The Bill Simmons Podcast - Messi Takes England Out of the World Cup, Plus Preparing for Christopher Nolan’s 'The Odyssey' With Ian Wright, Anthony Dabbundo, and Sean Fennessey
Episode Date: July 16, 2026In this special episode of The Bill Simmons Podcast, guest host Chris Ryan is joined by Arsenal legend Ian Wright to react to Argentina defeating England 2-1 in the World Cup semifinals. Then, Anthony... Dabbundo joins the pod to preview the World Cup final between Spain and Argentina. Finally, Sean Fennessey hops on to talk ‘The Odyssey’ and Christopher Nolan. (0:00) Intro (2:57) Argentina eliminates England, with Ian Wright (34:47) World Cup final preview with Anthony Dabbundo (55:21) Sean Fennessey on ‘The Odyssey’ Host: Chris Ryan Guests: Ian Wright, Anthony Dabbundo, and Sean Fennessey Producers: Chia Hao Tat, Eduardo Ocampo, and Chris Wohlers Brought to you by PayPal. Learn more at paypal.comAs the Official Beer Sponsor of the FIFA World Cup 26, Michelob ULTRA away $1million in FIFA World Cup tickets and prizes. https://www.michelobultra.com/superioraccess/FIFAWORLDCUP26 MICHELOB ULTRA® FIFA® WORLD CUP 26TM SUPERIOR ACCESS. No Purchase Necessary. Open to US residents 21+. Begins on 12/1/25 and ends on 7/31/26. Multiple entry periods. Visit https://www.michelobultra.com/superioraccess/FIFAWORLDCUP26 for free entry, entry deadlines, and Official Rules. Message and data rates may apply. Void where prohibited.The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit https://fanduel.com/playwithaplan to learn more about the resources and helplines Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Bill Simmons podcast is brought to you by PayPal and is hosted today by Chris Ryan. What's up?
I am filling in for Bill while he is away. And today on the podcast, we are talking the two things
that matter most in the world to me, the World Cup, and the Odyssey for the World Cup. I talked to
Ian Wright, former Arsenal legend, current UK media pundit for Stick to Football and our own
podcast Crossways over here at the Ringer podcast network. Ian is a legend of the English game
and was nice enough to join me to talk about England's loss to Argentina in that incredibly
thrilling semi-final. We talked a little bit about Spain and France and the final that's coming
up on Sunday between Spain and Argentina. But I talked more in depth about the final with Anthony
Dubundo, who joined me after Ian. And then I wrap things up with a long chat with Sean Fennacy
about The Odyssey.
There's no spoilers in that.
It's mostly a Christopher Nolan conversation.
But since that is sort of the movie event of the year,
I thought what better time to talk about it
and who better to talk about it with
than the co-host of the big picture.
You can also listen to me on the Watch
on Mondays and Thursdays.
And I'm going to be doing one more podcast
with Adam Friedland on The Beautiful Pod.
On Friday, we're going to be talking about
the tournament as a whole
and previewing Sunday's action.
Bill will be back on Sunday.
I think Anthony Dubundo and I are going to join him
after the World Cup final.
So we'll be coming to you probably live after that match.
I hope everybody has a great weekend.
Enjoys the Odyssey.
Enjoys the World Cup final.
Let's get into the show.
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All right, guys. This is a really huge honor for me. I'm joined by Ian Wright, my friend Ian Wright, one of the greatest strikers to ever play English football, capped over 30 times for England, an Arsenal legend. And now a pundit, you can see him and hear him on stick to football with Gary Neville, Jamie Carriger, Roy Keen, Jill Scott. You can hear him with Steph Hewton on crossways here at Ringers Spotify. He's also one of the best dudes out there. And, Ian, thank you so much for taking time.
on what must be a heartbreaking
late afternoon for you in New York.
I guess I'll start here.
Tuchel tries to turn
Atlanta into Azteca,
right? And
he brings on Kansa,
he brings on I. Riley, he brings on Byrne.
He takes off Gordon, Rice, Reese James.
Rice and Reese James looked a little banged up.
And then
was it the right strategy, but the wrong time?
Or how did you feel about this decision
of his to defend that lead, that one goal?
lead. It was when you consider that two call somebody, Chris, that we brought in for his bravery
and we've given him a lot of applaud. It's on the fact that he's left a lot of people at home
that people wanted to see in this squad that maybe now in this game, in a game where you look to
us and we looked like we were struggling, we were defending deep, couldn't get out, we didn't
have no ballplayers to get us out and maybe get to the wings where we could have hurt Argentina.
I think to see us, once we scored the goal,
to only have 12% possession after that
until I think Latino, Lataro Martinez scored,
says that it was kind of a negative play from my point,
from what I saw.
And I think that, you know, Chris, you have to go back to,
I'll go back to our final in the Euros at Wembley against Italy.
You know, we're in the game, you know, Luke Shaw.
You know, and then we start defending.
You know, the same with, you know, even the Spain final in the game.
You know, we're doing well.
Spain will come.
Then we start defending and it's happened again today.
I thought we started the game very well today, Chris.
We kind of went a man to man.
We really denied messy space.
We had Anderson in and around him.
Jude was in and around him.
And I think that it was a very brave thing to do.
And I quite liked it because it was working.
But Chris, I was still disappointed that we weren't getting out
and getting to the width which Argentina are very narrow
with the way they play.
They want to play it through the middle.
And this is why it was such an unbelievable move from Messi
at the end to completely destroy us
because they're normally very narrow trying to play through the middle
with the one-toes.
And I thought that their space is on the flanks.
And that's how we scored.
Jude made the run.
We got out the flanks.
The ball came in and bam, that was it.
But when you consider that in a semi-final,
we only had seven touches in the opposing box,
it says that that's not enough.
And 12% after you score a goal possession
is nowhere near enough to win a semi-final.
But from their point of view, even though I was saying,
they started with their, I knew what they were going to do,
with Jude and with the guys,
they're going to try and intimidate Chris.
They're going to do their stuff,
which you expect them to do.
But when they started playing,
especially when they went to go down, Chris,
this is a team that's scary.
It's a scary team to play.
Yeah.
Because they can play football and they're very dogged, my friend.
My old colleague, Zach Kramm, he threw this stat up on Twitter on X.
Here are Argentina's winners in the knockout rounds.
Cape Verde, 111st minute, Egypt, 92nd minute, Switzerland, 112th minute, England, 92nd minute.
You're not going to beat Argentina won nothing, you know?
No.
And that's the thing, Chris.
And this is why when you mentioned about Too Cool and the guys he brought on,
he seemed like he's bringing guys on to shore up a game with a team
that you're giving the impetus to come at you.
And they've got arguably the greatest player that's ever lived.
Who then realized, listen, I'm not getting anything through the middle of this team.
So let me just ease myself out to the right-hand side.
And, you know, we didn't like, whether it was Nico Riley,
whoever it was on that side, Jude coming across,
whoever it was,
no one got tight
so you can actually
make people say,
okay,
Messi's marked.
Even though they might give it to Messi
when he's tight,
he's not going to have the time
what we gave him
to then get those crosses
because you look at it,
McAllister should have scored
a couple,
should have scored a couple.
And in the end,
it was still,
it was Latara Martinez
who did score.
But we can't,
you can't just leave Messi on that side
just because you brought
five players on.
and not have a game plan that,
okay,
Messi is now not going through the middle.
He's stopped trying to play his one,
two's into the middle,
play round people and get into the box that way.
He's come out to the right-hand side to put crosses in.
And they should have scored with two more.
And I'm very surprised that we didn't see that.
And again,
I'm very surprised that we went so defensive,
so quickly.
And then you look at somebody as well, Chris,
like a, maybe a Kobe Mayno.
You need,
I don't look, I'm not going to,
to say, we should be taken off in this. I'm just like spitballing.
Yeah, I know. I was going to ask you this.
Yeah, I was going to say, you need somebody who's comfortable on the ball,
whether that's Kobe, whoever is going to be.
I'd say. And then maybe, maybe, you know, the way Harry was playing, you look at Harry,
Harry wasn't really giving us anything in the game. And I don't, and I say, with all due
due respect, he's our greatest goal scorer, is our greatest goal score in our history.
But in the game and the last game, we didn't get a lot from him.
So if we can play a different strategy, maybe we could have.
hit the ball long, got people around somewhere like Ivan Tony,
you know, with Rashford next to him with the pace, Chris.
And then at least we're giving the defenders some breathing space
to get their breath back and go again.
But we just kept coming back.
And I thought his strategy to bring on the defensive guys and the 5-4-1,
it's not going to work.
It's not going to work against Argentina, 1-0-down world champions
who are trying to win another one.
It's not going to work, man.
The messy thing has been one of the magical storylines
of this entire tournament.
And watching him out there,
you're just watching this supercomputer that can't get knocked over.
And I felt like at some point in this match,
he was like, I'm not going to score.
So what I'm going to do is have either the assist
or the hockey assist for what's going to happen.
Like, he knew that they were dedicated to the idea
this guy is not going to beat us.
And he was like, I'm still going to beat you.
It's just not going to be with a goal.
Chris, this is just the game intelligence for the greatest player.
For me, I'm probably, you know, he looks like he's getting to two World Cups.
He could have two World Cups on the spin.
Probably in respect to achievement, that will go down as the greatest achievement by any player
for him to have two out of all the so-called goats.
But for him to be so magnanimous in the way he plays with this team.
And you could see, you can see it, Chris,
Even if someone fouls him and they stand around him too long,
people just come from everywhere from the Argentinian team.
Don't you dare stand next to him like that.
Don't you dare disrespect him.
The protection he's got,
but the respect he has for that team as well where he can say, right,
I am going to step out.
I'm not going to go involved, get involved in there.
I'm going to step out to this right-hand side.
Now, continually get the ball to mercy.
And this is where we made a massive mistake.
We should have seen it.
It's game intelligence from his point of view.
I'm going to stay out here.
And if someone comes with me, okay, then I might have to take them on.
If they don't, then I'll just keep crossing into that area.
And let's face it.
You talk about Messi at 39, my friend, still getting the ball,
especially for the winning goal, getting on the outside of our players at 39,
crossing with his weaker foot, pinpoint the Tara Martinez scores.
You know, just somebody that knows is great enough to know that I can cause my problems
out here and is magnanimous enough to give somebody else the credit
in respects of winning the game for them.
So, you know what I mean?
I just, I'm disappointed with the manner in which we lost.
Yeah.
You know, I'm not saying that we had the most difficult run to the semi-final.
We didn't.
But I think that when you look at our history
and we get to these latter stages,
I think the World Cup in Qatar when we lost to France,
Harry missed that penalty and we lost,
we played a much better game than this.
I didn't mind going out like that
because we went through.
He missed the penalty.
France went through and they beat us.
But for us to go out like we did today,
hanging on was a hard one to take.
Yeah, I mean, so Tuchel, after the game,
pretty characteristic for him.
He's pretty defensive.
He's proud of the guys,
but said this was not,
it's not a structure problem.
It was not a structure problem.
We played maybe our best game, no regrets.
obviously he's seeing things from a different angle and from a different perspective.
And only he can answer why Saka wasn't out there.
And only he can answer why ETSA wasn't out there.
Chris.
Yeah, go ahead.
I mean, Chris, sorry to interrupt you.
Sorry, no.
Keep going, Chris.
I'll ask.
No, no.
I mean, look, you know what, Chris, when you listen to that, when you watch the game,
and again, it's like a, it's something that we, that's happened with us before.
You know, the way we kind of go into.
our shell when we're winning, when we should be actually going to try and beat Argentina.
And for him to say he's got no regrets, he was happy to the way to play.
It won't a structure problem.
It was a structure problem if you ask me, because we couldn't get out.
So if the structure was to bring on the big guys and just defend and then kick it out and let
them come back in, if that was a structural game he is playing, then it still didn't work.
But if the structure was to get on the ball and play out with nobody up front,
I don't know.
That don't make sense.
You know what I mean?
It doesn't make sense that that works because there's not an England fan.
It's out there.
Chris that can say they were comfortable with the way we played once we scored.
Not one.
You won't find one.
You know what I mean?
What we're trying to do, we're going to try and do a Mexico city with 10 men,
which was an unbelievable feat.
But we're talking about Mexico.
Yeah.
With all due respect, it's not Argentina, the world chance.
champions. And we were able to keep them off us. But at the same time, we're talking about
Argentina and the semi-final of the World Cup. We're five minutes away. I know there's the
extra time, you know, but we're like five minutes away from 90 minutes and the extra time on top
from getting to a World Cup final. And we were hanging on for dear life from the time we scored
until the time they scored. And then once they scored, like Roy said it, Gary said it, because
Gary Neville's been in games with England where he said, this is what happens with us.
When I played, when he managed, we dropped back.
We dropped back and Tuchel's meant to be the manager that's brave.
We saw him, like I said, at the start of this.
He made a brave decision by leaving some very, very talented players back home
that may have been able to get on the board and help us out.
He had players on the bench with pace.
He had a striker up front in Ivan Tony that could have been up top, you know,
to occupy a Romero and Ottomendi at the end.
there, give them that physical challenge, get the ball up there.
Maybe we could get some fouls, get the pace of Marcus Rashford up there to maybe get the
balls that could, the second balls, then we could play further up in the pitch.
So it's very difficult to digest him saying that it wasn't a structural problem and he has
no regrets because if that's the case, then I don't know what we're looking forward to because
if I'm going to be totally honest, Chris, if you look at, like I mentioned to France,
in 2022.
And if you look back at that game,
how I went out, I was happy.
And you look at this one,
we regressed.
We've regressed a bit.
You know, it's interesting.
We're getting to the end of this tournament,
and we have probably the best team is in the final,
and the best player is in the final.
And there are two different ways to have a winning kind of set up
for your football in international football, I think.
What Argentina does that's so remarkable,
And maybe this is just the way it looks on television.
I'm sure a lot goes into is the Scoloni's got these guys where it's like,
it's all in service of Messi.
He's got his bodyguards.
He's got his runners.
He's got his guys who have to get on to the end of the ball.
Everything is in service of a star player.
And then with Spain, as Tieri-Anriya said,
those guys are playing like that from eight years old on.
They're coming out of club systems that produce that kind of one-touch football,
pass-and-move football.
then you kind of have England
that's a little bit in between, right?
Like Tuchel tried to set these guys up, I think.
Many people have noted
that there are similarities
between the way he set them up
and maybe the way Artetus plays Arsenal.
It was about control.
It was about athleticism.
It was about physicality.
He left some really, really creative players behind
Adam Wharton, Trent Alexander Arnold,
Phil Foden, Cole Palmer.
Gibbs White.
Gibbs White.
Did this team almost need to be built
more around Jude.
You know, I mean, Jude obviously, he and Tuchel have this kind of contentious relationship.
But in some ways when I watched it, it was like, Jude was a little bit absent in the first
part of the game and he tried to come on.
I think his head went a little bit at certain times.
Like, he got into it with messy.
That's going to be a meme forever.
But if you're looking for a way forward, is it we have to build something that is
entirely about Jude here.
Well, listen, Chris, you're saying it there yourself and the answer is there for everyone to
See, listen, we see it with messy.
If you've got a player with that capability,
and I'm not saying that Jude Bellingham is messy
by any stretch of the imagination,
but I'm saying Jude Bellingham has something,
he's got some star quality.
He's got the ability to have moments in games
depending on how he is serviced.
You know, if we can get the ball wide,
because it was Jude that made the run forward,
for the ball to go forward,
for the ball to come across into Morgan,
where I just to cross it into, and according to score, it was Jude.
Absolutely, we should be looking to say, listen, this is the main guy,
and we want the main guy up there.
We want to get him the ball as often as we can.
We want to get the ball into him as often as we can.
And we should start, we should start maybe playing through Jude,
playing towards Jude.
Everything should be, you know, like how messy is, everything's service,
service dude so as an E can then service everybody.
Because we've seen in the games,
and we're not saying that there have been
unbelievable games and unbelievable opposition,
but we've seen in those games that he is capable
against anybody of grabbing a game by scruff of his neck
and running with it, just like Messi did today.
Just grabbing a game and just through his raw ability
and just greatness, just be able to win a game for your country.
And I think that we now have to start thinking about that.
Because you're looking at Harry, I think, you know,
I think that Harry would, again, coming deep,
you know what I mean?
He's coming into an area where, you know,
we're getting balls in the box and, you know, he's not in there.
Yeah.
We know that he's capable of dropping deep
and then hitting people who are long,
but we didn't have the people long.
So if that's the case,
if you haven't got the wingers for when Harry drops deep,
and then Jude may be filling into Harry's space.
And if Ari's dropping deep and he hasn't got galled
and he hasn't got Rashford to hit, which we didn't have in the end.
Then you may as well take Harry off.
Take Harry off.
You keep Jude on.
You put Ivan Tony up top.
You bring Marcus on.
And then you start to get the ball into a situation where, okay, let's get it up top there.
Let's go and play up there.
And then we'll go from there.
That would have been a better, for me, a better ploy.
Can we get maybe Kobe May anyone?
Maybe he could have maybe taken Anderson off, even though he's had a great World Cup for me behind Jude.
You know, maybe he could have taken him off, got Kobe on.
You can play.
If we could have got the ball down and played,
we could then get the ball out to Jude,
get the ball into Tony,
get the ball in and around Rashford to sprint.
We could have got out of our half, at least.
We couldn't get out of our half.
So at some stage now,
especially with the players that you've mentioned there,
with Trent, you know, with Morgan Gibbs White,
with Cole Palmer, we're folding,
real ball players.
You've got to start thinking about these guys,
maybe some of the guys you can service Jude.
Yeah.
you know, obviously Harry
Harry's still got a part to play
I don't get me wrong,
he's still have a part to play,
but not the part he's playing at the moment.
And especially if you're going to take,
if you're going to take the wingers off,
and Ari's dropping deep,
he hasn't got no one to hit the hit.
Right.
So.
Yeah, I mean, it's tough because
I could see different little clusters
of different clubs being
basically like modeled
or emulated by the England National
team. So like the way that Kane was playing is probably not altogether different than the way he
plays at Byron, where he's able to sort of like trade on and off with all these runners and kind of
they, they obviously like the German, German style football is so fast and everybody's, it's like
up and down basketball, you know, and then there's a degree to which there was some very
arsenal-esque like, we're going to keep it, we're going to keep it in control, we're going to out-muscle
you, that we're going to have, you know, midfielders who are pushing into the box.
I don't know what the answer is, obviously,
but I know that two years ago,
Real Madrid looked like one of the best teams in the world
with Jude Bellingham playing essentially as, like,
off the striker,
but being, like, the primary goal scorer.
And I don't think it's a bad model for them to emulate going forward.
And we've got the players for it, Chris.
We've got the players that could probably service that.
When you were watching the beginning of this match,
and you see how hot it's getting, how early it is.
You know, and, you know, the ref is getting surrounded.
Argentina is obviously trying to find the line
and they were walking right up to it
and they're saying, what's a yellow?
What's a yellow?
And there was one point I think the announcer said,
I think every Argentinian player has been warned now.
What's that like out there
when it's one of those games
where it's like we're going to find out how hot it can get out here?
Well, that's when you're hoping that the referee who knows
because we all know what kind of game Argentina would have wanted.
They would have tried to intimidate.
right from the start.
You know, people are talking about this is one of
Messi's favorite referees.
He uses him in the MLS and these wins around.
I don't know.
But the thing is, is that you know that they're going to do.
You saw what they've done to Jude first.
The first opportunity, you know,
you saw what they're done to Anderson.
You saw everything what they were doing.
I think Simeone was only playing simply to try and rile somebody up.
You know, because I couldn't understand why Simeone was playing.
Technically, I didn't think he was good enough to be playing
in this team, the way this team were playing.
we saw that in the first half and why he got taken off in the end.
As Pickford was targeting him with long kicks, they were just running right in the
only. Absolutely. Absolutely. But at the same time, you know, again, they do that
probably to test you, like you're saying there, Chris, and you're right, they're seeing how far can
we go? Because if we can keep doing this and I still haven't been booked yet, still haven't
been booked yet, then, you know what I mean? They're going to upset people. I think that
kind of like
kind of put
kind of got Jude off his
off his game for a bit
you know kind of disappeared in the game for a little bit
and I think that
you could see people talking to him
people in his face and that
and he was answering you know
I mean it was and we
we weren't getting the ball to him
as often as we could
and any time he did get the ball
he made sure you watch them
there's two or three of them
coming to try and tackle him
and tackle him really hard
so you know it was always
going to be a tough game like that
from Argentina's point of view
and they play it well
they play it brilliantly
but what I will give them
the credit I will give them
and it's a team in a country that I've got
I haven't got a lot of love for but at the same time
they are excellent footballers
and they know their job
their job is to make sure
that we do everything to get messy
the ball and surround them
protect him in every way we can
that's what you're seeing with this
Argentina side because after a while
they realized we actually don't need to wind
these lot up man I think that
you know what I mean they're you know they're not creating enough
I think we had like
with seven touches in the box in the game
something like that was crazy
I think Argentina had 27 28 or something
so after a while Argentina didn't need their shit houseery
whatever it was they didn't need to do it
they just needed to play
and once they went to go down
we started to see what the world champions are about
yeah maybe that's more of an indictment than anything
is that they were like oh we don't even need to mess with your
don't need our nastiness
yeah we didn't need our shit house
Oh, man. I mean, I guess it's very early, but do you think the same shithouseery works on Laminia Mall and Almo? And can they catch that ball? Can they catch up to those guys?
You know, the thing is, is that I think that Argentina, depending on how the game is flowing and I was playing, that's just naturally in their DNA for that side of them to come out. I think that because there's obviously the history of England.
Yeah, but they would play that way against Peru.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, exactly.
It's just the kind of thing that is always going to be very frictionous
and, you know, against England.
I think that against Spain, Spain are going to have a lot of the ball
and are very comfortable with the ball.
You know, it's going to be a totally different game.
But if there's any opportunity where they can,
I think someone like Laminia Malle will probably get some.
Absolutely will get some because they will.
We'll target whoever your best player is and try and get you off your game without a shadow of a doubt.
And you can watch that.
I can say for definite right now that Laminia Ma will get some form of rough treatment.
Sure.
It just happens.
You know, even though Messies, he's idle and Messi's got a lot of respect and love for him as well,
he's a danger to Argentina and they'll make sure that they'll try and try and stomp that out.
Was it strange?
I wonder if you've ever had this experience before because this is the first time Messi's ever played England.
have you ever found yourself
on the side of cheering against
Messi before?
No.
Yeah.
No.
It's really strange.
It's the same as,
it's the same thing
what happened with Maradonna.
I don't remember too many times
cheering against him,
but today,
even like, you know,
seeing Messi when Messi was getting angry
some of the times,
it's the first time I was angry with Messi.
I was thinking,
what you're doing?
I got angry of Messi with some of the times,
but yeah, yeah.
I think that what we learned today is our great years
and he probably is the greatest ever
in respects of what he may go on to achieve.
I'll always have a soft spot from Maradona
simply because I watched him do some amazing things, Chris.
But watching Messi for the whole of his career,
you know, like I did probably with,
like I watched the most of Maradonnas,
but watching Messi and the levels that he's continued to reach
at 39, he's still doing.
it, it's special.
It's something special.
We're watching a real genius of the game.
And I'll probably, probably the greatest we'll ever see.
I don't think anyone's going to eclipse what Messi's doing right now,
especially if they're going to win this.
You know, and I don't know what to say.
Unfortunately, we couldn't deal with him today.
I thought we dealt with him in the first half,
but it's going to take a lot to try and curtail someone like Messi
when you've got the backup that he's got in Argentina.
Because they're all excellent players.
How has this tournament been for you?
You've been in New York for the entirety of it pretty much.
You've been broadcasting and podcasting out there.
And I don't know, have you gotten to many matches at East Rutherford
or has it been mostly studio stuff for you?
No, no, no.
I haven't gotten into it to a minute.
I went to a couple of the Walmart games at the start.
tournament. I went to France and Iraq, but that was,
I was rained out for a couple of hours and I had to leave.
But I've been to a couple of Yankees games.
Okay. I went to see, yeah, I went to see the New York Liberty,
basketball, women, WNBA.
I've been having a good time doing that kind of stuff, really.
But I didn't get to see any, I didn't get to see any football matches.
I was meant to go to the World Cup final. If England got there,
it would have been the final that we would have went to because ITV were just doing it
from the studio that we've got here in Brooklyn.
And if England got to the final,
then we would have,
we'd have went to the stadium.
But like, it's been, it's been brilliant, man.
Yeah.
Brooklyn's being great.
I mean, I've had a great time around here.
It's been, like, you know,
this tournament definitely has some black eyes.
There has been some real shames of, of whether it's refereeing,
whether it's everything that has happened with the Iran team,
or whether it's, you know, like,
but as a sporting event
and as a moment for people
to kind of come together
and enjoy sports together,
it's been pretty heartwarming,
you know, like I was in Philadelphia
over the weekend
and my friends have a bar there
and they were like,
it's unbelievable, man,
like we would just,
on a random Wednesday night
have 50 Brazilians take over the bar.
Yeah.
Only football does that, Chris,
Chris, you know,
football and a World Cup,
this is why when people are talking about,
oh, they need to bring the World Cup,
up every two years or every three years. No, it's such a celebration of football around the world.
And obviously, everything that was happening at the start with America, the visas, the tickets,
the money, everything was going on, you know, all the negativity and the discourse that was going
on around it. You know that once the game starts, once the games start, it's going to be
unbelievable. Once the fans come, once the fans start to mix, obviously once we get down to the
nitty-gritty-gritty like with semifinals, it gets really deep.
in respects of like the fans and the rivalry becomes really intense.
But in the main, you know what I mean?
It's just brilliant.
Being in and around Brooklyn with all the fans,
because we're right close to the Adidas, like, fan park right there,
and everybody's coming there.
And it's just been a joy.
Yeah.
Because everybody's just celebrating football and everybody's had their moment.
I think that obviously Cape Verdi and what Cape Verde done,
you know, people talking about the expansion and I diluted it, no.
What Cape Verde showed in their little time,
in the limelight was you can have a go at the world's best
and you can nearly beat them if you're given the chance
and that is all the World Cup can give you that.
The World Cup gave us that because I think that if we're going to talk about
the beautiful moments in the World Cup on the football pitch
then it would be probably Cape Verde's time in this World Cup
which was magnificent and a joy and it was a credit
that they were a credit to the game and this World Cup
Yeah, when you could really tell when that match ended
the way the Argentinian players reacted to the Cape Verde players,
which was almost just like, whoa, thank you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I love, Chris?
Can I just say something?
In respect to, I wish that we could have played with the same bravery
that Cape Verdi played with.
If I'm going to totally honest as an England fan.
Because they pushed the World Cup champion.
champions to the limit.
It needed everything.
It needed all of Messi.
Even though, yeah, Messi came to the games,
came to the four today as well.
But Cape Verdi, they were breaking and still trying to score.
You know, again, we could take something from them.
You have to be brave.
You have to be braver.
And they were brave.
And that's, again, World Cup gave them that opportunity.
And I love that.
And there's plenty of matches that happened over the course of the knockouts
where teams tried to play defensive shells
and play for extra time or play for pens or what have you.
But we're going to remember Cape Verde.
And if that's what it's about like...
I was watching that on my phone.
My wife, it was like, is this important?
And I was like, it would be the greatest upset in the history of sports.
Because it was easily, easily, because, you know,
Cape Verde can't beat the world champions, you know, after drawing with Spain.
You know what I mean, again, playing against Spain,
and giving Spain the kind of game we're thinking,
oh my gosh, they're holding Spain out.
You saw what Spain done to France, who are the favorites?
You know, they held them out,
and then they nearly beat the world champions.
We've done that game,
and it was easily the best game of the World Cup.
Yeah, I was going to ask you if you have, like,
a memory you think you're going to take it,
if it's Cape Verde, or you think it's going to be Azteca
or what your favorite moment from this would be,
but it sounds like it's Cape Verde.
No, no, no.
Obviously, obviously because England,
England done it in the end
and they beat them with the 10 men
it was a real like tin hats
kind of like performance from us
you know dig out get the boots on and dig in
but Cape Verde's
Cape Verde's game against Argentina
for me is the best game of this World Cup for me so far
all right man I'm going to let you go
I just want to get your pick for Sunday
you know something I'm probably going to go with
I'm probably going to go with Argentina
simply because
I just feel that they just can't be beat.
Sometimes you have to throw their hands off.
If you're free near luck.
Yeah.
Honestly, they just look like they can't be beat.
They're never beaten.
And if there's going to be a team that can do it
because they can hold on to the ball
and maybe create something,
then it might be Spain.
But I can't look further than Argentina, Chris.
Ian, thank you so much for giving me your time tonight, man.
No, it's right.
Great seeing you.
Hope to see you again soon over in England.
Enjoy some time off after this World Cup.
Thank you very much, Chris.
Thanks for having me on, man.
I love you.
All right, brother.
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All right,
Anthony Dubundo is here,
Ringer Gambling show.
Very often,
the Ringer's Philly special.
Just watched England versus Argentina.
I obviously just talked to Ian about that,
but Anthony and I are going to talk a little bit
about the World Cup final.
Anthony,
I want to let you get your takes off,
though,
about that England match,
which felt like England thought
the match was going to rule
last 70 minutes.
and not 90 minutes and paid for it.
What did you think, man?
I mean, England were doing what they wanted to do in the first hour.
They were winning a lot of the duels.
They were controlling parts of the game.
It descended into chaos for a good amount of it, sure.
But once you go out one goal,
England, in the first match of this tournament,
had a situation where they took a 3-2 lead,
and Tuchel said, we are not going to bunker.
We are not going to go out playing the old way.
of England. We're going to go out playing our way.
And then he fell right back into it.
I thought that when he brought on Rashford and Tony at the end,
it was such an interesting, you know, like last ditch gambit to win the match,
but showed the kind of attacking creativity and, you know,
okay, let's try a different option up front with Kane and Tony and use a battering ram,
kind of. And it was sort of absent from earlier in the match.
I think they were so excited to get that goal.
it was such a physical game out there
that they just slammed on the brakes
and like I've said to Ian
it was just like it felt like he tried to
recapture the Aztec of magic
but that's not Mexico out there man
that's the reigning world champions
and Messi with Leo Messi
yeah and if you're gonna mob Messi
he's not going to look to score
he's going to look to find the open man
or the man who can get it to the open man
and they had so many chances in that second
half
Anthony, what did you think of Spain and France?
Because I, on one hand,
I want to do a little bit of backpatting
because I picked Spain to win the tournament,
but I was like, not like that.
I didn't think that they were going to decisively walk over
the tournament favorites in France,
the team that everybody had assumed
was like a cut above the competition.
And Spain made them look pretty pedestrian
and pretty ordinary
and ended Deschamps's reign in France.
Where are you at with the Spain team?
Is this actually been the favorites all along for you?
Or what do you think about what you're seeing?
So the one thing I'll say specifically about this game
is that I thought an under-discussed topic going in
was just how much France had to play in extreme heat
the entire tournament.
They played all their games outdoors,
almost all of them in the Northeast.
And the last three were New Jersey, Philly,
Boston all 90 plus
degree days. Spain
meanwhile got to enjoy the air conditioning
indoors. Their
hottest game was in Los Angeles.
So they didn't have to do
all of the
extreme heat. And I do think that definitely made France
look a little legier, but ultimately it comes
down to the same thing that
Spain's been doing to beat France the last
three years. It's like when teams keep
the ball and are daring
to possess the ball against France,
Dechamp has never ever coordinated a
press, never ever coordinated a counterpress.
The sum of the talent has never actually lived up to what they actually are when you
watch them play.
This team is way more talented than Spain if you go down the list.
But I think it's kind of a mark on Dechamp because he won the World Cup in 2018 and
then said, okay, this is how we do it.
We're going to change basically nothing and how our strategy is.
And the last four international tournaments, you could make the case.
France was the most talented at all four of them.
and they didn't win any of them
in large part because when they went up
against Spain a couple of times
or against Argentina in the first
hour of that World Cup final
the team that had better structure,
better pressing,
better team play
kind of just walked them.
And that's exactly what I felt.
And look,
I went back and forth
a lot of people on this.
I always had Spain as my favorite.
I never cared that France
was running up big scores
on vastly inferior teams
because of this one matchup,
this one thing that Spain had proven
and France hadn't proven they could beat.
So I was happy to arrive with Spain.
I was happy that, you know, our friends at Fendl made them an underdog, and it was a great day.
You know, it's interesting.
I think management in this World Cup specifically, but in international football in general, is such a complicated thing.
These guys don't get a ton of time to work with their players.
They're under an incredible amount of scrutiny for every single decision that they make.
And in a lot of times, a lot of those cases, context is kind of removed.
you know, like even some of Tuchel's decisions today,
while strategically I didn't agree with what he did when he did it,
you know, he had limited options in terms of guys had injuries,
guys maybe were on a yellow card, he loses Kwanza in the Mexico match.
There's all sorts of mitigating factors for why he had to do what he did.
And I don't know what was wrong with Bukai Osaka.
We'll find out like in a couple of hours, like was he not able to play for today or what.
But when you look at what Deschamps has done
over the last few years,
I think Jonathan Wilson wrote about this
in The Guardian.
Everybody has always regarded him
as somebody who was holding France back.
And in this Spain match,
Embapé comes out afterwards
and is like, we just, we got it wrong.
Like he put two guys in center midfield
instead of three.
And we were outnumbered.
He played Chouamani instead of Conna,
or, you know, he could have played
Kone and Chiuamani and Rabio.
I mean, whatever the sort of hindsight that you want to apply to this,
Deschamps just kind of got taken out by Delafonte.
And I think you could probably, you know,
I don't think Scaloni has like a system that you can really perceive,
but he certainly has like that Argentina team playing in a very coordinated fashion
and among, they share a spirit, you know.
And so there's this ineffable thing with international management.
It's not like Arteta with Arsenal or, you know,
Guardiola with Manchester City
where you can be like, oh, obviously he's having
them do this and then they do that
and then they do this. It's a lot of it
is vibes. A lot of it is keeping those guys
in a bubble and making
sure the noises turn down in the locker room
and trying to get everybody rowing in the same
direction and all those cliches.
But then you wind up coming
into these high, high leverage matches
and one decision or two decisions
can really send things
the wrong way.
And to the credit, like Spain
probably plays the most like a club team.
You can make that a compliment
because club teams get to drill together.
They have patterns.
I mean, the second goal that they scored against France
was a textbook definition of,
here's, we're going to pass and we're going to move.
We're going to create these triangles.
We're going to progress the ball steadily throughout the pitch.
We're going to go backwards to go sideways to go forwards,
to go backwards to go forwards.
We're going to play that one big through ball
that breaks the lines.
We're going to get the second ball then a little give and go.
We're in behind Pedro Poros scores 2-0.
And I was out of my seat.
Like, holy shit, what a goal, right?
And it was nice because you didn't want them to win with just the one when the, you know,
it was obviously a penalty, but a little bit cheap in the way that Lameen drew it to start the match.
So that kind of combination stuff, you rarely saw that from France in this tournament.
As much as they were dominating people, as much as they were playing at an elite level,
you never saw that.
But also, it's hard to be critical of Deshaam because it has worked to such a large extent.
I mean, when they're beating everybody so badly, it's like, who do you drop?
Do you take out Duet?
Do you take out Dembele?
from your team? Do you drop a leasee?
I mean, all three of those guys and Barkala,
they've all been great players.
So it's very hard when you don't really have, quote-unquote,
tactics to then invent some on the fly and change it
and then play a midfield three.
Because they had played a midfield three
and got now played.
We would have come on and said,
oh, you put the handbrake on.
Why did he change it? Let him cook.
Yeah, it was working so well.
Yeah, I mean, I don't think them losing Saliba
really hurt, I think.
You know, he is widely regarded
is, if not the best,
one of the best centerbacks in the world.
And, you know,
it's funny.
It's like the vibes in a team
and in a camp will be so good
until the very last second
when the season or the run ends.
And then everybody's like,
the manager was wrong.
Yeah.
I want to see,
I cannot wait to see the post-match quotes
about Tuchel.
It was the same thing
where Pocetino
was the savior of U.S. soccer
until he wasn't.
And Deschamp was,
was this sort of
wizard of French football
and finally had learned from his mistakes
until he hadn't.
Right. And with Tuchel,
at least we could see it unfolding in real time
and you're like, this is not going to work.
Like the one issue Argentina's had in this tournament
is they're actually not good at winning the ball anymore
without hacking people and committing murder ball.
If you just give them the ball,
they're pretty good.
Yeah.
Leonel Messi went out to the white wing
and he was just standing all alone out there
and they even made a point.
Stu Holden made the point on the broadcast where he's like,
you know, Messi's not really involved.
He's waiting for his moment.
And he's just jogging in and jogging in.
He gets the ball, draws two defenders,
plays one simple pass, one, one.
And you're like, wait a minute.
Why are we just letting them have the ball?
We should at least make them fight to have the ball.
And whereas with, you know, France,
it's like we can't get the ball off Spain.
That's a big problem.
Yeah.
And it feels like with France,
they never had that answer.
With England, it feels like they at least knew what the answer was,
and it was kind of working, and then they stopped doing it
in the name of like this defensive strategy.
When the whole complaint about England pre-tournament was,
are their centerbacks and defense good enough to hold up?
Then they said, we're going to double down on our defense.
Yeah.
It makes sense when you have 10 men in the Azteca.
It doesn't make sense when you have 11 men against Argentina.
Yeah, and it was, it was a strange match.
Like, it must have felt a little bit like Azteca to them
because that seemed like a almost 70%
Argentina. Yeah, that seemed like they were
in the Bombinera in Buenos Aires
or something like that. That was wild.
Maybe that was just a Fox broadcast
because they kept cutting to a wall
of Argentina fans and there was not a lot of
England fans. It would be Mick Jagger
and David Beckham, but they were not showing
like a huge amount of England support.
I wonder whether that, I don't really know
how that's going to translate to East Rutherford
and whether like Argentina fans are going to take
over New Jersey and flood that
match. World Cup finals tend to be
very, very corporate and
very filled out with people who have had
that ticket for however long.
And I don't know if they can get that kind
of support in these rather foot, but let's talk a little
bit about Sunday to the extent that we're
able to, since we only just found out who the
contestants are going to be a couple
minutes ago. This is obviously
a styles make fights thing where
if it's
a kicking contest and
the refs let Argentina
play the way they did today in England up until, you know,
somehow both centerbacks are on yellows and multiple players are in massive
meleys and then like they escape.
If they let them kick Spain, you know, I can see this being tight.
And then even if Spain isn't control of the match,
I am now done doubting Argentina, you know, like,
yeah, you know, I feel like call it a refereeing FIFA conspiracy to give
Messi another World Cup on a back-to-back here.
Call it pixie dust that's been sprinkled on this side.
I don't know.
But they find a way to win.
They find a way to come back.
They're never dead.
They seem to play their best football in the last 20 minutes of the match in an extra time.
It seems like it should be Spain and a cakewalk.
But I feel weird saying that.
The thing, though, is even Spain when they cakewalk people,
is not like, oh, wow, three, four goals.
Look at Spain.
You know, like Spain wants to control the game
to a level that they are not taking a ton of risk
and, like, not creating a ton of chances.
I mean, Laminium Al still only has one goal contribution
in this tournament.
It's kind of a question every time.
Pedro Poro chips in against Belgium.
McHale Marino comes off the bat.
I mean, they're getting more goals from their midfielder's and their defenders
than they are from their actual attackers at this tournament.
So you're like, okay, Spain.
can keep the ball
and can make life really difficult
for Argentina to get the ball off them,
like England did today for large stretches.
But they can definitely do that.
I have more faith if Spain is playing with a lead
that Spain is not going to do what
England did today,
and they're going to keep keeping the ball,
and they're not going to drop off.
And they're going to continue to try to play their brand.
Their brand is so established and so effective
that it can work.
Argentina is a funny team because they've been so bad with leads too.
in this tournament and overall,
they play so bad
going back to the last World Cup,
the Copa,
like they are bad with a lead.
So I feel like this is always setting up
for either Argentina's defending a lead
and struggling,
or Spain is barely holding on to their lead.
So either way,
it's almost guaranteed to be compelling
in the last 20 minutes.
Yeah, I mean,
with Argentina,
like,
all the sort of observations I would have,
and I bet any metrics I could look at,
like, every match they end,
they end,
I'm like, all these guys are dead.
All these guys seem to be crying and praying and sweating.
They are all in their 30s.
You know, like they all have just been running for 110 minutes.
And yet they show up at the next match and start the clock at zero.
And like they're just incredible.
They do not seem to be like carrying the previous match into the new one.
Spain has given up one goal in the knockouts.
One goal to Belgium.
Otherwise have been an absolute fortress.
and the fortress is built on possession, like you said.
There was an amazing clip of Tieri-Henri on the Fox broadcast
after the France match where he broke down
that I think a passage of play that you were describing earlier.
And he's like, these guys have been playing like this since they were eight.
And they've been playing together since they were eight.
One of the things you always look for when a World Cup comes around,
when a Euros comes around, is you're like,
what is the footballing identity of this country?
You know, like, what do these guys want to do?
How do they want to play?
Argentina is going to be physical.
They're going to be aggressive, and then they are going to wait for their moment,
and then they're going to turn it on.
And they have the best player of all time to do that with.
Spain is going to play largely, like, I would identify it with Barcelona style, possession
football, pass and move, one-touch stuff.
And it really is, like, I've had all of these semifinals, and now this finals,
I'm like, you could tell me so many different variations.
I'm going to go Spain because it's been Spain for me since before the tournament,
but it's going to be a fascinating match.
If they pull out of yellow because Peretti's bricks a guy in the first minute,
then we're going to know what's happening.
It'll be, it'll be Laminemal in some way, shape, or something.
He's getting hacked down within the first 10 minutes of the game.
Talifico is just going to, like, absolutely close-line him.
But yeah, I just, I think you're, I think it has to be Spain in my head.
But in my experience over these last two weeks,
it's just like, you cannot kill Argentina.
Well, there's a little 24 chiefsy and vibes to what the Argentines are doing.
It's like late wins, close comebacks, one score, victories kind of thing, like the whole bit.
And they keep pulling it off.
They keep pulling it off.
You're like, they can't keep getting away with this.
And then sometimes you get like an Eagles, you know, shout out.
The Eagles would be Spain.
But sometimes, you know, you get a 49ers, have a third down and three to win the Super Bowl.
They don't convert.
And now the Chiefs somehow win the game.
And you're like, well, they did it again.
So I will not count out Argentina, certainly.
However, I do think Spain should, is, and will be the favorite going into Sunday.
We still haven't seen, you know, like the best of Laminia Mall yet.
I keep saying this every game.
And then we don't see the best of Laminia Mall and then it doesn't matter.
But Argentina is wide defenders.
looked really bad today. I thought they got lucky
a little bit in a couple of different sequences
where they got away with it. It seemed like they had a note where
it was like Pickford was like going long
to Spence and guys going down that right wing
and trying to get into one-on-ones of the fullbacks
and draw fouls and get
throw-ins. Yeah. And it was just
it was obviously a point of emphasis
for them and it was working for a little
while but then the game got too chaotic.
You mentioned Barcelona
and I think that's actually a good point.
So, Jamal, Olmo, Kubarsi,
so many of the top players at Spain also play club together.
Pedri hasn't been starting, but he's in the mix.
They all play club together.
And with the, with like the identity,
Della Fuente kind of came out of nowhere.
When they hired him, it was like, who's this guy?
And it's like, oh, he's actually been the Spanish U19, U21, and U23 coach.
He's been managing these guys for a while.
And they've won...
For their entire careers.
Yeah.
Yeah.
At that international level.
So the symbiotic nature of it all is very...
in a way where you don't get a lot of time to train together,
but these guys actually kind of do,
because they play the same style,
the same brand,
the same coach for a lot of the youth guys
that have come up through the team.
The semifinals felt like the right four teams.
And if you look at it in a certain way,
the final feels like the right last two teams,
because we've got the reigning world champions
who have also, I believe, won back-to-back Copa Americas, right?
Yep.
And then you've got the reigning European champions
and I believe holders of the Nations League, Spain.
They lost to Portugal, but...
Oh, right, right.
But...
But, yeah, these two teams actually did play
because they have a tournament,
they have a game every year.
I don't think anybody ever watches it,
but the Finolissimo or whatever it is,
where the winner of the Euros plays the winner of the Copa.
I think Argentina won,
but I also don't think anybody watched the game.
Did that take place in Dubai or something like that?
Probably, yeah.
All right, well, you and I are both edging Spain,
I think we're going to be on Bill's show on Sunday
after the World Cup final.
I think Bill's interest might be diminished
now that England's not in it.
But I'm sure seeing Messi go for a...
At this age, go for a back-to-back World Cup.
His second World Cup would be...
It would be pretty...
It's must-a TV, and I think, like, the world...
One of the biggest accomplishments in sports history
if they pull it off.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, like, I was trying to think of comps
for this and is it like, I mean, for Messi, it was like
2019 Masters or something for Tiger, but it's like, that's,
it almost feels like that's so much bigger than that.
Yes, way bigger. Yeah.
You've seen the photo, right?
Yeah.
Laminemort.
Of Messi.
Laminemal as a baby.
It's insane.
It's going to be like the photo.
And I've said this that like this could go down.
If Laminumal has the career that we think he's going to have,
it could go down as like the hardest.
and craziest sports photo in history,
like off the field?
It's so hard to believe
it's not AI, but it's not.
I thought it was AI for like a month.
And then somebody was like brought it up to me and said,
oh, this is a real photo.
I was like, no, no, no, it's a real photo.
And I like searched it, read like four articles
and was like, okay, actually this is a real photo.
This was last, a couple years ago.
And I'm like, holy, you know,
because they obviously both won the Euro and the Copa
on the same day two years ago.
And this was Laminia Mall's big breakout.
He had just turned 17.
Now he's, you know, at the old age of 19,
going to try to lead Spain to a World Cup
alongside his teammate, Kabarsi, who's also
19. But yeah, if they pull
this off, you know, if
if Jamal, after getting baptized by
Messi, has like a big game in the World Cup final.
And then they, they, like, topple
the champions. No matter
what happens, it's an incredible, incredible
story. We'll be here on
Sunday with Bill to break it all down.
Dubondo, thanks so much for joining me, man.
Thanks for having me. Sorry again,
CR. That's okay. Football's coming home in a couple
years. It's coming home in like a couple weeks when we start the Premier League.
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But he hasn't forgotten them.
Sometimes Spider-Man has to do the hard thing. That's my responsibility.
Talk to Banner?
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Okay, Sean Fennacy is here, the Big Picture Podcast, the projections newsletter, my close personal friend, and a guy who has seen The Odyssey twice.
I have.
I've seen The Odyssey once.
This is coming out probably Thursday night.
People will start being able to see the Odyssey en masse this evening, I guess.
If they haven't already made plans, they probably should because it sounds like this is going to be a very popular film that's hard to get into if you want to see it in the IMAX 70 millimeter that Nolan wants you to see it in.
that we both saw it in.
Yes.
And I thought maybe we could, you know,
we're going to talk a little bit around the movie
because I think part of the,
part of the joy of it and the thrill of it
is going in and not knowing exactly what's going to happen next,
even if you're broadly familiar with The Odyssey,
which I know most of Bill's listeners are like classes.
Yeah, I mean, deeply literate.
Obviously, I've looked at all the translations ahead of time.
As am I.
Yeah.
But I want people to be like, holy shit,
the way we were like, holy shit.
Are you podcasting for different listeners right now?
are you just doing what you do?
Have you given this thought?
Because you mentioned Bill's listeners.
Well, they are Bill's listeners.
Yeah.
I mean, like, I think that there's a good Venn diagram crossover.
I don't get a lot of people who are like, and who's your boss?
Like, you know, who do you work for?
Good point.
But the Odyssey.
I wanted to ask you first about the format, actually, since we just made a little bit of a
side about it, you know, this is something that Chuck brought up on Bill's pod when
when he went on over the weekend.
And I thought it was an interesting conversation to have with you.
about whether or not movie-going
will increasingly become
an eventized,
as Chuck's word,
sort of a luxury experience,
but this idea that to save movies
are to keep the theatrical experience propped up,
we're going to need to continue
to iterate technology
and also iterate on the movie-going experience.
IMAX in 70,
especially the way we saw it
at Universal City Walk out here in Los Angeles,
but I think broadly speaking
for a lot of the IMAX experiences
is a very specific kind of like
movie-going.
experience. Are you a fan of it?
Broadly, yes,
just because I like the idea of a filmmaker
dictating how you see a movie.
So in the case of somebody like Nolan
or last year with Paul Thomas Anderson
or Brady Corbe with the Brutalist,
there have been movies in the last
three or four years that have been really
driven by the filmmaker
dictating how you see a movie.
Is it on film? What format is being used?
Is a dead format being revived in some way?
I just think it's good for directors
and producers to be driving the technology
as opposed to the corporation driving the technology,
which kind of intersects with,
like, I think a lot of the discomforter
and stuff like AI right now.
So I do think that it's cool.
I think Nolan is capable of scale
in a way that basically no other director alive is,
so it's effective.
But I did listen to what Chuck had to say,
and I thought there was something interesting in that,
and Bill has been talking about this for a long time,
about, like, how much of a premium would you pay
to, say, get a film earlier than everybody else?
In this case, they were talking about,
you know, will there be a limited number of opportunities to see a movie and will it be more like going to a concert?
When I sat down to watch this movie the second time, I was sitting between Mallory and her husband Adam and Amanda Dobbins from the big picture.
And we were talking about the seating in City Walk.
City Walk has jammed a lot of seats into their IMAX 70 room.
It's like going to Barclays or something.
Yeah, and it's steep and there's not a lot of leg room.
and the fellow sitting in front of me
was leaning back a little bit.
He was trying to get the full picture of The Odyssey.
Wasn't the most comfortable viewing experience.
I was very happy to be there.
The movie is really special.
But I thought to myself,
would I pay 50 bucks to sit in a room like this
with one third the number of seats?
Yes.
Because now what you have is you have these really cool
IMAX rooms in like Regal and an AMC theaters
where there's a lot fewer seats
and much more comfortable chairs
and they all recline
and they all have your cup holder
and it's a bit more like watching at home.
I do think this is an underreported component
of why movies are back a little bit.
And so that theater in particular,
which is one of only like 40 in the country
that you can see the movie in this format.
And it is one of the great screens in America,
if not the world.
And it is Christopher Nolan's Home Court.
This is his favorite movie theater
to go see movies.
It's still not the best place to sit and watch a movie.
It's one of those funny things.
It's like filmmakers have their
like their personal favorites. They have their
sentimental favorites. And it's like in the same way that
Tarantino has a movie theater here, the new Beverly, which
used to be a gum on the floor kind of grind house
exploitation type movie theater and still has that
architecture. It's narrow. The bathrooms are small. It's an
amazing movie theater. But people fall in love with the places that are
special to them. Obviously, City Walk technologically is on another
level. And when you're in it, you're immersed in it.
I've seen, I saw obviously the Odyssey,
and I saw one battle there, and both times,
it took me a little while to get, like, oriented, you know?
And I think that both first acts of these movies,
I was, like, struggling maybe to keep up, to hear,
to sort of orient myself, and there's a lot of it depends on where you sit.
Like, there is, like, a huge chunk of IMAX seats
that are just, like, get ready to be, like, nauseous, basically,
because you are looking up at Tiana Taylor or Matt Damon
or whoever you're looking at,
and it's going to be hard to get the frame
inside of your eye line.
And that's pretty different, I think,
from just going to your regular run
on the movie theater,
where most people don't want to sit in the front row,
but you can get away with it.
You can understand the movie.
I think in a...
That's how I saw Malcolm X.
Tough beat.
Did you saw Malcolm X in the first row?
Yeah, it was the last row.
Wow.
Were you late because it wasn't as big of a deal to you?
Okay.
Just checking.
I was in the same Patrick's Day Free in Philly.
No, I just got in there,
and then the whole time I was like looking up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's not an ideal way to watch a movie.
It's, you'll find, I think, in cities around the country, if you're trying to get tickets to go see the movie,
there are still usually tickets in the first three rows in these theaters because they're not super comfortable.
I also watched one battle in the third row, and it was a tough sit from that vantage point.
I would try to get a good seat.
And that just seems like a strange thing to have to worry about.
You know, because we have this pre-reserved seating, we have this sense of, like, everybody has their favorite place to sit.
and the movie is being eventized in a way
where seeing it in the right format
in the right room
matters so much
or at least is being marketed to you
as mattering so much
that it's like,
am I missing out?
Should I not go
if I can't get the kind of seed I want?
I was kind of curious about
is, you know,
will people be like,
well,
I'll go see the Odyssey
in mid-August
when all of this has died down
and I can go see it
in IMAX 70?
I think most people
who are not movie freaks
are already living that way.
You know,
they're just like,
I have a very busy life and I'm taking care of my kids or I'm busy at work.
And I go to three movies a year.
If you're a three movie a year person, this is probably one of the movies.
For sure.
I had a conversation last night with my dad who doesn't go to the movies very often.
And he was like, The Odyssey, tell me everything.
How was it?
And again, there's usually about one movie a year that we have that conversation.
What was it last year?
Last year, it was Bagonia.
I don't know what it was last year.
John the end of Bagonia.
It was probably one.
battle, but because he knows how much I care about PTA.
And it was Leo, and, you know, it felt like more of an event.
But that movie, you know, is not nearly as big as the Odyssey.
The Odyssey is cultural waterfall.
This very rarely happens where something comes in and it's just like, this is the only
thing that's happening right now.
I think for the next seven days, this is the only thing in pop culture that feels
like it's going to be happening.
Yeah, that's the thing is, like, today's pot is Odyssey and World Cup because it feels
like that's the two things.
And it was like, you know, there's summer league.
There's like little things peppering like the, you know, the, you know,
ether, but like, these are two really big monocultural events that are happening. And it does feel
like this is one that just has broken through to, like, to the people who watch one, two,
three movies in theaters a year. I also think that for those people, perhaps, they're like not
really part of the online discourse about like what is the exact right format. I should be going to
see the Odyssey in and are happy to go see it on like a good screen at their AMC or whatever. And I think
honestly, the movie will play that way. I mean, you and I have been.
watching movies for all of our lives
and we've watched them on bad TVs,
phones, various, like, VHSs
that weren't good, you know, like,
I was re-watching Barry Lyndon recently
and I was on a really good
disc and so I was like, damn, this is the first
time I seen this movie. Yeah. Because I've probably
watched like crappy VHS or
crappy DVD masters of it.
I wanted to talk to you a little
bit about Nolan.
You have like a kind of mixed
relationship with him in that I think you were a little bit
skeptical of him earlier and now have kind of like come to the if not the conclusion that he is like
in fact obviously very talented filmmaker but is also now kind of the biggest game in town for sure no
question would you do you think it's fair to say that he's the definitive filmmaker of this century
yes and i don't even think it's controversial i don't think it's controversial either i was looking
for a more exciting way of describing it beyond that but because this is just like he is uh he ushers in
and in some ways legitimizes superhero movies in 08 with Batman Begins.
Then he makes the Dark Night trilogy prints money.
Everybody is sort of on board.
And it also along with, I think, Iron Man,
but I think more, I would say,
the Dark Night trilogy introduces this idea that,
you know, you can be like a very serious actor who comes to these things.
And between bail and Ledger and Hardy and everybody who participated in that,
you know, make really good work while still working in this world.
He does three wildly ambitious
original genre films
Inception Interstellar and Tenet.
He does two award-magnet historical epics
and he's shown us a bunch of stuff on screen,
a black hole, a city folding in on itself,
the sacking of Troy,
I guess a spoiler for Odyssey,
the evacuation of Dunkirk,
assassins moving backwards through time and space,
and Bain,
that feel like indelible moments in film history?
Would you say Bain's appearance is
indelible moment in film history?
They expect to find one of us in the record's brother
is an indelible moment.
It's like D.Loren's blowing out the match.
The CR just popped out in the BS podcast there.
No, I'm fucking CR. Come on.
And, you know, our buddies over at the Blank Check podcast
like to talk about this idea
that a filmmaker at some point in his career,
like he's been building up equity with Hollywood,
he makes a movie, it's successful,
and then he has a blank check to do his dream project next.
wildly, the Odyssey
kind of is his dream
project because Oppenheimer was such a
runaway success, maybe against
some odds, I wouldn't say all odds.
You're going to detonate a nuclear weapon. I think people
are going to probably check it out. But
this is his blank check movie.
The Odyssey is.
I mean, he's had five blank check movies.
He's done this over and over again.
Inception was a blank check movie. He made
the Batman films, I think,
in part to give himself the equity
inside the industry to take on more challenging original ideas
and has proven over and over and over again
that people want these ideas.
His movies don't lose money.
He doesn't have a movie that most people consider to be bad.
I think they've actually been sort of increasingly going up in box office,
although the bad man movies kind of go and then Tenet came out during COVID.
But I don't know.
What do you think it says about our film going moment
and our movie making moment that he has kind of emerged
as this figurehead of what remains of Hollywood.
I think he is, it's all related to what you were asking about with formats because he is an event
filmmaker.
He's a grand stage director and we're at a time of fractured attentions and a lot of alternatives
to movies.
And there are fewer tickets sold to movies now than there were 10 years ago, 50 years ago,
100 years ago.
And so in order to get people interested in going out to the movies, you need to do something
special. And it seems like every time he steps up to the plate, his intention is to do something special.
I'm mixed on some of his most beloved movies, and there are some of his movies that are not as
popular that I think are among his best. But it's not only worth paying attention to. Like, he demands
deep attention and analysis. Oh my God. He did it be like scholarship. Yeah. And I think that his
super fans find that rewarding and his casual fans are at least willing to have a conversation about what
they just watched. And that says a lot.
I think that you can't underestimate how willing and quickly we are, how willing we're quickly
able to pivot away from what we've just done right now.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like the minute a movie is over, people take out their phones and they're like, oh, who do I have
to text?
They stop thinking about the movie.
Yes.
And his movies just insist that you just sit there for a minute, think about what you
just saw, respect the scale.
I really have liked the last few movies, and I've been trying to think about why that
you know,
Dunkirk to some extent,
but really Tenet Oppenheimer
and this film
have resonated so deeply with me.
And I think it's because
he changed editors.
And Jennifer Lame is his editor now.
And with Jennifer Lame,
he's changed his filmmaking style.
It's not a subtle change.
He's using images
from all different parts
of the timeline of the movie
earlier and later in the film.
And he's using this kind of recall style
that I think is,
I don't know if it's,
It's not revolutionary.
It's something you can find
in experimental filmmaking in the 1960s.
It's something that you can find
in European cinema in the 70s,
but it is a very sophisticated idea
of filmmaking that he's putting in blockbusters.
And I really, really like how he's doing it.
And he's doing it again in the Odyssey
in a really audacious way.
And this is something also that great filmmakers do
is that they keep stacking on top of their style
over time.
So you get more and more out of every movie.
And then you think about how they're all connected
to each other over time.
And whether he's improving
or not improving. And he is right now in that sweet spot.
So one of the things that I didn't really think about was that Dunkirk is his 10th film.
And it's like since Dunkirk, I think he has sort of moved into this, you know, I know the introduction of Jennifer Liam happens on.
I think on Tenet.
On Tenet.
Tenet certainly introduces this cutting style that is essentially, I don't even know how to describe it because one of the things that I don't think he gets enough credit for is how unconventional his movies are.
even in the Odyssey, one of the things that struck me is how little breathing room there is.
There isn't a lot of guy goes over to a window and stares out and says, well, the Spartans may come one day.
He doesn't hold a shot for more than 15 seconds.
And some of that is form and function, right?
Because the IMAX camera, the magazine doesn't run that long.
So he doesn't get these long takes that maybe, you know, we're accustomed to.
And maybe our TV watching brain especially is accustomed to like watching people in interiors and a very conventional kind of like master one
or one are cutting style.
And you're right.
Like,
Jennifer Liam and Christopher Nolan
are cutting back and forth
across like five minutes later,
six years later,
and in tenet,
like,
scenes seem to be already
in media res when we're joining them,
you know,
like,
which is not that different
than like how Michael Baye cuts,
but it is given this almost avant-garde
polish to the way Nolan does it.
And the material is just much more serious.
Yeah.
You know,
it's not like boom, boom,
explosion onto the next thing.
I thought you don't think
Revenge of the Fallen is,
serious?
It is to me.
Yeah.
And I take it seriously.
But it's just, if you're making Oppenheimer, and even if you're using a frenetic cutting style,
it doesn't change the fact that it's a story about one of the most consequential people of the 20th century.
And so using tools that are best understood as like action movie making tools for Homer,
right.
This is a new thing.
It is an evolution, I think, of filmmaking style
in a way that I find really exciting.
And it's not that it's being overlooked.
I think people have cited that something has changed
a little bit in recent years.
But for something like The Odyssey,
you talk about how it's kind of compressed
because there's just so much incident in the story.
Sure.
You just kind of have to go from place to place.
But what makes it exciting is not just that feeling of like,
oh, the Cyclops, Scylla and Carybdis,
the Sirens.
These are things that if you know even just a little bit about the Odyssey,
you know this stuff is coming in the movie.
It's what he puts in between.
all that stuff. It's all the spackle. It's all the, you know, all the binding of the story,
which is all the stuff that is unexpected. It's going into the past. It's shifting the perspective
of how the story is being told. Flashes of the future, which is also the past. But, you know,
but it doesn't have the kind of what I think people maybe rejected a little bit about Dunkirk,
which is the discombobulation of time and how, like, it was, people maybe felt manipulated, like,
by certain elements of the, the way that he plays with the timelines in Dunkirk.
although it's, you know, certainly, like,
I think it's pretty legible once you've seen the film to go back
and be like, ah, yes, that's him flying over,
but it's, you know, that day.
I think it really works with the Odyssey.
We're sort of, like, obviously staying away
from getting into the weeds with Odyssey.
But, like, this is almost an inversion of what happens with Oppenheimer.
I understood why Oppenheimer was made the way it was
because that is essentially with the exception of the explosion,
the Trinity Test,
is going to be this super dry,
procedural,
kind of dense, you know,
story about a guy who has an idea
who's running across the globe
to try and chase this idea
and then is drafted into service of his,
you know, nation to do so.
And it almost suits it
because you're like, okay, let's pop all this up.
Let's prop all this up and make it a legal thriller
and make it a military, you know, like TikTok.
The Odyssey you would think
is like, well, this is,
this is the story, right? This is the greatest action story ever told. This is the most amazing
adventure ever told. This is what all the stories are based on. All you have to do is get out of the
way. But he actually is like, no, because of all the context around it, because it's like classical,
because it's confusing because people aren't going to know Spartans versus the Trojans versus
the Greeks and everything. They're going to have to like get pushed into this like whitewater
rapids of this story.
And I think it actually really works in Odyssey,
but it is like, you're watching and you're like,
this movie's going to make a billion dollars probably
and be the biggest film of the year probably.
And it's kind of weird.
It's a weird movie.
It's very weird.
I mean, there's other choices that he makes.
It is an adaptation.
I mean, there are things that are left out.
There are things that are changed.
There's a lot of time spent in the story of the Odyssey
kind of pointing out what a sort of arrogant figure
that Odysseus is
and sort of like
what a flawed character
he is and you know
rereading it in over the last few months
like I've come away feeling like
he's kind of the original
flawed protagonist
Yeah
The original Draper
Yeah honestly he is like
He's a bad TV
character
And
but Nolan cast Matt Damon
Who's kind of fundamentally decent
And just one of the easiest people
to root for in all of movies
And he's played shit heels
you memorably played a shit heel and interstellar.
But you're just kind of with Matt Damon.
It's part of what makes him a good star is you're rooting for him.
And so even that kind of complicates the character of the movie
where it feels like a more traditional adventure hero story,
but he's doing all this avant-garde work around it.
So you're like, you feel safe even when he's taking chances.
And the same is true of Oppenheimer.
Like the first 20 minutes of Oppenheimer,
I remember seeing it with you and Andy.
and in the first 20 minutes
I was like, oh, this is something different
and special.
Like, this is very special
because he's just dispensing
with the most boring part of the movie
where you have to like show him as a child
and show a critical incident
that informed why this man became a scientist.
Like, he just speed ran the first 25 years
of Oppenheimer's life
with this dramatic score
and this flash cutting style that he was doing
and he was just like, that stuff's boring.
I'm going to make it as exciting as I can
and then we're going to go to the next thing.
Yeah.
And the same thing is happening in The Odyssey.
You know, you do get this kind of extended prologue where you're, you know, back on, back in Homer's palace.
Or in Odysseus's palace in Ithaca.
And then after that, it's just like you're off to the races.
And we're going through all these crazy incidents.
So yeah, it's like it's a gutsy adaptation.
If you don't think about it too hard, it's just an exciting action movie.
You get back to the tenet thesis of like, just don't think about it, feel it.
You can watch his movies and be like, oh, I didn't actually hear much of the dialogue.
or like only picked up every other line or something like that,
which I think people with extensive live music experience
will probably have that experience in the Odyssey,
just like they do with every one of his movies.
But you can also just sort of marvel at what he's doing.
You can just look at the landscapes
and you can look at the sequences and the set pieces.
And you can also just get the feeling from,
like, when you see Bernthal or when you see Repita Nyango,
you're like, I know what's happening.
Right.
Broadly speaking, I know what's happening.
Who do you think are the, the,
his forebears.
Because you asked that really provocative question
about who's the director of the century.
So it's like probably the previous 25 years
is probably Steven Spielberg.
Yeah, I was actually like kind of looking at this
because there's the argument that we could have
about like who has had the most significant contribution
to filmmaking in the 21st century.
And you know, you can get into PTA.
I, funnily enough, you know,
Dunkirk was Nolan's 10th movie.
One battle is PTA's 10th movie.
I think PTA has a little,
bit of a harder time putting his movies together.
You know, one battle obviously had DiCaprio and Warner Brothers behind it, and that was his most
expensive film.
It doesn't seem like he's going to make something even bigger next, but who knows?
I'm not sure.
Scorsese's had a remarkable 21st century, but I think he almost exists in the same way that
Spielberg does to me of this sort of like, you've already been minted, you know, and like,
we're just so happy you're grinding these out.
But, you know, between Shutter Island, Aviator, Shutter Island, departed, Wolf of Wall Street, silence Irishman Killers of the Flower Moon. That's his 21st century.
And critically claimed almost all the way down the line, but doesn't command audiences the way that Nolan does. I mean, that's really the thing that Nolan does. Maybe you could say De Nive-Ville Neve's coming up behind him a little bit.
That would be the sort of most obvious contender in this arena. And it's interesting to watch those guys do things that feel more like Susser.
will be DeMille or John Ford,
than like Martin Scorsese or even like Steven Spielberg.
You know, Stephen Spielberg in his prime
was a tremendously personal filmmaker.
You know, like, Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
That's a deeply personal movie.
Yeah.
I do think that Christopher Nolan sees a lot of himself
and the protagonist that he portrays.
There's a reading of the Odyssey
that it is straight up about Christopher Nolan.
Oh, sure.
I think it's a reading of the Odyssey
that people are going to see when it get to the end of it
that is like, oh, this is about the world right now.
100%
We can talk about that
after people have seen it.
But I
I'm kind of fascinated by those two directors
Villeneuve as well
deciding to take on a Bond movie
of really spending a lot of time
thinking about not just how the audience will react
but what will get the audience interested.
And I don't think that Scorsese and Spielberg
and some of those guys who came to fame
in the 70s,
Coppola is among that cohort.
You know, a lot of that generation is
is dying off, honestly.
But those guys
who are still making those films,
they're thinking about themselves, I think, first?
Yeah, I wonder whether or not
that Spielberg era where it's Jurassic Schindler
saving Private Ryan and AI
is probably the sweet spot of
what is something that's going to bring
everybody here, but also will give
me an opportunity to express myself
about my own personal
kind of passion points. And for Spielberg,
he's roughly in his early 50s,
which is the time that Christopher Nolan is right now.
Yeah, we should do like a larger
thing about like how old these guys are, how much juice they have, what they decide to do once
they're like, no one's going to take this away from me. So what I want, but I still want to be
relevant. Yeah, it's weird. Like, obviously I've gotten a lot of shit, perhaps rightfully so for
my inception takes over the years. But one of the things I always felt watching it, I was like,
this is a little bit of an immature movie. Like, it's a movie made by like a filmmaker who has
incredible skill, but like maybe hasn't fully like baked their stuff. And one of the reasons why
I've gotten so interested in what he's doing lately is I feel like he is. I feel like he is,
in total command.
Like, he is the absolute maestro of movies right now.
And the thing that we should probably just say about The Odyssey, too, is like,
I can't remember the last time a movie like this was even attempted.
Like, it's seven countries on multiple continents, in multiple climates,
with hundreds of extras and background actors.
I mean, every single actor is in, and this has just been like,
this is the craziest thing I've ever done and we'll ever do.
And, you know, Damon's done basically.
a five-month press tour at this point.
You know, this trailer came out late last year.
They have more or less been on the road promoting this on and off since then.
And Damon's stories about making this movie and about like Nolan walking up to him with an
IMAX camera with Hoyt van Hoytima and being like, okay, you're going to walk over there
and turn and you're going to look.
And he's like, I look and the fleet is there.
Like he's got four boats going across.
And he's like, there was no signal that that was going to happen.
He's just like in control of like the entire game.
It's pretty remarkable.
I have you have to doff your cap to him just demanding that this,
this be what the movies are.
Like that is what is really special to me about it is like we're in a time where it's been a very cool movie year.
And there's been a lot of talk about that on Bill's show on our shows about how,
you know, movies have juice this year.
I don't know if they're like back, back, back the way that they were in 1997.
But they have juice.
And the only way that that continues is if you have powerful people demanding this kind of thing.
Yeah.
Like you have to say, I want to do the biggest thing you're willing to attempt.
And I know that most studios, when I talk to the people who work at studios, they're like,
we do want a filmmaker.
We want a visionary.
We want a person who we can use to sell and market the movie and who also is capable of going to the heavens with anything they try to make.
Yeah.
Do you think Kubrick is basically the closest comparison point we have where it's something.
who is working at the forefront of camera technology
and is so obsessed with how the movie is being made
and the way at which it's going to be seen.
He, perhaps, not even perhaps.
He was certainly a more, I think, complicated
and intellectually stimulating
and probably unknowable filmmaker than Nolan is.
But that's the comparison point.
Like, Spielberg had it, has people kind of,
in his pocket at a couple points in his career,
but almost sometimes, like, feels like...
I feel like we're doing the book of basketball pyramid right now,
but for directors.
I'm just trying to find,
like,
I'm trying to, like, appreciate the moment we're in,
because I don't think it's going to last forever for a variety of reasons.
And so this guy going on this run,
doing a superhero trilogy and then being like,
I'm going to do,
like, I'm going to bring original genre movies back.
I'm going to do,
I'm going to orchestrate massive historical,
world historical important moments.
And then I'm going to do, like,
The Odyssey, it feels Kubrickian.
Yeah.
Well, you know, Kubrick, one of the great
sadnesses of his career, and for those of us who love his movies,
was he never got to make Napoleon.
Yeah.
Right.
And this is kind of Nolan's Napoleon.
It is like the most epic scale story
that he could possibly tell,
given the circumstances in the industry at the time.
And that movie falling apart,
there's an amazing book that is just entirely about
the failed production that features the screenplay
and all the storyboards and everything that he prepared to do that.
The reason he made Barry Lyndon is because he wanted to make a film
of that era in the aftermath of Napoleon falling apart.
There are some differences between Kubrick and Nolan, though.
Cooper, to me, is much more psychologically probing
and daring about what it means to be human.
Like, his representation of violence and sex is way beyond.
I think anything Nolan has ever come to.
No, I mean, that was sort of funny.
I was re-watching segments of Nolan's movies last night.
And it's remarkable how little blood is in Dunkirk.
You know, for all the shooting and tenet, very little viscera.
It's why I say Cesselby DeMille and John Ford.
He's more of a classicist in that way.
He's like, he's a very old school thinker and filmmaker.
And, you know, he has his uniform.
Whenever you see him, he's always sipping tea.
He has, like, he has personified himself in a very smart way.
He casts actors who kind of dress like him and look like him.
He does.
And, you know, you could also say Hitchcock is probably a clear kind of inspiration in terms of like,
what does it mean to be a Christopher Nolan movie?
Like, a Stanley Cooper movie means a lot of different kinds of things.
It's one of the great things when you watch his, like, highlight reels of his movies is, like, they all look different.
All the protagonists are kind of different.
There's a kind of an intensity and a mania.
But they all are different in a specific way.
They're all in different milieus.
Nolan, no one is working for the masses.
Like, and not in a bad way.
Kubrick was successful commercially, but not like Nolan.
I mean, Nolan engineered Oppenheimer to a billion dollars.
That's the craziest fucking thing that's happened in the movies in years.
I'm trying to think of, like, you know,
You know, Nolan is obviously a huge fan of Michael Mann.
Dark Knight is hugely influenced by Heat.
And Man has this period where he's doing Last the Mohicans is a very successful, romantic epic,
set in colonial times.
Then you have, you know, heat, you have the procedural courtroom and journalist thriller
of insider.
You have this sort of like boundary pushing technologically or camera, you know, cinematography-wise.
collateral.
And you have Ali all kind of in this mix.
But those films are not making,
those were not like the central movies of the year
that they were released, you know, largely.
You know, they were very well regarded
and had obvious converts, like me among them.
But like they're not like stop everything else
we have to talk about the Odyssey for a month.
I feel like also,
um,
movie culture has mostly been behind man where, you know,
heat was a popular movie upon its release,
but it was not,
as what would become one of the most influential films in the 1990s.
It just was not.
And I think the good works that you and Bill Simmons have been doing have contributed to that.
But there's just been a slow and steady movement toward its overwhelming power.
This is something that Chuck joked about with Bill on Sunday as well, the idea of it being overrated now, after being underrated for so many years.
I don't think there's no like waiting to talk about Nolan's influence.
You know, there's no like, we don't have to wait around to think about the depth and,
reach of interstellar.
Like,
interstellar was a massive hit upon release.
People who were 11 years old
who saw it when it came out,
it became one of their most favorite
and influential movies.
Still, like, the most significant,
like, thing I noticed
about modern movie culture
is that, like, it's not all about us.
No.
And going when we had a chance
to go to this movie theater in London
and the Prince Charles
where we got to host the screening
of Phantom Thread.
But I believe, like, after Phantom Thread,
they were doing a midnight screening
of Interstellar, this is a couple years ago, but I think
this is still the case.
And the line was down the block, and it was all young
people, and part of it was like, we're going to bring
drinks in, and we're going to have, like, a great night watching
Interstellar, take a gummy, and, like, whatever.
But I think that has become, like, what we think of
Jurassic Park. I think, yeah, I think it's Jurassic Park.
I think it's those movies that when we were
kids that... Like, Tate Frazier
thinks Interstellar is, like, one of the best movies ever made.
And he's, you know, he's right.
Like, for Tate... For him, that's
what all that matters, you know what I mean? Like, and that...
That's something that like, I guess Kubrick did have that.
You know, I guess he did have, well, I saw Bachwork Orange and it changed my taste
forever and I thought about movies differently forever.
But it's interesting to have now three generations of Nolan fans.
I mean, that's really what we're at.
I wonder if we'll ever start to see or if we've already started to see and I just haven't picked up on it,
like people making movies in his style because they're very hard to imitate.
They're very difficult to finance if you're not him.
So it's, it's, I wonder when there will be something that we'll see.
I suppose you could try to mimic the Jennifer Lame Nolan cutting style.
I wouldn't try it.
I would also imagine you would get noted to death by the studio if you're like,
hey, it's my second movie, but I've decided to cut it the way Christopher Nolan cut Oppenheimer.
I mean, it can be done.
It's just it needs to be the right material and the right skill set.
Jennifer Lame, you know, she's an Oscar winner because of her work on a Nolan film.
Voitavon Hoitima is an Oscar winner because of his work on a Nolan film.
Ludwig Gurence, and we haven't mentioned him.
He's now the composer of the last few films that he's made.
his work on The Odyssey is incredible.
Yeah.
And those people are best in class,
and they're all working with the director
who's at the absolute forefront of the industry and the form.
So you could try to imitate it, I guess.
It's not, you're not going to have $250 million.
You're not going to have his vision,
and you're not going to have all these people
who know how to execute.
Yeah.
So it's challenging.
I think it's really more like feel.
Like what feeling does a Kubrick movie give you,
or what feeling does a Kubrick movie or a Nolan movie give you?
and then what do you do with that?
And how does that inform
and influence people 20 years from now?
I think that the differences
is that you can still watch Kubrick movies
and it makes you question things about existence.
And when you watch Nolan movies,
I think you think about the Nolan movie
you just watched.
Yeah.
I feel like it's a little bit,
this is no knock against Nolan,
but like I was watching,
we did an event where we presented Tenet
up in Toronto last week.
And so I watched Tenet like in pieces a few times
and I started to just,
realized like all I was thinking about was Tenet and trying to solve Tenet and trying to figure
out what he meant to do here with Tenet and not time. That's kind of weird. What if we could go
backwards? What would we do? And what if the past was trying to kill us? And what does that mean?
It was a very like when you take your head out of the like the visor, you're like, oh, okay. Like there's
a whole world around here. I agree with you. I do think that the Odyssey is a movie that does this
really well. It's one of his only movies that I immediately was like.
well, what is this really about?
And not how does it fit together?
Because I already knew the story.
And so that's one of the advantages of this movie is
because you are likely to know the story
or at least parts of the story,
and because the conclusion, which is thrilling,
is so classical.
You don't have to worry about how it all fits together
or whether it makes sense or not.
You have to think about why he wanted to make it and what it means to him
and then maybe even furthermore what it means to the world right now.
And there is a lot in there.
For sure.
And I think Oppenheimer had that, and I think
Dunkirk was more of like a love letter to
a dream of collective responsibility.
And I think honestly, it's probably been,
that is echoed in the Odyssey, the idea of what we have
and what we could lose and all these things.
The recurring motif in conversation during the Odyssey
is civilization.
How do we get back to civilization?
How do we rebuild?
How do we become human to each other again?
And what do you do if you do?
break the golden rule.
Exactly.
I wanted to ask you a little bit about,
you know, we grew up reading
William Goldman and he was so amazing
writing about movie stars and what
they can do for movies and what movies can do
for movie stars.
And, you know, tragically, I think
Keith Ledger would have been the greatest example of
somebody who's worked with Nolan then
set his career on a completely different
trajectory. Well, think about just him appearing in
other Nolan movies. Yeah. I mean, you can
fantasy cast him into almost everything.
movie he's made since.
He probably would have been Odysseus.
No question.
Yeah.
Or could have been Odysseus.
Absolutely.
I did, you know, this cast is incredible.
Several people stand out in it.
But it does feel like he's kind of got almost a closed circuit now.
And I don't know that like when I see somebody in a Nolan movie, their career changes
necessarily.
I suppose, I suppose Pattinson and Tenet, like I started.
looking at him a little bit differently after that film,
but what do you think about what happens to actors
when they go through Nolan's school?
Well, there's this great story in our buddy, Zach Barron's profile
of sort of the making of The Odyssey and GQ,
where he talks to Pattinson and Zach had written a piece about Pattinson before,
and they clearly have a comfort with each other.
And Pattinson was like, he recounted getting the phone call from Nolan
about making the movie.
And Pattinson was like, wow,
you're making the Odyssey, that sounds awesome.
I can't wait to read the script.
And Nolan said to him,
you're the only person that has to read the script.
Everybody agreed right away.
Yeah.
And, you know, it says something funny about Pattinson,
who seems like a bit of an oddball in a very charming way.
Yeah.
And it says something I think about what Nolan means to actors,
that it's not just that they know the material is going to be good
and they want to work with him,
but that being in a Christopher Nolan movie is the biggest thing you can do.
It's the biggest thing you can do.
And, you know, Matt Damon has already appeared in his films,
and Hathaway has already appeared in his films.
And you've got this long,
Hemish Patel plays a big part in this movie.
He was in Tenet.
There's a series of actors.
He's got a little bit of a company going, a rep.
Absolutely.
And you've got all these actors who want to step up.
But then you have a couple of new people who are very big.
You know, you've got Charlie Starrin,
you've got Tom Holland,
you've got people who haven't worked with him before,
who are, you'd be stupid to turn down the part in the movie,
even though, like, Charlie Saren's part is not that big.
It's pivotal, but it's not that big,
even though she's one of the five,
biggest female stars, certainly over the age of 30 in Hollywood right now.
This is sort of the funny thing about the way his movies are working these days is that
obviously Killiam Murphy and Downey are huge parts of Oppenheimer, so is Benny Safdi, but only
for part of it. And so is Matt Damon, but only for part of it. And so is Josh Hartnett,
but only for part of it. You don't get the usual, like, I started here and I ended here.
With Nolan, you usually, you're like, I'm here. You know? Yeah. There's usually one
handsome white guy. Sometimes it's John David Washington, but it's
mostly one handsome white guy, and then everybody else around them are just much more famous
than the actor you would expect to find in that part.
Sure.
There are some exceptions.
Like, I love John Leguizamo in this movie.
I have such an inspired choice to cast him in this part.
But that's not common.
You know, like Tom Hardy is playing the third lead of inception.
He's almost the Michael Kane part of this movie, right?
Like Wasamo.
Yeah.
It's a very good call.
I hadn't thought of that.
I am veteran steady.
Whatever I need to do here, I'm off book.
You're not going to have to worry about me.
point the camera at me, it works.
And have gravitas, you know, and I fit in,
even though you wouldn't think John Lekhazamo immediately for The Odyssey,
as soon as he's on screen, you're like, oh, yes,
you were in Baz Luhrman's Romeo and Juliet.
You know exactly how to do this.
A modern telling of an ancient tale.
Qualified actor, you know, like, whatever stage it is,
like you can do this.
Yes.
Yeah, I think obviously this question is leading to Tom Holland
because he will probably be the performance people debate the most,
I imagine.
I thought he was quite good in it.
It's the least effective part of the movie for me.
Yeah.
Telemachus is the character he's playing,
and it is a tough role
because you're just like basically like asking people
what to do for two hours and 45 minutes.
But it'll be fascinating to see if this puts him on
Matt Damon from age 30 to 55 trajectory,
or if he's like,
you know, there's not enough Christopher Nolan's
to make movies the way I,
want to make them? So much of this conversation is about the choices that people are making and that
Nolan keeps making interesting choices for himself. He keeps pushing himself to do bigger things and more
interesting material, even if it's the oldest material in the world. And in that same Zach Barron's story,
there's a lot of conversation with Tom Holland about how his eyes were opened to what a movie
could be by working on a Chris Nolan movie and that he demanded that the production of the new
Spider-Man movie not only be pushed back, but work differently because of how he watched Nolan
work. And now the big thing is just, will Tom Holland make better choices? I love the idea of him
hanging out with Robert Pattinson. Robert Pattinson makes the drama and good time. Robert Pattinson's
fearless. For an actor as handsome with the origins in Twilight. He just seems like a guy's like,
this is a fucking mark. I want to just do interesting stuff. Like, and wants to have a good time,
he wants to be. Now, crucially, he's playing Batman and is like, that'll pay for everything for
the rest of my life. But Tom Holland already has that. He has Spider-Man, and it sounds like he wants to
keep being Spider-Man.
So if he does,
what are you doing
with your coin
when you're not Spider-Man?
Right.
And that's what makes
great stars now
because you do have to
have this kind of
lynch-pin thing
and the Odyssey
doesn't come around
very often.
In fact, it
almost never comes around.
In fact,
you know,
this has really never
been adapted before.
Parts of the Odyssey
have been adapted,
but it's crazy to think.
I mean,
Nolan described it
as a stunning gap
in movie history
that this story
has never at scale been fully adapting
into a three-hour movie. I just don't think people could do it.
I think that's what it was. I think this is now
is the only time that it could have happened. But as far as
the actors go, yeah, I mean, I hope Tom Holland
makes good films. I'm not... I think we just need Tom Holland
to be engaged with the idea
of making good movies. Because Hollywood
essentially functions when
Brad Pitt and George Clooney
and Matt Damon and Tom Cruise
are like, I want to work with the best filmmakers
and I want to give them what they need.
and I'll put my name up there to do it.
And we don't have a ton of new movie stars, you know?
I mean, there's a lot of people.
People like a lot.
But one of the things I really like about Zendaya,
and I hope Tom Holland follows suit,
is that she's like,
I may be mad, wildly famous and vaguely unknowable,
but just absolutely adored
and have like a complete 100% approval rating.
But I'm going to do Euphoria Season 3.
And I'm going to do the drama.
And it's going to be,
it's going to push up against like the kind of edges
of what,
people expect for me. They serve each other. Taking on audacious, memorable stuff
makes filmmakers more successful and makes actors more interesting. So,
you know, we can bang the drum all day. And who's listening at this point? You think Zendaya's
listening to this episode? What's she doing right now? Zendaya? Is she in the bath listening to the
episode? Do you think she's probably at various Odyssey premiere? Do you think she has her AirPods
in during Wimbledon matches while and listening to you? She's like, when are they going to talk about
in being solely? CR is hosting the Bill Simmons podcast?
What the?
I was hoping for a deep dive on LaBarron villain.
Last couple questions.
One is that you're going to do a pod about this with Amanda.
We're going to pot about it on the big picture.
I'm sure that won't be the last two pods you do about the Odyssey.
You did an extensive amount of potting about one battle.
There were movies that come along every once in a while that feel like you can't talk about them enough.
Does this as a text feel like one of those?
That's a great question.
I've been turning that over in my mind just thinking about what,
what we're going to do on the show for the next few months.
It didn't intoxicate me in the same way that one battle did.
Sure.
But one battle was very personal for me,
not just as somebody who was obsessed with PTA's movies for so long,
but what's in the movie hit at a very specific time in my life.
And that's specific to me,
and I'm just only talking about what kind of touches me, what moves me.
I think the Odyssey is a more universal film.
will be seen by way more people.
We'll have a bigger box office.
I don't know, having seen it a second time
where it improved as a movie for me,
but I don't know if it has that same,
like, you gotta go again feeling.
Some of it, but...
I think I can't wait to go again
because almost all Nolan movies
when I first get out, I'm like, okay, now I can breathe.
Maybe a better way to put it is like,
you'll go twice, but will you go three times?
Sure. Right.
And most films that become mega, mega successes.
you know, you're Barbies.
That means it's like it's a party
and people are going two, three, four times.
Marvel movies were like that,
two, three, four times.
Apparently obsession was like that.
Apparently it was.
The Odyssey isn't a party.
It's quite a serious movie.
It's exhausting.
Quite an intense film.
And at the end of it, you're like,
I went through the ringer on that.
So I don't know, I mean,
it's an awards contender for sure.
It's fascinating to think about him.
pulling the Coppola
and going back to back
where he goes
and does one massive movie
wins every award
and then comes back
two years later
and then does the exact
same thing
doesn't play
it's not it's not
impossible to imagine a world
where the collective
Hollywood and international
filmmaking world says like
well you're just the guy
right now
you're at the absolute
top of the mountain
and you decided not to come down
after Oppenheimer
in fact you you somehow
built more mountain
on top of the mountain
and so I could see that
being like a nine
month runway of discussion. Well, it's going to be interesting, too, because
they, you know, the Oscars have, I mean, they expanded to 10 films because of
Dark Night, right? And since then, there has usually been, you get your token kind of blockbuster
that gets nominated, but then really, like, the conversation is between these three or usually
two films that everybody has kind of decided it's between these two. And I'm not really, like,
as well versed on what the Oscar films might be.
But, you know, it's going to be weird if it's like the Odyssey versus Fjord, you know?
I mean, it will be.
You've also got to consider it'll also be Project Hail Mary and Dude Part 3.
And there will be big movies that will be sitting alongside of it.
And I think that actually helps the Odyssey.
Oh, for sure.
You know, because Dune Part 3 is probably going to rock.
But from what I've heard, it's not as epic as part 2.
And Project Hail Mary, which is a very good movie, but feels small compared to the Odyssey.
For sure.
It's a two-hander.
Yeah. So it's Titanic nature and it's cosmic significance. You know, it's all about the gods and fate, power and choice. Huge ideas. I think it's going to stand up pretty well. Now, whether does Chris Nolan want to do the Oscar campaign in the same way for another six months and take him away from working on another project? I don't know. That's yet to be seen.
Well, thanks for doing this with me.
So is this a permanent thing?
I don't think so. No? Yeah, I think that.
We've gotten some, like, already activated Bill vacation texts that are like, hey, like, let's do this in the coming week.
So I think he's back.
He's coming back.
Are you, what is this making you think about for your long-term future?
Um, well, it's pretty fun to have, like, any topic beyond on the board, right?
Wow.
But it is, right?
So does that, will this, will this auger the CR show?
No.
I could never, I could never.
I think the streets want it.
Yeah, but like, I, like, like, the CR show is all the.
shows, right?
That is the business model.
Except for beautiful bond, that's Adam's show.
And I just stand there in awe.
Yeah, I am
I'm so fascinated
by Bill's decision to do this.
And he told us
a few weeks ago that this was
something he had been thinking about.
And Bill is a student of late-night
television. He really understands its history and he's
very influenced by it. And
some people
install guest hosts with confidence
and some do it with anxiety.
Speaking of Odysseus,
the ultimate act of hubris on the re-apex
is to say, like,
I'm flying so high
that I can start putting a little sunlight
on the baby birds.
Yeah.
Who would you,
from the ringer universe
most want to see in the guest hosting chair?
Here?
Yeah.
Tony Buns?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Tony Buns.
It's time.
I do want...
Honestly, like, one of the most sincere
and genuine sports lovers I've ever come across
and a delightful human being.
Like, loves sports the way like a
1987 sports illustrator
writer who's just like, I like the World Cup
and tennis. Yeah.
Well-rounded. Yeah. Well-rounded. Love
baseball. Yeah. Yeah. I do
really, really, really want
one cousin Sal episode.
Without him? Yeah. Yeah. Just to
see what kind of... I think that would be...
Mayhem. He could get us to. He can get us. He gets him in their relationship
if that happened. Okay. But he's the, he's the one
true troll. Like, Sal would be the one who planned
for weeks to just do stuff that drove Bill insane.
That's what I wanted.
An epic prank.
Have all his Holy Cross roommates on to like talk about him.
Blue Boy?
Wow.
That would be our first Blue Boy appearance.
My big dream, you know, I did have a couple of, of celebrity guests
out that got politely.
You want to reveal that now?
Sure.
I asked Jalen Brown to come on this podcast.
Not personally, but we made entreaties.
Okay.
And he just has not, you know, he wasn't available.
And what would you guys have discussed?
wellness
I think
and Philadelphia restaurants
I would recommend some spots
you might have some spots
and then we asked
Brunthal but Brunthal was not able
and make the schedule
When is it going to happen?
I don't know
Menelaus come through
Is he ducking you?
No I think I think it'll
I think it'll happen eventually
but like you know
I do think that
the guest thing is titillating
you know when you're just like
I just call anybody right
well apparently not anybody
Jill and Brown not available
you're here
I see you fucking all the time.
Do you think deep down
Bernthal's mad?
No.
Did you think he was mad?
Like there's an Esquire video.
They ask him,
like, have you heard the rewatchables?
Have you heard the Wing Jenkins thing?
And he's like, love those guys.
Do you think he was,
I don't want to get into a thing here,
but...
What do you think?
I think he probably likes the pod.
Okay.
Okay.
I don't know what context he's heard of it.
Is somebody send him that?
And he's like, huh, okay.
That's pretty funny.
What's his favorite episode?
Jaws 2?
Yeah, probably.
He liked it when I said trimstruck.
All right, we'll get out of here.
I got to let you go.
Thanks to Sean Fentasy.
You can hear him talking more about the Odyssey
on tomorrow's episode of The Big Picture.
I'm going to go on Monday's episode.
We'll talk.
Let's rank those Nolan movies.
Where does the Odyssey fit in?
That's what I want to do.
Yeah.
It's hard to say right now,
but I think top five for me.
Well, let's not spoil that.
podcast, please, Chris. I'm just giving you a broad idea. Thanks for coming, man. Thanks, buddy.
All right. Thank you so much to Ian Wright. Thank you so much to Anthony Dubundo. And of course,
thank you so much to Sean Fennessey. You can listen to Ian on Stick to Football and Crossways.
You can listen to Anthony Dubundo on the Ringer gambling show. And you can, of course, listen to Sean
Fennacy on the Big Picture. I've been Chris Ryan. I still am Chris Ryan. I will be back here on
Sunday night with Bill and with Dubundo to talk about the world.
Cup final.
And thanks to Gahau and Chris and everybody who made the show today.
Talk to you guys soon.
Have a great weekend.
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