The Big Picture - ‘One Battle After Another’ Is a Modern Masterpiece, With Leonardo DiCaprio and Paul Thomas Anderson!

Episode Date: September 26, 2025

Sean and Amanda are joined by Chris Ryan to break down their most anticipated movie of the year: Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another,’ starring Leonardo DiCaprio. They dive deep int...o spoilers right from the jump, make the case for it being the movie of the decade, and highlight why it’s the culmination of Anderson’s career (2:25). Then, they talk through how the film has been marketed to audiences, hypothesize about its box office potential, and consider its chances at the Academy Awards (1:31:15). Finally, Anderson and DiCaprio join the show to explain why now was the right time for their first professional collaboration, how you know you’re getting what you want with a movie on this type of scale, and how aging affects your politics and self (1:47:35). Hosts: Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins Guests: Paul Thomas Anderson, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Chris Ryan Producer: Jack Sanders This episode is sponsored by State Farm®️. A State Farm agent can help you choose the coverage you need. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.®️ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This episode is presented by State Farm. Life's full of decisions, big and small, and sometimes you make movie ones you can really stand behind. For example, I was wise enough to stick around through the mid credits during Ryan Coogler's sinners. And unlike my co-host, Amanda, I got to see a very special sequence with the great buddy guy, among other things. State Farm gets it. Making confident choices can make all the difference. That's why with the State Farm Personal Price Plan, you can choose the right amount of coverage to help create an affordable price for you. to a State Farm agent today to learn how you can choose to bundle and save
Starting point is 00:00:32 with the personal price plan. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. Prices are based on rating plans that vary by state. Coverage options are selected by the customer, availability, amount of discounts and savings, and eligibility vary by state. How would it less time with theinkup to bring and for more time for your loved podcast to have? With the Revere appell service, get that.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Bestell your own car off, online, and hold him bequeem and I'm ready-packed in market-up, naturally, without minest-best-bestll-wirt. So, you'll be more time for the next podcast episode or
Starting point is 00:01:05 your love-links. Now, outrewee slash shop or in the Reve app. Your Reve-up-Service. Online bestelling, in market-upoling.
Starting point is 00:01:17 I'm Sean Fennacy. And this is the big picture, a conversation show about one battle after another. Today is the day. Chris Ryan joins Amanda and me to discuss our most anticipated movie of 2025. It's called One Battle After Another. Later in this episode, I'll be joined by the writer, director, and star of that movie. Paul Thomas Anderson and Leonardo DiCaprio, perhaps you've heard of these two men. Leo and Paul are patron saints of this podcast, a pleasure and an honor to talk to them.
Starting point is 00:01:53 We talked about the long road to making the movie. Paul started writing it almost 20 years ago. why it appealed to Leo, why it took them so long to get together, how the movie evolved when they decided to make it together, why Paul finally decided to make a movie set in the present day, something that we've talked about many times on this show. We talked about a whole lot more. I hope you will stick around for that conversation.
Starting point is 00:02:12 I suspect you will. Leonardo DiCaprio, now a podcast guest, so we are coming right on the heels of new heights. Very exciting. Programming reminder for the top of this episode. This is not the last conversation about one battle after another. I mean, we're going to be talking about it for the next. six months, but on Monday. On Monday, we're going to do a mailbag, a one battle PTA mailbag. So if you're listening right now, I assume you are going to see the movie or have seen the movie already. And if you
Starting point is 00:02:39 want to hear more about it, more about PTA, more about Leo, more about everything related to it. The box office, I think, will be a topic of hot discussion for sure. Send us an email at big pick mailbag at gmail.com. Yes, big pick mailbag at gmail.com. Can you alluded to something important, which is if you're listening to this episode, you either have seen the movie or you're planning on seeing the movie. I think we need to set some boundaries and some delineations right here up top. We will spoil the movie in full. Starting right now. Yes. So, you know, don't do the thing where you're like, oh, I know I'm going to see it, but I'm going to listen anyway.
Starting point is 00:03:17 No. Treat yourself. Stop, pause, come back. And also, if you're the person who's mad about spoilers in any way, shape, or form, take responsibility for yourself and hit pause because I don't want to hear it. Also, even if you wanted to fast forward If you wanted to fast forward to my conversation With Leo and Paul, that is also full of spoilers And in fact, during the conversation, they were like, We're really spoiling this, but, so go see the movie. We encourage you to see the movie.
Starting point is 00:03:43 The reason we encourage you to see this movie is because this is a very special movie. And it is Paul Thomas Anderson's 10th feature film. It's produced by Paul, the late Adam Sumner, to whom the film is dedicated, the longtime assistant director, producer and Sarah Murphy stars Leo
Starting point is 00:04:01 Tiana Taylor, Sean Penn, Chase Infinity Regina Hall, Benizo del Toro, Wood Harris, Alana Heim, Tony Goldwyn, many other folks. Let's jump into it. Last night we saw it together. Yes. It was my third viewing. It was Amanda's second viewing. It was Chris's first viewing.
Starting point is 00:04:17 Pop my cherry. Amanda, I will start with you. What did you think of one battle after another? This is the movie of the year. And the movie of the decade, probably. And I mean that both in the sense of it is the best movie of the year and the best movie of the decades so far, but also is a movie of this moment
Starting point is 00:04:36 and of these really fucked up five years that we in America have been living in in a startling way, especially given how long PTA has been working on it in one form or another and how long it takes movies to make. It is jarringly, prescient and timely
Starting point is 00:04:58 and just feels like it is speaking to the things that torment us on our phone every day in beautiful and alarming and upsetting and exciting and amazing ways. So I just I'm really glad everyone gets
Starting point is 00:05:14 to see it now. It's amazing. So you would recommend this movie. Okay, CR. So you had a slightly more challenging experience seeing the movie for the first time. You had a vertiginous view of the film. Those seats are there. We sat in the third row of the IMAX and citywalk and if they put
Starting point is 00:05:30 those rows there, someone's going to sit there. And so the movie has to play to the front and to the back. I will go see it again where I can get like perhaps a different perspective, but didn't change how I felt about the movie. Interestingly, I went into this with the best movie of the decade, best movie of the year,
Starting point is 00:05:46 the crowning achievement, etc., etc., of various careers and it's a lot of hype to live up to and a lot of expectations to have. I don't think I've ever had that experience before. It's like, saw Oppenheimer pretty early and I was like, that's great. You know, I saw social network
Starting point is 00:06:00 and nobody was talking about it in those terms that we talk about it now, to go into a film and be like, this better be the best film of the last, you know, 10 years is pretty impressive for it to live up to it, which it did. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:14 And I think I, you know, to the specific perspective that I had on it, like in the screening, like it took me a second to get my C-legs with it. but it's just a transporting movie that transports you to where you are right now which is an incredible feeling to have to feel like there's something magical
Starting point is 00:06:34 and amazing about real life is like the best thing movies can do. Yeah, yeah, this is a very tactile movie made by human beings. It feels very much like a movie that could have come out in 2010 or 1985 or 1965 because there's no CGI really
Starting point is 00:06:52 in this film. There's not it's certainly very grounded in the real world even though it has the familiar absurdist satirical qualities that we expect from a Paul Thomas Anderson movie and it is exactly what you're describing which is that it is a very politically salient movie it speaks to the sort of like how power works right more more than anything but it isn't only that you know so it is like incredibly entertaining and exciting and even though it is a two-hour and 45-minute movie, which it is. It's a very long film. It's very propulsive and engaging and emotionally deep. Yeah. Which all of his films are, but very rarely in such conventional terms, and I mean that as a compliment.
Starting point is 00:07:38 This is a movie movie. It's not a exploration of the human psyche. It has those components, but like this isn't the master. If you're going in expecting something, more mysterious. This is not as mysterious. This has a plot. it has like a prologue and then characters and what's going to happen and dramatic reveals and you know in in some lights could almost be parts of it could be seen almost like soap opera
Starting point is 00:08:04 adequately but it it still has room for the psychological analysis you do wonder about every character there are those weird you know flights of surrealism and and and horror that are also played for laughs so it kind of has it all but yeah it's It's a movie. It's a movie, movie. It's way closer to Road Warrior than it is Nashville in a great way. Yes. But those are elements of both.
Starting point is 00:08:32 Those are two good signposts, I think, for the movie. Because it is trying to accomplish both of those things in terms of its expansiveness, but also how the movie moves. Like, this is a movie of literally moving from one physical destination to another over and over and over again. So to me, it's very much the culmination of the Paul Thomas Anderson project. Like this is, it being number 10 is, I guess, kind of interesting and being kind of a capstone on these three waves of his career that he's had.
Starting point is 00:08:57 Don't retire Paul Thomas Anderson. No, no, I don't get the impression he's planning to do that anytime soon. But, you know, we can talk about those, what I think a lot of fans of his see is, like the three different phases of his career. But he's never really attempted anything, not just this big, but in this style. His movies, if something is moving, it's usually the camera and not the people. You know, with the exception of boogie nights where there's some high energy, he makes a lot of people talking in rooms films
Starting point is 00:09:23 that's kind of his thing and this is not that this is something very very different from that so for him to attempt that without losing I think those qualities in the first nine movies is part of what is so exciting to me because one of the tenets of this show is that we like big Hollywood spectacle
Starting point is 00:09:37 you know we like action movies and blockbusters and so for someone with his skill set and point of view to bring his ethic to a blockbuster movie is incredibly exciting. Yeah, but on steroids. It's not like there's just like one really virtuosic chase sequence where we're like, oh, wow, you know, you've never done that before
Starting point is 00:09:58 and look, you can really do it. It is like two hours of that, of different set pieces, people in different places. And that's another, they are, in most PTA movies, they're in like a house or a townhouse or, you know, and they're very nice houses in real places, but these are out in the world with like tons of extras
Starting point is 00:10:20 and tons of explosions and just, you know, real actual practical giant things happening in volume. Like just the sheer amount of it is sort of astonishing. I was really blown away thinking about how he moves the camera
Starting point is 00:10:36 in this movie. I think you alluded to it. There are scenes where really very little is happening. A character is in a convenience store and the camera is just speeding past all the stuff on. the shelves and going over a shelf and then turning to see who's come in the door
Starting point is 00:10:50 and then turning back to the character going out of an employee only door and I was trying to think about like why he did what he did because I think that there's parts of boogie nights that when you go back and watch it you're like this guy's really fucking good but like he's almost like that's the point I'm really fucking good I completely agree with you one thing I feel I don't feel that this movie is show offy I think it does have all the moves but you know those first couple of movies are real like I've seen every Martin Scorsese movie and let me show you how I can do it too. Yes. And while this movie has incredible energy, it doesn't feel like it's riffing on other people in quite the same way. I think he's very generous and says like, I was inspired by the
Starting point is 00:11:27 Battle of Algiers or the searchers or running on empty for this movie. And that all is clear. But it's not the same as I watched Raging Bowl ten times in a row and then I made my movie. This doesn't feel like that at all. It feels, um, I wouldn't say it's like, oh, it's singularly his style either. I think it's because it is so generally entertaining, you're so interested in where the story is moving, that you're not like, you don't have time to kind of ponder on the mechanical decisions that he's made. What's the relationship between moving a camera or keeping a camera still and what it does the audience? And the only time in my first viewing of this, all caveats aside, that I really noticed the camera was still was when people felt safe. So it was either people in power who don't
Starting point is 00:12:08 think anything can touch them or it was people who were about to be on the run in that moment of piece before their lives change. That's the only time I remember the camera ever sitting still. And then the rest of the movie is pushing these people out of the doors, following them on rooftops, into cars, into, you know, all these different things. And it creates your emotionally identifying with characters who are doing things that you maybe could never imagine doing. And that's like what movies do that nothing else does.
Starting point is 00:12:38 So we should probably talk about what the movie's about. Okay. Um, the log line is that Bob Ferguson, Leo's character, is a washed-up revolutionary who lives in a state of stone paranoia, surviving off-grid with his spirited and self-reliant daughter Willa, played by Chase Infinity, when his evil nemesis, Stephen Jay Lockjaw, played by Sean Penn, resurfaces, Willa goes missing. The radical scrambles to find her as both father and daughter battle the consequences of their past. Now, that description of the movie, which is sort of like the widely shared plot synopsis, Eli, the first 40 minutes of the movie, which is really interesting and has become more interesting as I've watched the movie a couple of times now
Starting point is 00:13:18 because I think this is the part of the movie that people will probably love the least because it is the most impressionistic and it is not as focused on Leonardo DiCaprio. It's very much Tiana Taylor's story. She plays a character named Perfidia Beverly Hills who is a radical revolutionary. I guess this
Starting point is 00:13:35 is meant to be roughly 2008, 2009, 2010 when everything is happening because the movie is contemporarily set. Right, and it says 15 or 16 years later when it springs ahead. So this is... Wow, I can't believe that was 15 years ago, but anyway. And I think that's kind of useful to think about, too, in terms of what was happening
Starting point is 00:13:53 in the world at that time and why this character, who is part of this radical group called the French 75, part of a wider resistance that engage in violent acts of revolution. And so this setup for the movie, and even just the very first thing that we see, which is the very first thing we see is her. and him moving towards her. We see Leo's character who's known as Ghetto Pat and Rocket Man, who's like a new joiner of the French 75,
Starting point is 00:14:19 going to be closer to the movement, going to be closer to her, going to join whatever it is that they're cooking up. And the movie is like a, it's very un-PTA, I would say. It is not as funny in the first 30 or 40 minutes as it becomes in the second half of the movie. It's much more tightly focused.
Starting point is 00:14:36 It reminded me a little bit of phantom threat in terms of how much time it's giving to the psychology of a woman in a movie which is not really a signature of his work and it's very interested in showing the how-to of revolution the specific things that they do blowing up banks
Starting point is 00:14:55 freeing migrants from a detention center blowing out electric grids and dominating municipal spaces and also like a very sensual part of the movie too because perfidia and ghetto pat are falling in love as they're doing this revolution and they're fucking a lot and there's like a thing that happens really early in the movie
Starting point is 00:15:16 where you know that it's a Paul Thomas Anderson movie where one perfidia engages Lockjaw the Sean Penn character and she like embarrasses him slash like you know and sorciles him yes exactly perfect perfect word for what she does she turns him on and leads him out
Starting point is 00:15:32 and after they have finished raiding his detention center she gets in the car and she kisses ghetto pass And the way that they kiss, I was like, this is a PTA movie. It's like an open mouth, tongue out kiss. It's not a movie kiss. And you can see that there's something really like right on the surface with Perfidia. She's like living out loud in a way that a lot of characters don't in a lot of movies like this. They're sort of like presenting the idea of revolution but not actually showing it.
Starting point is 00:15:59 And the movie then becomes this like portrait of her kind of dominating the space. You know, her kind of running the show, him living kind of in awe of her. Right. While they enact all of this stuff. So, I mean, give me some reflections on the first third of the movie, essentially. Well, woven into all of that. And you mentioned what starts it, the initial scene between Stephen J. Lockjaw, Shod Pan, and Perfidia, which, you know, and it turns into like a sight gag erection, but also with some very, very messed up undertones.
Starting point is 00:16:36 And so throughout this prologue, this kind of extended montage of Pat and Perfidia being revolutionaries, falling in love, starting a family, like interwoven through like Lockjaw keeps showing up. And Lockjaw keeps showing up and you keep seeing his obsession, fetishization of perfidia. and ultimately, like, they do also wind up sexually entangled in a way that is, like, important to the plot, very upsetting, played like a little bit for, for shock value, maybe if not for laughs. I mean, there is an incredible needle drop to Soldier Boy when they are finally. The Sherell song, yeah. Yeah, making, doing whatever you want to. call that. I don't know what you would term. I have some ideas. Yeah. Yeah, intercourse. But it's sort of like, but the question of power comes in a play from the very beginning and
Starting point is 00:17:41 it's something Lockjaw thinks about a lot. Yeah. And also something that Tiana Taylor thinks that perfidia does. And you see it in Tiana Taylor's performance, like, in that first erection scene, the way her eyes kind of light up and she realizes that something's going on, there's a bonfire scene where she has a line she's talking about like, like this pussy is for war. It's not for, like, as she's pregnant, and then you cut to pap being like, it's like she doesn't even know she's pregnant. But so how she is both using her sexuality and how it is being objectified or, you know, taken advantage of being a generous term is also, like, a major part of what is going on with her and the lockjaw. So she is figuring, and that's a different, like, type of power, both from Profidia's perspective, but also. than what Lockjaw has on her or against her.
Starting point is 00:18:37 So, I, it's, I mean, it's fascinating. And the way it resolves itself is not a resolution. But, and I think we'll be, like, I like, I like it about it too. And I think, it's not a, the movie doesn't present like a binary idea about perfidia. No, no. There is a lot of, there's shades of gray in terms of how, trying to understand how she really feels. Right. About certain things.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Whether she is actually turned on in any way. I think it's also, there's an element that I find fascinating, which is like, what does it take to be a revolutionary and how far do you take your beliefs and your principles, right? And so the reasons that she gives, like, Perfidia has, like, more in common with, like, Neil McCauley than she does with anybody. Like, she's like, and she, when it's useful to her, it starts employing revolutionary rhetoric to be like, there's a new consciousness. You can't keep me at home with this baby. And you can't, like, like own my ear. Like this is fragile male. Right. What she says right after she's talking about how I carried her for nine months and now he has this person to coo over and it's like I'm not even the number one girl anymore.
Starting point is 00:19:45 She feels jealous over her child. Yeah. She says. You know, like insightful and you know, but like another complication in terms of the power dynamic and she got power from being like the number one woman in charge. And then there's someone else
Starting point is 00:20:00 on the scene. Yeah. Who's very small and demanding. Yeah, and I think I don't think the movie judges her. You know, and I think the decisions that she makes because of the position that she's put in, and, you know, as the movie goes on, we see her trying to kind of break free of the expectations of any
Starting point is 00:20:17 woman, especially a woman who's had a child, where the expectation is that she stay home and take care of her family. And Pat is very comfortable even at, let's say, he's in his early 30s, entering into like a more domesticated phase of his life. And she's not, she doesn't want that. And so she continues to go out into the world and she goes to rob a bank and something terrible happens
Starting point is 00:20:34 and she shoots and kills someone during this bank robbery that leads to breathtaking chase sequence. I think one of the most accomplished things PCA's ever done. He's talked about the French connection, huge waves of that in this movie. Very exciting moment. Very scary moment for the characters.
Starting point is 00:20:50 And it ultimately leads to her being captured. And when she's captured, she has to make a decision about what she's going to do. And she chooses to, she's forced to, to save her own life essentially rat out the French and we see a lot of her cohort either get killed or arrested in a really bracing sequence.
Starting point is 00:21:09 And Lockjaw thinks that he has commandeered control of her. I guess it's worth mentioning that Lockjaw represents this like shadowy government agency called MQ, which is like a highly militarized police force that seems to concentrate a lot on immigration, but now seems
Starting point is 00:21:24 to be rolling rogue through the country and doing whatever it wants. uses narco-terrorism and a lot of other concerns to exert his power. And when she makes this choice to go in a witness protection, that's the moment when the movie starts to shift gears. The first 30 to 40 minutes, with the exception of the funny stuff that Sean Penn is doing, is quite serious.
Starting point is 00:21:47 And it's like kind of an example. It's like it's a portrait of a revolutionary, basically. And it feels a lot like a lot of 60s and 70s movies that were about these kinds of figures and these kinds of ideas. Part of what is interesting to me about this, and I just haven't thought about this as much, but seeing it a couple times has continued to push to the front of my mind this is an invention.
Starting point is 00:22:07 You know, we don't have a lot of examples in our culture in the last 25 years of violent revolutionary acts. There have been some, there have been some attacks like we saw how to blow up a pipeline
Starting point is 00:22:17 a couple of years ago that was inspired by, you know, some real acts of direct action. We don't necessarily have a weather underground that we're aware of these people rampaging, not rampaging, but you know, like doing their thing.
Starting point is 00:22:28 Yeah. And I bring that up for a couple of reasons. One, obviously the movie has been inspired by Thomas Pinchin's Vineland, which is a movie set in the 1980s, very much about Reagan's America, about 1960s revolutionaries, kind of contending with their former lives,
Starting point is 00:22:42 what they've done, what that represents to them. To transport the movie to the present time is really interesting because all of the ideas of power, the way that Lockjaw's character works, and the way that the shadowy secret group that we will soon meet in the movie operate, all feels very now. It just feels exactly like
Starting point is 00:22:59 how we imagine decisions are, made behind the scenes. But what Perfidia and her group do doesn't feel as now. I'm not sure if you could say it feels like a wish. That might be casting too strong a notion, but it feels like it's an oddly hopeful movie
Starting point is 00:23:19 about this kind of action, even though a lot of terrible and sad and tragic things happen to the characters throughout it. And I'm fascinated by the choice to make a movie that is about standing up to power, essentially. Yeah, well, it still, it does put it in the past, even though
Starting point is 00:23:33 the perfidia section is a prologue, right? And so then the majority of the movie and the characters are dealing with the after effects and also many of them that they're not in the game anymore, that they have failed in one way or another, or they've
Starting point is 00:23:50 lost the fight as the, you know, the sister of the Brave Beaver says. So I think like I didn't bump on it as much I mean you're completely right that we don't I'm not aware of the weather underground of the current day you know
Starting point is 00:24:09 I'm sure there are people who imagine themselves as such I'm not on that particular dark web but you don't wake up every day and hear news about a bank getting blown up by revolutionaries that's not the common political news right now but it is the movie still does set it in even though we can remember that past that it's it's kind of trying more
Starting point is 00:24:28 to deal with the aftermath and the people, the younger generations and the people trying to make sense of something that has failed, which I would argue we are very much living in. And also, I mean, the movie's not particularly explicit about ideology, or the ideology it's explicit about is, like, ideology that is, like, transcends, like, politics. It's, like, racism or, like, revolutionary behavior.
Starting point is 00:24:52 She calls about an abortion clinic at some point. Like, in that montage, they're kind of... There's some ideas. Thanks, and like, I totally understand, but I just mean, like, once you move into the second half of the movie, it's much more almost mythical than it is political, I think, you know? Yeah. To me, in some ways. And also much more comic, and because of that, it feels more absurdist. Again, with the exception of some of the Lockjaw stuff, the first 40 minutes of the movie is pretty grounded in terms of the tone.
Starting point is 00:25:22 The opening scene is Tiana Taylor on a bridge overlooking. a detention camp at the at the U.S. Mexico border. And it's like we have seen those images very recently. And there is a lot of it in the first 40 minutes of like
Starting point is 00:25:40 the militarized police in major cities. I was trying to figure out which city is this that is being overrun right now that I have also seen on the news being overrun. So it, yeah, it is very much, if not pulled literally from headlines, then reflective of
Starting point is 00:25:58 of the news. The second and third acts of the movie are fascinating, very crowd-closing. The movie jumps, as you said, 15 years into the future, where Willa and Bob, which are the new identities of Ghetto Pat and his daughter, Charlene, they moved to Bacton Cross, California. It's supposed to be like Eureka, like Northern California kind of thing. I think, you know, some of this movie takes place in Sacramento, some of it takes place in Sacramento. know some of it takes place in kind of like the middle of this state
Starting point is 00:26:30 again, it's a Paul Thomas Anderson movie it's a California movie in many ways the movie is all about the topography of California and they're hiding out and they've been hiding out for 16 years and trying to avoid becoming discovered
Starting point is 00:26:46 and then of course they become discovered because this is a movie this is my opportunity to say this is very much a dad-daughter movie and that is not surprising. Paul Thomas Anderson has three daughters.
Starting point is 00:27:04 I think all three of his daughters are teenagers. You can feel a lot of the inspiration of this movie being about the conversations that fathers have with their daughters. You see that up front at the beginning of the second act because one of the, to me, one of the most entertaining and affecting scenes in the movie is Bob and Willa, Willa
Starting point is 00:27:25 coming down hard on her father after a long night in which he's been going out drinking with the boys He's trying to achieve Steely Dan sound with some Yeah, he's trying to get those tubes
Starting point is 00:27:36 And she's also She has a school dance to get to Yeah So her dad is, you know, they're trying to parent each other Let's do the math on that So do we think he just slept till 6 p.m?
Starting point is 00:27:45 Like what happened? Well, I did notice the second time that the school dance is happening during her happening during daylight hours. Yeah. Like, even when... But could it have been like 5 p. Like, it seemed like he slept
Starting point is 00:27:56 pretty late that day. Sure. It's possible, man. He got home around three or four, he said. So, you know, but like the bathroom is a lifestyle. Not just a time of day thing for him, so... That's a good point. In that scene, you know, Chase Infinity, we saw her in a...
Starting point is 00:28:14 Presumed... In presumed innocent, the TV show. And this is her first movie. And her job in this movie is to go toe to toe with Linaard de Capri. Regina Hall and Sean Penn. So that's a tough job. She also has to be an action star for some of it. Has to credibly hold a gun, has to credibly run away, has to credibly fight grown men.
Starting point is 00:28:36 Got to figure out how to get zip-tied hands. Like the zip-tide thing, which I was really ingenious. I was like, wow, this is... She knew right what to do as well. We're going to do the Amanda Dobbins drives a Dodge Charger with Zip Tied Hands challenge. She's really, really turning the wheel a lot there at one point. But yeah, no, just the leg. reversal thing. I was like, this is practical knowledge. I'm glad I have this now.
Starting point is 00:28:57 One of the things that we don't get explicitly clarified, but that you can assume is that Bob has shared his ideology with his daughter, not just the information about how to keep her safe and keep her anonymous, but like how they see the world, or at least how the French 705 needs to see it. It's a running on empty influence or whatever, but this idea of we're off the grid. there's like a really, I think, lovely bit if this movie that's about how just because you're not on the internet doesn't mean you're not connected to a community
Starting point is 00:29:28 and like Bob obviously even though he's something of a hermit like goes to bars knows the Benici El Toro character like as part of this community and his daughter wants to be maybe part of a bigger world and both in terms of what Bob used to do and also just having friends and going to dances
Starting point is 00:29:46 and you know wanting to be out in the world through her phone. One of the things I like about it too is just the way that most daughters are like smarter than their dads and they know it and that that's a huge part of this. Like Bob is such a burnout. He's a real one of the running jokes of the movie
Starting point is 00:30:03 is how he's completely fried his brain. So he can't remember anything, especially when he really needs to remember something. And he also wants to be progressive. He wants to be like, he wants to have an empowered daughter. That's important to him. Yeah. And so when she starts scolding him, he wants to say like stand up for yourself
Starting point is 00:30:21 that's right you should tell me what you say I am an idiot you know like I did fuck up I'm sorry which is very amusing and obviously like she reacts to it but she's like any 16 year old girl she's like I hate my parents they're so annoying why won't they get out of my shit but that that
Starting point is 00:30:36 interaction she has some points because he came home at 4 p.m. And he's admitting to drinking and driving you know and he's like I know how to drink and drive you know and then to me the absolute funniest part of the movie is when her friends arrived to pick her up for the dance.
Starting point is 00:30:53 It's a classic, you know? And Leo greets them. And I can't do justice to What's Up Homi, but the entire What's Up Homi experience where he talks to Bluto is so good. And it does, to me, the movie kind of like goes into a second gear once that scene happens.
Starting point is 00:31:11 Yes. Because it feels like it finds its comic sensibility in a real way. And if Leo gets activated in the movie in a way that he has really, for the most part, not been up until that point. Yeah, that's where, like, that's the best acting I've ever seen. Rick Dalton shows up. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:26 You know, it's like, he's kind of, like, running that whole, the whole space. Well, and it's, it is also when, like, the heart and the emotion of the movie shows up. The first 40 minutes are incredibly, like, upsetting and involving and, like, technically accomplished. And, you know, there's, like, an amazing action set pieces. But then you get to this moment And you're like, oh, he's a girl dad You know, but there is
Starting point is 00:31:53 To your point about There's a hope in this movie There is some There's real emotion And it becomes evident Once Leo is in a bathroom screaming of people Yeah, and their connection is the engine You know, the idea of him
Starting point is 00:32:08 Being so protective of her There's this great little plot device In the movie of these kind of transmitters These responders that they're given That Leo is given right before he goes off on the road to go to Backton Cross eventually. I love that actor
Starting point is 00:32:23 who gives him the transponders who the Howard Somerville character. Who is never in movies. He's in this great movie Frownland that Ronald Bronstein made some years ago and he's a composer. And that character who creates these transponders
Starting point is 00:32:38 and eventually shows up a little later in the film in the present day is a classic Paul Thomas Anderson thing where I'm like, did he just remember that that guy is alive. There's a guy
Starting point is 00:32:49 in this movie who plays like basically like Sean Penn's character's interrogator who has a single IMD credit and it's one battle
Starting point is 00:32:59 after another and he is one of the scariest parts of this movie and I just don't know how he does this he just over and over again the guys in
Starting point is 00:33:07 the Christmas adventures who we'll talk about but like you're just like where did you fucking how did you come up with the roulette wheel
Starting point is 00:33:14 that gave you these three dudes yes there there's a lot of examples in this movie. You can go through everyone. Honestly, it's a podcast. We have time. But, you know, he hands his daughter, this transponder. And we, you know, we realize that her life is kind of hard because he is obsessive about protecting her. He's paranoid also. As she says, in the car, they're driving away. Yes. And he's like, really, it's wearing her down as she's entering her teenage years. And I think actually Paul might have said this when we spoke, but just the idea of like, maybe for the first 12 or 13 years of her life,
Starting point is 00:33:47 she didn't realize how weird this was. Yeah. But she's starting to realize now. Isn't that true for all of us though? Yeah, it is. I love that idea in the story of her trying to find a way to break free, figure out how to be her own person, but she's kind of bound by the actions of her parents, you know,
Starting point is 00:34:01 and that she can't actually be as free as she wants to be in the world, which is really interesting, you know, a common condition of all. Yeah, here we are. Here we are all are. And I think it's funny that Leo... is doing this part to me he's never been a parent to an older kid in a movie before he turned 50 years old last year
Starting point is 00:34:25 and he's in he was born sometime in the 80s according to this movie and I was like I clocked that he's playing down a little well he says that to the police officer we don't actually know
Starting point is 00:34:34 if he's even telling the truth there but this is a new step for him I think to be playing he's played parents before but not like this and there's a certain kind of like desperation and goofballness
Starting point is 00:34:47 like loserness. Yeah. Many of the dads I know like instantaneously become losers when they become dads like you kind of like seed something. No, you though. You just level up.
Starting point is 00:34:59 I mean, I was a loser well before I was a dad. But I just think this performance is really special. It's been part of a lineage of movies that he's now done for roughly the last six or seven years. We talked about the Wolf of Wall Street on the show this week.
Starting point is 00:35:14 And then if you go from there to Once Upon Time in Hollywood, which Chris just mentioned and the Rick Dalton Energy Don't Look Up Killers of the Flower Moon These movies are all like really nervy, comic
Starting point is 00:35:26 kind of like goofball but also deeply dramatic stories It's also an interesting It's interesting to think about like him think of it thinking of himself in this way Because it's You know sometimes you see a picture of him
Starting point is 00:35:41 And respectfully like he does have a little bit of a bob energy You know what I mean When he's got like a V-neck white t-shirt on and he's like vaping with a hat pulled down and then he's on a jet ski and then there are times
Starting point is 00:35:52 where he puts on a tux and you're like well you win yeah there's carry grant yeah yeah and what he wants to be I mean he hasn't done Carrie Grant in a while
Starting point is 00:36:00 you know he's basically been like I want to hide it I want to have a punch I want to be stupid I want to be insecure I want to be in a bathrobe the entire movie
Starting point is 00:36:09 it's interesting that that's what he but still like you know vaping on a jet ski or like playing tennis which with his younger girlfriend, which I think was this summer's activity, but Leah loves the summer, much
Starting point is 00:36:20 like myself, that's still, like, very far from the dad energy that he is bringing to this, and there is something so, like, I mean, he's just a really good actor. It's, like, deeply felt, like, emotional. You're just like, oh, like, no, you have the dad's stuff. Like, you really do, you care.
Starting point is 00:36:41 And that scene in the car when he's talking about how he doesn't know how to do her hair, and the scene at the, you know, the very in with the hot like it is it's so moving and there's a softness to it that I didn't really know Leo had there is um that is so essential to making this movie work and um and then and that I've never seen before yeah and I also think that the one of the most powerful things the movie does is just say like it doesn't really matter like it doesn't really matter like the title is incidental to the behavior uh in terms of like people's family familial relationships or how they treat each other
Starting point is 00:37:16 And it's like if Bob treats her like a daughter, then he is her dad. You know what I mean? We'll get into why that is. But like this movie essentially moves from this moment where, you know, Willow goes to her dance. This is where the movie leaves fucking earth and you will like, don't leave, don't blink. You can't go to the bathroom after that part. I can't do anything.
Starting point is 00:37:36 Just stare at it because this is one of the best sustained pieces of filmmaking I've literally ever seen in my life. And it just turns into the fucking inverted version of. the searchers told from the Comanche's and it's like this maniac chasing down this family and it's unreal one thing one last dad thing I want to note that I think is important is like pretty relevant to this whole movie is uh Paul Thomas Anderson is the daughter of biracial children oh no the father by racial children and like this whole movie is very much a movie about black women and black women existing in the world and his experience I assume as a white dad trying to understand
Starting point is 00:38:16 how to help his kids get through the world. I do also think that there's a little bit of his wife is Maya Rudolph, and there's a Katie Weaver profile of Maya Rudolph, like 2018-19, I think, that I always remember because Maya Rudolph's mother, Minnie Ripperton, died pretty early in her life and has the detail of Maya Rudolph's father not knowing how to do her hair. And that being like a thing to, like in one detail, explaining like what that loss means at that age to a young black woman. And so then that is showed up literally line for line.
Starting point is 00:38:56 And you know, that there's also absent mother in that. So it's just he's he is pulling from not his experience, but people very close to him. There's no doubt this is an incredibly personal movie for him. And it's risky to kind of draw conclusions based on people's biographical details. But some of things are just so overt that you can't help but ignore that. The other thing, too, is that one thing that we joke about a lot on the show is the generation gap and the way that ideas are a little bit different for people who are 10, 15, 20, 25 years younger than you are. And this is a version of it in politics and in particular ideologies in the way that parents, as they get older, even if they fancy themselves revolutionary types, just turn a little more inward, you know, get a little bit more focused on their own shit. Sometimes they turn conservative, but even if they don't turn conservative politically, they turn conservative personally, or they just become more nostalgic.
Starting point is 00:39:53 They don't think about progress in the same way, and that having kids or even just encountering young people can really be like a confrontation of your values. It's hard to make a movie about that. And this movie is very much about that because of how strong Chase Infinity's character is. Even though she's not like banging a gavel explaining how the world works to her father for two hours, you sense that there is a real tension insofar as she's. she gets herself a cell phone, even though he's told her not to. Like,
Starting point is 00:40:19 she is seeking a certain kind of independence and expressing it. There's like a very funny exchange about they, them pronouns that like, he's just like, I'm just trying to be polite.
Starting point is 00:40:26 You know, it's just like, and she's just like, it's they, them. It's not that hard. I think that it's basically what this movie illustrates
Starting point is 00:40:33 really well is that when you're old enough to have any wisdom, you lack the willpower to change anything. And when you're young enough to have the willpower, you don't really have any wisdom
Starting point is 00:40:42 and people get hurt. And I think that that's, depicted very well in this film. Yeah, I think also just beyond, like, the difference in ideology between generations, there's this movie's inflected with a real sense of, like, we are not, we didn't do anything. Like, we didn't fix it. And so now this generation, and, you know, I think we all feel this way about our boomer parents, but now we're also having kids and it's like, okay, well, what we're handing down to you,
Starting point is 00:41:08 like, we've completely failed to change it in any way, shape, or form. And, like, you know, Jack's generation or our children's generation, like, know it. And so, like, Chase's Infinity's character, Willa is a little, like, yeah, you did, like, you fucked up. And I, like, I don't want to deal with this. And all this is for nothing. And now I have to figure out how to do things my way. I think it's really insightful. It's definitely a huge part of the movie.
Starting point is 00:41:33 And it's, I was driving into work today. And I usually listen to podcasts because I have to listen to a lot of podcasts. And I was like, I'm just going to listen to music. I want to have like a clear head. I want to have just a nice emotional, a beat drive. I didn't want to even have to make a decision. So I went to Made for You on Spotify. Oh, boy.
Starting point is 00:41:50 And I clicked hip-hop mix. Okay. And the first song that played was Bombs Over Baghdad. Okay. How Kess, Bombs Over Baghdad. And it hit me that there's not a lot of popular art that is about radical politics and rebellion. There is a lot of art about that.
Starting point is 00:42:08 Not a lot of stuff that gets popular. And this is an attempt to make a popular work of art about these ideas. You know, Bombs Over Baghdad is not the anarchist cookbook or anything. It's not like a guide to how to feel about the world, but it is very much a song about the chaos of that era when Outcast was making music.
Starting point is 00:42:27 This movie is the same thing. This is a movie about the chaos of being alive at this time and thinking generationally about the decisions you've made and how they affect the people in your life as you get older, which is really deep. But also, what you just said is true, which is that once Willa leaves the house and she goes to the dance,
Starting point is 00:42:45 the movie grows wings and starts flying. And you can think about all the ideas if you want to, but you really don't have to, to enjoy yourself. Because then it just becomes an abduction, chase, and retrieval movie. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:58 Which is super duper exciting. And the mechanics of how he does it, like we can talk through each step. But I was, I was impressed. You know, it sounds stupid to say that. Pretty good. I was impressed by how he pulled it off, even though this is my favorite director.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Even still, I was like, I didn't know he had... Well, it's new. We haven't seen him do all these things. It doesn't mean that he can't do them, but you are just like, huh? And there is also, it's not just one chase sequence. I mean, we've described, like, the first hour of the movie now, right? So it's another hour and 40 minutes of people and cameras, like, on the move.
Starting point is 00:43:32 Yeah. And there's an element to the second half of this movie, and I wish I had a more... like maybe unique comparison point, but it made me think a lot of Nolan, Christopher Nolan movies, because what he does is he takes the real world. And so there's a huge sequence in a town,
Starting point is 00:43:52 and then there's a huge sequence on the road. And what he does is he takes these pretty like recognizable things, and then you're like, did you spend a billion dollars building out a tunnel system in this area? Or how did you orchestrate like a rooftop chase like this while there's also a riot going on in the streets. And that ability to see what we see every day and then imagine like what's five layers deeper than that?
Starting point is 00:44:19 And imagine like what if you went through that window and then out that door and then into this other room that's over here is that feeling like you are actually inside of a world rather than watching someone paint something or construct something. Yeah, there are two, there's two things about that. One, you're right that there is like a level of world building that is really big.
Starting point is 00:44:40 So, like, that allows for in the storytelling this really great experience of intercutting and simultaneous action because you've got these key characters who are separated from each other. Yeah. And what's happening to, there's not like one guy sitting in a room waiting for something and another, and things are happening to another person. Right. They're both on a kind of, you know, separate track journey.
Starting point is 00:45:00 Three different, because of Sean Penn's character is also, you know, he's trying to lay siege. Bob is trying to find his daughter and Willa is being exported out and that allows for the movie to not just be like rolling down a hill the whole time but for all of these things to be happening in the periphery and all matter to the story too which you're right Chris that's really really hard to do
Starting point is 00:45:21 and it's like a huge feat of editing too. It made me think about like how when you watch Dunkirk you're like God you go inside of the boat and then you go inside of like the cafeteria like the mess hall of the boat and then you know where the mess hall is when the boat gets sunk and how hard it is for them to get out.
Starting point is 00:45:36 And that same thing happens in the Backton Cross battle, essentially, where you're like, oh, I understand how, like, this store turns into a dormitory, which also turns into, like, an underground railroad for immigrants. And, like, it just all unveils itself to you as you run through these doors. Yeah. Let's talk about that because at the big switch over to 16 years later, we very quickly meet Sergio, Sensei Sergio,
Starting point is 00:46:07 who has been a Decio del Toro's character, who was a karate instructor. And we very quickly come back to him because Bob needs his help. Bob needs his help because Lockjaw has laid siege on his home. That leads to Bob escaping through a tunnel, one of many tunnels in this movie. And he realizes that his daughter is,
Starting point is 00:46:31 if she has not been abducted, she is in big trouble because he's received a call from the wider resistance. I guess that's what we're meant to believe is that there is a larger apparatus. The remnants of French 75 that have turned into whatever it's turned into. It's a point of contention. And it's not really clear who Comrade Josh is answering the phone on behalf of. Get a better name Josh. Better name Josh.
Starting point is 00:46:57 That whole sequence where Lockjaw is trying to find him and smoke him out with a tear gas. and then he needs to escape through that tunnel that presumably he has built into his home some years ago and then race through the convenience store and then get on the pay phone, which is the moment that is seen in the first trailer with Rise and Shine and that whole exchange of Leo doing phone acting, yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:21 Can we just skip? Is amazing, amazing. And his performance in this movie talking into phones is remarkable. Some of the best stuff is just him on a phone. Some of the best stuff is him needing to charge his phone. It's a number of different places that he plugs in that one G-4. It's really, really funny.
Starting point is 00:47:41 He does eventually find his way to Sergio who helps him to transport him. And Sergio also needs to jump into action because Lockjaw's team has invaded the high school. And invading the high school has triggered this sense of panic in the community. All these places are being raided. This seems like it's a very progressive community. It's a sanctuary city. sanctuary city and that World War III is starting to happen
Starting point is 00:48:04 in the streets. There is a direct confrontation with police forces and while that's happening everyone is scurrying around trying to like clear out all their illegal activity this is happening simultaneous to Bob who's trying to get to a safe harbor to charge his phone to get in touch with his daughter as soon as he or at least to get in touch with the French 75
Starting point is 00:48:20 so he can figure out where his daughter is headed. Yeah. So I talked to our friend Wesley Morris about this and he pointed something out to me after the first time I'd seen it, which is that that sequence when Sergio takes him up to that building where all of the migrants are being transported, protected, you know, given safe harbor. The patience that the movie has during that scene is amazing because it makes a real effort
Starting point is 00:48:49 to humanize as many people as possible because Sergio keeps introducing Bob to all these people. Yeah. Telling them their name, making him look at them, making him, like, respect that they are alive. Beniso Del Toro is amazing in this movie. We can talk about why. But that decision in the face of Bob's chaos, right? Bob is freaking the fuck out.
Starting point is 00:49:12 And all he wants to do is yell at Comrade Josh and get the rendezvous point so that he can go find Willa. But he has to look at all of these people, this older family, this young mother. The toddler. Yes, a little kid. I noticed this time Leo touches the little kid the way that you do when you meet a little baby and just like touch their finger and all of that patience and the super zen quality that Sergio has in that scene while Bob is losing ocean waves yeah ocean waves like the him trying to calm him down it's such a good choice such a human choice in the movie um which then leads to another
Starting point is 00:49:48 he also keeps giving him medellas true yeah which is just a great like it's still kind of a buddy comedy it's still there's elements of that where it's just like right we can stop to have a beer though. Totally. One of the movies that PCA is inciting is midnight
Starting point is 00:50:00 run. And they have a little bit of midnight run energy between them. You know, the still
Starting point is 00:50:04 waters and the chaos beside him. And then the conversation with with Comrade Josh sure.
Starting point is 00:50:13 In Sergio's apartment. I'm calling it a Greyhawk. I'm calling it a Greyhawk 10. Oh, Greyhawk 10.
Starting point is 00:50:18 That's right. He's like, you're doing this? He's like, yeah, I'm doing this. And he gets his supervisor on the phone and his supervisor
Starting point is 00:50:26 is played by the R&B singer Dijon, and Dijon, who's got like dyed gray hair, I think he's like 28 years old. He gives him the clue with my... This is the most Paul Thomas Anderson thing
Starting point is 00:50:39 in the whole movie. Where he's like, Bob, Bob, Bob, Bob. You're going to know this question. You're going to know this question. This isn't what time is it. You're going to know it. What's my favorite type of pussy? And Bob, in less than five seconds,
Starting point is 00:50:52 it's like Mexican hairless. It's the only time he's cogent in the whole movie is he instantaneously remember this inside joke slash true story. It kind of sounds like a cat, too. It's just like perfect, right? So that allows him to learn that, in fact,
Starting point is 00:51:07 he's headed to the sisterhood of the brave beaver. The supervisor is like, apologize, mean it to Comrade Josh. It's just really, really funny. He's like, this is a war hero. That's what he says to Comrade Josh. I love that sequence so much. I love Leo in that whole sequence. And then that leads to like another amazing chase.
Starting point is 00:51:24 You mentioned the rooftop foot chase. Oh, yeah. It honestly has my favorite shot, I think, of the movie, which is all the smoke and light coming off of the street and the kid with the skateboard, like leaping over. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like a roof, and Leo has to climb the ladder to get up. Yes.
Starting point is 00:51:43 And just following those skaters. And it's just like, you know, I watch a lot of TV where there's a lot of critiquing and nitpicking of like the mechanics of doing something. And it's like, why did this character do this or do that? I love that he puts real people in action sequences and that Leo falls off the roof it's the fucking funniest psychag
Starting point is 00:52:04 you'll see like for a second I was just like this didn't just really happen. It's so unexpected. Because he's making his getaway and you're like you're a revolutionary soldier and these awesome skateboarders are leading you to freedom and then he fucking falls off a 40 foot roof. It's just like a beautiful shot down the tree
Starting point is 00:52:20 and I don't even know how they did it. I have no idea. I've seen three times and he's in the shot. There's no cut. And it's down through this tree as he like falls off these branches, lands on the ground, stands up, walks five feet, and gets tasered. And it's so awesome. Which also then
Starting point is 00:52:37 actually, if I don't mean to run ahead, but like that leads to honestly one of the most beautiful sequences in the movie, which is the hospital. Oh, it's wonderful. Yeah. Is when like then the like kind of the underground. The community. Yes. The community. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. And they say
Starting point is 00:52:52 oh, he's diabetic, even though he's not. And so he needs medical attention, and then immediately the nurse is like... And that nurse who runs in and you're going to, you know, go through this, but... And he just says, right now. And she just, like, very, like, calmly like, yes, right now. And then leaves. It's wonderful. Those two actresses, the woman who receives him and then the nurse who sends him out are so good in such small moments.
Starting point is 00:53:10 There's 10 performances like that in this movie of people you see for a minute and then they're gone. Yeah. Before we get too far, we should probably talk about the Christmas adventures. Oh, yeah. Oh, that's right. Because we're totally skipped over them. They are...
Starting point is 00:53:21 I guess we should also talk a little bit about Lachjaw. like just in general. Yeah, and Sean Penn, because there's such an important part of this movie. The reason that Lockjaw is attempting to apprehend Willa and Kill Bob is because he has been asked to join a secret society. He's been invited to a hotel room by characters played by Tony Goldwyn and James Downey, James Downey, the famed SNL writer,
Starting point is 00:53:48 who of course once appeared and there will be blood showing up 20 years later in a PTA movie. and these two men want to invite him to join the secret club called the Christmas Adventures Club. Yeah. Introduced with the What Are You Doing New Year's Eve Needledrop? Yes. Just really. So good.
Starting point is 00:54:06 As soon as it hit, I was like, okay, this is what's happening here. Their greeting is Hail St. Nick. Hail St. Nick. Tony Goldwyn marshalling the wonderfully malevolent force that only he can marshal. Great sport. From a time to kill or not time to kill the Pelican Breed. to scandal. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:24 Just always a great asshole on a seat. Yes. And they explained a lot to talk that they want him to apply
Starting point is 00:54:31 to start the initiation process for this very secret club, which is clearly a white supremacist organization that is attempting to eliminate
Starting point is 00:54:38 the maniacs, haters, and punk trash as Sandy, Jim Downey's character identifies, which is what we're also trying
Starting point is 00:54:47 to eliminate here on this podcast. And he's like, that's all we're trying to do. No more lunatics. Yes. And they're all lunatics, you know. And Lockjaw, who we don't know anything about except for the fact that he loves black women because he has told this explicitly to Bob's face.
Starting point is 00:55:01 Yeah. And has had an affair, a coerced affair with perfidia and works for this government organization. These are the only things we know about him. Well, we know a lot from his physical demeanor. We know a lot from his haircut, which is, I mean... Shaved on the sides, grown long down in front and combed down. Whisp it. And he has a very specific walk.
Starting point is 00:55:26 Yes. His posture is stick up the ass. Yes. And also injured at some point. Yeah. And veins visible just about everywhere in a pretty alarming way. I have not heard Sean Penn say this, but I would be stunned if he was not inspired by Vincent McMahon. This is Vince McMahon.
Starting point is 00:55:45 Oh. This is how Vince McMahon walks. This is how his arms look. This is how his hair looks and his cut at times. this is Vince McMahon He also reminded me of Michael Flynn Totally There's huge parts of that for sure
Starting point is 00:55:57 Sean Penn Something I keep hearing about his performance In this movie is that this is the movie That will remind people Why Sean Penn is Sean Penn Because it's been a very long time Since he's given a performance One that a lot of people have seen
Starting point is 00:56:11 Two that has been acclaimed And three that is outside of the context Of the kind of chaos of his life Right, yeah Like interviewing Al Chapo and stuff Exactly. Thank you for your service. He was in licorice pizza in a small part.
Starting point is 00:56:27 And PTAs always said Fast Times is one of his favorite movies of all time. And when he saw Sean Penn, he was like, I'll follow that guy anywhere. I love that actor. And he's an actor who, like, I would say roughly until about 2015, other actors venerated so deeply. Like, young actors would be interviewed and they would say, I just want to do what Sean Penn does. You don't hear that as much as you used to. We kind of moved into like making either taken rip-offs or not ill-advised, but just unsuccessful independent acting showcases.
Starting point is 00:56:59 Yes. He directed a couple. He directed like an action movie. He's had kind of a curious decade or so. I, there's a case this is his best performance in Scarleto's way. Like this is the most, the scariest, the most immersive. Like he disappears into the park.
Starting point is 00:57:17 Yeah. That's the thing that people used to say that he did. He disappeared. Heard into parts and you couldn't see him. All of the little ticks and the the actual physicality of it. He's so gestural. His voice, you know, he looks like a piece of burnt beef jerky. Yeah, really, really very gross, yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:33 And he just gets grosser looking as the movie goes on intentionally. But they do a lot. Shout out to the hair and makeup department of this film. But he is really committed to using his whole body for it. figured in the cause of whitewashing his past basically. Which is I think a big theme about
Starting point is 00:57:55 the people who are in power who are trying to control other people is their own hidden shames. Yes, they're hidden shames about the things, the way they really feel about things but are afraid to tell anybody or let anybody know. And it's tried and true, but very effective. And the Christmas Adventures Club stuff
Starting point is 00:58:11 is so good because it's the most pinchonian part of the movie in my opinion. But it's not. Have you read Vineland It's not in the book It's not in that Because the first time I saw it I was like
Starting point is 00:58:22 It's spiritually pinched Yeah but it is very It's a nice marriage The only thing in the book That is really the same Is this triangle Like love triangle Slash like familial triangle
Starting point is 00:58:37 That evolves over the movie As far as I can tell Like obviously the sentiment of the characters And the idea of revolution Yeah yeah But and you could tell the movie Would not exist without Vineland
Starting point is 00:58:46 But a lot of the It also was like Thomas Pinch and named all these people. Right. Yes. Yes. This episode is supported by FX's The Lowdown, starring Ethan Hawke. Allow us to introduce you to Lee Raybon, a quirky journalist slash rare bookstore owner slash unofficial truth seeker who is always on the tale of his latest conspiracy. This time, his most recent expose puts him head to head with a powerful family that rules Tulsa, meaning only one thing.
Starting point is 00:59:11 He must be on to something big. FX is the lowdown. All new Tuesdays on FX. Stream on Hulu. lockjaw because he is being asked to join this initiation and knows that he's going to have to go through a fairly thorough vetting process needs to clean out his past and he needs to get rid of he needs to find out if he is the father of willa he needs to get rid of bob he needs to close open business right so that he can join this club and i think one of the more uh bracing commentaries on like contemporary uh politics and the militarization that we see going on in this country is how much of his own personal animus is animating like national policy
Starting point is 00:59:51 so he's able to just be like yep this is a big narco terrorism and sexual human trafficking hub and it's not you know and he's just like so we're just going to have to go in right fucking delta force and wipe it out and he literally says to his
Starting point is 01:00:07 lieutenant make me a reason to have to go back to cross which is I think how many people feel like national politics and the military state operates sometimes you know that there are there are conveniences. I think especially in the aftermath of W's Iraq War, the incredible cynicism about the way that these decisions are made
Starting point is 01:00:26 that has been coursing through the country for the last 20 years. And lack of oversight and lack of, and just the amount of power and tactical force available to just... Yeah. People who you've never heard of who can just do whatever they want. They take over a small city. In fact, during that protest sequence, there's a funny...
Starting point is 01:00:46 A funny, chilling moment where they say, activate Eddie Van Halen. And a guy jumps out of a military vehicle and he's got a Molotov cocktail, but he's dressed like a protester. Right. And he throws the Molotov cocktail at the police to incite the violence. Right. Yeah. And then that leads to tear gas and rubber bullets and the, you know, the police moving forward with their shields. And it's terrifying stuff. But it's terrifying and it's happening alongside of Bob being funny.
Starting point is 01:01:14 Yeah. You know, and the movie is able to walk this tightrope of this huge Sean Penn performance of this really comic nervy Leo performance of Chase Infinity's performance, which is very steely, you know, not comic at all. She's pretty much under threat the entire movie. And it's all like, he spins the plates effectively. Again, I can't overstate how hard this is to do in a movie. Like most movies like this have to be one thing or the other. You know, they have to be incredibly like hard-bitten and straight or they have to be really over-the-top. and Mel Brooksie
Starting point is 01:01:46 and he's synthesized these two genre types like so amazingly well where should we go from here? All right so we did Christmas Adventurers and we did we do see them again
Starting point is 01:01:59 Can we talk a little bit about Regina Hall? Yeah. Yeah. First of all, watch her own good hang. She's incredible. She's fantastic.
Starting point is 01:02:07 She's one of the best working actresses. This is like a supporting role where she kind of fills in as a surrogate mother figure midway through the movie and also a suspicious interrogator of Willa
Starting point is 01:02:24 as she ex-fills her from Bakhton takes her to a convent revolutionary convent in the California mountains and I find that she just does so much remarkable shit emotionally and just reactively with very little
Starting point is 01:02:41 sometimes like she's in a mirror Sometimes she's watching two people look at each other and she does amazing work in this movie So I mean she obviously becomes like a major part of this sort of second act here She's incredible she also This is a very very funny movie at times But she who is an incredible comedic actress
Starting point is 01:03:00 Does not get one laugh line She's just wearing an awesome sweater And and watching people And so much of what she is communicating Is through just the way that her face look Yeah, I had the exact same thought is it's fascinating to not, when I heard that he wanted to work with her. Yeah, sure. I was like, he's going to write her the funniest part of match.
Starting point is 01:03:20 Right. Like, PTA was born to write funny shit for Regina Hall. And the choice to not have her do that is actually more power to make her just watchful through the entire film. And sort of like a guardian angel and sort of like a person who is still fighting the good fight but has also been left behind in some ways. Right. You know, like she doesn't have the wherewithal to look for Willis phone. like she asks her but she doesn't have the force
Starting point is 01:03:45 to root it out and find it. And I think there's also like that this is the difference is like you know if you live in a revolutionary cell for most of your adult life like being honest with one another is probably a condition of survival
Starting point is 01:03:58 and it's like you don't come across a lot of teenagers who are like... Yeah, but then she also she has the scene with the mother superior of the brave beavers and is like I didn't have the heart to tell her that her mother was you know, was a rat.
Starting point is 01:04:13 And it's her revolutionary duty kind of going up against the surrogate, you know, mother figure and you can tell she has a lot of, so the personal versus the political, just in that moment. And she doesn't really know what to do. Very nuanced and very powerful.
Starting point is 01:04:27 So because she holds on to this phone surreptitiously locked on, is able to track her essentially to this convent. So did you guys happen to clock who the mother superior is, who that actress is? No.
Starting point is 01:04:39 This is another lost figure in the, PTA filmography, that's April Grace. She played the journalist who interviewed Frank T.J. Mackey and Magnolia. Oh my gosh. So that's... You're right. Holy six years ago. And she is also a very striking actor.
Starting point is 01:04:55 It's also interesting in that exchange that Mother Superior has with DeAndre? DeAndre, right? DeAndre, yeah. Where they're like, we might need to get rid of this girl.
Starting point is 01:05:09 Because we can't have another loose end running out there. It's what you described. When you were part of a revolution, that tacit trust is essential. And this idea that there is something genetic about perfidia's ratdom is, you know, that explains how
Starting point is 01:05:24 how tight everyone has to be. By the way, we didn't talk about that. Her name is literally perfidia, which, you know, is right there. And like, all things in a Paul Thomas Anderson movie, you know, the obvious is actually not obvious and you're supposed to, but
Starting point is 01:05:40 That is pretty funny. All of the names are insightful in one way or another. Jungle Pussy, the rapper and actress, Shana McHale is in this movie as like her cohort. You know, Jungle Pussy says it all, right? She also gets that incredible speech moment where she is taking over the bank for a couple of minutes. May West.
Starting point is 01:05:59 May West, yeah, really good. That wig. Harris is Laredo. The wig shot is just really, really. Her in this convenience story. There's so many moments like that. Also, the sisterhood of the Brave Beaver is also just an incredible PTA joke straight out of their advice or pension joke for that matter.
Starting point is 01:06:16 At the DGA screening, we went to, Paul told Steven Spielberg and the rest of us the story of Chase Infinity not understanding the name, the Sisters of the Brave Beaver, and him having to explain why he had chosen that. Yeah, but that was not something that Chase Infinity's generation was up on yet, so that is special. I was like the DVD Beaver. I was going to say, she's clearly not a visitor to DVD Beaver. Dot com Chase Infinity. Tough stuff.
Starting point is 01:06:44 Yeah, and then the movie starts to culminate because the second encounter with the Christmas Adventures Club someone has been brought in to eliminate Lockjaw. It's clear that Lockjaw is trying to cover something up. He's now gone basically rogue even within the MKU military unit that he controls. Yes, he overreached. And is taking guys with him to go specifically just find
Starting point is 01:07:09 Charlene Slashwilla. And they have a stunning confrontation in this comment where he runs a DNA test on her. And they have their first ever conversation, which goes about as well as you can imagine. Yeah. And to make the act of a paternity test visually interesting, sounds hard. Yeah, a lot of little test tubes. Yeah, all the little tubes and droplets and the spinning wheel and the lines coming down. but he makes all of that stuff work
Starting point is 01:07:41 and there's a real tension because we're watching... Well, we don't want her to be his daughter. Yeah, but we know because I mean, just the visual language it cuts from them having sex to her nine months pregnant
Starting point is 01:07:52 shooting the machine gun, which is in the trailer. And it's probably also a huge reason of why she leaves. Yeah, and you're like, right. Yeah, there we go. Yes. So we know.
Starting point is 01:08:02 We know. And it is revealed, in fact, that Lockjaw is as well as dad and that that sets him off and he knows that she also needs to be eliminated. She needs to be wiped claim right. He cannot do it himself. He cannot bring himself to do it himself. So he hires, well, we'll go forward step by step before.
Starting point is 01:08:19 Yeah, I just, he, we are reintroduced to this character of Avanti Q who is a bounty hunter and tracker. Right. Who is played by the great Eric Schweig, which PTA mentioned he first saw in Last of the Mohicans. I haven't seen him in a movie in 10 years. And Avanti won't kill a kid. And so he's told to take her to 1776, which is apparently the compound of a white nationalist group. Right, yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:47 To have her killed. And that sequence is incredibly tense, maybe the most tense thing in the movie because she's been handcuffed to a bench and the world is operating around her. All these military men are coming in and out, and she knows what her fate is going to be. And Avanti has gotten back into his car,
Starting point is 01:09:03 but he hasn't left. And he has a change of heart. and he decides that he's going to save her and that he's going to take these guys out in part because they show us that the 1776 guys are racist. They make note of his Native American heritage. They mock him.
Starting point is 01:09:17 And his... Those guys prefer the original version of the searchers. Yes. He's literally called Wagon Burner in the movie, which is clearly a callback. And Firewater. Yes. And that is happening in this series of intercutting moments
Starting point is 01:09:35 where Bob, who has been freed from prison, escaped, transported by Sergio, while they're driving drunk, drinking Modellos, and talking about revolution. And I think at a certain point, Sergio says, saved a French 75 or twice in one day. Really, like, remarking upon the wildness of their experience together. Then there's a stop, drop, and roll. Very funny Tom Cruise joke.
Starting point is 01:10:03 Yes. Yeah, and a great, and Sergio, you know, sacrifices himself for the cause. Bob gets, jumps out of the moving car, hot wires a car, he goes on a chase. Like a Selica. Yeah. Was it a Selica? Look like that. That looked familiar to you?
Starting point is 01:10:18 I just, it was just a great car. It had that hum clicking sound. And a spoiler. Yeah. And then he goes on a hot chase. And that hot chase is happening simultaneous to what we learn is Tim from the Christmas Adventures Club who's been assigned to eliminate. Lockjaw. So Lockjaw has left Avanti Q
Starting point is 01:10:36 and he's off to go to the next stage of his life, hopefully joining the Christmas Adventures. Lockjaw and also the implication is also Willa, right? They need to clean everything up. So there's, you know, it's a pretty grim. Yeah. And DeAndre will be killed. Howard Somerville will be killed. All the French 75 will be eliminated so that this can be all clean for him to join this club. And out of nowhere, Tim shows up.
Starting point is 01:11:00 Speeding down the road, is he in a Dodge Mustang? Dodge Charger I believe that Avanti and Tim are both driving chargers I was like I would love to see what a Dodge Charger does
Starting point is 01:11:12 on a drive That's right because Willa takes Avanti's car Yes Right And then he's also driving like a bright blue
Starting point is 01:11:19 No he's Avanties is white Tim's is blue Yeah yeah Tim's is blue Yeah We're talking so much about these cars
Starting point is 01:11:25 because this movie is leading to a huge car chase Yeah Eventually Tim shoots Lockjaw and the most bracing moment of the movie shoots him in the face while they're driving
Starting point is 01:11:36 and the car crashes off the side of the road we think Lockjaw's gone for good. Tim circles back. Bob arrives since he's on the chase to discover Lockjaw. Lockjaw's dead, he thinks. Yeah. He turns around a moment of panic.
Starting point is 01:11:49 He's uttering the Green Acres line from the Gil Scott Herron song and trying to get somebody to... To show up to show him that somebody's on his side that someone's going to help him and he's all alone. He doesn't know what to do.
Starting point is 01:12:03 And then the final act of the movie is this chase scene, which takes place in Borego Springs, a highway, which is an incredibly loopy up and down highway in California. And what do you guys think of that soon? Yeah. I just want all our lords of letterbox out there if you're thinking about making a road trip. Just be careful.
Starting point is 01:12:25 Yeah, don't react this. This is not a safe roadway. there's a lot of highway driving in California where you will just be like holy shit like you come over a hill and then the sun is eight feet from your face and this really captured it but also made it feel like inception
Starting point is 01:12:45 and also made it feel like the is it the California adventure ride what's the ride at Disney where you're hanging over California as you're being kind of like flown through the air I think Are you thinking of American screen machine? No, it's not, it's like you're looking at a screen.
Starting point is 01:13:06 Oh, Soren. Soaring. It reminded me of soaring. Yeah. Soren, no G. Okay, soren. Okay. Have you been on Soren?
Starting point is 01:13:15 No. You've been to Disneyland? No, I've been to Disney World when I was seven. Anyway. She skipped right past that because she does not want to get into two sons who want to get their picture taken with Iron Man. Which is coming. It's coming. It's you in an Ironman costume.
Starting point is 01:13:29 I might be busy, because it might be good content if you have to go. No, but watching this and IMAX definitely had an amusement park feel. Like you actually did become, as the camera goes up and down, you start feeling like the motion. And again, at the DGA Q&A, Paul Thomas Anderson said that they did not have this ending until they went location scouting. And that they were just around in a vanpera and they found this road. And he was like, and then it all came together. I wonder how much of this movie is a result of, like, finding a place to put it. Like, he talked a lot about that in the interview.
Starting point is 01:14:06 You'll hear that. Okay. It wasn't as much on the page as you might think. Yeah. I've never seen a chase sequence like it. Yeah. It's one road moving straight. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:16 Three cars. But you're trying to catch each other. Yes. But they disappear. It's not, nothing like this has been done before. Yeah, with that. The closest comparison is probably Stephen Spielberg's duel. which is a straight chase movie
Starting point is 01:14:28 of a truck and a car and that's it and not and moving at a consistent high speed together you know not necessarily whipping around turns and flying across things you know it's not and then the conclusion which is incredibly exciting and incredibly scary and sad
Starting point is 01:14:43 and incredibly savvy shows Willa is also again incredible practical knowledge yeah she has been schooled well despite everything that she would say about her dad as for as much as it's a great car chase movie it's an amazing car crash movie. The crashes in this make me really want to buckle up. Yes, there's a crash that the car that Perfidia is in, escaping from the bank robbery, is a wild car crash.
Starting point is 01:15:06 It feels like you're sitting in the seat when it happens. Anyway, Willa decides when she's gotten to the top of a very tall part of the Barago Springs Highway that she's going to park the car quickly, come to a hard stop, so Tim cannot see that she has stopped her car, and then he crashes into her. And as he stumbles and gets out of his car, he's survived, but she attempts to find out whether or not he is friendly. And he's not friendly, and she shoots and kills him with the gun that she has found in Avanti's car.
Starting point is 01:15:37 And I said this he last night. I heard the scream that she lets out when she shoots him for good is very emotional, very upsetting and raw. And you see that, you know, this is the real toll of the things that have happened that her parents have done. Like this is really, she's now taking someone's life and has been under this incredible, terrifying threat and also has this terrible knowledge
Starting point is 01:15:57 that her father, her birth father, is a monster. Eventually, Bob does show up in the Selica. He arrives, and she doesn't know what to think, and she's confused, and she almost shoots him. Right. Until she finally, he finally convinces her that it's me. It's your dad. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:15 Keep saying, I'm your dad. It's your dad. And then he does also, quote, part of the Gil Scott Heron's hug back. Yes, we'll no longer be relevant. Can I ask you guys when you first saw it? So the next sequence, you're kind of like, great. So we've gotten to the end of the movie and he's gotten her away from this.
Starting point is 01:16:30 And then like a Terminator, Lockjaw has returned. And he's storming through the desert, blood all over him, holding a machine gun. And he's got more shit to do. So when you first saw that, were you like, oh, are we going to have another like confrontation action sequence
Starting point is 01:16:50 between Bob has to kill Lockjaw and take... I'll tell you why I didn't. Because of the music that is used in that scene when we see the roadway and you see the sun haze and then you see his head come up over the hill, it's a laugh moment.
Starting point is 01:17:06 It's a comic moment. And do you know what that song is called? Tell us. Perfidia. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. He's surviving for her as well. And because it's funny, I didn't think that we were headed toward a Robert Patrick moment. It could have happened
Starting point is 01:17:23 but in fact, that's an unexplained part of the plotting that you can ask that question. What happened between that moment and Lockjaw learning, determining that he is going to join the Christmas Adventures Club because he's actually not been successful. He thinks he's been successful what he's doing,
Starting point is 01:17:41 but he hasn't confirmed it. We don't actually know. Tim has also been killed and has that feedback gotten to the Christmas Adventure? You know, this is all unexplored. There's like, there's a, there's a gap here in information. It does seem like a pretty expansive organization when you get right down to it because that's just the Southwest office.
Starting point is 01:18:00 That's true. And, like, they introduced, like, the fifth, like, fleet commander just of the Southwest. That's true. So there are a lot of levels here. Yep. I don't think that's actually the Southwest office for the record. That's where he's murdered. Sure.
Starting point is 01:18:15 Yeah, Lockjaw does eventually get into the club. And by getting into the club, we mean. gets gassed. Yeah, he's gassed to death in a very funny moment. While he meets his moment of finally arriving at like,
Starting point is 01:18:25 he's been accepted. In corporate America, he gets the corner office. Yes, he gets the corner office. And, you know, that's what you learn about that character is that that's somebody who's been fighting wars
Starting point is 01:18:34 to feel accepted. You don't think that the Christmas Adventure Club has like a gas chamber as part of its office? I don't know if that would be an office you would want others to occupy the regular basis. I mean, it's a gas area.
Starting point is 01:18:44 I thought lockdown could have been like, where is everybody? Right, right. There's something very eerie about that entire sequence and you're meant to feel like, oh, no, something terrible is about to happen to him and something does. Maybe on another floor. Okay.
Starting point is 01:18:58 That might just be the gassing floor. Okay. For the Christmas Adventures Club, we don't know. And then the movies, De Numa, is one last conversation at the kitchen table between Bob and Willa, where Bob gives Willa a card, a letter that is written to her by her mother, and Tiana Taylor will involve,
Starting point is 01:19:19 always overreeds this letter to her daughter. It's incredibly moving and powerful. And I think it's a big part of what this movie is about, which is don't give up. Maybe you can change the world in the way that we were not able to. And this moment of exciting inspiration comes where we see Willa a little bit later on getting a CB radio call about a protest that is happening in Oakland. And she jumps out of her chair and grabs the car keys and goes and drives up and leaves her dad. And then American Girl starts playing. And my heart grew 10 sizes
Starting point is 01:19:50 Yeah A very simple, straightforward and conventional needle drop Not a wow, look what I found in the crates You know? Oh yes Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I meant is it like is there any
Starting point is 01:20:03 What does it mean? You know, like what does the whole ending mean is something we can talk about? But yeah, no, it's it plays to them Yes, I think that it that will steal some Oscars Just that one song choice alone You walk out of the movie feeling a sense of relief and happiness
Starting point is 01:20:18 and maybe even inspiration for some people. A little bit of melancholy as Bob tries to figure out how to take a picture with his new iPhone. Yes, but how nice for him that he finally got an iPhone? I kind of, I mean, it's fantastic and I'm glad that they've figured out that they can be, you know, on 5G.
Starting point is 01:20:35 Sure. But he's moving into his dotage. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And he can't make the flash work. Nope. Yeah. I mean, you know, comes for us all. It's very much a movie about passing the baton. But also, what's equally great about that scene is the instructions that she's giving are, like, useless.
Starting point is 01:20:52 You know, I was like, but that's how you tell you that thing, and I'm just like, oh, my God. But it's also what, right. Yes. You cannot explain technology. It's just like 25 years ago, how do I get the flashing midnight off the VCR? You know, how do I fix the tracking on my, on my tape player? All these things, this is what kids and their parents and you have to do for them. So the movie is very, very insightful about all those things. bear with me as I read through why this I think this is the culmination because there's... Wait, you can't talk about the ending?
Starting point is 01:21:20 Wasn't like... Yeah, no, no, no, no, I just like, you know, this, it does feel... Like, how happy is it of a happy ending? Do you know what I mean? Like, what are... Because there is so much in it that is... There is hope, and I do find
Starting point is 01:21:34 this movie to be very open-hearted. Mm-hmm. But, especially on my second watch, you know, I told it, I found it very, like, I was taking by the comedy and the spectacle the first time. And the second time was more emotional, it's more upsetting. There was a lot of dark stuff here. There was a lot of mess stuff going on.
Starting point is 01:21:52 There was a lot of regret. There is, you know, to Chris's point, like, at the end, Leo's just, like, sitting on a couch trying to figure out, like, he's out of the, and in Perfidia's letter, there is a lot of regret. So, you know, and the last line, he yells, like, be safe. And she's like, I won't. And it's very cheerful. So, you know, I don't know. maybe, is it supposed to be just purely like, hey, it's Tom Petty?
Starting point is 01:22:17 Are we supposed to give over to that? Is like that the question? Just, you know, are we supposed to? I think you, I think you can read it very clearly that Paul Thomas Anderson thinks that a young girl that looks like Willa is the American girl in 2020. Sure. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So that part of it, I think, is very sweet. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:35 And then I'm sure she looks somewhat like his kids. Yes. And maybe it requires having your whole life in front of you. you to imagine a better world, you know, and to imagine anything is possible if we push back hard enough. Whereas, like, once you get older, I think you have all these reasons why I can't push back that hard because I have this, right? You know, we have to do that. Absolutely. And also, the first line of that song is she's an American girl raised on promises, which, you know, has its own bittersweet. I'm perfect writing, by the way. I do think, I do think it is hopeful. But I think it's
Starting point is 01:23:07 also very wide-eyed and, I should say, eyes open about the fact that Willa now knows the cost. Yeah. That she has fired a gun, that she has seen what the monsters really look like, and that she has made an active choice to try to make that change. Maybe inspired by her
Starting point is 01:23:23 mom's letter, maybe inspired by her experiences, maybe inspired by what she knows now about her dad, and what her dad did to go save her. And she probably knows that it's not, it's going to get worse before it gets better. I think that's big part of this too, that you have to, if you want to make the change, you're going to have
Starting point is 01:23:42 to get into some shit. I don't know if the movie actually thinks that that change is possible, or plausible. Right, right, right, right. But I think it does want to believe that it could be. Yeah. Why did it get called one, why did he arrive at one battle after another? And I think that that title gets brought up like in little ways explicitly. And then also, it's basically one fucking thing after another and what is the is it ultimately the conflict that forges us and not the result? Right. And what side are you on? You know?
Starting point is 01:24:15 Yeah. Yeah. And I'm guess I'm kind of curious about when the movie goes out into the world, how much of that is is tangled with. You know, like whether or not that's a takeaway. I think having seen it multiple times, it's very clearly. Right. an older guy looking at what he did or did not do in his life
Starting point is 01:24:37 and what impact that did or did not have and what it means for his family and younger people, yes, exactly. What's now, what is their responsibility? Yeah. Which is a scary thing to think about but also happens to anybody who cares deeply about the world and people.
Starting point is 01:24:52 And also is like maybe a little bit, feels a little guilty about what they didn't do or couldn't accomplish. I think, I mean, I think that's a big part of it. So this is an amazing movie. I mean, we haven't talked about a lot of, like, the mechanics of it. It is shot on VistaVision with IMAX cameras, which must have been extremely challenging.
Starting point is 01:25:09 Those cameras are huge and loud. Right, and they're also moving up and down those hills. Yes, we also heard that there's a special thanks to Giovanni Ribisi in this movie. And that is because Giovanni or B.C. has a hobby of restoring old movie cameras. And he is a lover of film and celluloid, which J.T. Molnar talked about on this show when he helped shot Strange Darling. And he rebuilt and gave PTA a VistaVision camera to shoot this movie on. And I have yet to see the movie in VistaVision. I'm seeing it in VistaVisivision tomorrow.
Starting point is 01:25:42 I'm excited about that. At the Vista, it's only playing in that format on maybe fewer than 10 theaters in this country. But I've seen it in IMAX twice now, once at the Chinese and last night at CityWalk, at CityWalk, it's overwhelming because that screen is so tall. And the movie, like you said, in the chase scenes and in the whipping action. but also in the close-ups, you know? One of the key influences on PTA is Jonathan Demi and the into-camera close-up, there are several of them.
Starting point is 01:26:08 You know, Tiana Taylor's face, the detail that you can see in her eyelashes is wow on an IMAX screen. The same for Leo's face holding the screen, Regina Hall, Benicio del Toro. And then to be making a movie that is in constant motion with those kinds of cameras too.
Starting point is 01:26:26 It's not a chamber piece down the world. It's pretty impressive. Also, kind of an unusual. color palette for PTA very dusty, very brown Bob's robe it's kind of the like, it's the dust bowl
Starting point is 01:26:41 of California. It looks like California to me. I mean, this is kind of the real California. Yeah. Yeah. The inland, yeah. And we haven't mentioned Johnny Greenwood's score. I was going to say, yeah, you want to do the score? It's really interesting. I mean, it's, I think it tells you a lot about how he views, how
Starting point is 01:26:56 PTA views the movie because it's very David Shire, Michael Small. Like it sounds like clout. It sounds like the conversation, these like single plinking piano notes that are played like very rapidly and kind of getting your your heartbeat up because you know something is happening. Like we're headed somewhere is kind of the energy that it gives you. There are a couple of orchestral moments. It opens with this kind of like big orchestral dirge when we meet the French 75. And that comes in a few times. Like it does. Like usually in those close up shots, like when there's one with Willa, there's one with lockjaw when he comes up. And it's like is a
Starting point is 01:27:30 recurring motif. There is also one needle drop that producer Jack was particularly excited about, which is when Mo Bamba drops at the school dance. I laughed so hard. It's really funny. I think, you know, the inclusion of someone like Dijan in the movie and the Mo Bamba drop, there's a lot of like, my daughters told me about this stuff going on in the movie, too, which I really like. You know, like, I don't think PTA is really banging Mo Bamba at home, but I bet his kids were at a certain point in the last 10 years. still a movie that is like about all of his same stuff
Starting point is 01:28:03 you know I wanted to mention this to you guys so he gave PTA gave an interview with Dazed this week and he acknowledged that he participated in some way in the scripts for Napoleon and Killers the Flower Moon which is something that has been had been rumored for a long time I've told you I've gotten separate
Starting point is 01:28:21 private phone calls of people being like it's true it's true right yeah yeah worked on these movies and when we talked about those movies we talked about the fact that it's very plausible that PTA if not contributed wrote them wholesale because they're about dumb guys
Starting point is 01:28:37 who love to fuck and can't get out of their own way with the women that they're in love with and they also do terrible things and have to kind of cope with their decisions around those terrible things and it's like one of the hallmarks of all of his movies. Bob is yet another PTA guy like there's all just every movie
Starting point is 01:28:55 has a guy like this like whatever done as like, unsure, creative, horny, sincere man boy who subjugates himself to a woman and then has to reckon with what it means to have subjugated himself to her, right? Phantom Thread. That's what Phantom Thread is, you know? A lot of these punch drunk love, that's what punch drunk love is. All of these movies are about a guy turning himself over to the idea of love and passion and then shit going wild. There's a million things like this in the movie, though, like all of his movies are about families breaking up and mom and dad can't be together anymore and then what does that mean for
Starting point is 01:29:30 the man boy at the center of the movie or um the tangible connection between radical politics and satire and how things that seem like they could change the world also seem ridiculous like he always talks about Robert Downey senior all the Robert Downey senior movies are about that very idea I think he also I mean I know I'm thinking of the master and and there will be blood and Magnolia specifically, but like sexual trauma and unclear parentage comes up a lot in his movies. And that's obviously something that's in this film, but then is on the other side comes out. It's just like we can get through it if you love each other. Like you can conquer that.
Starting point is 01:30:13 That's it. The movies are so humanist. You know, they're all about flawed people trying to figure it out. I go back to Perfidia and how she kind of like haunts the movie. Certainly for me. and the fact that her voice is one of the very last voices that we hear. And the fact that the, you know, her identity in the world as a rat, despite the things that she did and the way that she talked and the way that she acted.
Starting point is 01:30:38 And the fact that other people kind of define her agency in the aftermath of everything that has happened is a really interesting concept. And like maybe the way that we think about people who try to make change in the world and then get villainized. And the things that they have to do to survive, which is very complicated. Oh, I mean, once you find out her secret, you can go back and chart different interactions with Lockjaw after they've had sex, obviously. And, you know, there's a really amazing scene in a hospital after Profidia has been captured,
Starting point is 01:31:06 and Lockjaw comes to her and is basically like, it's this, you know, or life in prison, you know, it's like you have one chance here. And the decision that she makes to save, you could say, like, she makes a selfish decision, she rats these guys out, she goes to witness protection, she eventually escapes is also probably
Starting point is 01:31:24 to keep Charlene away from lockjaw you know right yeah do whatever she can to kind of keep him away from from her daughter yeah what else do you want to talk about Oscars at all yeah I also want to talk about like how this has been presented and how it will be received to the extent that it's possible to do marketing in box office and then we'll close with Oscars
Starting point is 01:31:47 the second trailer which is the predominant trailer for the movie does not feel like a trailer that Paul Thomas Anderson cut. The first one does. The first one with the Johnny Greenwood score and the phone call, that feels like a PTA trailer to me.
Starting point is 01:32:02 The second one does not. People don't seem to like the second one. That's the one they're running before movies. That's the one that I think has failed to ignite a ton of interest. I think it is not a bad trailer, but not very representative of the movie. And so the movie is now tracking
Starting point is 01:32:16 for somewhere between $20 and $30 million in opening weekend. It's a very expensive movie. Costs anywhere from $115 million to $180 million, depending on what you read and who you believe. I definitely don't need to have a long conversation about whether or not this movie needs to make money or not. For me personally, I don't care.
Starting point is 01:32:37 But I am quite curious about what the world thinks this is and what they're going to get. I don't even know how to talk about that, but it is a movie with the biggest movie star in the world. Yes. And it is an action movie. And he is selling it in a way that I have not seen him do, or really a major movie star do since late 2000s.
Starting point is 01:33:02 He is on every podcast. He is doing junkets. He is doing magazines, sort of. And he's just on my Instagram way more than Leonardo DiCaprio has ever wanted to be. There's like a Chase Infinity has been putting him in her TikToks. Talks a lot. Totally. They are like, we need to sell this movie. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The way that other movies are meant to be marketed.
Starting point is 01:33:28 And Paul Thomas Anderson doesn't do a lot of press these days. Leo, of course, he hasn't been on a talk show in almost 20 years. He went on Jimmy Fallon this week. Yeah, Jimmy Fallon this week. Hasn't done it in 20 years. Yeah. And they're working hard. Yeah. This movie comes from the same studio that is on one of the most legendary runs of the 21st century at the movies, where Warner Brothers has six consecutive movies that have opened. at $40 million or more.
Starting point is 01:33:54 There's not much else going on with the movies this weekend. We're in Weekend 3 of Demon Slayer. Chris will be running it back for a fifth time. It is three hours. It's three hours. Yeah. But so you ask, like, what do people think they're getting?
Starting point is 01:34:09 And they are selling it and, you know, the trailer and then the very Leo forward strategy may make a lot of people who, aren't really in the habit of going to the movies being like, oh, Leo's like in an action movie, like I guess I would go see this, but then they are going to get something slightly different than what that
Starting point is 01:34:31 would. But I actually wonder whether that kind of marketing, you know, whether the random person is like, oh, Leo's in an action movie? Like, sure, I'll go out to the theaters versus the more specific PTA heads or the, you know, premium format people
Starting point is 01:34:49 or all of the, you know, that The IMAX of it was another. Or people who are susceptible to the critical response to this film being almost uniformly in a way that I have not seen certainly since Oppenheimer but even Oppenheimer had it.
Starting point is 01:35:01 It's like, well, you know. There will be a well about this movie. I just want to put that out there. There's going to be, we are going to get a lot of feedback that is you oversold this and that everybody oversold this. That's going to happen. That's okay.
Starting point is 01:35:14 It's just because we've not had this level of unanimous acclaim from critics, I'm trying to think of, when's the last time? Probably Parasite. Parasite's probably the last time. Everybody was like, we're all on board. This is, let's make this a movement. But there's a big difference between Parasite bubbling up as a foreign film that then just becomes a phenomenon to the biggest movie star we've got is in the movie with one of the best living filmmakers and we're going for it and we're advertising it on Sunday Night Football. There have been examples of this that have
Starting point is 01:35:44 become tremendously successful based on that power. The movie I think of is gravity. Gravity is a little bit like lost a time now because it's such an in-theater experience and the script is only okay. But that was a movie with platinum reviews. It was two huge stars and a huge super celebrated director. And, you know,
Starting point is 01:36:06 I don't remember word for word every review that came out, but people were Gaga over Gravity. And it worked. Like that machine. Now, that movie had space spectacle on its side. And it was also 90 minutes long. That's true.
Starting point is 01:36:19 Which, you know. That is a factor for sure. And also it's a different time in movie going, of course. Which I'm not saying this movie should be shorter. I'm going to say that like that actually does. But now we do have this. I asked Paul and Leo about this too, this large format in theater, like cult thing that is happening. You know, like Coogler really pushed a lot of that along with explaining the formats and the film stocks.
Starting point is 01:36:38 We see Benny Safty doing this now with Smashing Machine. Last night, people, I mean, we were like at Nerd HQ, but people, by the way, thank you to Corey Everett for my ticket. Shout out to Corey. Yeah, thank you. He's the other real one who's now seen it three times. he's going a fourth time. But people applauded at the IMAX, like, teaser,
Starting point is 01:36:56 you know, just so it's like the IMAX brand thing and like all the men and it was about 80% men were applauding. And I was like, okay. No, no. I thought there were some.
Starting point is 01:37:05 I got a little nervous about this. I don't want it to become too stratified. I get it. I get it. There's just not IMAX theaters everywhere. They're not good or whatever. I mean, they do need to build more. That's a whole, that's a separate episode. The only other thing is
Starting point is 01:37:18 I think that there's one I had a long conversation with Van Leithin about this yesterday he hasn't seen the movie he's been on a jag about how it needs to make money I don't agree with him he and I have had that debate many many years this movie probably needed to do a better job of marketing to black audiences because it's a movie about black women and like Leo is definitely the star of the movie but it is about perfidia and Willa and to a lesser extent Deandra and activating black audiences is something that really
Starting point is 01:37:48 works at the box office and they just didn't, I don't think they've really done it. I don't think they've really, the fact they'd van is like, I'll go see it. You know, but isn't like, I can't wait to see it is, that's not good. And I don't know who that's on specifically, but maybe there will be a word of mouth thing that helps with it over time. And the other thing is, you can use this as a trailway into Oscars. It will have long legs. But it's going to run for a long time. There is there's a case for 10 Oscar nominations and I can certainly see the headlines on March 18th, 2026 that are
Starting point is 01:38:25 one battle after another wins best picture and best director Paul Thomas Anderson crowned king of Hollywood this year that's that is plausible I'm not saying it's going to happen There's a road where this is this is like an Oppenheimer thing and you know the minute it comes out it's like okay
Starting point is 01:38:41 a celebrated director finally and it's just as kind of a steamroll through. It would also be interesting if this gets sucked up into the culture wars at all. Yeah, which it could also happen. I think it will.
Starting point is 01:38:54 I think it will. I mean, it is about radical politics. Sure. But lots of people watch Jimmy Kim all this week. Oh yeah. There's more than enough people that could just support the movie
Starting point is 01:39:05 that agree with its politics and it could be a success. Sure. But, and honestly, from a box office perspective, that would probably help. That's what I'm saying. It would almost be helpful if... Somebody was like, this movie, are you fucking kidding me?
Starting point is 01:39:18 Yeah. Yeah, but they're like exploding the power grid in a major American city, you know, and they're like, this is the hero of the movie. But that will probably, I think, become a bigger issue or a bigger talking point when it's award season. And movies are under a little bit more scrutiny and then there's the usual dirty tricks. I would like to start the Benicio del Toro Oscar campaign here and now. Okay. Please vote Benicio del Toro for Best Supporting Actor for one battle after another.
Starting point is 01:39:44 So, which is not showing Penn. You can nominate him as well. Interesting. And that is like the showy performance. And obviously he's one of the three. But, I mean, Sensei's incredible in this movie. And that's also like a quintessential supporting. Yeah, it sure is.
Starting point is 01:40:01 You know, he shows up. The movie does not work without him memorable. He's on his own kind of wavelength. Yeah. And then he goes away. So thank you. I don't think that will happen because supporting actor is a knife fight this year. that's fine. But I, you know, I have a platform. You do have a platform. And I don't have a vote.
Starting point is 01:40:20 I support you. Thank you. Stellan Scars Garden sentimental value. Sean Penn. Adam Sandler and Jay Kelly. Paul Meskell and Hamlet, Hamlet, and Hamlet, you brought up. That which is the other... That's the collision course right now. And so we either have like an Oppenheimer year or we have a saving private Ryan versus Shakespeare in love year. And, you know, and which is, and but Which is, which is interesting. Because in a lot of ways, Hamlet is Shakespeare in love. But as Sean pointed out, like, Chloe Jop has already won. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:40:52 An Oscar. She's kind of Spielberg in this race. Yeah. So, what are you going to do there? Like, nobody sees Hamnet. Still, like, it'll still be like, it's a specialty release that speaks deeply to artists. Okay. You know, the telly ride, it won Toronto.
Starting point is 01:41:08 It's like, it'll be in the mix. It will definitely be in the mix. I think it's also. I know how I feel. But, you know, I just, we're talking about, like, Oscar, the models for Oscar season. PTA is 0 for 11. Yeah. It's very easy to tell that story.
Starting point is 01:41:26 There's definitely a world where it's like Hamnet wins best picture and he wins best director. I could see that. I could see that very clearly. Sinners is not going to be in the mixer. It will be, definitely. It'll definitely be nominated for Best Picture. Everything after that, I don't know. I thought it would fall away a little bit when a bunch of movies started coming out,
Starting point is 01:41:44 but some stuff that I thought would be big was not as well received. Yeah. Whether or not cooler gets in, I don't know. But adapted screenplay seems likely. Editing seems likely. Whether or not they decide to run Chase Infinity or Tiana Taylor for supporting actress, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:42:04 Right. They're going to have to probably make a decision there, which is tough. You know, you've got production design. You've got best casting. That's right. We have the new... Johnny Greenwood's score. Colleen-Ey and Outwood for costumes?
Starting point is 01:42:18 Costume design. That bathrobe is legendary. There's definitely a 10 or 11 or 12 Oscar nominations potential. Warner Brothers has a lot on their plate. Right. And they're running campaigns for they announced sinners, weapons,
Starting point is 01:42:36 and one battle after another. Yes. So what's going to get the most time and energy? You know, Warner Brothers did campaign do in Part 2, but not very well. Right. So they haven't really run the race. This era of the organization hasn't run the race in quite this way. We'll see. Leah will be nominated. I mean, they won, know that it was universal for Oppenheimer. They lost Barbie. You're right. Because that was the switch. Yeah. Yeah. Hmm. I take solace in the fact that we will be talking about this movie in 20 years.
Starting point is 01:43:07 Yeah. It's pretty exciting. It's pretty. So I hope it makes money and I hope it wins awards just for everybody's benefit, but... Where are you in the PTA rankings right now with this? You want to do this? You want to save it? I would like to save it for Monday. Okay. Is it minute to minute?
Starting point is 01:43:24 It always is. We'll also be having that conversation again throughout this year. This is the first movie that it really impacts 25 for 25. Or we have to look at it and say, do we have to do that. Is this the right choice? I think we're going to, we'll probably talk about it for the next couple months. So you guys are a lot, did you have a caveat that you can, you can break in case of emergency
Starting point is 01:43:44 it's until the episode is done like you once the episode is recorded it's the basement tapes we can't go back and change it but we have changed things interesting yeah so if we wanted
Starting point is 01:43:58 to choose this film there's still time there's 10 more movies to go I had one last one yeah you know I think I don't know if you're going to do a syllabus for this I made one I don't I didn't
Starting point is 01:44:12 want to put one out because I don't want to spoil the movie for people, but I have a long list right now that I can talk through. PTA talked about searchers running on empty midnight run in Battle of Algiers being inspirations for this movie or being movies that you could watch along with this. I can't get over how much this movie made me think of the searchers. Like, I think I will
Starting point is 01:44:28 watch the searchers this weekend and then I would like to go back and see one battle after another. It's a lovely 4K from Warner Archive. Yeah. It is. Did you get a copy of witness? Yes. You can just bring that right over. As like a loaning situation? To my house. No, no, no, no, I just like, do you need it?
Starting point is 01:44:44 Do you need it? Is the question. Any movies that this movie made you think of that you... Yeah, a lot. The Christmas Adventures Club and Lockjaw just could not be more Dr. Strange Love. Like, the Colonel Ripper, the Sterling Hayden character, and especially the speech that Penn gives at the end
Starting point is 01:45:06 where he talks about being raped in reverse and her wanting his power is just, pure ripper. So that's a big one. There's a really great Jules Dasen movie called Uptight from 1968 that I would highly encourage people to check out. It is about
Starting point is 01:45:25 it's essentially a remake of John Ford's The Informer and it's about a black revolutionary group and someone who turns and informs on the group that is an imperfect movie but is an incredible time capsule because it's made you know simultaneous to the movement,
Starting point is 01:45:42 to the rise of the Black Panther movement and is really powerful. There's like a bunch of other movies from that time like medium cool
Starting point is 01:45:48 and Zabriski Point I think are both in this movie to some extent and then there's all the comic stuff too like he mentioned Midnight Run
Starting point is 01:45:56 but like something wild has Cheech and Chong in it Lobowski totally Lobowski was all over it I think I tried to think about some other movies
Starting point is 01:46:07 that are about this because there's just not a lot of movies set in these worlds Oh well there's not it's it's not about this specific thing at all but there's a lot of Casablanca in this movie including both like Perfidia the song
Starting point is 01:46:19 has also played in Casablanca he orders a friend's son like there's the Easter eggy stuff but like a love triangle like three people you know during revolution yeah and what are your responsibilities to love and back and has some of the hidden passage ways of Morocco yeah yeah no it's it's completely true I mean that's the other thing too is making a movie with a light motif
Starting point is 01:46:44 you know like having an idea of like the characters are always moving across bridges or moving through tunnels there's that moment when Tim goes through Alice's house and goes downstairs into the basement and into the tunnel and it's this large circular tunnel so that he can get into the meeting room for the eldest member of the Christmas Adventures Club
Starting point is 01:47:04 played by Kevin Tyke right? Kevin Tyke who's so good or he's like I want to be able to eat it off the floor. That's how clean I want it. That is like pure movie making stuff that you can make you can have ten examples of this feeling. Racing across the rooftops, skateboarding
Starting point is 01:47:20 into World War III. Just the idea of like being dragged on a line for 90 consecutive minutes on the movie is so great and hard to pull off. I mean also just like obvious stuff like all the president's men, sorcerer in movies that give you that feeling of paranoia and then
Starting point is 01:47:38 anxiety as you're trying to get to where you need to go to unsal to solve this, this mystery. Any other thoughts before we go to the guests of this episode? I wish I could make a fool of myself before you introduce them, but I can't think of anything. Okay. Thank you both for your thoughts on this film. We'll talk more about it very soon. Let's now go to my conversation with Leonardo DiCaprio and Paul Thomas Anderson. It is an honor and a delight to be joined by Paul. Paul Thomas Anderson and Leonardo DiCaprio. Guys, thanks for being here.
Starting point is 01:48:12 Paul, I know you've been working on this movie for 20 plus years. Why was now the right time to actually make it? There's a few answers to that. I think one of the first answers is that after we finished Phantom Thread, Adam Sumner, producer and assistant director, legendary. assistant director and producer said it's time for it's time for us to go make that one and i went over to see leo after coming back from england i said i don't think we're getting any younger and i think and but then i didn't i started to look for a will and i just i got distracted
Starting point is 01:48:59 and i didn't seem i just didn't i couldn't quite feel like i had it right yet and got distracted and made licorice pizza got to work with his dad bad, but not him. And then it just sort of seemed like I felt comfortable with where the script had landed. And Adam was really forceful and saying, enough, you've searched enough. And I think it's really time. We have to do this film now. And so I got him. I said, all right, I think we've got to get started, you know. And that was, but that was also years before, really. I mean, honestly, it was probably a couple years before. So the search began to find Willa. And then we got slowed down a little bit by the strike, but we kept working, so we were ready when
Starting point is 01:49:42 that was over, and here we are. But there's also a shorter answer would just be, I don't know, it just felt right. And thank God, everything seems to have happened the way it was meant to happen. And I'm just so grateful for the way it's all turned out. So Leo, in 2018, I talked to Paul, and he said, I loved Leo, and I loved him then, which is around the Boogie Nights time because I was obsessed with Gilbert Grape
Starting point is 01:50:10 and he said this boy's life was a fucking amazing film and he said Leo and I will work together one day and it will be the right thing it will happen
Starting point is 01:50:18 so when was that 18 okay a phantom thread time so you were thinking about it yeah what was it that you connected with with Paul's work
Starting point is 01:50:30 and why did you want to ultimately work his body of work you know his unique storytelling you're transported into world i remember watching the master and i it's very aware where you get that moment of how do you put it detachment from feeling like you're in a theater where you feel immersed and i don't know what it was but i felt like i was in that time period and i felt
Starting point is 01:50:55 that these people were real and and you know even with the film like this you know the fact that Paul's been working on this for 20 years, you say, right? 20 years. There's so much intricate thought put in and layering to what is essentially, you know, a sort of action film about a father trying to get back to his daughter. But there's, I've compared it to Star Wars in a lot of ways. You have the bounty hunters. You have Princess Leia.
Starting point is 01:51:25 You have Yoda. You have, you know, Darth Vader. But it's saturated in real world, you know, the world. that we live in right now, it's holding a mirror up to society. And it's the fact that he wrote this, started thinking about this 20 years ago, the fact that it's so incredibly topical to the world and the struggles that we're dealing with now in society, the fact that no one seems to be listening to one another, that, you know, there's extremism on both sides and the conviction that all these characters believe in their ideology, that they feel that they're right. And I know
Starting point is 01:52:01 I'm just really, to me, you can see films that have a lot of thought put into them, you know, that have had ideas put in that, you know, maybe he's taken out and replaced with something else. And what was great about working with him on this one was the malleability that he had for new ideas too. I think, you know, Regina talks about a moment where your, you know, action sequence TBD, to be determined or something like that. There were kind of little moments in the movie with Sensei and I where we kind of didn't know what direction to go. And then you'd get the actor in. You know, we waited three months to get Benicio because we knew he was our Sensei Carlos. He was our man. And then he came in fully cooked with his idea of who Sensei was, that he would have connections in the corrections facility and at the hospital and that he's got a sort of Harriet Tubman immigration system going down in his basement.
Starting point is 01:52:55 And we go, okay. Yeah. Let's follow that directly. It's highly ironic that 20 years of writing and we basically, Benicio came in and wrote that in the day with us. It was like, huh, okay, so a day and a dinner, we just wrote the best sequence in the movie. Let that be a lesson to you. Don't write for 20 years. Thinking about something for 20 years is okay. I guess that's what gets you there. But it's true. You, Benicio, that sequence was was so sort of stagnant before he kind of came in and brought all of this. energy. It was much more isolated to that apartment. I can't even remember what it was exactly at this point. It grew so quickly and a whole world sort of just sprouted out of nowhere. And then the fact that we're in these communities working with real people, real shop owners is like, okay, this is we have a relationship here. It was like made on the spot. It was improvisational and it was fantastic. And that's flexibility. It was just so much fun. Part of it feels so real despite the tone. And you know, even though you started writing it 20 years ago, you haven't made a contemporary
Starting point is 01:54:00 movie in over 20 years. Yeah. The novel is said in the 80s. It's about the 60s. Yeah. Why the decision to set it right now? Well, I mean, I think, in a practical way, in a very, very practical way, not even an artistic concern is, Jesus, wouldn't it be nice to just walk into the street and shoot
Starting point is 01:54:22 a movie and not have to think about all the things that you have to think about when you're making a period film, that is a kind of relief. And I think enabled us to do the kind of things we're talking about, to be fast on our feet, to kind of, you know, make up things. You can look over here. You can look over. You can do anything. But more to the point beyond a practical thing is I suppose as I started to get much more serious about writing this film about seven or eight years ago, I had kids that were becoming teenagers. I could understand in a deep, way, the relationships to teenagers, the gap that's between generations. So it sort of became impossible to ignore that.
Starting point is 01:55:07 And the fun of making a film, I think right now was when we first started talking years ago, I was still tiptoeing around really embracing that it was a contemporary film. I had a kind of, I had icon of safety nets, and I didn't want to talk about phones, and I was too nervous of all these things. And between him and Chase, especially him, it was pushing it and leaning in more and more to grounding it as a contemporary film. I mean, really just having to shake hands with it
Starting point is 01:55:39 and look it in the face and say, we can't get away from this. There's nowhere to hide. And if we hide, we're doing ourselves in the story a disservice. Yeah, there's a lot of people talking on phones but not looking at their phones. That's right. A very smart choice. Leo, you haven't played a dad in very many movies and not, certainly not an older, having an older child.
Starting point is 01:56:04 And I have a young daughter. This is an amazing father-daughter movie and I think we'll hit a lot of father-daughters very heavy. But I'm curious, like, what conversations you guys had about the father-daughter relationship and kind of getting into the mind state of somebody trying to take care of a kid at that age? I have played dad dads before a revenant. I think I played a father, Revolutionary Road, Inception, movies like that. But yeah, this sort of centerfuge of this entire story is this sort of makeshift father that is, you know, trying to relate to his, you know, trying to relate to his daughter. And that's the driving force of this entire movie. You know, I, when I was thinking about this character in movies, to watch we we watched a lot of different movies not based around father's father-daughter dynamic but i i remember watching what did we watch running on empty yeah which was you know sort of revolutionary parents running with with their children we watched battle valjeers i think i remember watching a lot of um dog day i watched dog day afternoon a lot because that urgency of the great alpuccino in that movie with those phone calls
Starting point is 01:57:19 The franticness of trying to get your loved one back at all odds was a big influence. Did you watch Lion in the Winter? I watched Lion in the Winter, too. That has nothing to do with it, but it's great because it has the best acting ever in a movie with Peter O'Toole and Catherine Hepburn. And they can be so gigantic and so fun and so hammy, but like that switch to an intimate thing that's like, that's razor's edge. And I'd like that as an idea. The movie is very different, but in similar ways that we could go from really big and broad and all over the place to, you know, keep it real and make it really, you know, something else. Is that something you would literalize when you were preparing to make the movie or even on set?
Starting point is 01:58:05 No, I don't think so. I think those things just sort of come because you're feeling your way through it and you kind of, you know, just try to play loose and see where it goes. And, you know, most of the times you kind of, you feel good and you go, this feels right. I will not say in six months when we're looking back at it's right, but we have to keep moving forward. And so this instinctually feels pretty good. Or from time to time, you do do something. And at least within 24 hours ago, maybe we should revisit that. And that can happen too from time to time.
Starting point is 01:58:40 I was curious about something related to that. This is a really big movie for you in terms of scale. a ton of movies, Leo, with huge scale. When you're working on something that is this big, that this has this many moving parts, do you know when you're getting it? Do you know when you're getting what you want because you have to have so many various moving pieces going as opposed to just two people sitting in a room talking to each other? Yeah, I do. As big as it is, it was still the same 15, 20 dopes around the camera that it always is. It was all just us making the movie, you know? I mean, things would grow. We would have bigger.
Starting point is 01:59:14 days but we started the film in that little cabin in the woods shooting three days there was only room for four of us and chase and leo so you know and we would watch dailies every night and sit and you know have our dinner and and look back and and say okay this is feeling good and and keep progressing so yeah you you do you do the the scale kind of becomes inconsequential you know you kind of if we were prepared, we knew what the goal was. So you're just really focused on getting what you need, looking for inspiration and keeping your shit together, really. Leo, it feels like Killers of the Flower Moon,
Starting point is 01:59:55 this film don't look up once upon a time in Hollywood. There's a strain of comedic drama that you seem really interested in in the last few movies and this kind of nervy, very funny, but kind of anxiety-riddled figures. Like, does anything account for that? What is drawing you to these kinds of guys? What's drawing me to them? To be honest, it's not a synodic conscious choice.
Starting point is 02:00:23 It's reading the material, working with the director, and trying to do this story justice and bring a, my hope is the comedy comes from real-life circumstances and real-life scenarios that, that make it funny. Otherwise, it's never funny to me. Yeah. It wants to set up gag or a set up joke.
Starting point is 02:00:47 I mean, just the opening of Bob's character. It's kind of like, I love the fact that, you know, it's like you're 15 years, 16 years later, his past comes back to haunt him. What would Bob be doing? He'd be smoking pot, you know, on his couch, watching Battle of Algiers for the 50th time. And that would be,
Starting point is 02:01:08 and he would have an argument with his daughter about the fact that he got drunk last night. You're right. You know, there's the setup for that is. And then, of course, you know, the gag of my character, not knowing the password is a brilliant choice, you know. You think you're going to be with this sort of traditional hero who's going to use all his revolutionary techniques from his past
Starting point is 02:01:29 to save his daughter in a profound way. And he can't get past over the first hurdle of the race, you know, he tripped on the first hurdle. And then he continues to trip on every single hurdle all the way around the track. And then we kept on doing that, too. There were moments in the original screenplay were like, okay, maybe he does this. And Paul was like, no, I think that the mere, for our protagonist, our flawed protagonists, I think the mere act of just propelling himself forward against all odds is his heroism.
Starting point is 02:02:04 And through that is a lot of hilarious moments, you know. A lot of comedy comes naturally from that. from those in that situation i think to that or i'd say you know we had an idea it didn't exactly kind of emerge like this but it was good for us to go into it thinking about this this way is what if like the sixth most important member of the french 75 you know like and ended up being now suddenly the last man standing and the guy with the baby you know like of all these people who you'd really rather see you know in in an action position guy number six choice number six who was really kind of just involved in shooting stuff off
Starting point is 02:02:45 and maybe that was his job is the last man standing and also has the child it's like what happens then you know that and that was good for us to just have in our body and our mind approaching the story he's not like a full-blown buffoon though i love the mexican hairless moment where it's like this man's a hero you know that's like that's exactly right if you go full buffoon then that's preposterous, you know. I mean, he's sharp enough, but he's also stuck in what he's done to himself in 16 years to disengage has definitely slowed his game down. I want to ask you guys about that because I do think one thing that I really connected with that I think a lot of people who are maybe 40 plus will is you're very young, you're hopeful,
Starting point is 02:03:31 you're idealistic, you're maybe even radical, get older, you turn a little inward. Maybe you don't turn conservative, but you become just a little bit more into your own stuff. And Bob is not conservative at all, but he's kind of stuck where he was in some ways. And I'm curious about like that dynamic and developing that dynamic. And even talking to someone like Chase who has, you know, a much more limited life experience, and I would assume is maybe a little bit more idealistic and kind of making sense together out of that in the movie. You're touching on one of the main things that we always talked about, that and the fatherhood aspect. we just mentioned it but you know there there was a up north they have a type of character
Starting point is 02:04:15 that is bob and they refer to them as hipnecks which is half a hippie and half a redneck and generally probably when they were younger they were miles apart in terms of what their ideology is but they become closer and closer and end up being the same exact person in middle age and they share the common theme of just leave me alone i do not care you know and so um yeah i mean it's a natural and it's it i don't know you put miles on you and you slow down and it's a funny one and probably his inability to relate to his his daughter's generation whatsoever you know in fact that she's off into the stratosphere with you know her her own ideology and he's trying to pull her into his but at the same time just the
Starting point is 02:05:06 setup that we have of this guy in a log cabin that can't make a phone call. I almost thought it would have been interesting if he put in a laser disc of Battle of All gears. He's not online. There's probably no connection to the internet. And here he is trying to exist in today's society. It's just a brilliant setup in that regard. I think we're finding them two at a time. I bet, I bet, and you can kind of see in the backyard the remnants of all like little toy slides and things like that that are now overgrown and everything else. I would imagine that their life from like zero to 10 was absolutely idyllic. She knew nothing else except this, this, this this this this this this this this this doting dad and he's going to take her and maybe we go to
Starting point is 02:05:53 the market and then we come right back and he's taught me all this stuff about how to survive. But as you start to emerge in young adulthood, you start to you are forming your own path and you know, a friend of mine recently took his daughter off to college and his heart was broken and he said, you know, if I had known she was going to break my heart, I wouldn't have gotten this close to her, you know? This is sort of premise that
Starting point is 02:06:17 the best thing that he can do is, is let go, you know, is let her go out of that door. No matter what danger she might end up facing, that's his job. One other thing I really loved about the movie is it's set up to be a showdown movie. You encourage
Starting point is 02:06:35 or Darth Vader, you know, this idea of good versus evil. But you actually only get, I think, just the one scene with Sean. Yeah. And I was wondering if you guys could talk about the decision to kind of keep them apart, ultimately, to make this not high noon and something a little bit different. Well, I think that was Paul. I mean, I remember us talking about the varied possibilities, not only for the ending, but the midsection of my character.
Starting point is 02:07:03 And I remember him just saying, look, I just. don't know how to do that. I don't know if I want to do that with this character. And I think to him, I'm not not speaking for him, but it would have robbed that moment and not to give away the ending, but of the sheer relentlessness that Bob has for just being there and being present and being that father figure. That is, that becomes his heroism at the end of the day. I mean, uh, there was a lot of traditional tropes that we could have done a little, but, uh, it took a lot of discussion, and I think I had to let go of a lot of those ideas as well into the process. And it kind of naturally occurred. And there we, I don't think we even decide until we're
Starting point is 02:07:44 right there on that road in Borago Springs with her, with the three cars sort of following each other. And he said, no, no, this is, this needs to be passed on to the next generation. I remember him saying that, the trauma of what, you know, Bob is now, she's now paying the price for Bob's ideology right here, boom, and it's the next generation dealing with all of this right here. And what happened? And then, not to give away the ending again, but the idea of her being in complete shock, you know, that who is this man? She's been put through such extreme traumatic events. And I thought it was a brilliant choice at the end of the day. Yeah. And it was, it was sort of discovered.
Starting point is 02:08:32 You know, you're standing there and you're just faced with logic. You just ask yourself, he's like, let's get back to common sense. Forget the moviness of this. What is common sense? What is she asking herself? We know what he's after. He's after just protecting her. That's quite simple, you know.
Starting point is 02:08:50 But now it was her time, you know. After all this time of being thrown around in the movie and handcuffed, she's got a blossom and she's got a few fucking questions over. own to ask around here, you know, and that's, to his point before, I think I, what took so long over 20 years is, is trying all of these versions, maybe more traditional things that it felt like you're supposed to do, wait a minute, you got a bad guy and you got a hero. And I wrote all these things and all these things. And there's a certain point, you can really, you can really try to do things that you think you're supposed to do. And they're terrific exercises, because inevitably
Starting point is 02:09:27 they will let you know like hey it worked or their characters aren't going that way that's not what they want to do you know and you just have to keep listening to the story or the people in the story and the more you listen to them the more they'll speak back to you and and help guide the story hopefully they're guiding it in an energetic and kind of action oriented way that has momentum and is interesting to an audience hopefully they don't want to be boring well it's so it's just interesting to hear you talk about finding it so much creatively in the making of it, especially because
Starting point is 02:10:01 shooting on Vista Vision, and I know that those cameras are a little bit complicated to use and it's a little different from just grabbing a digital camera. But on the other hand, like, something is clearly happening in Los Angeles, I think in other cities where there is
Starting point is 02:10:17 a film fandom that really wants on film, large format. I want to be with 500 people, people in a room, community thing that is going on. And it's like Nolan's movies and Quentin's movies and the repertory scene here is like very crazy now and exciting. And I'm wondering, like, you guys have participated in that.
Starting point is 02:10:38 You always shoot on film. Most of your movies are on film too. Like, what do you think that is about? Why are people, especially young people, into it? I think even young people are oversaturated with the sheer amount of imagery and fast-paced content, I mean, look at the amount of production that's out there on Netflix alone and no discredit to any of it. There's some brilliant stuff out there, but that, I don't want to say lo-fi experience, but that theatrical, communal experience of seeing something on, that's got to be
Starting point is 02:11:12 equally as vital. And I hope, to me, it's exciting because, you know, otherwise there's a huge gap in the art form, you know, that all these things have to sort of, coexist together and this movie was it's a truly original idea you know it's it's a big budget film and it's meant to have that communal theatrical experience this movie is specifically made for that you know more than anything else i can imagine it is made for the theatrical experience in benisior and i were talking about it the other day you know i love uncomfortable moments in movies that's what i love the most when i'm sitting there with the character feeling an embarrassment for them or not knowing whether to laugh or cry or or or and that communal
Starting point is 02:12:01 experience almost allows you to connect with the character oh that guy feels that way about this moment oh that's oh that's actually funny it it it's uh it's something that can only happen when you know a bunch of homo sapiens are together in a room you know feeling the energy of one another. And I think everything that Paul did to make this movie was, was for that singular experience. It is one of those movies that's not meant to be seen on a tablet or a small screen. It's meant to be in the theaters, to be felt and witness and experience in the theater. You said it best. I'm just going to fuck it up. That was exactly right. I mean, no, that's what, that's why you go through the pain in the ass of working with these cameras and doing all of these
Starting point is 02:12:50 kinds of things because it's absolutely worth it. Back to your point about, you know, finding things with a VistaVision camera, yeah, they're kind of counterintuitive, you know, you kind of, you would think you should, but because I don't want it to seem that we were out there just kind of making it up as we went along, you know, this is the product of a schedule that, you know, if you have four days to do something, you can do it as it's written the first day, look at it back, you come back the next day, you refine it, you better get it right by the third day, and you've got that fourth one to really bring it home, you know,
Starting point is 02:13:26 especially for key and important, valuable scenes that you know are essential, and that there might be something more too. That's just, that's what a great producer and assistant director brings you. That's what we had. We end every episode of this show by asking filmmakers, what's the last great thing that they have seen? One of you guys seen recently that you really dug? It's a film that I've seen before.
Starting point is 02:13:51 Is that okay? That's okay. Vertigo. Why did you watch it? I'm working on a film where that's a reference point. Marty, I had a conversation with Marty about it. And, you know, anytime you get to sit and talk with him about movies is a religious experience. But when he talks about a movie that he's still trying to figure out, it's an even more.
Starting point is 02:14:16 He's like, you know, each decade that movie, that movie, mean something different to me. Yeah. Is she a ghost? Is she not a ghost? Is she there? Is he a ghost? What is it? Right. And, you know, listening and to talk to him, so I rewatched it. And I knew the moment's the exact moments in the Redwoods that he was talking about. I was like, that's the moment that Marty felt that. Right. So yeah, there's something that we're working on that has been a reference for that. That's a VistaVision movie too. Yes, it says. You know, and we actually, funny enough, it was cut. Did we have one of our cameras from Vertigo or was it? North by Northwest or was it?
Starting point is 02:14:51 Probably not. I don't know. There was from that whole other group. There was, but, but, but we shot a whole sequence that we cut out of the movie in the beginning of the movie. And we were in San Juan Bautista, where they shot a lot of vertigo, very famous. Are they shot Vertigo there? No, the church is there. There's the kind of, there's the carriage that she goes and walks by.
Starting point is 02:15:12 It's there. And there's an upper landing that they used for the courtroom scene. So we took our little Vis-Division camera there and we put her up there and we stood there and we went, hmm, there was a camera here or 60-something years ago shooting Vertigo and we're standing in the same room. We ended up cutting the whole sequence out,
Starting point is 02:15:30 but nevertheless we really felt like fucking hell, this is exciting. I saw for the first time a movie called Tom Horn, which is with Steve McQueen. I'd seen, I saw, there was a book about him later in his life. I think it was his second to last movie. And I said, God, I've never even heard of this.
Starting point is 02:15:50 I never even seen it. I haven't seen it. It's terrific, terrific film about Tom Horn, who was a real Pinkerton detective, but kind of protected the cattle rust. He kind of employed by rich cattle barons in Wyoming, so it kind of touches near where Heaven's Gate goes and stuff. It's a really interesting film, beautifully shot by John Alonzo. And recent enough that there was a gaffer named Jim Plinette, who I worked with many years ago.
Starting point is 02:16:21 I got to text him and said, I just saw Tom Horn. He was like, we had a great time making that movie. It was exciting to see Steve McQueen in the movie. It was his second to last movie, so I think he was already ill, but he gives a great performance. And Richard Fonsworth is in it. It's terrific film. Great recommendations. Leo Paul, thank you so much for chat.
Starting point is 02:16:39 Thank you. Yeah, thank you. Okay, thanks to Leonardo DiCaprio and Paul Thomas Anderson. Yes, thank you. A normal thank you. Thanks, guys. I'll see you later. Thanks, guys. We'll catch up with you at your house. Thanks to you both for your contributions. This is a very special movie. We hope the listeners of this show go to see it. Thanks to our producer Jack Sanders for his work on this episode. Don't forget Big Pick Mailbag at gmail.com. If you'd like to send us some questions about the film, though we did talk about a lot of it here. See you in New York. And yeah, next week we head to New York.
Starting point is 02:17:14 for a live show at the 92nd Street Y where what are we doing don't spoil what we're doing okay we're not allowed to show up and and be like tonight we're drafting uh wizards yeah tonight we're drafting wizards former members of the washington wizards the gilbert arena i'm actually quite prepared for that uh you'll be there i will be there thank goodness yeah on stage not just in the audience yeah of course yeah and there will be other special guests i'm willing to say that so uh that'll be on October 4th. In between then, we have nine episodes to record. So we'll do our best. Are you serious? Do we really? No, we have three.
Starting point is 02:17:48 Oh, I was like, I mean, that would be possible. I was like, oh shit, I got to check the spreadsheet. Yeah. And hopefully everyone listens to all of them. We'll see you then. Thank you.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.