The Big Picture - ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’ Is the End of 'Star Wars' As We Know It. Plus: The Winners and Losers at Cannes.

Episode Date: May 27, 2026

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away … we used to have good ‘Star Wars’ movies. Before diving into ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’, Sean and Amanda give a final recap of their trip to the C...annes Film Festival, and cover a handful of movie news headlines they missed while they were overseas (2:28). Then, they are joined by ‘Star Wars’ superfan Van Lathan to discuss who the movie was actually made for, why it doesn’t feel special for one of cinema’s biggest movie franchises, and how this film marks an end of an era for ‘Star Wars’ at large (32:02). Finally, Sean is joined by Daniel Roher to discuss why he felt his new film ‘Tuner’ was an exercise to prove to himself that he could broaden his horizons outside of the documentary genre (1:28:33). Hosts: Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins Guests: Daniel Roher and Van Lathan Producer: Jack Sanders Production Support: Lucas Cavanagh Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Toronto movie lovers, we are coming for you. This summer for the first time ever, the big picture is going to Canada. The kind folks at Tiff invited us to participate in this summer's Tiff Lightbox series, Christopher Nolan, colon, Grand Designs. We can't wait to join their slate of programming. On July 8th, you can join us for a live recording of a very special draft episode with some friends of the pod, Canadian and not Canadian. And then we'll run it back on July 9th with a screening and discussion. of one of our Nolan favorites, Tenet.
Starting point is 00:00:37 Now pay attention. There will be special limited presales for big picture listeners and TIF members for both of these events. The pre-s, I'm still pointing, the presale for the July 8th live show will be on June 3rd at noon eastern
Starting point is 00:00:53 and the link will be available at the ringer.com slash events. If tickets remain after that, there will be a general on sale on June 5th at noon eastern. Then the pre-sale for the resale for the ringer. The July 9th tenant screening will go live on June 11th at noon eastern, and the link will also be at the ringer.com slash events.
Starting point is 00:01:12 If tickets remain, there will be a general on sale on June 12th at noon eastern. Further ticketing information will be available at the ringer.com slash events soon, and more programming details are tiff.net slash nolan. See you in Canada. I'm Sean Fennessee. I'm Amanda Dobbins. And this is the Big Picture 8 Conversation show about Mando. And the end of Star Wars, as we know it, Van Lathen,
Starting point is 00:01:45 will join us today to break down the Mandalorian and Grogu. Later in this episode, I'll be joined by Daniel Rour, the writer-director of the incredibly tight and entertaining new thriller tuner about a piano tuner who finds himself entrenched in a criminal underworld. I had a chance to see this movie back at Telluride. I've been eager for the rest of you to see it ever since. If you know Daniel's name, it's because he's an Academy Award-winning documentarian, best known for Navalny, and this year's AI doc.
Starting point is 00:02:08 I had fun talking with Daniel about pivoting to scripted features from docs, how he pulled tuner off and where he's going from here, see his movie, stick around for that conversation. But before we dig into the Mandalorian and Grogu, we need to circle back to the Cannes Film Festival and everything that happened since we left that darn country right after this.
Starting point is 00:02:27 Okay, Dobbins, you want to talk Cannes first or movie news that we missed over the 10 days we were gone? Let's do movies first. I'm following what you have here in the dock. I'm dock loyal. Lucas Cabinow put all this information in the dock. Shout to you, Lucas. Let's start with obsession.
Starting point is 00:02:42 Yes. So, CR and I recorded an episode about horror and obsession well before we went on our vacation. Right. And... Let's not say vacation, but well before we went to Europe to see movies and represent this great institution, the big picture, on the international stage. That's true. It honestly wasn't a vacation. It was a lot of work. It was a lot of work. But you know what? It was fun work.
Starting point is 00:03:05 And while we were gone, America got obsession fever. They did. And this very small film, $750,000 budget, has earned $68 million in roughly 12 days. And Curry Barker, the writer-director, was on the show and talked about his experience. I never in a million years would have guessed that the movie would have become what it is becoming when he and I spoke. You haven't seen it yet. You're going to see it very soon, I think. Tomorrow, I believe, yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:30 But it's, the box office went up. It literally went up weekend over weekend, yes, which almost never happens and virtually never happens in a non-holiday period, like a non-Christmas period, and with a non-IP story or a non-sequal. So this is like very rare air that the movie is in right now and it has kind of caught fire on social media. It's got a very young audience thus far. I'm very interested for your take on it because it is kind of a rom-com. Okay, great. Not in any way that you would hope for it to be one. But it's a fascinating test. to the thing that we've been talking about,
Starting point is 00:04:11 about finding younger audiences, what they want, why they want it, the sustainability of horror storytelling at the box office right now. We're on the verge of backrooms this Thursday Friday weekend and the fervor for that is an all-time hour. We just had a chance to see the movie
Starting point is 00:04:26 and we'll talk about it on Friday. So this is just delightful as a film fan. You shared with me that some of the internet culture that is already developing around it, like people within the movie are breaking out. And it seems to be a whole thing, which I'm excited about.
Starting point is 00:04:44 I hope you didn't spoil anything for me. I don't think so either, but I do think that we can have an Indy Navarretti conversation, the female star, once you've seen the movie. Other news, David Fincher's Cliff Booth will premiere in IMAX before debuting on Netflix in November, which is going into the slot that Greta Gerwig's Narnia film previously occupied. Right. So it gets two weeks in IMAX over Thanksgiving. Yes.
Starting point is 00:05:06 And then we'll be on streaming services December 23rd. So roughly a thousand screens in North America? Here is my question for you. Why does no one else want the Thanksgiving date? Because as soon as the Narnia movie vacated that, we thought, oh, okay, well, Avengers, whatever, will now move up and it can dump Infinity Vision or whatever. And they're not moving off December 18th. It's fascinating. It does seem I'm excited for Cliff Booth.
Starting point is 00:05:36 you know, we like Quinn Tarantino, we like David Venture, we like once upon a time in Hollywood. But it does seem like they just took the screens because no one else wanted it. And I don't really understand what's going on with the Thanksgiving day. I wonder if there was a tacit agreement when they made the Narnium move for IMAX to hold that space for Netflix. Okay. This was always the intention. Yeah. I think I did speculate that this could happen. You did. And it does seem very logical. I wish it was a month or six weeks and not two weeks. Sure. But I don't know, Disney and Warner Brothers seem very set on having the Dune's Day Showdown.
Starting point is 00:06:17 That's Dune with a 3. Remember, TM, the big picture. Dune's Day Showdown, and they're not moving. So this is the spot. December 11th also still wide open. There's no major release on December 11th right now. What's going on? Pretty weird.
Starting point is 00:06:32 It is strange. And I feel like there's something that, They know that we don't. It does feel that way. I mean, this is nice. It's good that Netflix is putting the movie on bigger screens as opposed to smaller screens. We are pro that. It doesn't.
Starting point is 00:06:44 It's not that different from a traditional prestige release for a Netflix movie, which gets a more limited, usually two to three week run in theaters to qualify for awards and then gets its streaming date. I don't know. I'm curious if they're going to have to report box office numbers for any reason if being on IMAX informs that because they don't have to. reporting box office numbers and the other forms of distribution that they do, even though the companies tend to speculate, like, how much K-pop Demon Hunter is generated. I just, I want this to be at a minimum the new normal that these movies that are of this scope and size that they're making are going in this way. And we talked a lot about when they were doing their Warner Brothers analysis, whether or not this would create a new opportunity for Netflix theatrical. I don't know what the downside is.
Starting point is 00:07:30 Like, it just feels like they're screaming into the ocean at this point. So I'm hoping. that this means we're moving in the right direction. Yes, sure. Okay. I hope so too. But also maybe not. I mean, I hope a lot of things until they don't happen. I like that this is the third thing on this list.
Starting point is 00:07:46 Thank you, Lucas. So I'm seeing here, Paul Schrader had, quote, an AI girlfriend who, quote, terminated our conversation, colon, quote, what a disappointment. I don't have much to add beyond that. Have you explored AI partnership? No. I followed the Zach Brath does not have an AI girlfriend despite what comedians said on a podcast. Right. Okay.
Starting point is 00:08:11 And then was sent an article about how that actually works in real life when you have an AI girlfriend, but I didn't read the article. So that is kind of where my knowledge ends. Tough to be dumped by the AI girlfriend. Yeah. You know? I don't have a lot of comments about this story. I do think it's funny to say those words out loud. It's a great headline.
Starting point is 00:08:37 The Batman Part 2 confirms its cast and production has begun. How are you feeling? Are you ready? I'm excited for everyone. I'm Team Robert Pattinson. Maybe I'll watch the first one again before it comes out. It seems like I still have a little while. Is this 28, 29? Will we still be podcasting?
Starting point is 00:08:52 It depends on if it comes before, after the Beatles films. I, in Batman News, watched the trailer, I suppose, for the new Lego Batman Video Games. game with my daughter yesterday. And now I'm a little worried that she wants that game. Okay. That game featured every single Batman villain. And also was soundtracked by Seals Kissed from a Rose.
Starting point is 00:09:15 And my wife and I were rocking out. We were just like, remember being 13? That was very fun. While we were traveling, I saw a friend and I saw two friends, one who has a son, who is five. He's also my friend. And he was telling me about movies. and he said that he only likes one movie and it's the Lego Batman
Starting point is 00:09:34 movie and then he tried to watch the Lego movie but he didn't like it because it was the Lego Batman it was not Lego Batman. Understandable. So this is great news for him and I'm excited. More news. Adam Sandler's grown-ups three is in the works. I'm writing and directing this film. I just wanted to let you know.
Starting point is 00:09:50 It's going to be on Netflix. But what will my part be? You're going to be grown-up number 12 which is going to be a breakthrough performance. Dion Waders-esque. Matt Damon is in talks to star in the Daniels movie? Well, sure. So everybody's in talks until they're not in talks. Like, we've learned this, okay? Let me know when something's signed. Yeah, I'm in talks to have a conversation with Jessica
Starting point is 00:10:09 Chastain. Uh, image from Mel Gibson's The Resurrection of the Christ Part 1 sequel to his 2004 film, The Passion of the Christ, has been released. Okay, clicking through right now. Skip ad. What is it a picture of? Um, right now... How's Christ doing in the picture? I don't see the picture. Why isn't it in this post? I see an ad. for food. What? Where can I see this photo, Lucas? It's a tremendous podcasting.
Starting point is 00:10:38 I'm sorry. You'll be seen these movies? No. I had actually an interesting thought about them because the timing of them is kind of strange. So part one is coming out May 6th, 2027, which is the same day, the same weekend as the legend of Zelda, which is like one of the most anticipated movies of all time. Yes. And then the second one is coming out the same day as Star Wars Starfighter. Okay.
Starting point is 00:11:05 I was like, wow. Counter-programming? I guess so. I guess I'll watch them. I don't know. I have no respect for myself. Next news item, Sam Ramey to direct modern update of ventriloquist dummy horror movie Magic for Lionsgate. Are you familiar with magic?
Starting point is 00:11:20 The concept or the movie? The original film? No. The original film from the 1970 stars Anthony Hopkins as a ventriloquist whose dummy comes to life. it is based on a novel written by William Goldman. The screenplay is by William Goldman. Pretty cool little movie. Interesting to the Sam Ramey's going back to it.
Starting point is 00:11:37 Not much to say about this. I think that's all the news we need to recap. Let's talk about Cannes. Okay. That's news in its own. There was a lot of news. Yeah. The biggest news, of course, was the winner of the Palm Door, which was my favorite,
Starting point is 00:11:53 and I don't know if it was your favorite. I don't know if you actually did your proper rankings, but Fjord. Christian Manjou's film starring Sebastian, and Stan and Renada Rinesville one. It was top two. It was top two for you. And it was top one of the films in competition eligible. Yes, and you were greatly relieved because you saw it.
Starting point is 00:12:09 I did see it. And there were a couple others that were mentioned that you missed. Yeah, it was a late-breaking can, huh? It was. We had to spend the first week, you know, pontificating about Europeans and their existence. I did warn you about this. Listen, it was when I was available. Also, you couldn't be there.
Starting point is 00:12:24 So someone had to go and see what Leicadio was up to or not up to. I just meant when anora premiered, I think, on the Wednesday two years ago, I was like, I will not be getting anora at my first can. Okay. Well, I didn't either. Thankfully, neither of us did. Speaking of, the film that you were nearly annoyed by, which was minotory, which you made you, which premiered while you were still on the ground, but you were not able to attend. I had other work obligations. Yes. You were getting drunk, right?
Starting point is 00:12:49 Is that what you were doing? It was recording jam session. Okay. That film won the Grand Prix. Yeah. And I think we had talked about how it felt like that was, that and all of a sudden. that was really the race amongst the three of those films. The Dreamed Adventure, which is a film that I was not able to stay for, Valeska Greasbach's new film, her first film in like 10 years since Western,
Starting point is 00:13:10 won the jury prize. Other winners included Los Havis, which won in a tie for Best Director for their work on Labola Negra and Pavel Pavlovakowski for his work on Fatherland. I want to ask you about ties momentarily. Best actor went to Emmanuel Machia and Valentin Campaign, from a coward, which you also were not able to stick around for. Good performance is not my favorite movie, the new Lucustan film.
Starting point is 00:13:35 Best actress went to Virginia Fira and Tao Akamoto, which we may have suggested might have been a possibility for all of a sudden. I think we picked it for Grand Prix or we thought it would be in the top three. And then you sent me some speculation after the fact that identified this as a possible best actress. Smart way to honor that movie. Very good performances. And then Emmanuel Mayor won for a man of his time, aka Notre Salute.
Starting point is 00:14:01 Yes. A film I saw and did not really enjoy at all and was deeply French about the rise of the French bureaucracy during the occupation of World War II. Yeah. Just any, what's your quick glance on the way that they gave these prizes out? Yes, they were also bored in the first week. Yes, a lot of late-breaking prizes. La Bolanegro premiered very late. Coward premiered very late.
Starting point is 00:14:25 the Dreamed Adventure premiered late, Ford and Minotaur were midweek. Right. Nothing really from the first week. Yeah, other than Fatherland. Yeah, so I left because I went to Paris. It's a tough life being me. And I saw a friend there who was asking about Cannes, was asking about the awards in particular. And he was like, so is it just a lot less bullshit than the Oscars?
Starting point is 00:14:47 And is it a lot fairer and more, you know? No. And I say, no, not at all. It's a very different system. You know, and because it's a jury and it's closed deliberations, they're going to make different types of decisions. But I explained that it usually did feel as though they were trying to spread the wealth that you don't see a film, you know, gather 14 prizes as you do at the Oscars. That, you know, like as like at the Oscars, you know, the filmmaker's history, like previous performances at Can, etc. can come into
Starting point is 00:15:23 consideration. Certainly, like the jurors' relationship to the filmmakers or the previous work can also be part of the deciding process, at least as much as we can glean from the press conferences and from rumors. So, you know, in a lot of ways this seems
Starting point is 00:15:39 pretty can-like. It does. I think the case for Minotaur would have just been that Andre Zifganet's have had not won the Palm Door before and that Christian Manjou had won before. Sure. And so while there had been 10 previous two-time winners of the palm, that, you know, it would have been reasonable in that wealth-spreading idea to give Minotaur the palm. And so it was a little bit of a surprise.
Starting point is 00:16:04 I think also Minotaur, I would say, is very definitive in its political and social point of view. Right. Whereas Fjord is a little bit of a little bit of like a political football. I see everybody's getting a little itchy since it got released. And it's definitely been some hard, you know, takes against it. I think it's going to be much discussed over the next six to 12 months. Some of you have never worked for a Scandinavian company, and it shows. Yeah, I think what you think Fjord is, which has a lot about you.
Starting point is 00:16:37 And I liked it. Yeah, I liked it as well. But this outcome is kind of fascinating in that they did not lean in that very clear direction. And, you know, Park Chen Wook and Demi Moore and Paul Laverty, the screenwriter. And there's a lot of different interesting figures from different experiences in the film business who are making this decision. Stalin Scarsguard, of course,
Starting point is 00:16:56 who we know is close with Renata Reinsva from their work on sentimental value. But then you... You saw that she wore his suit or the same suit. Yeah, you caught up with that. I'm having an amazing week with Renata Rinesva, just in general. So to your point,
Starting point is 00:17:10 like, who's what the jury's comprised of and what their experiences are and what they like and what they bring to it versus what the experiences of the filmmakers who've been here before is notable.
Starting point is 00:17:21 You know, for something like the dreamed adventure, I have no opinion. I didn't see it. Jury Prize is usually like a recognition of something special and unique, but isn't most people think
Starting point is 00:17:31 of the best director prizes I understand it as really more like third prize. And so in this case, there was a tie for third prize. You're not a big fan of ties as I understand it. That's true, but in this case,
Starting point is 00:17:45 when you're doing it to spread the wealth, it's not like a, it's not a Democrat system or not a voting system where you could just do a runoff. And it's not a sporting competition where you could just have another overtime or whatever, like play to the death. This seems fine to me. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:02 I'm not mad. It's so interesting. I didn't see La Bolanegra. And this is the other thing I texted you is I want to be very clear. We will be calling it La Bolanegra and not the black ball, even though it was acquired by Netflix and will become one of their award season, you know, centerpieces and has like a very very very fun cast, who will definitely hit award season hard. I'm looking forward to that.
Starting point is 00:18:26 We will stick to La Bolinegrra. We will have self-respect and we will use the original language. We can say it. I'm totally comfortable with that. For those of you who have not heard about La Bolinegra, it is a story of gay men in three different phases of Spanish history in the early 30s, the mid-30s, and the 2010s, and the ways in which their lives intersect in surprising ways
Starting point is 00:18:48 through the Spanish Civil War and a number of other events. There's a lot of kind of literary history baked into it. There's a lot of social history baked into the film. It is a big, bold, chest out, audacious piece of filmmaking.
Starting point is 00:19:03 I think very flawed, but very fun to watch. It'll be a rich conversation, I think, on the show as well. I really look forward to you seeing because there's a lot about it that I really admired. But I got one of those texts from me,
Starting point is 00:19:15 you walked out of it, and you were like, I was kind of blown away by this. And then, you know, that you start thinking through it and not everything totally wakes through. But your instant reaction was very much like, this is a big deal. And 100% is a big deal and not surprising and probably very smart for Netflix to pick it up, being the worldwide distributor that it is so that the people around the world can enjoy the film.
Starting point is 00:19:34 The thing about it is it is so different from every other movie they played at the festival, which was a fairly restrained series of chamber pieces. And one of the reasons why it popped so much for me was because it was a breath of fresh air. It was a big sweeping war film. Yeah. And so, you know, I wrote in the newsletter that it reminded me of Atonement, you know, that it had that kind of like the character drama, but then against this huge canvas of battle and history and struggle. And that's a, that's a, that's a timeless thing in the Oscar race. So, um, I'm excited. It'll be interesting to talk about as we go along. Fatherland is the opposite. Fatherland is a, is a, is a post-war film and there's a very restrained,
Starting point is 00:20:14 very meditative work about what's in our past and what's unspoken. And also a very beautiful movie in a lot of ways, but literally almost the emotional opposite of what Labola Negra is doing. So it's funny to pair them up. Well, I mean, it's a showy filmmaking in its own way in terms of it is incredibly beautifully photographed as the, like the Pavel Pavlikowski trilogy at this point, like all are. And for all its moments of restraint, it has several very memorable, you know, funny or the ending is like very beautiful. So it is, even though we kind of were like,
Starting point is 00:20:51 okay, this is the, a more minor work from Pahlikowski, it's really, it's showing off in a lot of different ways, just different ways. So let's talk about some winners and some losers from the festival writ large. Yeah. Neon, clearly the biggest winner of the festival. Their streak of seven consecutive Palm Door winners is intact. Yeah. And I doubted him. And we can talk about momentarily, I doubted that they were going to have the one. And I thought that that instinct to spread the wealth would have extended to Minotaur. But they got it again. Renata Rines for the star of Fjord.
Starting point is 00:21:26 And now the new Queen of Cannes. I mean, she really is at the center of so many films that have premiered there over the last five or six years. We just saw her this morning in backrooms. And kind of amazing the way that her star has risen in a very short period of time as a non-native English speaker. Right. And someone who's kind of bouncing between countries in terms of her productions and primarily working with otors on like honestly more challenging material. Sure. But doing it right.
Starting point is 00:21:53 I really appreciate what she's doing. But, you know, she's also, she's been lingering like she was in presumed innocent for whatever reason. That's once worst person in the world, which was also a can film, happened. She kind of very quickly became everyone's like, oh, I'm interested. I want to know more about her. She also just has a huge fashion following already. So it kind of seems... Did you see that she recreated the famous Justine Tray smoking holding the palm door?
Starting point is 00:22:19 Several people were doing that over the course. Did you do it? No, I didn't because... Have you held a palm door before? No, because that's the only reason that I haven't. I didn't get to do it. This can. I wasn't there for the actual handing of the palm door.
Starting point is 00:22:31 But yeah, she's kind of entering meme, you know, or not Internet girlfriend territory is the way to do it. In addition to... She's been in that position for some time for me. cinema. Very big fan of her. I'm so happy to see that. Her performance in Fjord also is very different, I think, from the girl from the worst person in the world.
Starting point is 00:22:50 Yes. It's a very different character and she transforms pretty ably. Jordan Firstman clearly one of the big winners of the festival. Absolutely. His movie was acquired for $17 million club kid. And I think to most of the, not even most of the North American critics, most of the critics I met during the entire 10 days it can, we're like, that's my favorite movie there. People have been asking me what was the best thing you saw?
Starting point is 00:23:11 And I said Club Kid. And you will hear a lot about it in the next six months and you'll enjoy it. I agree. So great for him. Yeah. And then Los Havis, like I mentioned, Javier Ambrosia and Javier Calvo, who are these incredibly beautiful and charismatic men who directed La Bolanegra, who, you know, are celebrities in their own right and have worked primarily in TV, have made a couple of films as well. And we're judges on Spanish drag race. Yes.
Starting point is 00:23:38 And I believe also international. drag race. I think they at least appear at some point. I think so. Forgive me if I'm wrong. But brace yourself for nine months of them as well. Also interesting for Los Havis, who were romantically paired for many years, including, I think, during at least part of making of the Bolanegra. And then they have since split up, but then they won Best Director together. And now they're on a rocket ship for the next nine months. Should be interesting. Listen, it's going to be great content. And I'm happy for them. Everyone always says work with your ex. That's something you hear all the time. Everyone also says work with your ex in front of cameras yourself,
Starting point is 00:24:16 because what's, you know? And promote stories about the complicated, fractious relationships between people at times of great struggle. Okay, losers. So we both lost. Yeah. Here's the way you lost. You missed five of the seven main competition winners. Main competition, yes. But I did see the winner of the queer palm. You did. Teenage sex and death at Camp My Asmas. So I missed that one. That's one for me. I'm seeing it next week, so it's going to be okay. We both missed the Uncertain Regard winner, even though I had tickets for it, because it was about a family going to Tenereef. Is it La Ben Ayma?
Starting point is 00:24:51 Every time. No, that's Uncertain regard. Oh, La Gradyva. No. No. I think your Uncertain regard is every time. Sandra Wulner. Oh, the Sandra Woller. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:03 So this is the thing that you learn when you go to camp. Yeah. You think it's really important to see every competition type of. Yeah. Or like I thought it was. And then through the first three days, you're like, why did I skip all of these films in director's Fortnite and in certain regard? Those are the movies. This year at least, there were more good movies in those categories than there were in competition.
Starting point is 00:25:25 And I'm glad I saw the competition movies that I did. But I'm regretful about missing a bunch of stuff. Right. I mean, the reason why is because we were terrified of having that missing an aura moment, you know, like in any way where it was there and you just didn't go see it. And then it wins the palm. Yeah. You feel like an idiot, which I definitely would have felt like. You can't imagine how happy I was when I checked my phone at dinner Saturday night.
Starting point is 00:25:47 And I was like, oh, my God. The Fjord won. I made it. You can't imagine what an idiot I felt like when I saw that Fjord won. Yeah, because the other loser is you who on this podcast, and I told you in real time. As you were picking Minotaur, I was like, don't do this. You are F-Munning it. And you F-1 did.
Starting point is 00:26:05 I did. I mean, it's okay. How can we correct this in the future? Like, what is... Do I just say F1 to you? This is just a true thing about me. I am so smart and so stupid. Yes.
Starting point is 00:26:19 It is the absolute... And I think it is like part of my appeal as a human. Sometimes you'll be talking to me and I think people will be like, wow, that guy, he's really got some ideas. And then other times people are talking to me and they're like, why is this guy fucking such a moron? And there is something kind of charming about that.
Starting point is 00:26:33 And this is a case where I was like, in my bones, before the festival, I was like, this is right. And then after we saw the movie, I was like, this is it. This is exactly what the... You walked out and we had to stop in the middle of the press center so you could get the tweets off. Did I?
Starting point is 00:26:46 Yes, I did. Yes, you did. Yeah, it was in like kind of the trade show when they were like, come film in like, you know, Ireland. And then the last moment, you got yourself a little bit talked out by other people. I did. You know? Well, I bought into the narrative of the filmmaker who had not won. And that was wrong.
Starting point is 00:27:05 You're right. I got to believe in myself more. Yeah. I got to be comfortable with my... my own strengths and my own weaknesses. I'm happy for Christian Manju. You know, like, I think people should, I hope people will go back now and look at his movies. Obviously, most people have seen four months, three days.
Starting point is 00:27:17 Like, that's a legendary film from 2007. But graduation and Beyond the Hills and RMN, these are really, really, really good movies. And he was on the show in 2022 talking about RMN. So I hope that people will dig into his work ahead of what will probably be like a long run of talking about Fjord. Yeah. Leisadeu did not win best actress. We suggested she might. She had two different movies up. You saw both of them.
Starting point is 00:27:41 I saw both of them. And you're a better woman for it. Sorry to her. And now we have some good bits. I do believe that Gentle Monster was also acquired by Netflix. It was. Which makes sense. Hilarious choice.
Starting point is 00:27:54 Oh, because he said it was trashy. It is trashy. And Netflix, you know, has the whole sideline of like, you know. Right, right. Sorry I killed my boyfriend. Yeah. Right. And all these sorts of things.
Starting point is 00:28:03 And it is just European that. With Leyes-A-Doo. My boyfriend's liver. with some fava beans and a nice kianti. So it makes a lot. It makes sense. And, you know, I'm happy for Lais A2. She put in the work at both films.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Oh, no, I ran over my stepdad with a snowplow. Have you ever watched any of those? No. Okay. I haven't either, but many people have. So I guess it makes sense. Okay, final can note. James Gray.
Starting point is 00:28:30 Really brutal. No prizes. Yeah. 0 for 7 in can competition history. Yeah. I don't know. It's really, it's... What are we doing?
Starting point is 00:28:40 First of all, we were, you know, we were so excited about it. And then everyone was so hot. And we were like, what's going on? And then no prizes. And we're also just, like, very confused. I don't know why we can't reach a happy middle with James Gray, which is just giving him some awards. Yeah. I mean, they gave a man in his time the screenplay prize.
Starting point is 00:28:58 And I'm like, really? I don't know. I know it's a French film festival, but like... I will say that Le Figuero, the French paper, um, posted that they were very angry, or the headline was they were very angry about the palm pick and that their personal palm pick was James Gray's Paper Tiger. So at least he still has the French. I noticed that he had a very high score in the French grid of critics, which is historically the case.
Starting point is 00:29:23 But that festival has not been very good to him. Paper Tiger, very good movie. I look forward to talking about that. So now all of these movies enter the atmosphere where they are all going to be at the festivals over the next few months. And then most of them will probably have October, November, December, January releases. Right. And also probably 40% of them will never come to the United States. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:42 And the ones that we missed, we may never see. Will people get to see the unknown? I need them too. Because we got to be able to reference it, you know? I know. I hope so. It's really? I hope so.
Starting point is 00:29:54 I need that. I mean, I need the whiteboard to get out there. You know, some people hated it and some people loved it. I've seen some people say, like, it is their favorite film with the festival and a masterpiece. I'm really right in the middle. I think it has, like, a lot of cool ideas, and I'm glad I watched it, but there's some absurdity and dullness to it. But I do think it would be good for the culture of this show to have bits about the unknown.
Starting point is 00:30:12 It's just like we need that and we need the whiteboard released. Oh, yeah. Please put the whiteboard in the trailer when you release all of a sudden, which I do also think we could have called Sudan like we can say, but, you know, that's... Yeah. But I guess it's being translated several times over so. There are already so many things that are going to alienate normal movie watchers from all of a sudden, you know? It's true. Hey, Ken, we did it.
Starting point is 00:30:34 You feel good? A plus. Yeah. A plus. I thought it was so much fun. You didn't think it was... A plus. I mean, how many things in my life get an A plus?
Starting point is 00:30:43 Okay. An A. Or A minus, if you want. Okay. Because we didn't get to the cap. We did not get to the cap. And I did not go on a yacht. So there's always next year.
Starting point is 00:30:53 No regrets about the yacht. Yeah, but I would have liked to go swimming. You know? You going on the yacht is like, that's the first act in a taken sequel. You know? It's like, I got to get Amanda back because she's with some Bulgarians who took her to some foreign island anyway. So yeah, A-minus, but I thought it was a great time.
Starting point is 00:31:10 And I also thought it was really lovely to just be in a different part of the world watching like very different movies than we normally see. Like obviously I got a little over-indexed on Europeans and their problems here and then and now. But when I was sitting watching Mandeloree and Grogu, I was like, well, you know, for two weeks I was doing something different. I had the same exact feelings. I'm glad you put it that way because there is something about being captured by a festival that can be really fun.
Starting point is 00:31:40 And when things started to get good, kind of in the middle of the festival there, where we saw three or four films over two or three days and we were like, this is okay. Finally, we've come around on something here. That's a great feeling. So I'm glad we did it too. All right. Well, speaking of Mandalorian Grover, let's now bring in Van Lathen to talk about that film. Boom, Van Lathen is here. Hello.
Starting point is 00:32:04 What's up, guys. Thank you for being here. You asked on, and I love when you ask. on this show. Because it's Mandalorian and Grogoo time. Now, Amanda and I have seen the film. We took our respective children who are Star Wars fans to this movie. I'm going to give some brief details of the movie and then we're going to dig right into it because
Starting point is 00:32:22 I've got some feelings and I bet you guys do too. So it is directed by John Favreau, who is the, I guess the official creator of the television series upon which this is based. It's written by Favro Dave Filoni, who is the new overlord of the Star Wars universe and Noah Clore. It stars Pedro Pascal. sort of, Jeremy Allen White and Sigourney Weaver. The story is as follows, the evil empire has fallen, but imperial warlords remain scattered throughout the galaxy. I hate when that happens, as the fledgling New Republic works to protect everything the rebellion fought for.
Starting point is 00:32:54 They enlist the help of legendary Mandalorian bounty hunter, Dindajarn, and his young apprentice Grogu. Amanda, I'm going to start with you. Oh, yeah. What are your thoughts on the Mandalorian and Grogu? This was incredibly boring for both me and the four-year-old sitting next to me. So, and obviously they are trying to, if not grab everyone, then grab as much money as possible. And then in the consequence of that was grabbing no one and not as much money as they would like. So I have honestly no judgment on whether it's, quote, good or bad.
Starting point is 00:33:30 I knew that I didn't care at all at any point. And I was interested to the extent that my four-year-old, who was vibrating with excitement when I told him we were going to see this movie. And he brought his toy Grogu with him that Sean gave him. And anytime that Grogu was on the screen, he was very excited. But the rest of the time, he was just not engaged. And I was a little worried after seeing the footage at CinemaCon that he would be scared because, you know, there was gun violence as opposed to lightsaber violence. And people like punching him. each other as opposed to, you know, lightsabers are fun. He's never scared about lightsapers,
Starting point is 00:34:08 but I, and then, and then I didn't even know about the monsters, but there are monsters. Couldn't have cared less. Just absolutely went over his head. And his review was there was a lot of fighting, but not in a way that was upsetting to him or that has caused nightmares. So this seemed like a big nothing to me. And because Star Wars is not as essential to, my childhood and is because my child was fine with it. I'm not that upset about it, but I'm here to support anyone else who has any feelings that they want to go through positive or negative.
Starting point is 00:34:46 Okay. Well, what were your feelings? I told you I haven't listened to your other podcast about this film. So we're coming in fresh. Yes. The podcast is The Midnight Boys, by the way, one of the very best podcasts here at the ring. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:34:59 Nice little pew poup there. So look, so there's no way to look at the movie. and say that it's like a coherent piece of cinematic art. You can't. Yeah. You guys, it's boring when I talk about this stuff. I'm in the bag for Star Wars. I'm in the bag for it.
Starting point is 00:35:15 It is a part of my makeup. My creative and film-watching makeup is Star Wars. It helped me form and understand story. So whenever I'm in the world, I am having a good time. Whenever I'm in the world, I'm having a good time. But you can't cape for the movie and act like the movie
Starting point is 00:35:33 takes itself seriously. The movie doesn't take itself seriously. The movie doesn't try to advance the story of Star Wars, the individual character story of Deng Jarn or of Grogu in any way. It gives you a slice of their adventure and it hopes that you will be happy with that.
Starting point is 00:35:52 Right. That's a description of what it is. Yeah. Did you like, I mean, I'll share my thoughts at length, I promise. But did you like that? Well, so when you ask me if I like it, the question is going to be, for me, is how could I not? And so that's what I'm trying to say. It's like, but just any Star Wars movie you would enjoy? Just anything that they served to you, you would say, good, I like it.
Starting point is 00:36:17 Interesting when you say they served, because I think that's the difference between me and a lot of other people. I think they did not serve. No. As I understand. Right. So that's the difference between me and a lot of people. Like, okay, you can watch boxing. and I'm a huge boxing fan.
Starting point is 00:36:32 You can watch a bad fight, a cynical fight, a stupid fight, a mismatch fight, or whatever. But if you are enough of a boxing fan, then the fact that the fights are on is why you're there. And so, like, for me, that is the thing about Star Wars.
Starting point is 00:36:46 So I don't want to come on you guys' this very serious movie podcast. And listen, and, like, and bullshit the audience. The fact of the matter is, I, for the most part, liked the Mandalorian and Grogo, but I know that you won't.
Starting point is 00:36:59 Well, okay. I think I've been trying to sort through my feelings. So this is a defensive pose that you're taking. No, no, not necessarily a defensive pose. It's like I've accepted something. Yeah. What I've accepted is that it, for some reason, the things that I watched first, the things that I watched first have this cynical control over me.
Starting point is 00:37:23 Like, I go, people talk about, like, Howard the Duck is one of the worst movies ever made. Not to me. I know what you mean by it. Not to me, the things. Coyote, ugly. Two thumbs up. There's a lot of reasons to love that movie. But what I'm saying is, for me, Star Wars is an experience.
Starting point is 00:37:41 And so being inside of the world, they're varying degrees of disappointment that you can have. But this movie is at least, from a story standpoint, it's a nothing burger, right? But it's competently made enough that I enjoyed it. And the Star Wars that I've not liked is the Star Wars that actually, isn't at all well-made. That's not well-acted, that seems a little stale or wouldn't. This movie, at points,
Starting point is 00:38:07 seems like, unnecessary and unfocused. But I'm never sitting there going, I'm watching a scene and not having a good time with that scene. So that's kind of the conundrum I'm in when I'm talking about the movie. Because I had fun watching him fight.
Starting point is 00:38:24 I had fun watching a brolic hunt with shoulders. Like, I had fun doing it. Rata, yeah. But leaving the movie, you didn't really take anything with you, which is, to me, the mark of a good film. The mark of a good film is not the experience you even had in the theater so much. It's what you take with you when you leave it.
Starting point is 00:38:44 You said something interesting that I leapt to when I was writing down some thoughts about the movie over the weekend, which is that this story doesn't really advance anything. It doesn't reveal any additional mythos about Grogu. or where he comes from, or even Dindajaran or, like, who he is really as a person and why he's a part of the Mandalore way. It doesn't really reveal anything about that religion. It doesn't even, a lot of this stuff was in the show, which I know you didn't see,
Starting point is 00:39:13 but a lot of the directions that the show sort of pushed some of these characters is not really a part of the movie. And then I was stopped myself as I was thinking about these things. And I tend to go down these rabbit holes and I'm thinking about, like, why was this movie valuable or not valuable? How did it get us closer to where we're, supposed to be going with the story. And I was like, well, that's not the only thing that matters to a movie.
Starting point is 00:39:32 It's not just pushing the mythology forward. But it is about how connected you are to characters and what their actions reveal about their humanity or their alienness in this case. And this movie doesn't have anything like that. It is just a series of adventures and, in fact, just feels like four distinct episodes of the TV show. And I know many people have said that, but it is what it feels like. It feels like there are act breaks throughout the movie.
Starting point is 00:40:00 And so if you just receive it in the way that you're describing, which is like, I'm going to turn my brain off. It's been time in the world. To go chill in this place with these people and to watch this kind of level of craftsmanship, then it's fine. It's like perfectly okay. I didn't think it was above average.
Starting point is 00:40:18 I didn't think it was below average. I thought it was average. You use the word nothing. I agree. There's a kind of nothingness to the entire thing because it doesn't even really change anything about the Mandalorian or Grogu. Like, if this movie never happened, you could just pick up the next season,
Starting point is 00:40:31 and we would not really have, like, felt a dramatic change. Aside from the fact that, you know, one of the characters is his life is threatened severely. But, like, maybe that won't ever come up again. We don't even really know. There's only one part of it that I think is useful and was emotionally resonant in a real way, which is, and this is a legit gauge on how much you care about these characters. And your connection to the lore. Grogo will live to be 800 years old.
Starting point is 00:41:00 His father will die. His father, he will outlive his father, not like we will outlive our fathers, but he'll outlive his father by hundreds and hundreds of years. By his father, you mean, Dinn. Dens is his dad, basically, right now. No, I mean, I saw the movie, you know? His adoptive father. Parents come in many forms, right?
Starting point is 00:41:17 Okay, like, we honor the caregivers. His found father. So that's fine. I just wanted to make sure I knew I was talking. There wasn't, like, another baby Yoda somewhere. There's probably something there. Yeah. How do Yoda's, which is what we've named the species in my home just to keep kids to bring you in?
Starting point is 00:41:32 Yeah. How are Yoda's born? I mean, how? We don't know anything about them. Stop and don't make that face at me, okay? Sorry for asking questions. No, it's a fair question, but we don't know anything about that. But you were doing like whalefall face, okay?
Starting point is 00:41:45 And it's just, I'm just asking. There's just, they're willing to know what three of these. We don't really know the name, all of this stuff. But this raises the point, which is like in this movie, I'm not sure that I thought. I thought I was going to learn about like what's truly in the heart of Grogu when they showed a movie. But I thought I would learn a little something else about this world in some ways. And shit, I love an adventure movie. I'm not against an adventure movie, but we don't learn anything.
Starting point is 00:42:09 You don't. But what I was saying was that there's a whole portion of this movie where Den is incapacitated. And then Grogu gets a little solo journey. And we get to see Grogu slightly in a little way grow up. Like live in a world where his dad is not there, where he has to save din, where he has to use his own resourcefulness, where he, and that to me, obviously, because Grogu was so cute and also because you know that eventually these characters are going to say goodbye to each other. There's a final goodbye coming, and that goodbye is going to be like heart-wrenching and who knows like when that's going to happen. That to me was important for that character, but also for the audience. That was priming the audience for a version of Grogu in the future. where Dan is not around. I mean, yes, but you have to bring all of that information to the movie. The film itself is not telling you, giving you any of that, either textually,
Starting point is 00:43:09 explaining, you know, where Grobu came from or how Yotos are born, but also emotionally. Even in the moments where he's like taking care of what, din. Dinn, that's what we're calling him. We can call him Mando. Okay. Yeah, well, I noticed that he is, he is, ah, man. But they call him Mando, that seems confusing. Anyway, when he's, like, burying him effectively or creating shelter for him, there's also a joke, you know, embedded in that of like he doesn't make it quite large enough.
Starting point is 00:43:38 And so it's going back and forth, which undercuts the seriousness of this situation. Yeah. To Amanda's point about the taking your children of the movie and who the movie is for, there's a lot of confusing messages being sent because that segment in particular, I think, really should. shows off the kind of puppetry and animatronics that this franchise is very acclaimed for. Yeah, he's really cute. And a lot of that stuff is done by hand. In fact, the sort of deus ex machina like alligator swamp lord who creates some sort of healing medication for the Mandalorian, that when he hands him that paste in the little green leaf, that's real.
Starting point is 00:44:18 That's puppetry, right? And so there's something like kind of nice and nostalgic about watching a sequence that has made by hand in this movie that is full of all of this digital effects. And that stuff feels like it is, even though it's potentially about death, like marketed to kids. It's like a sweet, cute grogu sequence where he is getting some agency and has to figure out how to grow up. And then there are whole other chunks of the movie that are full of blaster battles and explosions and really high-toned action and crazy monster effects work that is extremely violent.
Starting point is 00:44:51 And my daughter thought scary and my daughter doesn't really get scared of stuff. and thought it was very intense. And so I couldn't really figure out, was I think back on the movie, like it seemed like it was marketed to like five to nine-year-olds, but it was made for like 25 to 45-year-olds, but then it also doesn't gratify the 45-year-olds who are like, I need my Star Wars to have a certain kind of a feeling.
Starting point is 00:45:14 And then you look at the movie in full, and you're like, what was this? Like, who is this designed? It's not who was it made for, But it's like, what was it meant to be designed as? Because Star Wars is obviously the biggest tent possible, right? It's the biggest franchise that we've ever had. And I'm a little confused about how a movie full of puppets and cute little guys,
Starting point is 00:45:37 but is also overflowing with guns, gangsters, monster showdowns, old school puppetry, but modern VFX shot on the volume. Martin Scorsesey voice work. Yes. Oh. Yeah. Which I was like, okay. I mean, I guess this is for me and I'm here in the theater.
Starting point is 00:45:52 Right. But I was like, what? I thought about trying to explain this to my date. And then I was like, I don't really know how to even communicate what's going on here. This is an octogenarian, Italian-American filmmaker who is providing this voice. This is funny because, you know, he made an enemy of Van Lathen when he talked about these films becoming theme park rides. Tough, Marty. You know? So, you know what is the most interesting thing about this question?
Starting point is 00:46:16 is this is a question that Star Wars can't answer this for kids, for adults, thing, whatever it can't answer. But it's also a question that wasn't being asked when Star Wars was created, which is a reason why it can't answer it. See, when Star Wars was first created and the movie comes out, Leah doesn't have a brawling. No bras in space. No bras in space.
Starting point is 00:46:36 So if you're... Looking back on that, huge. Formative. Not huge, but perfect. Yeah. Well, yes. I wasn't being descriptive. Much like space, waitless, you know?
Starting point is 00:46:48 Which is at the moment in time. If they're perfect, wasn't there a tape scenario going on? All kinds of stuff is happening, right? But I want you to think about it. We all know, they make the movie. The movie is not cutting edge cinema. It's actually bleeding ed cinema, right? So a lot of Star Wars now feels like a very safe, contained story.
Starting point is 00:47:08 But at that time, it was incredibly ambitious. So the story itself had to be something that you could come to. But, I mean, you have a guy. and solo murdering somebody because he's a scoundrel, right? The first thing you see him to, boom, kills a guy, right? That's right. Then you have a really scary villain with a red laser. And all of this stuff is very serious.
Starting point is 00:47:29 However, it was more accessible to kids. It became for kids. It was more accessible to kids. Now our expectations for that stuff is a little different. And Star Wars doesn't really know how to reconcile that. So the way that they've actually done it is to make stuff that's so cynical, it can only be consumed by adults, which would be Rogue Warner and or,
Starting point is 00:47:49 and then in other places to try to split the baby. It's not a question that Star Wars can answer. It's also not a question that used to be asked as robustly as it is now. So to me... Because you have a generation of pundits such as ourselves who grew up on this stuff who are reckoning with it in real time. But also because I think that media has changed in this time to where we've had stuff like was saved by the bell for kids.
Starting point is 00:48:14 it was, I certainly watched it as a kid. Jesse was doing dope, okay? But that is the same to me as Star Wars, which is it is sort of behaviorally aspirational, but baked in a kind of childlike wonder. Like that is the intention of a lot of media that is made for kids that are basically like nine, I would say. That seems like the ripest age for Star Wars.
Starting point is 00:48:37 It's the ripest age for that sort of a TV show too. The problem is that now wonder isn't enough to make it for children because it can't be too scary. It can't be too violent. Like, it can't be to anything. Wonder isn't enough anymore. Like, an animated space is that's an easier thing to do. What you can do in an animated space is you can have some stuff on there that's for kids.
Starting point is 00:48:57 Then you can make a couple of adult jokes that the kids won't get. And if we laugh, we feel like the movie was for us. Star Wars cannot do this. It has not shown the ability to do this. The sequel trilogy was not for kids. It was complicated. and it was this and it was that. And so we go, can't do that.
Starting point is 00:49:17 So they come back, they don't really know how to do this anymore. And the reason why is because we kind of are in a space right now where we don't know what is for children and what is not for children. You guys just said that you went to the movies. Your kids thought that it was perfectly okay and it was too scary for yours. I'll read Alice's review. Okay. Gave her bath yesterday.
Starting point is 00:49:39 We sat down and broke out the laptop. And I was like, just tell me what you thought. I want to know specifically what you thought. I've never, I've never done this exercise with her before. And she said, I said, what was your favorite part? She said, my favorite part was when the ship crashed into the Huts tree home. We should talk about Huts momentarily. Huts, yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:54 She asked then a follow-up, what was it that the Huts were trying to do? Which then had me explore the idea of them playing both sides, both the, the new republic, not the magazine, but the actual republic being formed and the empire. And then she said Rada wasn't trying to be like her aunt and uncle, right? He was trying to be on the good side. I did like how whenever they bumped into the villain, they fought but did not talk. And I liked that Grogu was healing the Mandalorian. Okay.
Starting point is 00:50:25 Now, the fought but did not talk thing is fascinating. Was so interesting to me because that is what the movie accomplishes. The movie is actually not a series of human interaction. So you can compare this movie to the first movies or to the most recent sequel trilogy. but those movies, even if they did have violence in them and adult themes in them, they were about human behavior and character using their actions to tell us more about who those people are. This movie doesn't do anything to show us who these people are. It shows us that the Mandalorian is heroic and that Grogu loves him,
Starting point is 00:50:59 but we knew that already. That's not new. That's incredibly different from watching Luke turned literally from boy to man over the course of a new hope. So I think it's fair to say, like this movie is very unsuccessful in that very specific way, because even though it does accomplish like a two-hour adventure in the world of Star Wars, which might be more than enough for some people, it's not a good movie because it doesn't really give you anything that shows you like growth, development, an arc of progression in any direction dramatically. So that's, to your point, that's the nothing.
Starting point is 00:51:31 Yeah, there are no characters and no emotion. at all. Except for Rada. I guess. Yeah. Rada is there in the traditional Jeremy Allen White role of being completely
Starting point is 00:51:44 pulverized by the men who came before him and trying to break free of their expectations. Whether it's in chef form or swole Java form. Or Swole Hutt form, I'm sorry. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:55 Or Bruce Springsteen, which my husband watched on the plane back. And that is still not a very good movie. I have been trying to think about why my son was not scared of this, but is absolutely, he's had bad dreams in the past week from Ratatoui and Frozen, which are two animated movies where things not merely as quote unquote scary as what we saw in Mandelore and Grogu happens. And he keeps bringing them up and he wants to talk about and unpack what it is. And I think it is because much like his mother, like emotions
Starting point is 00:52:28 and sadness are the real scary part. And people being in like mortal peril, he doesn't even know what that is. And or if he does, he just knows that it's going to be okay. I guess once or twice when the fighting really started during this, he turned to me and he said, Grogu's, Grogo's okay. Grogu's okay. And he just thought by like willing it that it would be so, but I thought it was notable that he only cared about Grogo and that otherwise, because there wasn't any, like there weren't any feelings, he doesn't really know these characters because he hasn't watched the TV show. And there were like no emotional stakes whatsoever for him. And so and there's just nothing to grab onto here, especially if you haven't watched the TV show.
Starting point is 00:53:13 Well, yeah, if you haven't watched the TV show, there's probably nothing for you. All of that stuff is I acquiesce to it. Yeah. It's difficult to connect with it then sometimes because his helmets on the whole time. So it's a character that has a helmet on the entire time. You can't see him. Actually, some of the most emotional moments of the television. television show is him having to remove that helmet and then break the oath of his sect
Starting point is 00:53:38 of mandolarians and all of that stuff. All of these things are built in limits that a story like this has, which is why when this movie was announced, a lot of people were like, there's just not enough meat on the bone to tell a Star Wars story about the Mandalorian and Grogel. I get all of that. For me, there's no real defense of the movie as a story. There's nothing there, right? as a piece of Star Wars and as the existence of a contemporary piece of the a piece of the contemporary existence of Star Wars, I have to defend the movie because I believe in the world of Star Wars. I believe in the imagination that can go into that world.
Starting point is 00:54:14 I believe in everything that the world can be and is, and I've just devoted so many hours to it in comic book, novel, in YouTube, and all of that stuff. I think that's kind of the larger question. that people are asking. You guys, there's no way to say that the Mandalorian and Grogel is a fully formed movie. I'm actually surprised at the movie being as on the nose as what it was because of Jean Fabro's involvement. And if nothing, over the course of his filmmaking career, he's shown how to make you care about a character and then put that character in a different place than like how it was when you found it.
Starting point is 00:54:53 I'm a huge fan of his movies in general. I mean, he's made a few duds here and there. but I think he's not just a skilled crafts person, but going back to Swingers, like I have always thought he has a real ability to capture human behavior. Like that's something, and whether it's in a big world or in a small world,
Starting point is 00:55:08 I like it. I think this just kind of, it feels like Moana too, which was intended for Disney Plus, and they kind of upscaled it a little bit and added a few more dynamic elements to make it more theatrical and to leverage a moment,
Starting point is 00:55:23 maybe a weak, open space in a calendar to create something a little bit bit more theatrical. And I groused about this when Solo came out in 2018. I was like, Star Wars movies are special and Solo is not special. And this movie is not special. And so it kind of undermines the entire premise of the Star Wars exercise. I think you could make a case that the streaming series in general, I think, kind of violated a lot of that. And we could probably look back at a lot of different things over the last five years that were undermined by making them streaming TV series. but this one I think would work really well
Starting point is 00:55:57 if you were just moving from season three of the show and then you were just like you're on a binge and you just binge the movie immediately after watching season three and then maybe you go right into season four. And in that way, it's a totally viable thing if you like these characters in this world.
Starting point is 00:56:11 But for the big Memorial Day weekend Star Wars movie, this ain't good enough, man. That's just straight up what it is to me. It's just not good enough. I mean, I agree. But I also don't have the standards of there. I don't think there was anything. I mean, I guess if it were really good, I'd be like, hey, that was really good.
Starting point is 00:56:33 And I was exciting. But I'm not bringing to it any sort of like fan expectations or anything other than I went to see a movie and it wasn't really a movie. And I won't think about it again. And with the remove, it just also, you know, becomes increasingly clear. The generous version, as Van put it, which is that Star Wars, the Star Wars world is, is that such a disadvantage because they have to please everyone and they also have to please every individual age group fan base all at once and they have to be both niche and broad and that's impossible.
Starting point is 00:57:09 The ungenerous version is that they've just backed themselves into a corner and there's like no way to do anything interesting anymore at the scale that they have to do it for financial reasons. So what do you, what is Star Wars now then with that in mind? Like, this was a seven-year gap, theatrically. Yeah. We have obviously a very big movie coming one year from now Starfighter, the Ryan Gosling, Sean Levy movie.
Starting point is 00:57:35 Right. I do think that this augurs the end of an era of Star Wars. Like, we were in, there were, there have been four phases to this point. There's the original trilogy. Right. There's the sequel, or the prequel trilogy. There's the sequel trilogy. And then there's the streaming era.
Starting point is 00:57:52 Right. This to me feels like an end cap on the streaming era. and it's underperformance of the box office, relatively speaking, feels like a clear signal that Disney, like, reset. You got to reset. Now, next year probably is a reset.
Starting point is 00:58:07 How are you feeling about it? So I think what this signals for Star Wars, where Star Wars is right now, is where a lot of these things are, which is a monocultural institution trying to wrestle with the death of contemporary monoculture. And what Star Wars has to do, what anything has to do,
Starting point is 00:58:25 It was segmented itself. And it's very difficult to do when you want to make a movie and you want everyone to talk about. You want everyone to go see it. This is best explained or expressed or the best example of this, shall say, is The Last Jedi. The Last Jedi is a Star Wars movie that did everything that serious high-brow film goers want to see. They subverted your expectations of what was going on. They went in new places. They established new lore.
Starting point is 00:58:51 They did all of that stuff. And for the fans that are looking at Luke Skye, Walker as this father figure Jedi God who at his height would be able to overcome any problem and do whatever, they went, that's not what we want, right? And then as a film project, you had a whole bunch of people that were saying, that's exactly what we want. That's exactly where you have to go. And then Star Wars Splinter didn't know how to do it. Then they made a really dark space opera in Andor and they went, yeah, that's what we want. But then people couldn't really connect with that. That wasn't for
Starting point is 00:59:25 every Star Wars fan. So I think what Star Wars has to do is realize that there are pockets of their audience that will watch anything that they put out. Like, I will watch LSU versus Western Tennessee Tech on 3 p.m. on Saturday and be up for
Starting point is 00:59:41 every down. Subscribe to ring your tailgate. Bring your tailgate because I love LSU football so much that I'm interested in seeing what the third string walk-on quarterback does when he gets the opportunity to come in the game. So that's, you you have a low bar for me, but not everybody's going to tune in
Starting point is 00:59:56 for that college football game. So if you want everybody to tune in, you might have to expand the lore or do some different things. I say all of this to say that as a huge blockbuster, $2 billion entity, there are questions to answer,
Starting point is 01:00:15 but if you're not a Star Wars fan right now, if you're out on Star Wars right now, then you were certainly out. in 1993 or 1994 or 1996 where there was no stuff coming out, where there was nothing that you could turn on your television and see where you had to go to your bookstore and buy books and go seek this stuff out. And for me, my fear is actually going back to that. My fear is actually not having people bring new ideas,
Starting point is 01:00:42 even if those ideas are poorly executed or under-executed. My fear of Star Wars is not overabundance. My fear of Star Wars is the wilderness. because I live through the wilderness as a Star Wars fan, where Star Wars... So that's my deal. And so that's the dividing line that I think I'm on with a lot of people. It's a very, very interesting way to frame this.
Starting point is 01:01:05 And I would argue Amanda didn't care because she was not fully invested in the original trilogy, even as a young person. But I was. I would assume as much as you up to a point. And then I never really got into the novels. That was something that that was like beyond what I was interested in. Certainly, yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:22 But I vividly remember being 11 years old sitting on the floor of the Barnes & Noble in my hometown, reading the Star Wars Encyclopedia for two hours. Like just obsessed with every component of the lore. And the absence of new movies actually, I think, might have helped. I think having fewer things as I got older to pick apart helped it grow in my estimation. And then when the prequels came along, which I actually always kind of liked and always kind of defended, you can check with Chris Ryan on this because I knew him back then. I could see their flaws. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:58 And the way that they were received, especially critically, made me feel like we were going again into a wilderness because it was like, all right, maybe we didn't need to go back to this. Now, what we've had since 2016, 2015, when was Force Awakens? 15? 15, something like that, yeah. So in this 11-year period, we have 10 times the amount of Star Wars hours than we ever had for the first 40 years of my life.
Starting point is 01:02:24 And it's too much. It's, we're not going to the wilderness. That's never going to happen again. It's corporately held. They're never going to stop. There makes no sense for them to stop. So there's no reason to be worried about the wilderness. What we should be worried about is this.
Starting point is 01:02:36 Is the like the watering down, the degradation? I mean, this is the essential tension or conflict of fan culture, right? Which is like, do you actually want to get what you want? Is fan service actually fan service? And I think there are many people who watch it and who, and who get the, you know, new movies and new iterations and the Easter eggs and everything and receive it as like, that actually is why I'm going to the movies. And then I think there is a different type of people who watch movies in a very different way,
Starting point is 01:03:05 who understand fan service to just kind of be spooning things out to you. Are those people in the room with us right now? Are those people in the room with us to try to get your money? But that's always the risk, right? I mean, that's the... Yeah, you know, is it. just, like, I'm not inherently a cynical movie watcher, so like, not at all, right? So I just, it doesn't bother me.
Starting point is 01:03:29 We're not going back to the wilderness, but this is the first Star Wars movie in like seven years. Yeah. Right? So, like, as far as a big screen Star Wars experience, we are in the wilderness, right? We were, yeah. We were. Right.
Starting point is 01:03:40 So this is the first one in seven years. Look, I would rather, with any of this stuff, any of the stuff that we're talking about, I would rather say, hey, do as much as it as a dude, I don't. want to limit on it because I don't necessarily believe that scarcity, like, breeds greatness, right? What I would say for everyone, and this is despite my criticisms of the Last Jedi, what I would say to everyone is, like, tell a story that you feel like is important. Like, tell a story that, like, is meaningful to you. If fan service, once there's a lightsaber on the screen, I'm serviced.
Starting point is 01:04:21 Okay? Yeah. Like, I'm serviced. Interestingly, no lightsabers in this film. Right. And this is kind of not that story. Once there's a lightsaber on it, I'm serviced by being there in the world.
Starting point is 01:04:30 That doesn't mean that, like, me as a Star Wars fan is going to look at a movie and agree or necessarily think that every decision that was made was right. It also doesn't mean that I can't be glamored. The Force Awakening is a glamoring of Star Wars fans. It is a retread of so many things
Starting point is 01:04:46 that we had already seen to where it took two weeks after the movie until we went, Huh, was it very much in that film that we hadn't been accustomed to seen before? That's kind of a remake of the first one. I will say, though, one thing that that film accomplished, that I don't think this film accomplishes to the point about our own children is, that movie activates young imaginations for people coming into Star Wars for the first time.
Starting point is 01:05:07 And it makes you think about the fact that the Force of Awakens wasn't just made so that you or I or you could have an exciting new Star Wars experience in our 30s. It was made to create a new generation of fans. and I really question whether or not a movie like this can create a new generation of fans. Starfighter does seem like the kind of thing that could do that because it sounds like it's wholly original in this world. Like it sounds like it is outside the realm of the Skywalker saga and all this other stuff. But that's sort of why I question the intent of this movie a little bit is, is it just like a mile marker? Is it just like, well, we just got to get back in theaters?
Starting point is 01:05:46 And so let's do the best we can because we've had so many stock. and starts throughout the Kathy Kennedy seven-year corridor where nothing really was being made. And that actually, it's hard to not see a movie cynically through that lens. I agree with you. People listening to the show in the last three or four years
Starting point is 01:06:02 might be surprised to hear this, but if you listened to the show before that, I was very excited about a lot of the things that were happening in this kind of storytelling. And it's hard to not see this to me as like, this is like the death belch of like an entire era of movies and TV making where like this is kind of like the best they could do.
Starting point is 01:06:21 This is like they ate a big meal and this is like kind of what's coming up. And it's not, it just doesn't, it doesn't sit right with me. It's not a fiasco. It's not the sky is falling. It's just like they just needed to put $600 million on the board this year and this was the best way they could do it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:36 And Favro was willing and they had enough pieces in place. Yeah. That's like, that's not exciting. But you're absolutely correct. Everything that you're saying is right, right? Like everything that you're saying, there's no way to push back on anything that you're saying, it's all right.
Starting point is 01:06:49 This was the most film-ready adaptation that they could put on the screen and make some money and say, hey, Star Wars is back in movie theaters. That's absolutely correct. Do you agree then that audiences are smart enough to know that? No.
Starting point is 01:07:03 I think that, like, I think that, like true film connoisseurs are smart enough to know that, right? I think audiences just will have a visceral response to whether or not they had a good time with it. And it's difficult to have a good time with something that,
Starting point is 01:07:18 doesn't have like a really thrilling story, right? It's like the Super Mario Brothers movie, which is what I compared Mando too. Super Mario Brothers movie. Very similar. Very similar, right? They go to a place. You're like, okay, this is where the story,
Starting point is 01:07:30 the movie's going to get started. And then somebody makes a call and they go, Mario, we're on this planet. And then they leave. And then you're like, wait a minute, this movie doesn't care. They give you Star Fox. They give you all of this stuff.
Starting point is 01:07:39 And then they go, hey, if you liked it enough when you were a kid or if your brain isn't developed enough, you'll have a good time, a billion dollars to see you next time, right? Yeah. So that has to be looked at with a certain cynicism just like this does. I will say this, though. Like, take the film biopic, like the biopic movie.
Starting point is 01:07:59 So we've gotten Michael, we've gotten Bruce Springsteen, we've gotten a complete unknown, we've gotten a bunch of different versions of this in the last, they've joked about it. We've gotten, and almost always, with what's happening right now, these movies are bad. Almost always. some of them are laughably bad, right? And to me, when I look at them, they have almost no excuse to be bad because you could literally make a movie just about Michael Jackson during the thriller period and everything that happened
Starting point is 01:08:31 and it would be a kick-ass, unbelievable movie. I think we might have even to say this. This was my pitch, which is if you had called it thriller instead of Michael. Right. And you took the Springsteen approach, but to this material. Yeah. Right. But these types of films are important for two reasons.
Starting point is 01:08:48 Number one, they have built-in audiences because people are really interested in these people. Number two, they're big showy performance pieces for the leads in these movies. So they're never going to stop making them despite the fact that they're almost always bad. Yep. So when I see them, I go like even sometimes in the pictures, like the poster, I'm like, I'm signing up for a two-hour ride that's about to be some bullshit. I'm comparing them to Star Wars only to say that it's not that I necessarily think that they should stop making that type of film. What I think that they should do is when they are taking in consideration the story and the stuff that they are doing, make that film with some actual artistic inspiration and ingenuity.
Starting point is 01:09:35 Because there is a good Bruce Springsteen movie in there. There is a great Bob Dylan movie in there. So I don't need less Star Wars. I need Star Wars to remember the face of his father. His father is George Lucas. And George Lucas was concerned with new worlds, new ideas, and consistent storytelling. And that can't exist in Star Wars. But then, you know, and the problem with Michael, the problem with Springsteen is that if you want the music and the like artistry that inspires everything else,
Starting point is 01:10:05 there are a bunch of people who own all the rights to that and they have to, you don't get to do it artistically. if all of these other lawyers are involved. Which is the shame. Well, then, well, then here's the deal then. I agree with you. Make good things. Right.
Starting point is 01:10:18 I'm like, like A plus. Make good things, not bad things. And once again. According to my standards of them, I'm available. I will answer the phone.
Starting point is 01:10:26 Once again, I'd say it all the time. I've read stories about Darth Vader trying to get his lightsaber and having to decide he's not going to, the emperor says, you're not going to bleed a crystal that gets a lightsaber.
Starting point is 01:10:39 You got to go take it from a Jedi. which means he then has to find a Jedi that's taking the bearish vial. The bear's vial is when the Jedi swears off being the Jedi. So he has to get a list of every Jedi that's ever taken the bearish. He has to find out where they are. He picks the wrong fucking guy because that guy legitimately, his only job in the Jedi was to fight. And then he has to go and fight up to the top of a mountain and get this.
Starting point is 01:11:03 I have seen exhilarating, new, interesting Star Wars characters and stories that are based on existing lore. I know that it can be done. Of course. I'm going to have a good time watching Star Wars movies, but I haven't lost faith in the entire world because there's so much imagination that can be put to it if, in fact, these types of movies can defeat the same thing
Starting point is 01:11:26 that I'm saying other genres of films have to defeat, which is all the stuff that Amanda just mentioned. You're no longer young people. You're just people. And people are either productive or dead weight. It's my first day of work, and I need to make a big, impression. Were you just checking me out?
Starting point is 01:11:42 No. It's too bad. I see at least 15 ladies I need to talk to before my beta block wears off. My coworkers don't take me seriously. It's not a human. It's just a piece of meat.
Starting point is 01:11:55 Someone bring a gurney. I think one of the reasons why the Last Jedi resonated with a certain sector of the fandom and of filmgoers in general is the very famous Kylo Ren, let the past die line.
Starting point is 01:12:14 And that spoke to the the Star Wars mythology, but you could also apply it to this kind of broader component of culture. And what you just described, there's a part of me, there's an 11-year-old part of me that really wants to see the Darth Vader wrecking shit, you know, mid-story movie where he's like having battles and figuring out how to be the real true dark overlord of the empire. Then there's a part of me that's like, I don't know, I already know what happened to Darth Vader, you know? Like, I know how he died
Starting point is 01:12:45 and I know how he saved the rebellion and I know what he means to Luke and Leia and like I saw the, I saw Return of the Jedi. That story's over. It's not that it can't be done and it shouldn't be done and I'm not telling people like, don't tell another Darth Vader story, but it's never going to be as special
Starting point is 01:13:01 as that's a very specific feeling when something big and new arrives and it can take over for a while. And part of what I've been trying to talk through on the show for the last few years is like something is, like, something is dying and something new is happening.
Starting point is 01:13:15 We might not always like what the new thing is. In fact, Super Mario is one of the new things. It's something from our childhood, but in movie form, it's one of the new things. But as we have gone through, and credit to Amanda for sitting in that chair for like five plus years of pretty bad fandom stuff. Ten years now. I mean, going back to solo. But more of that stuff was tolerable or interesting. I thought from 2015 to 2020 than what we have had in the five years since.
Starting point is 01:13:42 That's my perspective. Just saying, Rise of Skywalker was 19. So I think it's 2018 is when it starts going south. Maybe it's been seven years of not great stuff. Nevertheless, something's changing. Movies like this don't happen if they're not like afraid. This is like a scared move. This is a scared move.
Starting point is 01:14:00 Well, no, we know what's changed. What's changed is that you make a movie now, it's for all films. You make a movie now and you have, I was just talking to somebody about this. The amount of times I went to the movies and saw what's considered now to be a bad movie. We would talk about how bad the movie was for a day, two days. I was talking about a movie called Ride that my boy Derek Dansberg went to see. And Derek Danesberg came out and said, man, how was Ride? It's like a hip-hop type movie from the mid to late 90s, right?
Starting point is 01:14:32 And he goes, man, that shit was an hour and 20 minutes long. It just didn't feel like it was an actual film. We wouldn't saw it. Ride sucked, and then we got over it. now every time a movie comes out and that movie is bad first of all we hype these movies like I mean not the Star Wars up we hype these movies like there's no tomorrow every film is going to be this
Starting point is 01:14:51 deep exploration or this brand new breathtaking new filmmaker that's going to change everything right we hype this and then we rip them to shreds which we should have conversations about movie any prestige in any art form is to me oriented around criticism if you have a low critiqued art form,
Starting point is 01:15:14 it can have no prestige. Prestige is oriented around criticism. But now, like, we take the qualities of these movies, the quality of these movies, a little bit more personally than we used to. And there is one or two places where people are allowed to direct all their vitriol, and they sing very loud.
Starting point is 01:15:34 And then the people who are, A, creating them, and B, marketing them and financing them, get the shit scared out of it. them. The actors get fucking harassed. The directors get I knew that they would make a movie like this because they have this political belief. I knew that they would do- Amanda gets clipped on Instagram and she's hectoring some poor young actress who's just doing her best, you know, trying to be a slave girl in a Star Wars film, you know?
Starting point is 01:15:58 Right. So there is like there is different. How do you make a you don't? What you do is you say, I have this and I think the next group of Star Wars, the next batch of Star Wars, the next batch of Star Wars stuff that we're getting is a lot more original. It's got some characters that we recognize, but we'll see how the story is told. You go, hey, I have a take on this world, characters be damned, world aside, how can I get this original takeout? And you let the people who are fans, a part of the fandom, you let them go out. And then people who don't want to fuck with it, don't watch it. Like, don't watch it. Don't go to it. Because I am, like, I'm, like, if only for Amanda.
Starting point is 01:16:43 I know, I'm just like, you know, preach. Like, if we could get to that place, that would be beautiful. Unfortunately, you have two young boys. Yeah, I know, I know. You're in for a penny in for a pound here. Yeah. This is it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:52 So, to me, there is both the ability to be critical and be honest about the fact that we are in the dirt in the dirt in terms of Star Wars content that's coming. We're in the dirt. We're in the dirt with Star Wars. We're in the dirt. Let me ask you something. In a dirt. In the series, there's a couple of things that are, that were kind of Easter eggy fan servicey
Starting point is 01:17:15 that you were describing. You know, Luke obviously appears in the series at a certain point. In Mandalorian and Grogu. Or in the Mandalorian series. So Katano, we get the Dark Sabre. We get things. The Dark Sabre is a lightsaber. But it's dark.
Starting point is 01:17:33 But it's dark. Let's just show some respect. I'm sorry. Why don't you show some respect to the Dark Sabres? Some of that stuff. It's the single ruling. You have to fight and you get in, you rule the Mandalorans. I had to stuff down so many questions about where you get a lightsaber when you were describing the
Starting point is 01:17:52 fan fiction or whatever it was about Darth Vader going to find his lightsaber. I mean, I just, I don't, there's, but I would watch that. You just reminded me because my daughter and I built a lightsaber three weeks ago at Galaxy's Edge at Disneyland. And I will say... Not cheap to do. Well, it was promised and it was delivered. That's what I'll say. We had been discussing it for a long period of time.
Starting point is 01:18:14 And she chose the white lightsaber because she loves Asokatano. Not because she's a young white girl, Van Leithen. How dare you? No, she loves Osceola. She loves Asoka. And so...
Starting point is 01:18:26 But that was very special. And then I saw you tweeting yesterday about being at Disneyland and ranking your favorite rides. And Rise of the Resistance was at the time. top of your ranking. It is.
Starting point is 01:18:37 And it was your first time going on it? No, no. That was my third time. Okay. I went on it for the first time with my family three weeks ago. And for the first time in a while, I was like, there's nothing like Star Wars. Star Wars is the best thing that's ever existed. There's a part of Rise of the Resistance that people that haven't written it before don't
Starting point is 01:18:54 think is coming. And one lady cried. So, like, she cried when, because they put you inside of the world. There's a part that a door opens and you're like, shit. Are there people in costume running around? Yes. Yes. I'll never do it.
Starting point is 01:19:11 Yes. It's so cool. You know I hate that so much, though. When they, I really am afraid of audience participation and like character interaction. Yeah. So this would be tough for me. But I'm glad you guys loved it. It was an interesting.
Starting point is 01:19:23 It just, it transported me. It brought me back in a way that the movies and TV shows in the last seven years just never could. And it reminded me that like this does have a real power and that there's something really handmade about this world. And the idea of making a theme park. ride that has that level of detail and um tactility you know that you felt like you were on the ship in a way that no other ride has ever given me before even though i was a star tors freak when i was five years old i love star tors which is and it's great now too they've updated and everything but nothing is like this ride and so it's got i kind of got to jog my memory sometimes too where it's like
Starting point is 01:19:58 don't just be burned out you know podcast guy who's like i hate everything from when i was a kid it is still special and it can be special again, but just not this way. You're right. This is what I'll say. Okay, so all of the things that you talked about in Mandalorian in the early Mandalorian series, Skywalker comes into that.
Starting point is 01:20:20 That is fan service without a doubt. 100%. But it's also story. Meaning Grogu is a force being. He calls out to the force for assistance If he did that at that time, who is the guy that would show up, crush everybody and save the day, and then tell Grogu about the way of the Jedi the thousands-year-old tradition that he has the opportunity to be a part of. then when he has a chance to be a part of that tradition Grogu actually making the decision not to be a part of that tradition
Starting point is 01:20:59 both because of the shortcomings of what has happened to that order and because of his connection to his father, it is actually a real choice. So you use Skywalker and it was so great to see Luke as soon as the X-Wing, I was like, oh shit, Gleek was like, what's wrong with you? I'm like, yeah. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:21:18 Not now my stories are on. Exactly. I know it's about to go down. So, yes, that is fan service. Without a doubt, that is fan service. But even that is something to hold on to when Grogu in the Mandalorian Grogu is using the force. I'm like leaning over, was it the force? It was the force?
Starting point is 01:21:36 Yeah, I'm leaning over to my four-year-old and being like, hey, that's the force. And that's what Luke Skywalker does. And I, Star Wars idiot, mommy, am having to explicate this to a four-year-old during the movie because the movie can't do the work for itself. The movie assumes that you know about the force. What an interesting and weird choice. And it doesn't even, but it doesn't use the drama. But you can't.
Starting point is 01:21:56 So this is why I will say about that. And I'll finish off that point by just saying, yeah, you're right. The early Mandalorian stuff was new. It was a new way to tell the Star Wars story. But they also incorporated things about Star Wars that we already knew. And it worked until it got cynical as a part of itself because there was people at Disney, respect to everybody that wanted to sell toys surrounding Google more than they wanted to tell stories.
Starting point is 01:22:26 That's how you lose. You lose when you put the toy first and the story second. But I'm telling you, in Star Wars, story can still win. Now, as far as Rise of Resistance, Rise of the Resistance has to play to people who are not massive Star Wars fans. I was at Rise of Resistance with two people yesterday. One of them, Kalika, who knows about Star Wars,
Starting point is 01:22:49 the other one, our friend Alexis, who is not in any way initiated with Star Wars, right? When we left, she had a million questions. I don't want to ruin the ride for anyone. Why did they stop us? Why did they do this? Why did this happen? She was exhilarated because the Imagineers at Disneyland, they know that they cannot make a ride that is just specifically for Star Wars fans.
Starting point is 01:23:11 They have to put you in the middle of the world, make you feel stakes, make you feel overwhelmed, and then make you win at the end. that is still possible for Star Wars and I believe that it will be done we're just in the dirt right now but out of that dirt I'm telling you something's going to grow Rise the Resistance is one of the first things forget about Star Wars, forget about Disney
Starting point is 01:23:30 it's one of the first experiences I've had where I had been hearing about it for years since they opened it and I was like wow this is really fucking cool and I'll just encourage people to check it out if they find themselves at Disneyland all right we got to wrap it up before we go I have to say one thing
Starting point is 01:23:45 now all right there's something that the streets are really involved in. Oh, okay. And I don't know if you guys know. All of the big pick heads like myself. Shout out to the big picture Reddit. Y'all know how much I fuck with y'all. Okay. We're obsessed with the latest beef on this show.
Starting point is 01:24:02 What's the latest beef? The race for third chair. Oh, yeah. Oh, sure. Yeah. We're obsessed with this. Did you raise your hand for this episode because you really want it? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:24:11 Are you your money? No, no, no, no, no, no. I'm the black chair, not the third chair. No, no, no, no. Okay. No, no, okay. I don't want to, I don't want to be the third chair. This is a clear, this is a clear.
Starting point is 01:24:20 These chairs don't see race. This is a clear two horse race between Tracy. Yes. And Chris. Now, I'm of the belief that is a one horse race because there's only one true third chair, which is the incomparable Chris Ryan. Okay. Okay. However, there are those who believe that with the single-minded focus and dedication that he has when he's on his podcast,
Starting point is 01:24:47 This is a guy who has a great fucking life, by the way. Talk about Tracy. Yeah, this guy who has a great fucking life, by the way, right? Married, beautiful, talented lady has a fantastic career, also on the screen and on the stage. But yet he is... This man is a father. He has a family. He has a family.
Starting point is 01:25:06 However, being third chair matters to him. Yeah. I would caution Chris Ryan not to take him for granted in this. I would caution Chris Ryan to maybe look behind. I think he's coming. I think he's hearing some footsteps. I think he's hearing some footsteps with Tracy. You saw it when he closed the computer, you know, at the end of the draft.
Starting point is 01:25:31 He knows. And that's the beauty of Chris Ryan is that, you know, he's waiting, you know, for his moment. Tracy was on a heater in the month of May. I appreciate the work that he did watching 85 million Robert Duval films. And, you know, giving us some travel time. Yeah. But we are living in like the Tracy Afterglow right now, you know. And he's also...
Starting point is 01:25:54 This was like rewatchables after CR month too, you know, where it was like, oh, okay. And I would just... That was then and this is now, you know. Let's talk in a few months. Well, you know... Well, how long would Tracy have to deliver this current level of performance? I'm a CR head. CR is the third chair.
Starting point is 01:26:12 Here's a real challenge. And this is... absolute truth in this question. One, the third chair will always be the friends we made along the way. That's just how I've always thought about it and we've made so many friends just doing this show. Two, if there is in fact a true race for third chair, the thing that Chris does and will continue to do that Tracy has not yet shown himself willing to do is that Chris will join us at 10.15 a.m. on a Tuesday after a holiday weekend to go see backrooms in Beverly Hills.
Starting point is 01:26:40 That is the work of this making this show. In addition to hanging out, talking, making our little documents, having our strongly held opinions, you got to go see the new movies at the annoying times and places where they're being held and then come to the episode and record with us on a regular basis. You can't just say, I raise my hand for this episode and that's it. You got to do the work. And C.R. pre-Big Picture, been doing the work with me for 20 years. So he will have an inherent advantage as long as he continues to do that. That's just a fact. It's a gum.
Starting point is 01:27:14 Tracy's also shopping for third chairs on some other podcasts. I'll just put that out there. Okay? A little third chair curious. Yeah. So there's a little bit of a loyalty question. Is Tracy a third chair thought? I just, you know.
Starting point is 01:27:29 What are we talking about? You're trying to see. Let's not sludgeeem anyone. Let's just say. The other thing is I just don't, I don't want to discount the Van Lathens and the Joanna Robbonsons and all the people, the people. It's a clear to. Rob, it's great.
Starting point is 01:27:44 It's a clear two-horse race. And Chris is way ahead. Like us big pick heads, no, Chris is way ahead. But what I liked more than anything, it's the last of my rabble-rousing that I'll do. What I like more than anything is Tracy told Chris his face that he wanted. I'm like, yo, what is he on? He told Chris to his face, I'm coming for you.
Starting point is 01:28:07 You know, it's like a movie? You know, it's like a movie like I watched John Wick not too long ago. John Wick is always. bound and all like that. And he's looking at Vigo and he's going, I'm going to kill you. I always wonder in movies like that. Like, how are you going to kill him? Shouldn't you?
Starting point is 01:28:20 You're dead, dog. You're caught. Dinn does it in Mando. When he's tied up in front of the huts. Whenever somebody says, you can't wait, can't wait till I hear you die, screaming alongside. That's what Tracy did. Tracy was like in his face. Look at him.
Starting point is 01:28:33 Chris has got the power. And he goes, y'all, I'm coming for you, dog. I appreciated it. I did too. Yeah. I did too. Van Lathan, Tailgate, Midnight Boys, Higher, Higher Learning. Rewatchables.
Starting point is 01:28:44 What else you've been doing? Everywhere. I'm everywhere. I'm doing a lot of stuff. It's fun. I'm having a great time here at the Ringer. And so... I'm like a hostage video.
Starting point is 01:28:53 Thank you for being here. No problem. Okay, let's go to my conversation now with Daniel Rourer. I'm here with my east side of Los Angeles compatriot, Daniel Rour. Welcome back. Hey, man. Nice to see you on the show. So cool to be here.
Starting point is 01:29:09 So you co-wrote and directed a feature film. I did. Last time we spoke, that wasn't what you were doing. Right. You were doing something mysterious when we last spoke. You had directed Navalny, which then went on to become an extraordinary sensation and won you many prizes. Congratulations. But I don't know that I saw this trajectory. What's been happening for the last three years? When we last talked, I was in my clandestine spy days. Everyone has to go through it. It's just a phase. I was in Kiev, I think. It was a couple weeks. It would have been, that would have been in January or February 22. So just before the war started
Starting point is 01:29:45 and I was doing my clandestine Ukrainian stuff. And did you know you went because you knew that things were on the precipice? I didn't know the war was going to start. I was with Bell and Cat Christo, the guy in Navalny. It was like I got, we're doing this big expose in Kiev and we want to make a movie about it.
Starting point is 01:30:02 And I was like, oh gee, okay, great. It's like I'm looking for something to do. That's why I was in Kiev when we last connected. And I was on a film set, a documentary set interviewing like whistleblowers from the Department of Defense who wanted to blow the whistle on this clandestine operation that had gone belly up and they were they were accusing Zelensky and his government of sabotaging this mission and and I was making a documentary about that and uh you know it didn't
Starting point is 01:30:30 we didn't end up making that movie um but yeah a lot of water under the bridge since that conversation I'm no longer doing, I'm sort of like moved out of the spy genre, the nonfiction spy genre. And to your point of like, whoa, didn't see this like fun, heisty crime movie coming down the pike. That was kind of the point. I did Navalny. That film was a sensation. But, you know, when you're 29, you win an Oscar, it's really cool. Like, not going to lie, it's pretty sick.
Starting point is 01:31:00 I imagine. But also, it's really daunting. Uh-huh. And it very much had this sense of like, oh, what do I do now? And people would come up and be like, wow, you just made like the ultimate movie of your life. You should just retire. Ha, ha, ha, ha. But that made me anxious.
Starting point is 01:31:15 And so for me, it was very much like, okay, how do I cope with the feeling of like what the fuck do I do now? And the way I chose to deal with that was by, you know, doing something completely different. And the world knew me as a documentarian. You know, my first film was about the band, Robbie Robertson and the band. It was a music doc that sort of takes place in the extended Bob Dylan's cinematic universe. And we saw this in the Chalamee movie last year. Bob Dylan was a folk musician. People loved his folk music.
Starting point is 01:31:42 He did really well. Accolades. He was lauded for his folk music. And then he was like, you know what? I think I want to play rock and roll. And so he plugged in and he went electric. And in my own little tiny way, tuner is me proving to myself that I can play electric. But I can do that too.
Starting point is 01:31:57 Was that always on the menu for you? Did you know you, like, did you see yourself as being a lifetime documentarian? Or did you know you always want to make scripted films? No, I, I, like, I can, I can point to, so like anyone who knows me is used to see me with a book, like a little blue book like this. I carry my sketchbook wherever I go. It's sort of an important part of my creative process and how I cope and navigate life. And I've been doing it since I was 14. And I can go back to being 15 or 16 and passages like, Dear Future Daniel, if you're not a Hollywood director, you will have failed me.
Starting point is 01:32:33 You have disgusted me. ULHulls, like really intense. It's a burden, yeah. Like 15-year-old me was dialed in. And so, no, I always wanted to be making movies. Documentary was a tributary. The most amazing tributary. I love documentary.
Starting point is 01:32:46 I love nonfiction. I will always be doing both. I'm always making documentaries. I just premiered documentary of Sundance. And I hope to always be making fiction films, different skill sets. Some of the fundamentals are the same, but really not so much the same. You know, I had Robbie, who has since passed away. on the show actually, four once were brothers.
Starting point is 01:33:06 I didn't talk to you for that movie. Yeah, I was mad that they sent him and not me. Yeah, well, I was happy to talk to Robbie, but I didn't know you then. And I'm glad I got to have that conversation. But, you know, we didn't actually, I don't know how much we spoke when we spoke about Navalny, about kind of how you ended up at like 26 years old
Starting point is 01:33:20 making a movie about the band. So maybe before we... Dude, I was 24 when I got that job. How did that even happen? Okay, so I was in Toronto. I dropped out of college when I was 18 or 19. I started making documentaries. So the technological revolution that I kind of,
Starting point is 01:33:34 clung on to was that in like 2010, 2011, 2012, DSLRs became a thing. So for the first time, you could, like, put some stuff in a backpack, some equipment in a backpack, go make a movie that look like cinema with a shallow depth of field and kind of that sort of cinematic air and feeling. And before then, documentary was like, you know, like Panasonic GH2s, where you're running around with like mini-d-v and it kind of looks good, but kind of like shit. But you what I'm talking about. It doesn't look like cinema. Often more handheld. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And so here I was sort of coming of age when this technological shift's taking place and it's like, oh, I can just go make movies. And for me, that was very empowering. So I'd like film a bar mitzvah in Toronto,
Starting point is 01:34:16 where I was from and make a couple thousand bucks. And then I would go make a movie. And I'd fly somewhere in the world that was of interest to me. I did one of those on the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip. I did one in a slum in Uganda. I did one in the high, high Arctic in northern Canada. And I would just tell stories and make movies and make a documentary. And I did probably four or five of those films. I'd send them the film festivals. They mostly got rejected, but I just keep making stuff. And that was sort of my film school. And so by the time I was 23, I had made enough of those movies that in Toronto, people kind of was like, oh, it's that kid who keeps showing up to the documentary film festivals. And the other
Starting point is 01:34:53 thing about documentaries, I could just go do it. I found that very empowering. If I was doing a fiction film, I'd need my mom to do craft services. I'd need my friends to come act in them. I'd need, like, my dad to let me use his car or whatever it is. And I did that in high school, but by the time I was like 19 or 20, it's like, I just want to be out in the world making stuff. And I was very motivated by that. And so I just did enough of those shorts that they knew me a little bit in Toronto. I knew that I want to find a film that was sort of bigger that would put me into a bigger stage of first feature film. Robbie Robertson had written his book, his memoir called Testimony, came out in 2015. I read this thing and I just sort of like lapped it up. It was like so, he's such a great
Starting point is 01:35:32 storyteller. It's an amazing musical odyssey. And I identified it as something that is Canadian. So I could get this thing financed in Toronto, but it would have a global, like certainly an outside of Canada scale and scope. And so I went on a campaign to get that job, took me like six or seven or eight months to get in front of Robbie. And I went to me with Robbie Robertson. It's my first time in Los Angeles. I went to the village studio. I met with Robbie. And I kind of, I kind of I just like put up a mirror. I was like, dude, I am you. I will fucking die to make this movie. Like, you can hire some, like, big wig documentarian. It'll be one of five projects that that person's doing. But if you, like, hire me, I will, like, literally leave it all on the ice. Like, come on,
Starting point is 01:36:16 like, I got to do this. And he was like, you're hired. So that is shocking, though. It was very, he agreed to that. Irresponsible, perhaps, from his perspective. Like, if you think about normally who his guys are, who he's best friends of Martin's Corsezy. I know. So it's like, what, I, that wasn't lost on me. But, but, but, yeah. know, Robbie, to his credit, he just saw something in me. Yeah. And when someone's, like, sitting across from you and is like, look, on paper, I may not look like the obvious candidate to do this job, but like, I am telling you, look into my eyes,
Starting point is 01:36:44 I will, like, die to do this. Like, I won't eat until the job is done. Like, that is compelling. And so I gave him that sort of pitch. He hired me. That job took two years to make. You know, I made it in a broom closet in Toronto, a couple of my buddies, which was a fun experience. And it turned out well. And it was the opening night film of Tiff and Robbie was pleased
Starting point is 01:37:06 with it and Marty came to the premiere, which for me was, you know, he was the executive, him and Ron Howard were the executive producers of that film, which is wild for me. And, you know, that sort of set me on the path, which, you know, COVID hit just as that film was premiering. I think that film was in theaters, Magnolia released it February 20th. He was one of the very last people I spoke to before lockdown. Is that right? On the show. That makes sense. Yes.
Starting point is 01:37:32 Maybe the second and last person I spoke to. It could be. So that film premiered in theaters. I think we did a week, you know, in like 800 theaters, art house theaters. And then everything shut down. And so I was like, okay, my life is over, like many of us thought. Like any momentum, I had no momentum. It all stopped.
Starting point is 01:37:48 You know, I didn't have a career at that point. I had just done this one movie and I was looking for the next thing. And, you know, by contortions of fluke and destiny and whatever you call it, I went out in the world. I flew to Vienna, Austria on a hunch. I met someone who introduced me to someone, and I eventually met this guy, Christo Grosev, and meeting that person, meeting Christo was what led me to Navalny
Starting point is 01:38:12 and the experience of making that movie, which was its own fever dream. Crazy. Like, there's still the cognitive dissidents that I went and did that movie. And, you know, that film was pure chutzpah. It was just like, you know, courage and bravery, and I wouldn't have been able to do it now.
Starting point is 01:38:27 You know, I'm a different point in my life. It was just your 26, you have nothing that's holding you down. And like the leader of the Russian opposition is like, okay, come make a movie about me. And I'm like, okay, you know, again, I'll leave, I'm going to leave it all in the ice here. Like, this is one of those things.
Starting point is 01:38:42 I'm just going to give it my all. We put together an amazing team. We made that movie. And that film was kind of like the rocket sauce that really propelled my life. And I, it's, that film is the original miracle of like, it's extraordinary that that film happened. it's extraordinary that I met Navalny.
Starting point is 01:39:01 It's extraordinary that he was as amazing a subject as he was that we were able to make that movie. In the rolling out of that movie, I met my wife. You know, we have a family now. So it's like everything good that's manifested was because of the original sort of fluke of getting to do that film. And, you know, to the original question of like,
Starting point is 01:39:24 you follow up Navalny with a film like Tuna, it was, I was thinking about being 15. years old, being in Toronto, making movies, like running around on the subways with our cameras, shooting stuff in the alleyways, you know, getting our friends to be acting in it. Like, that's what I was doing in high school. And I came to documentary not through journalism, like many of my colleagues, but through like Tarantino and the Coen brothers and Scorsese and Christopher Nolan. Yeah, movies you liked. Yeah, yeah, my cinematic heroes. And I always had it in my head. It was also Robbie.
Starting point is 01:39:59 After I did Robbie's doc, before I found Navalny, Robbie was like, you got to go find a script. Go find a script you can sink your teeth into. That's what Marty would do. Not for this documentary stuff. He was a big cinephile too, Robbie. He was. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:40:10 And we talked a lot about that. And, you know, one of the, you know, something that I think about that, you know, as we're here talking about, that's sad, is that Robbie never got to see me do that. Because he kind of saw that I could. And he sort of had that belief in me when I didn't always have it in myself. And but he inspired. me in that way. And Robbie's life is a testament to doing the impossible. Like this vision that you have for your life, it's like, it can be ginormous. You can do, it's like, like the only thing
Starting point is 01:40:40 that stops you from achieving something amazing is your own self-perception of what it could be. And that's what Robbie's life was, this kid from Toronto who grew up and became this, this rock star. And, you know, so Robbie saying to me, like, go find yourself a script. Enough of this documentary. go do fiction, go to a, go to a real, a movie movie that you can sink your fangs into. He probably would have said something like that. And, and, you know, that would have made me think, oh, maybe I could do that, you know. Well, okay, let's talk about it. Because I was going to ask you all these questions, like, you know, Errol Morris did this,
Starting point is 01:41:13 Steve James did this. They've all had their try at a scripted film and they worked out or they didn't work out. Sure. You know, Asaf Kapadia, like, all great documentaries, legendary documentaries, people who kind of like push the form forward. Yeah. But you're describing yourself as somebody who, you're describing yourself as somebody who, you know, always wanted to be making scripted films. And I'm curious, like, what, if you had to learn anything or relearn anything, having made
Starting point is 01:41:36 these movies the way that you did as you prepared to make this one. Well, look, on my first day of shooting tuner, I got on set and I said to everybody, you know, spirit of transparency, transparency, like, every single person here has more experience making movies than I do. You've all been on sets more. This was like, I've only been on set a couple times when I stepped on my own set. But the button on that was, but I have more experience making this specific movie because I've been making this movie in my head and on paper and in drawings and in writing for two, two and a half years. And I really just tried to summon both the humility and the chutzpah required to like get the job done. But it's a, like I had never worked with
Starting point is 01:42:22 actors before. Leo Woodall, who is wonderful in the film, he really taught me a lot about he probably, Leo's probably taught me more about working with actors than anybody else and not, not necessarily overtly, like, this is how you direct actors, but more just like in process. But yeah, it's a, it's a different skill set, but as I look to like, as I understand who I am and where I come from, like I started out drawing comic books. Like I was 12 years old, 13 years old, going to comic book conventions with a portfolio under my arm, talking to big artists, being like, hey, well, you look at my drawings. And I was always been a visual artist. And so the idea of making a fiction film always seemed like a very natural extension of what I've always wanted
Starting point is 01:43:04 to do. The documentary, my documentary career was almost like a tributary that is a reflection of my love of politics and history and current events and geopolitics and all of these things where documentaries is an amazing lens to explore those issues. But cinema has always been my first love and making movies has always been my number one passion. So after Navalny won the Oscar, you know, for a second, I'm like, oh my God, what do I do now? This is amazing but scary. And the answer was like, okay, doors are, a door might open that doesn't open for a lot of people. And so I wanted to go make a movie.
Starting point is 01:43:44 And I wanted to make a movie that, that, you know, was like the films I loved watching that was propulsive and fun and engaging and like musical and romantic like a movie movie and that's what I that was my mission for this film that's what I set out to do uh I was trying to describe the movie to someone just outside earlier and I was like you know it's like um it's like rain man meets uh the shine meets heat you know like it's not it's a very it's a very odd collection of different kinds of stories like uh where did the conceit come from? Like, obviously, you get this opportunity and you got to run through it, but like, did you have a drawer full of scripts and things that you knew that you wanted to do? No, not at all.
Starting point is 01:44:28 It was very much like, you know, I sat down, I really tried to, like, drop a game plan and a quarterback it. Like, I had this dream that, like, you know, maybe with the success of Navalny, I could get to a point where I could make a real movie. And so, you know, it was about designing a movie that I would want to watch. And I wanted to be a crime story. I had this idea of doing something auditory, like that was just so interesting for me. But the sort of lynchpin was that I had just met my wife. I had just become her boyfriend. And she was sort of taking me around to meet her friends. And one of her friends that I went to say, have dinner with was this couple called Michelle and Peter. And Caroline and Michelle are like kibbittsing and hanging out. And I'm chatting with Peter.
Starting point is 01:45:11 And I was like, what do you do? Pete, nice to meet you. What do you do? And he's like, I'm a piano tuner. I'm like, huh, tell me about that. Like, that's interesting. And he took me into his like little garage, which is like a piano exploded and its guts are on the walls. And he's like, well, piano tuning, you know, I go and make sure the instruments are in good shape and I keep them. And I'm like, no, I know. I get that. But like, what is, like, what's your day to day like? And he's like, well, I'm in my van and I sort of bop around and I have some clients who are like real musical people. And I have some clients who are just like rich people. And I, you know, prefer obviously like the conservatories. He's just sort of describing his work. And in no time he's, he's,
Starting point is 01:45:50 He was talking about like philosophy and spirituality and talking about like entropy and atrophy and the forces of the universe that want to pull these things out of tune and the natural order is chaos and it's my job to restore order where there wants to be chaos. And I was like, this is amazing. It's like and it's auditory and it's lonely and he's by himself and some people treat him like he's the plumber and some people revere him like he's like, oh my God, thank God you're here. And I loved all of that. And I thought it was like a really interesting job.
Starting point is 01:46:15 I like the itinerant quality of it. I liked how it kind of like defied modernity in a way. Like, like, you know, there's no way to kind of like, there's no like smart piano tuner, no apps. It's really just like a guy. Right. You know, I really appreciated that. And I followed him around. I went to work with him for a day. And sure enough, you know, within 10 minutes, he's, we're in this like ballroom. But wait, what did he say when you asked him, can I follow you around? Oh, like you're a weirdo? Yeah, basically, I was like, can I come to work with you? Can I just like do a ride along? He's like, I don't think he got Pete Peter at that point hadn't seen Navalny.
Starting point is 01:46:52 He didn't really, you know, I don't think he had a full understanding of who I was or what I was about or what I did. He knew I made documentaries. So he thought it was odd, but he was also like, probably not because my clients, like, would not be into that. I was like, well, maybe just ask because I'd love to if it's okay. And so I ended up doing a ride along with him. And we went to this, you know, the guy had a ballroom in Brentwood or something with this giant Yamaha. like, you know, a really expensive, big, beautiful piano. And I was just sort of sitting there and taking pictures and doing some drawings and being in
Starting point is 01:47:22 the space. And, you know, they were like doing construction next door. And Pete was like a little like, oh, fuck. God damn it. They're making a lot of noise. And then within 15 minutes, like the cleaning lady or the housekeeper was like, hey, can you take a look at the toilet downstairs when you're done? Like, what I mean? And Pete was like, no, it's not.
Starting point is 01:47:37 I'm the piano guy. Like that whole. I just thought the job was so interesting. And like, okay, this is a really interesting world. and moving around and montage and itinerant. We were meeting different people and going different places. And so that was sort of the genesis
Starting point is 01:47:50 and the nucleus of the piano tuner. And then I was like, how can I make this a crime story? Like where is the crime part? And then I kind of had this epiphany that like, what's tactile and hearing? Safecracking. And then I was like,
Starting point is 01:48:02 is safe cracking a real thing or is that just a movie thing? So then I went down that rabbit hole and I started doing all this research and safecracking. And I called L.A.'s like top safecracking guy. And, you know, the reality is is it's like kind of somewhere in the middle. It's like, the way you see it in movies is sort of fictionalized, but it definitely is a real thing that is this. There's something to it.
Starting point is 01:48:20 Oh yeah. And like, and there are people who can go in there with a stethoscope and do the thing and, you know, open a door. And I was like, okay, well, that's all I need. So I was just sort of off and I sort of developed from that. And I want to make something that was musical, that was propulsive, that was auditory where the sound design really helped, you know, elevate the production design. Because I didn't know how much money a movie costs to get made. I figured someone would finance a movie costs a couple million dollars. That's what I understood. But I wanted to make something
Starting point is 01:48:46 that punched above its weight class that, you know, when you'd watch it, you'd be like, oh, that feels both refreshing and familiar at the same time. That's sort of what I was going for. And, you know, once Black Bear got involved, the whole thing sort of came into focus.
Starting point is 01:49:01 I was able to go, you know, do this impossible dream of making this movie. Do you play music? I learned a little bit of guitar when I was doing Robbie Robertson's movie. Okay. So I do play a little guitar. enough that if a real guitar player was next to me for like 15 seconds or 20 seconds, they'd be like, oh, hey, but that's it.
Starting point is 01:49:20 So that's really interesting because the movie obviously, in addition to having this incredible sound design, is very musical the way it's cut. And obviously the music is a huge part. There's a lot of jazz needle drops, especially in the beginning of the film. So very, very, it feels like a movie made by a musician. Well, thank you. I really appreciate that. You know, there's this whole convention of like, write what you know. I heard that a lot when I was trying to, you know, come up with a screenplay idea. And, you know, what I understood is like, yeah, write what you know, but also maybe like write what you're interested in, write what you'd like to know more about and explore. And, you know, the idea of a conservatory and this woman who, you know, met this guy, but they seem great for each other. But maybe it's not the right time. All of these things in a way were metaphors for things happening in my own life. I met my wife just as she was embarking on her first feature film. And so it was like, hey, you're wonderful. Like, this is really cool. like, don't get in the way of this big dream I have. And I was like, I totally get it.
Starting point is 01:50:15 I'm only here to support. You know, all of these sorts of things. But yeah, I wanted it to have the authenticity and lived in this. And I think that's what drives me to documentary in the first place. And a overlap between fiction and documentary is just an exploration of something fascinating. Like, I'm really interested in music. I'm really interested in classical music and jazz and learning more about the history of jazz and through this film and literally getting, you know, one of the great luminaries of
Starting point is 01:50:42 jazz to do a cameo in the movie was really exciting for me. And, you know, while it's an unfamiliar world to me that I had to learn about the sort of themes and emotionality of the film felt very real to me. And everything else was like stuff I could learn. Tell me about hopscatching in the kind of subgenres and tones and making sure that that was all working. Because it is like, it's a romance. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:04 And it's a crime movie. And it's a movie about a person with a special gift. Yeah. I mean, that's that, that was the scariest part of the movie. It's like, you know, it sort of starts off and it's like kind of like kind of like kind of a, not comedy, but almost a comedy. Like it's kind of light on the seat. Totally buddy comedy in the first, yeah, 20 minutes. And then like in the same movie, like the guy's head gets blown off and like, you know, carnage and death. And like those films have to be in the same movie. And the sort of miracle of that of that whole thing is that we were able to like get the tones and the frequencies right and thread those genres into one another.
Starting point is 01:51:38 You know, I worked with Greg O'Brien, my extraordinary editor, who really helped us find that frequency. And we, we, that was the biggest, the biggest challenge. But at the script stage, I sort of just understood how everything had to bleed into one another and, and sort of like the elements that would adhere everything. Like the music in a film like tuner is like the adhesive that just brings everything together, right? And if you can sort of figure out those elements, figure out how you're going to shoot it, the sort of propulsiveness of it, we were able to get it all working when we were cutting the film. But those sorts of like tonal shifts were certainly tricky and the thing going into it that I was like, I hope this will work. Like if we don't figure this out, we're fucked. But I think we will be okay.
Starting point is 01:52:30 I noticed a very interesting name in the credits of this film, Joanne Seller is listed as a producer who is Paul Thomas Anderson's longtime producer, produced many of his. films yeah and I think this is her first film that is not a PTA movie that she's produced in some time like oh he had them mighty have fallen yeah well so how did she get involved what did you learn so joanne joanne uh seller who was the producer of the film with lily coug and mike and teddy from black bear um you know she is this sort of like epic producer who's produced like some of the greatest films ever and um you know she was had this sort of professional, I don't know, this like thing with PTA for 25 years, almost feels like a professional marriage of sorts. Her and her husband Daniel Lupy, who's an amazing producer as well.
Starting point is 01:53:18 And, you know, I never really litigated the details, but, you know, as happens sometimes with people, you work with someone for a long time and, you know, you wake up one morning, you're like, maybe this isn't right anymore or something like this. And that's just life and that happens. But I came to Joanne. I was fortunate enough to meet Joanne via Rob Ramsey, who I co-wrote the script with. And Rob and Joanne knew each other. Their kids went to school together. And that's how I came to meet Joanne and Joanne, you know, was sort of looking for projects to do and reading scripts. And she read Tuna and she really saw something in the script. And she and I really hit it off. And, you know, her experience is kind of like, you know, those movies, come on. They're just like,
Starting point is 01:54:02 you know, it's pretty intimidating. When you look at that. the filmography. But I was so lucky because with Joanne and Lila, I had a first film that was kind of a smooth endeavor. Yeah. And a lot of first-time filmmakers, it's like, you're up Schitt's Creek and you don't really have the support. But with Joanne and Lila, a problem never got to me before it was solved. And that's sort of the mastery of an amazing producer. It's like I'm focusing on the creative. And if something happens, if someone falls out, if there's an issue, When it's brought to my attention, it's like, hey, this thing happened, kind of a bummer, but here's our working contingency. Here's our plan.
Starting point is 01:54:41 Here's our overcome. And that was very meaningful for me and something that I really appreciated in working with the two of them. I think the movie is really accomplished, and I really liked it a lot. Thank you. And I hope you make more movies like this. I am really interested in your perspective on putting a movie like this out into the world in which it's a little bit more challenging to release, effectively, an independent feature. commercially, especially because you in your 20s had such an amazing experience releasing what is usually not considered very commercially viable in docs, but you got attention for them.
Starting point is 01:55:15 And now, like, what are your expectations with putting a movie like this out in the world? You had festival premiere and all that seemingly went well, but like now you're going to be in the marketplace. Sure. And market don't lie. Those numbers don't lie. And that just is what it is. And I accept that and understand it.
Starting point is 01:55:30 But at the end of the day, you know, I look at some of my film heroes. And I just read that amazing Stanley Kubrick biography. Oh, yeah, sure. And Stanley Kubrick was like obsessed with every morsel of the process, right? Like making the movie through to promoting the movie, through to the key art, through to the trailer, through to – he was across all of it. And, you know, my perspective is I really know what I love to do and I love to make movies. The marketing and selling of a movie is kind of a different job. And so as I look to like the type of career I want to.
Starting point is 01:56:04 to cultivate in my sort of film heroes, I look to like a Soderberg or a linklater, these guys who are just sort of like movie a year, love to work, love to stay busy, they'll go do a $2 million dollar indie movie and then a $75 million studio movie and then a doc, and just sort of flirt between the two. Like that to me is really exciting. The prize of the Oscar and the attention that comes with it is that I get to work. That's the prize. And I understand that about myself. So look, my expectations, what I hope is that everyone in the world sees the movie. That's my dream for it. Of course, that's why we do this. But I'm sort of clear-eyed, and I understand that it's a tough market, and there are overcomes and everything like this. But at the end of the day, I also believe,
Starting point is 01:56:46 like, if something's good and cool and, like, original, like, people will seek it out or find it. I do believe that, too. And maybe it's not, like, you know, the film doesn't gross $150 million globally, but maybe, like, you know, some people see in theaters, and then it finds a home on streaming and people see it there. Like, I just try and be optimistic about people wanting original stuff, especially in a moment when, like, you know,
Starting point is 01:57:09 everything is turning into computer goop. I think that to me really matters. But I really just try and be, like, fully committed and fully detached. Like, I want this to do well. I work my hardest to make the best possible movie, but there are so many forces
Starting point is 01:57:23 that are outside of my agency. So I'm kind of like, I hope it works. The guys who are in charge of marketing are doing a great job. And meanwhile, I'm going to go off and make my next one because that's really what drives me what I'm so passionate about.
Starting point is 01:57:37 Yeah, so you're about to go make the next one. I want to make the next one. Smart to do it before the movie comes out. Very savvy strategy on your partner. Because if it boms, I won't get a job. You never know. I'm not saying that. Yeah, look, I more than anything, again, I just love to do this.
Starting point is 01:57:54 Like, for 20 years, I was just like, for 15 years. I was like, what a dream it would be to make movies. And I have books of like every film I saw off and I'd save the ticket and I'd write a review and I'd give it a star system. Like I had a whole thing before letterbox was a thing. My books were letterbox for me. And so the fact that now I can have this career is extraordinary. And I feel very, very, very lucky to be able to do this. And it's what I love to do. I'm so driven by the work. And being a film director is this all-encompassing job where you never have a second off. And I love that. It's just like my work and my family. So the next film is, if you read the script for the next one after watching Tuna, you'd be like, that makes sense.
Starting point is 01:58:38 That makes a lot of sense. Okay. Like that's a natural, let's say evolution. So it's this sort of like heist con man story that's almost like to catch a thief. But if you took Carrie Grant and Grace Kelly and swath them with Zoe Seltana and Matthew McConaughey, that's the movie. And it's sort of this like expat in Positano in the Amalfi Coast who has this little restaurant who moonsets as this prolific thief. and he's really good at it, but on one particular job,
Starting point is 01:59:02 he crosses past with somebody else and gets them in all kinds of trouble. And that is sort of the premise of the movie. So sort of jazzy and propulsive, much like tuner, but with a much bigger canvas which takes me outside of my comfort zone.
Starting point is 01:59:14 Okay. And so that's something that I'm really excited about. It's like, you know, the tone and the sort of like genre work, I know that I can do. Never done a car chase before, though. You know, never done all this big location work,
Starting point is 01:59:25 never worked with these big movie stars. And so all that's just exciting. And these are just, you know, motivated by being outside of my comfort zone, but knowing in my heart that I got this. And that's a very empowering place to be sort of operating from. So we're shooting the film this year, and it's been really, really exciting for me, just in the preliminary stages of getting it set up. We just got a green lit, of scouting the film, working with McConaughey, working with Zoe, and just getting the thing off the ground has been a, like, wonderful, wonderful opportunity.
Starting point is 01:59:58 Good luck. Thanks, man. We end every episode of the show by asking filmmakers what is the last great thing they have seen. What have you seen? You must be, you gotta be doing some Oscar cramming, right? I'm not an academy member. Get out of here. Yeah, I swear.
Starting point is 02:00:12 I swear. No kidding. Yeah, I'm not. You've won and you've not been, what's going on there? The doc branch is a little, they're a little persnickety. I see.
Starting point is 02:00:21 Well, maybe now that you're a feature filmmaker as well, you'll get invited. Maybe. Well, I'm, God, the last great. That's fascinating. Isn't that funny? That's so funny. Literally daily, I'll get an email from someone and be like, hey, can you watch our short film?
Starting point is 02:00:33 It's like, we're going. And I'm like, I'm not an academy member. And they're like, okay, thanks, goodbye. Like, they don't, you know. You should just automatically be inducted if you win an Oscar. I thought that's how it worked. But at the end of the day, it's like, trust me, I'll take the award over the membership to their club. Maybe one day I'll get in.
Starting point is 02:00:49 But in the meantime, God, what's the last great thing I watch? I've been watching the classics of Italian cinema. And so I... Yeah, so really, like, like, just. just learning the fundamentals, you know, before I go make a film in Italy. And I rewatch Cinema Paradiso. Yeah, sure. And it probably has the best ending of any movie ever in the history of movies.
Starting point is 02:01:14 And if I was ever became an actor and I had to do a crying scene, it's like, okay, cry, I would think of the ending of that movie and just, it would get me like that. And then, you know, more contemporary what's out now, I, like everybody, watch Marty Supreme. name. And I felt, it was such a complicated movie for me. I recognized myself in Marty, but that's challenging because he's kind of a sociopath. And then a bunch of people were like, yeah, but you're on the other side. You've got a kid now. So hopefully you're being a good guy now. I'm after the hero's journey. That's right. I was never a bad guy like Marty, but I, but, you know, there's a sort of like fast-talking Jewish trope that. Striver. Enough people were like, oh, he reminded us of you. And I was like, I don't know how
Starting point is 02:01:57 feel about that. But I love the propulsiveness. I love the cadence. I love, you know, how how Josh Safdi just pulls you into that movie and doesn't let you go. And that's something that I'm very inspired by. Those are always my favorite kind of films. So I think those are two safe bets. And then I just saw Sarah Dosa's new film, Time and Water. I just saw it as well. Yeah, very good. And that is a film that I had to see in a theater that was, you know, meditative and patient and thoughtful and and just like a just like just like all Sarah's films tell people what it's about because it just premiered at Sundance yeah so Sarah does this new film time and water uh is it water on time or time and water time and water is about this uh three generations of this
Starting point is 02:02:39 Icelandic family um who they're sort of like identity as a family is almost moored around their love and appreciation for the natural beauty of Iceland where they're from and in this case the glacial fields that Iceland's famous for. And it's about how the family shifts over time and the sort of pain and challenge of these glaciers, which do not shift over time. That's the whole conceit. They last thousands and thousands, thousands, thousands of years. And they're sort of living, breathing things, these giant ice sheets. But except in this changing climate of ours, the glaciers are dying. And so it's about this family coming to terms with this thing that doesn't change, but it's changing now. And how do you more How do you mourn the, almost like the death in a family of when your family's a glacier?
Starting point is 02:03:28 Like, that's your family member who's dying. It's like, how do you mourn that? So it was like beautiful and thoughtful. And I just did a documentary that premiered Sundance. And I was struck by how similar it was to Sarah's movie. And so far as it's like big thing in the world, big issue that's moored around like a personal story. And in my case, it's about AI and entering fatherhood, which is how we approach our AI documentary. And so the Andreas, I think, is the name of the protagonist in Sarah's movie.
Starting point is 02:03:56 And he and I kind of had a hug after both of our films premiere. And I was like, how are you feeling? He's like, pretty good. How are you feeling? I was like, dude, we did it. We did it. Yeah. So those are some, that was a long answer, but those are some films that I saw that
Starting point is 02:04:08 have stuck with me. Great recommendations. Daniel. Thanks for coming back. Thank you so much. So cool to be here. Okay, thanks to Daniel. Thanks to Van.
Starting point is 02:04:19 Thanks to Jack Sanders for his production work on this episode. Thanks to Lucas Kavanaugh for getting all that info about Paul Schrader in document. Appreciate that. I mentioned we saw backrooms and that's coming later this week. Yeah. Pre-sails are through the roof. I've seen that. Gen Z is extremely fired up. You know,
Starting point is 02:04:37 I go where Gen Z goes. Do you think so? There might have to be some sort of like Gen Z horror mommy thing that we develop as well here. For me or just in general? Yeah. I were just watching both you and Sierra get a little startled in a movie. Just a lot of fun. Honestly, it was really mostly Chris. He jumped a lot. He did. He had a couple of jumps.
Starting point is 02:04:54 And I was like, well, I won't spoil it, but I do it was... Okay. Yeah. We will get into backrooms very soon. And until then, see you.

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