution is for those black characters.
Because it does mean something, the fact that we know that they're the ones leading this.
And people like Leo are just kind of along for the ride.
And Alana Haim also shows up very briefly, like kind of blink if you miss it as part of the group.
But the black and brown people are leading this charge.
And I kind of wanted a little bit more of that before we turn to focusing on.
on the Leo character. And I think that's kind of where I, and also like Regina Hall is in this movie.
I was going to say, she is completely under you. Yeah.
Okay. This is not an excuse, but here's what I think was happening in D.T.A.'s mind.
He wants to say, I need to represent the culturally common idea of a revolutionary. That's DiCaprio.
He also wants to acknowledge that that he is not the whole story. We see in this movie that revolution, or at least resistance, is a noble thing.
and that revolutionaries can also be competent
and you want to get behind them
and yes, if they take the form of Tiana Taylor
they can be sexy. I agree, that's pretty much
all she is in this movie. That's her
characterization, but in the same way,
if it takes the form of Benici del Toro
revolution can be chill as hell
and I would argue that chill as hell
is also pretty much the extent
of his, that's who he is. But, you know,
he's effective. I mean, there's a lot of really
compelling images in this film
including that Chasini guys talked about, but the one
that I'm going to be kept with is the silhouettes of
these kids leaping across rooftops, joyful, purposeful, gorgeous.
And then I think what he's trying to say, and I don't think he's doing it a particularly
layered way, but he's saying, that's the resistance.
And then we see DiCaprio huffing and puffing behind them.
And then he's like, he's like, that's us, right?
Which is why I think the film wants to be a call to action, but not a humorless or
didactic one, but a fun one.
It is a mainstream movie that has subversiveness at its center.
It's not a deep subversitous, but it's there.
And all that's really saying is get off the couch, look around and help each other.
And I bought it.
Yeah.
I really dug the fact that you have so many different examples of what a revolutionary
leader looks like, whether that's more the showstopper, more the person who gets off
on control, like perfidia, or like DeAndre, which is Regina Hall's character.
Like, she's way more in control than I think almost anyone else in the movie up until
a certain point.
And she's kind of running, you know, a good portion of that movie.
I enjoyed that.
And same thing with Beniso D'Otoiro, like, even though he has this very cool, reflective
service, like, nothing's going to trouble him.
He's overseeing, you know, a huge operation.
And, you know, while Leo's character, Bob is freaking out and, like, throwing himself
on the floor to not be seen by the cops.
Yeah.
Benicio is, like, just slowly and purposely packing his stuff, getting ready to go into the next
mission.
Yeah.
So you have all different kinds of responses to this moment of action, a moment of crisis.
Absolutely.
I think all of those points, I agree with them, and I think they're so important to point out.
I have to say, like, this is, again, this is a me sort of critique.
I think also I'm just looking at it from the sense of, like, the history of black people on film and black women specifically on film and how you are kind of like playing with fire here to have a black woman character who is so sexualized in a way and in a violent way.
And I'm not saying he doesn't necessarily pull it off, but I do.
do think that I wanted a little bit more complications with that.
And also, again, this movie is almost three hours long.
I'm not sure what I would cut to make more room for that.
I will say, while I felt I wanted a little bit more from Tiana Taylor's character and
Regina Hall's character, we do get to spend a good amount of time with Willa, Bob and Perfidia's
daughter, who's played by Chase Infinity, who was actually new to me.
Yeah, also new to me.
I think she does an astounding job with the complexity of those.
The role, first you get to meet her, she's like this naughty 16 year old who doesn't like trust her dad or just like eye rolls, whatever, he's freaking out about something and also kind of.
To be fair, Bob is a little like no phones.
Not world's best dad.
He is actually kind of looking out for him at that beginning set.
And then it's trying to, you know, get him to wake up essentially.
And then she is kind of like coming into her own at this moment and this, I guess.
again, moment of crisis and has to kind of reckon with her family's past, her own, you know,
role in this and what she, what is she going to do? Is she going to run away? Is she going to
stand and fight? There's a big, you know, question for her to answer. And I mean, she throws her
all into it. I mean, she's really great and such a great scene partner for Leo as well.
Yeah. She is a very convincing 16 year old who is both sheltered, but also is like,
whatever, Dad, I'm doing what I need to do to try and.
feel as normal as possible. I think overall, like, this is such a, I don't know, Paul Thomas Anderson
for me has never made a bad movie. You know, this is his 10th feature. He's just one of our most
consistent working directors today. I'm just very happy that he even decided that, like, I want to
at least try to address something that is happening now. Some of it's been happening for a very
long time. But yeah, it's a fun time. I think people are going to have thoughts about it. You should
definitely tell us what you think about one battle after another, because there is so much
to talk about, so much to chew on, I'm going to see it again, and who knows, I might see it
again and change my mind completely on how I feel about this. But find us on Facebook at
Facebook.com slash PCH and on letterboxed at letterbox.com slash NPR pop culture. We'll have a
link to that in our episode description. And up next, what's making us happy this week.
Hey, y'all, before we get back to the show, yes, you, you with impeccable taste in podcast,
if pop culture habear has ever helped you win a group chat debate, find a hit series before everyone else,
or pretend you saw that movie, you definitely didn't, do us a solid and leave the show or review wherever you listen to podcasts.
It helps more people find us and helps us make the show even better for you.
And now it's time for our favorite segment of this week and every week, what's making us happy,
Monica, let us know.
So this past Saturday, Amazon hosted a live stream of the end of Bad Bunny's residency at El Choli and Puerto Rico.
It was the end of his No Me Giroi De Aki residency.
So it's a big to do.
For those of us who were able to log into the broadcast, great.
If you missed it, I'm so sorry.
But good news is there's like little clips and everything that keeps circulating.
And I'm so in love with the number of memes and reactions and posts that people have been doing.
since then. It just felt like a moment for the community to come together and enjoy something,
kind of celebrate Latino joy that even if we aren't Puerto Rico, we can all still take joy in
each other's arts, send support and solidarity for a lot of the things that Bab Bunny was singing about
and drawing awareness to. It really felt like a moment that we all kind of tuned in and
watch the same show at the same time, which we don't usually get to experience that much.
So I was glad for it, and I'm glad that the memes and the videos are living on and having a second life, even though the live stream has expired.
So that was Bad Bunny's final show for his residency, which was live streaming on Amazon.
And we should note that Amazon supports NPR and pays to distribute some of our content.
Thank you so much, Monica.
That was great.
Glenn, what is making you happy this week?
Plain Clothes is a film that's in theaters now.
It stars Russell Tovey and Tom Blythe.
It's the debut feature from writer director Carmen Emmy, and it's about a young undercover cop played by Blythe, whose job it is to entrap and arrest gay men cruising in public toilets.
You will not be surprised to learn that the Blythe character is very deeply conflicted about this because he still wait for it in the closet.
And then hot daddy Russell Tovey shows up into the men's room and complications ensue.
This movie isn't reinventing the wheel, but it's a solid wheel that is not overwritten.
It's really solid.
And I should note that some reviewers haven't liked some of the film's stylistic foot.
It's just a handheld video at certain, you know, really emotional moments.
I kind of love that, frankly, especially when you consider the film's really about surveillance.
It made sense to me.
And I'm curious to see what Emmy does next, which is the best thing a first film can do.
So that is plain close.
It's in theaters now.
Thank you so much.
I've heard nothing but good things about it.
So I'm definitely going to add that to my very, very long two watch list.
No, I want to catch up with that one.
I missed it at Sundance.
Yes, so did I.
Well, one movie that I did not miss at Sundance is actually my.
happy this week. And it is one of the best things I saw at the festival this year, that is
Predators, which is directed and produced by David Asset. You may be familiar if you're of a certain
age of the show to Catch a Predator, which first aired as a new segment in 2004 on Dateline NBC and then
continued for a few years after. And I don't really remember watching this myself, but once I
watched this documentary, I was like, oh yeah, this was the format of the show, which was adults who
could convincingly look like they were minors, would impersonate minors online, then lure would be
sex offenders to a house that was part of an undercover operation. And then the host, Chris Hansen,
would show up, confront the men, and reveal the entire production crew hidden in the house.
And then afterwards, they would usually be arrested by police waiting outside. This documentary
is so fascinating because it focuses on the consequences and the effects on those who were involved,
including, you know, the emotional toll it took on the decoys who were being used to lure these
people and also the highly publicized suicide that led to a lawsuit and then the end of the program
eventually. This is a doc that kind of like asks what has all of this wrought? Like, did this actually
work to stem abuse or was this just another form of shame, humiliation put on display for
everyone's entertainment? So it's really complicated. It's really layered and really
harrowing and devastating. And I highly recommend it. So that's Predators. It is in theater.
limited release currently, and then it's supposed to expand nationwide on October 3rd.
It's tough stuff, but also really, really fascinating as well.
That's what's making me happy this week.
If you want links for what we recommended, plus more recommendations, you should definitely sign up for a newsletter at npr.org slash pop culture newsletter.
That brings us to the end of our show, Monica Castillo, Glenn Weldon.
Thanks so much for being here.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me.
This episode was produced by Liz Metzger, Carly Rubin, and Mike Katzv, and edited by our
showrunner Jessica Reedy. Hello, come in, provides our theme music. Thanks so much for
listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. I'm Aisha Harris, and we'll see you all next week.
