The Flop House - Ep.#437 - Megalopolis, with Roman Mars
Episode Date: November 9, 2024You KNEW this episode was coming, and we got to it as soon as we could! We discuss Francis Ford Coppola's defiantly personal, defiantly incomprehensible, personal-fortune-destroying Megalopolis! And f...or such a megaflopolis episode we enlisted the help of Roman Mars, a man who knows a thing or two about architecture and design, and who's currently co-hosting a podcast series with Elliott about The Power Broker, a book about Robert Moses (clearly an inspiration for Adam Driver's "what if Robert Moses but not totally evil" character)!We’re in season 2 of FlopTV! Pop in for individual episodes, or get a price break with a season pass! Peruse the full line-up and/or get tickets here! And hey, while you’re clicking on stuff, why not subscribe to our NEWSLETTER, “Flop Secrets?!”Wikipedia page for MegalopolisRecommended in this episode:Dan: Lost Highway (1997)Stu: Anora (2024)Elliott: You and Me (1938)Roman: Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse (1991)For a limited time, visit AuraFrames.com and get $45 off Aura’s best-selling Carver Mat frames by using promo code FLOP at checkout.Stay energized with America’s #1 Ready-to-Eat Meal Delivery Service.Head to factormeals.com/flop50 and use code flop50 to get 50% off your first box and 20% off your next month
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Floppers. Before we start this episode, I just wanted to remind you we are in the
middle of FlopTV Season 2. That's right, the one-hour internet televised Flophouse TV show
is here for you the first Saturday of every month through February. Just go to theflophouse.simpleTix.com
and get your tickets or season pass for this all-new Flophouse TV stuff. For covering movies
we've never covered before, we've got video
segments. It's amazing. Just go to theflophouse.simpleTix.com for Flop TV Season 2. This time it's personal.
On this episode we discuss Megalopolis. I got a feeling one. Yum yum. Give me that. Delish. Hey everyone, welcome to the Flophouse.
I'm Dan McCoy.
And I'm Stuart Wellington.
I'm Elliot Kalin.
And I'm Roman Mars.
Wait, what?
Hold on a second.
What?
How did you get here?
How did you get in?
Dan, I told you, you got to have your apartment fumigated.
You got to get a Roman Mars infestation.
Someone much more respectable got in here somehow.
I got on my lit up moving sidewalk and I landed right here.
Wow, in the city of the future, aka the Flau Pass.
Yeah, well, this is a special movie, a very special movie.
So we had a very special guest.
Elliot, why don't you talk a little bit about Roman being on the show?
Because you have been doing some work with, you've been moonlighting,
you've been cheating on us with another podcast.
That's right. It's been so exciting to be discovering new things with another host,
discovering things about myself, showing the things about me
that you guys have gotten bored with.
It's made you a better co-host of the Flophouse, honestly. with another host discovering things about myself, showing the things about me that you guys have gotten bored with.
But I will say it again.
It's made you a better cohost of the Flophouse, honestly.
In some ways, yeah, because I'm more excited.
I come in and I kiss you guys and I give you flowers
and you're like, what's this?
You haven't done this in years.
And I've got a spring in my step and a song in my heart.
So, Megalopolis is a special movie
in that it feels like it is so indebted
to the ideas of city building
that come from having read the Power Broker and then forgotten most of what was in the
book.
And so what better person have come talk to us than Roman Mars with whom I have been co-hosting
the 99% invisible breakdown, the Power Broker, all throughout this year.
We have been taking on one of the greatest works of nonfiction writing or I would say
writing period in American literature,
The Power Broker by Robert Caro.
Every month we break down a hundred pages of it.
We just recorded our penultimate summary episode.
We actually made our way through most of the book at this point.
And so, The Power Broker is always on our minds.
And this movie, Megalopolis, there's so much about it that is so clearly
indebted to a certain idea of Robert Moses the subject of the
power broker and indebted in a way that is totally weird and doesn't really work
it is messed up and so we wanted to bring Roman on to talk about that aspect
of it and also have a little bit of synergistic cross-promotion between
these two endeavors.
But...
I thought because we're talking about a movie that's all about New Rome,
we would bring in the best Roman we know.
Name-based pun scenario.
An actual Roman, yeah.
Yeah, that's right. That's right.
No, I'm very happy to be here. Thank you so much for having me.
And I don't think...
I kind of needed a sort of a work excuse to see this movie because it looked a little bit... I don't think, I kind of needed a sort of a work excuse
to see this movie, because it looked a little bit,
I don't know, like something I wouldn't necessarily see
on my own.
And so, it was a good excuse.
You mean you wouldn't make this, as I did,
the only movie I've seen in the theater
for the past couple months?
That's amazing.
As soon as we decided that I would see it for the show,
I was very excited to take it in.
But anyway, we'll get to that.
No, I mean, I'm on the show all the time
and I had a similar experience where I'm like,
well, I mean, maybe it's partly because I'm like,
well, we'll probably have to watch that eventually.
So I don't need to run out to the theater to do it.
But then when we all decided to do this together,
I'm like, oh, great, I can see it on a big screen I can see all the the nutty vision of Francis Ford Coppola all of the ideas that he's been saving up for decades and put them
All in one script whether they all belong in the same script or not. Yeah
Was the last one we did in last flop house in the aisles we did
I think like sister says the one with process Crowe. Was Madame Webb since then?
Madame Webb was... No, you know what?
I saw it in the theater.
That was the theater movie.
Guys, can we talk about Madame Webb?
Another time, maybe.
Her web connects us all. Kind of like how Megalon connects all these houses.
Yeah, sure.
So, the other thing about this movie is that I wanted to see it in the theaters
because unlike every other movie we've seen, where there's a reasonable expectation it
will be available for home viewing and like, they're like, gotta see this new Marvel or
Star Wars movie or whatever in the theaters.
I'm like, I don't have to because I'll be able to see it on my nicely sized DCV at home.
This movie, conceivably, could disappear.
It is a Francis Ford Coppola owned thing. It's amazing to
me that it was a national release movie and it it's very possible that it may disappear after this.
I don't think it will. I think it will be home viewing somewhere but this is this is such an
indie film in so many ways that it's potentially unavailable at a certain point. You know, so we
had to see it when we could see it. I guess I see what you're saying in the sense
that the response to this was so,
I mean, there are people who are like,
wow, big swing, love you, Francis.
But for the most part, very negative
that there could be a part of them that's like,
well, I'm taking my ball and going back to my vineyard.
But like, if you hope to recoup-
Doesn't have a vineyard anymore.
Yeah, it's sold.
I know, he only sold part of it. He only sold part of the vineyard. But if he hopes to have a Vineyard anymore. Oh yeah, I know he only sold part of it.
He only sold part of the Vineyard.
But if he wants to recoup anything,
like it has to go to streaming.
It has to be available somewhere.
So it was distributed theatrically by Lionsgate,
but it's more like I can see a world
where a large distributor is like,
we don't want to handle this.
And so he has to scramble to find some way.
And maybe it's up on,
maybe it's Francisco Coppola's YouTube channel
that he uploads all of Megalopolis 2 in 10 chapters
or something like that.
But it-
Yeah, his TikTok channel, he just splits it all up.
But you know, in a world where you can't-
Wait a minute, didn't Lionsgate also distribute
Borderlands this year?
Man, they're having a tough one.
It's been a great year for Lionsgate.
But in a world where even movies that are owned
by corporations are not readily available
the way that they maybe once were or that we assume now.
To have a movie that is one,
literally one guy paid for it himself.
It is, anyway, I just all a long way of saying,
I was saying like, I had to see it in the theater
because it was the first time in years
that a movie has come out where I'd be like,
this might be my only chance to see this movie.
And of course, maybe it'll be on HBO Max next week.
I don't know, but I was like,
this could be my only chance to see this movie. And of course, maybe it'll be on HBO Max next week, I don't know, but I was like,
this could be my only shot, you know.
Yeah.
There was only one theater showing it
when I was looking for Bay Area.
Well, there was maybe a couple,
but it was like showing at 3 p.m. or something
at Emory Bay.
Makes sense with the Bay Area,
tech companies hate this guy.
That's Copa country, that's the Bay Area.
His offices were in San Francisco,
he lives up over in the Napa area.
And then we ended up seeing it at the Kabuki,
my wife and I saw the Kabuki theater
in Japantown in San Francisco,
which was, we went to dinner ahead of time.
Pretty on the nose name for a theater in Japantown.
But it was a weird experience, that was a weird vibe.
I want to ask, how does your wife feel
about our podcast now that you post this?
There was about midway through the movie
where she looked at me and she said,
why is Francis Ford Coppola doing this to us?
But it started from the very beginning.
We sat down, empty theater.
It didn't stay empty, but it started empty.
We were there early, like just, you know, we just got there after dinner and the place
is completely empty.
And then this older white woman comes and sits right next to my wife.
Like the theater is empty.
There's two of us.
Your wife is a very friendly person.
There's something very welcoming about her.
So I get it.
Yeah.
I was like, and it already started. I was like, oh, there's a weird vibe here
that you would want to sit right next to us
in this little pack.
And then it just kept on getting weird
because more and more people sat
like glommed on right around us.
Maybe they just wanted to sort of like sit mostly
in the middle because it's a spectacle and whatever.
But it started out weird and just got weirder.
Yeah, well, speaking of how weird it gets,
Stuart, you took notes, we all saw this, as we said,
in the theater, because that's the way we could do it.
I respect you for- I took the notes
in the dark of the Alamo.
Yeah, being able to do that.
Well, I mean, we're going to see how good these notes are,
since I transcribed them onto note cards,
and I'm like, what the fuck does this say?
To be fair, to be fair, this is-
I'm like, surely you couldn't say that about Claudio.
This is an intricate puzzle box of a movie.
Every link indelibly forged to the next,
so that it just like, it's airtight.
The thing about the movie is airtight, so.
So I'm going to need some help here, guys.
So, Megalopolis, movie opens with what?
But like a title card, right?
That's Megalopolis, a fable.
Yeah, and like right off the bat is like,
hey, modern society is kind of like Rome
if you think about it.
It's true.
I mean, it is a movie that is,
it is a movie that one,
anytime a filmmaker puts a fable
at the end of their title, you go, this movie is not going to make sense.
This is, this is a, this is a, that's calling it a fable really.
It's like when we did North a while back, I was thinking about these, these interviews
I've heard with Alan Zweibel, who wrote North, and he just kept saying, it's a fable, like
it's a fairy tale.
Why do people dislike it?
It's like, you can't just,
you can't bandage over a movie that doesn't make sense
by calling it a fable.
Come on.
It is the equivalent of being like,
I washed my hands of this at the beginning of the movie.
It's like when a political candidate says something racist
and they're like, it was a joke, come on everybody.
Like, well, if people have liked it,
you wouldn't say it was a joke.
But anyway, that never happens, so don't worry about it. But you're right, Stuart, at the very beginning,
they start with their thesis statement.
Hey, America's kind of like Rome.
Is America going to fall like Rome does?
And we have title cards that look like
they're chiseled into marble.
So you're like, oh, that's like classic Roman shit.
Okay, so let's just talk about some of the characters
and then we'll get into the plot.
That sounds good. I think that's easy.
So our hero are- Easier than trying to walk us through the actual sequence,
which is baffling, yeah.
Our protagonist is Caesar Catalina, played by Adam Driver.
It's impossible to say this name and not smile.
I mean, come on.
Yeah, because you're eating in a Catalina Island.
Uh-huh, and it's a Caesar salad, I love it.
The ultimate fantasy of eating a Caesar salad
on Catalina Island.
Or with Catalina dressing on it.
Oh, yeah.
Stop it, stop it, guys.
Turn the cameras off.
It's two types of salads in one.
So he is the head...
They probably side a sandwich like this, the Ultra Salad.
He is the genius head of the design authority of New Rome
whose task is to design things like buildings
and plan out the city, right?
City planning type stuff.
He is the master builder of New Rome.
He is also the inventor or discoverer of Megalon,
a magic super substance.
Yes.
The middle of the future, yeah.
He also has the ability to stop time.
Oh yes.
And I do not object to this film
having a magical realist component.
I don't even particularly object to it
not being explained why he can do this,
because what explanation would be appropriate.
Would be necessary.
I mean, it's I would, I met the problem with the, but this is a very large, bizarre elements
to be added to the film with no apparent like, I mean, I wouldn't say no apparent, but like,
it seems like it should have more thematic heft or something.
If you're going to put this thing in there, I mean, I might be just too dumb to realize what's going on.
But I think you're right that it's it does not work on a plot level.
I mean, I would say that when you say magical realist,
the issue is that there is no realist aspect to this.
It's just all magic.
And Adam Driver's character is so clearly a stand in for the artist
and in this case, the filmmaker.
And I think his ability to stop time is supposed to be
the artist's ability to reshape the world around them,
even more explicitly than him just building buildings
and stuff like that.
But you're right, he doesn't do anything with it.
Like he never uses it for anything.
As a plot device, it is like an anti-checkoffs gun.
Like it never pays off in any meaningful way
of how the story goes.
And especially when you're talking about someone
who is struggling in a power play,
you think, why don't you use some of your time
stopping powers to like.
Yeah, stop time and pull the mayor's pants down
so he looks ridiculous when you start timing him.
If Megalopolis was released as a series of episodes,
the nerds in the Megalopolis subreddit would be like,
why isn't Caesar using his powers?
They'd be like, I know, in the last episode, he's going to use his powers to do X, X, and Y.
And then when the show doesn't do what they thought it was going to do,
they'd be like, the show sucks.
The show sucks.
The, I think also, to me, an element of this time stop power is like it plays into the fantasy
of a guy who is trying to achieve something amazing,
but he is beset by all this other stuff, all this background noise, so many things like distracting him from what he's trying to do and the fantasy
of being able to just stop everything and focus on the one thing he wants to work
on. Is that like, to me, especially for like a filmmaker like Coppola,
I'm sure that that's part of it for him.
Well, it reminds me of the, it reminds me of the,
the story I've heard about Stanley
Kubrick and Jerry Lewis talking that they were both editing movies at the same
facility and both took a break at the same time.
And Jerry Lewis was like, well, you can't polish a turd.
And Kubrick says you can if you freeze it.
And this idea that if you can just stop time, then you can you can do the work
that otherwise would be impossible.
You know, if you could just freeze something in place, you know.
Sorry, I got a leg cramp, so I'm dancing around my chair.
Okay, so that's Caesar Catalina.
We know who he is.
He's super cool.
Now, the mayor of New Rome is in a bit of a pickle.
That's Mayor Frank Cicero, played by Giancarlo Esposito, who plays it a little hammy.
I feel like Adam Driver is pretty straight in this one.
I mean, well.
I don't know about that.
I was taking, I mean, he's like, Driver is big,
like you can't not be in this movie.
I mean, like the one, I mean, there are some performances
that aren't big and they suffer for it.
I think that I admire.
And the best performances in the movie
are the biggest performances, I feel like.
Well, here's what I'd say. There are very hammy performances in the movie are the biggest performances, I feel like. Well, here's what I'd say.
There are very hammy performances in this movie
that are fun to watch because what else are you gonna do
in a movie called Megalopolis with all this stuff in it
than chew the scenery?
And then there's Adam Driver who magically seems to create
a grounded and consistent character
despite the movie around him being gibberish.
Like he's amazing.
And then there's, we'll get to her,
but the female lead is sort of lost in this movie
because she is giving a small performance
and the movie is not helping her out.
To Natalie Emmanuelle, who is the daughter.
Who I think is good in other things,
but is sort of not served by this film at all.
Yeah, did you see her in that John Woo killer remake
where she does the very realistic jump
and then latch her legs around a guy's neck and spin around shooting every other dude in the room.
It's amazing.
It's a solid move.
It's cool.
I mean, if you're going to do it all the time, that's why it's such a common move.
Yeah, it's a great move, but you can only do it once.
OK, driver is set up.
It feels like it's set up at first.
This is the movie I was expecting, at least was it is a battle between the mayor and the designer over the future of
this portion of the city. And they each have competing goals.
And we're going to see the pros and cons of each and it quickly
becomes even though Adam Driver is kind of a Robert most of
character, it really becomes no, he's a genius and everyone needs
to just like, SCF you and let him do whatever he wants to do.
Yeah, and and this kind of comes to a head in the first scene
where we're also introduced to the mayor's daughter,
Julia Cicero, who seems to be a vapid club girl,
but she...
But it turns out that she's much more than that.
If anything, because she is able to witness Caesar
when he stops time, it stops for her as well, and she can see what's going on.
She can witness the stopping of time,
and it doesn't affect her, which seems to be an indicator,
yeah, that she has a hidden artistic ability,
or at least intellectual skill, that Caesar has.
And then the last big faction, I guess, in this is Crassus,
who is the owner of the largest bank.
He's a very rich old man played by John Voight,
who, guys, I think he knew what he was doing here.
He brings a lot of juice.
Well, as we'll see, he does deliver the best line
in the entire movie later towards the end of the film.
Yeah, I mean, he's had a lot of practice,
like both playing and being ritualed as a whole.
And so.
And doddering.
Yeah, it's his thing.
Now there's, now we should mention also,
there's a lot of little side minor characters
that pop up around here.
They're all played by, for the most part,
but like Dustin Hoffman shows up,
James Reemar shows up, like D.B. Sweeney shows up.
It's all these well-known faces.
D.B. Sweeney?
From The Cut Again?
I know.
Jason Schwartzman has a very good scene later on where he plays drums.
Yes.
Talia Shire, family member of Francisco Coppola, shows up.
It feels like one of these movies that is overstuffed with people.
And you have to imagine there is hours and hours of footage.
We didn't even talk about Lawrence Fishburne.
Yeah, Lawrence Fishburne, who's the narrator slash chauffeur.
Yeah.
And we also haven't even touched on the other two important characters.
We have the son of Crassus, Claudio, played by Shia LaBeouf.
And, wow, Platinum, journalist extraordinaire, played by...
She's very clearly a take on Maria Bartiromo.
Maria Bartiromo, the money bunny,
because she calls herself the money honey in this, right?
Which is the other way around.
Maria Bartiromo, she's now, she's just a straightforward
Trump, Trump all the time person.
Her whole thing was she was the CNBC kind of like
lady reporter, and they used to call her,
whatever one, while Plattnum is in in this she's the other one of either the money
bunny or the money honey and I don't remember which one is
which.
Lister's right in.
Okay.
Or don't.
But these are, but these are, I mean, we'll get like much as,
is it Jared Leto and Haseguchi who, right, much as his
performance is at the level the movie wants to be at, I feel
like these two are at the level the movie wants to be at, which
is cartoonish, you know?
Yeah, I mean, it feels very much like Aubrey Plaza
is doing a performance of her character, April Ludgate,
doing a performance of this character almost.
Yeah.
So we're kind of introduced to this drama
and these different personalities at a press conference
that is held over a scale model of what the city is supposed to look like, I guess.
Where they're like walking around on like what, gantries and like...
Now, Roman, you know urban study stuff.
Is this usually how like a new city development is unveiled
by everyone walking on a catwalk over it and it's very dimly lit
and people are arguing with each other in the catwalk?
Yeah, it's similar to all the ones I've been to, for sure.
But is it the dramatic lighting, all this sort of thing?
It just, this is where the beginning of the nonsense,
especially the big talk with nothing inside of the big talk.
Yeah, well then, apparently Adam Driver had a speech
that he was supposed to deliver in this scene,
and Coppola, to loosen him up, said,
"'Why don't you just go out there
and do the to be or not to be, soliloquy from Hamlet?'
And he did it, and Coppola was like,
"'I like that more, I'll put that in the movie.'" So that's why Adam Driver just there and do the to be or not to be soliloquy from Hamlet. And he did it. And Coppola was like, I like that more. I'll put that in the movie. So
that's why Adam Driver goes out and does to be or not to be. And it's a, it's not a bad
performance of that soliloquy, but it's the whole, the whole time I was reaching to be
like, why is he doing this in this moment? Cause I wasn't yet far enough into the movie
to realize there's not really a logical reason for a lot of the things to happen in the movie.
So we get a little bit of a further backstory.
We get, it turns out that Caesar Catalina
has a tragic backstory.
His wife was potentially, what, like killed by him?
Is there, that's the belief is that he may or may not
have been involved in her death or a car accident
that she was injured.
She was found, she was found, drowned in a car
at the bottom of the lake, or bottom of the river,
in a shot that is an explicit call to the bottom of the lake or bottom of the river in a in a shot that is an
Explicit call to the night of the hunter to Shelly Winters in the in the drowned car and night of the hunter And so we already know that before he was mayor
Giancarlo Esposito was the DA and he brought Adam Driver up on charges and took him to court
Accusing him of that murder and he was acquitted of that murder. And so yeah, there's there's bad blood and he's a bad boy
It's bad blood over a bad boy.
Now, speaking of bad boys.
Adam Driver, ironically, they said that he drove her to death.
That is ironic.
That's ironic.
Thanks for explaining irony to me.
So he's a bad boy because he's also kind of secretly dating
while platinum and they have this scene where they are kind
of hooking up
in a very messy hotel room or apartment he kind of spurs her spurns her
affections there is the lovely line where she is down on her knees and says
Caesar your anal is hell luckily I'm oral as hell and I was like hooting and
hollering in the theater. That's the Academy Award winner for the screenplay for Patton, who wrote that line. Shot off your pistols into the air.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Should we set up here one thing
when they are in this press conference
talking about the different visions for the city.
I think the mayor wants to do this sort of garish,
Biff style casino in this space.
And then Adam Driver's like talking
and he boats Hamlet and stuff,
but there's no presentation of what his ideas are really,
or did I just miss them?
No, I think it's kind of taken for granted on his part
and made the movie's part that everyone already kind of
has a sense of Megalopolis, his dream city
that he wants to build.
But he does not present,
I think that was probably the speech he was gonna give
in the original screenplay.
Let's think, also, look,
casinos are basically never the answer,
but the way it's at least presented-
They're the answer to,
where can I get a cheap steak at three in the morning?
The way it is at least presented here is,
the mayor is like,
hey, you've got all these, you know, behind the sky ideas,
but like there are people who need things right now
and I'm going to give them to them.
And in the absence of Adam Driver's character
having any argument, I'm like, I don't know,
it sounds like he's making some sense.
Like, why am I supposed to sympathize immediately
with Adam Driver?
Because he can stop time? Great.
But he says something to the effect of like,
let's just give the people what they want.
We need to serve the people.
And this is the way we serve the people through this casino.
And then Adam Driver offers, right, no counter argument whatsoever.
So I was trying to get like, this is my,
this is the beginning of my frustration with this movie.
Up till now, you were totally on board. You were like, this is my, this is the beginning of my frustration with this movie is like, is like-
Up till now you were totally on board.
You're like, I love it.
I love it.
Yeah.
You showed up wearing a Caesar Catalina t-shirt.
Foam finger and everything.
But it's, if you're going to be broad stroke fables, then you have to present ideas.
You know what I mean?
Like if the characters are not gonna make sense
and they're gonna be completely arched
and not have natural dialogue,
if the sets are all fantastical and stuff,
that usually means that you're clearing the way
of all this nuance so you can tell,
like a war of ideas of good and evil or whatever.
And this is where I begin to like,
what is the premise of Megalopolis?
You know, like what is he trying,
what does this utopia mean other than the word utopia?
What is the casino?
Like, is it really about serving the people?
Is it about corruption?
Is it about both?
None of these things are clear here.
And I'm just like, I'm just at sea with this idea of like,
and so much of it is like,
is that the deflation of this moment of like,
oh, it isn't that Caesar is a Moses like figure.
It's, oh, he is just a genius.
Like he's just great.
That's the- Yeah, I mean,
that's the thing kind of Elliot pointed out.
Like it'd be one thing if the idea was that Caesar is this guy who he believes that people don't understand what they actually want or need.
Right.
And that he's at odds with the mayor and there's an actual question as to which one who's right.
But the movie is like, nope, Caesar's right.
You got to listen to the smart guy.
I'm interested in that.
I really think one of the way that it makes sense to me is just if I look at it as a metaphor for
Francis Ford Coppola the genius and the mayor is a studio executive and he's saying make me a superhero movie We got to serve the people and that's what they want. They want a flashy casino and
For and for instance Coppola's like no
I want to build them the movies of the future that will
Create new ways to think and feel and I have this new element Coppola
I mean Megalov like that's the only way.
And I don't know if it's that explicit in his head or if that was intentional, but that's
the way I can read it as a metaphor where it starts to make sense.
But that's the only thing that makes that's the only way it makes sense.
But because he also but he also seems to think that it makes sense on a political level of
like this is a story about politics and populism versus,
it's one of those things where it's like,
obviously populism is bad.
We need a genius who can cut through things.
And it's like, well, that's fascism.
Like that's like, like you're like,
the thing you present is like the mob gone unruly.
Your only solution is that we all just trust
Adam Driver's magic metal, you know.
But that's the thing of like,
as you're doing the synopsis,
that the main thing that is like to be conveyed
about this moment is that the ideas are almost there
as if there's some kind of thing to be said or some point,
but they don't connect.
And instead it just moves on, you know, like,
and it's very, very weird.
That's what I was like, I was like, what is it?
What does it mean to serve the people with a casino?
Who I just like these ideas, like none of them stick, none of them are consistent.
And, and, and it just keeps rolling on.
I think John Carlos Vizito or Mayor Cicero, my mistake, his plan actually, there is something
he's saying we need to build a casino because it'll like the people want it. At least that's a concrete thing
explanation. Like, I can at least understand that.
I mean, we learn more about what Magaluflus will be like later. You'll get
to it Stuart, the plant buildings and the glowing moving sidewalks.
The plant buildings, a home for everyone with apparently tons of space now.
I don't know. I'm like, did half the population die? Did everybody get nowhere?
You'll see, there's a disaster that opens up
quite a bit of extra space for building.
We're like 15 minutes into this, two and a half hours.
I'm sorry for moving us backward
when we should be moving forward.
So this scene happens, you realize,
has a relationship with Wild Platinum.
With Wild Platinum, exactly.
I kind of enjoy that name.
That was one where I was like, I'm into that.
I mean, everything about Aubrey Plaza's performance and character
is on the level of a political editorial cartoon,
which is kind of where this movie wants to exist, you know?
And she knows how to play these characters, you know?
Meanwhile, Julia Cicero bluffs her way into the office of Caesar Catalina.
And we have a little bit of a verbal sparring between the two of them.
She wants to get in on this Caesar Catalina department
of this design authority stuff.
And he is initially, go on.
Well, she like sent him like a letter to insult him, right?
She wants it back because she doesn't want
to embarrass her dad.
And she also like, but she's also like,
I think she's interested in him.
She saw him stop time for God sakes.
Andy looks like Adam Driver. Andy looks like Adam Driver.
Andy looks like Adam Driver, which is not to everyone's taste,
but you know, most people.
This is where he tells her to go back to the club,
which is a moment that, in context,
it does not seem as bonkers as it does when it's clipped out.
A fun reading is what it is.
It's a fun line reading.
And he's trying to make fun of the idea of the cool club.
This is also where he says,
like, why do you deserve to make fun of the idea of the cool club. He also, this is also where he says like,
like what, why do you deserve to be exposed
to the riches of my Emersonian mind or whatever,
which is also a very funny line.
Yeah.
It's great.
And then he like-
It's everyone on Twitter.
Yeah, it's great.
He then takes her to a not,
probably not perfectly to scale cardboard model
of the city and has her walk through it
with her eyes closed and she pictures the megalopolis
that could be, you know, with again,
like floating walkways and streets and everything's glowing
and it looks like it's made out of plants.
It's super bio-organic.
It looks like every CGI rendering proposal
of a skyscraper in New York,
when they're like,
here's what we're going to do with this space that opened up.
And it's always a CGI rendering where everything's super glossy
and there's trees all over and...
Yeah, it looks like the cover of a super melodic Tech Death album cover, you know.
Exactly, yeah.
And I also hate to slow us down, but in terms of the look of this film...
I hate to slow us down, but...
In terms of like the look of this film. I hate to slow us down, but in terms of.
I'd like to do the Bob and Ray
Slow Talkers of America sketch.
Great sketch.
The look of this movie is all over the place,
partly I assume because, you know,
some of it was filmed years ago
and then some of it was filmed more recently
and it was all sort of jammed together and you know
He it's what effects I mean, even though this is a hundred and twenty million dollars of his own money
It wasn't enough and like it's what he could afford in certain scenes like but I think that there's some scenes that are genuinely like
beautiful and visually striking and some of them look like
You know, maybe a C tier
CGI effects companies reel and some of it looks like they got it off of Storyblocks or something.
There's some beautiful stuff on there, a former...
Storyblocks has a lot of great footage, but it's not what you would expect from a major motion picture.
Yeah, it's odd to see what seems to be stock footage
just sort of interspersed in this thing.
This is definitely...
So they were making a documentary about them making this movie
at the same time they're making the movie,
and it hasn't come out yet.
And I'm so curious to watch it,
because I have to imagine there were huge swaths of the film
that were changed at the last minute
because of budget reasons and things like that.
So the mayor finds out that his daughter's been spending some
time with Caesar and he's not a big fan of this.
Right around now he goes he has a parade and everybody's like
mean to him and don't like him.
They're all booing him.
Yeah.
I think also this is where a random guy gets recruited off
the street to be one of Claudio's henchmen.
I think that's the same guy.
The tuba player in the marching band. He gets recruited to go off of Claudio's henchmen. I think that's the same guy. The tuba player in the marching band.
He gets recruited to go off of Claudio,
and I'm like, I guess this is going to be
an important character, but it's not really.
Like, they spend a surprising amount of time
with the marching band wondering where this guy went to,
considering we barely ever see any of them ever again.
Okay, fast forward a little bit.
It is nighttime.
Caesar jumps in his car and goes driving
through the rainy streets of New Rome.
He is pursued by Claudio and Julia in separate cars.
We have like a little rainy street chase, I guess.
And this is where we have one of the,
there are a couple moments in this movie
that I do think are brilliant and beautiful.
And this is where he's going driving through the city
and he's seeing the statues of the city,
these huge kind of Greco-Roman type statues
are literally sagging out of fatigue
and dropping the things they're holding
and leaning against buildings.
And it's like, I think it's such a,
it's a beautiful way of getting across the idea
of a society that is exhausted itself,
that is losing the energy that made it great once.
And I'm like, oh, this is the kind of beautiful,
straightforward metaphor that he's not achieving
through most of the movie.
In my opinion. Right.
Well, it's a sort of directly expressionist look
that I think part of the problem is
it doesn't settle on one thing.
If it was all sort of poetic in the same way,
it would feel better,
but there's a lot of disjointed different ways of doing it.
Yeah.
I had the same feeling when I saw this,
this scene was the most where I was like,
oh, this is what this kind of fantastical imagery is,
this is where it's achieving what I think
it's supposed to be achieving the whole time.
This is where it hit me.
And I was like, I can deal with this artifice.
I can deal with the fact that this all feels
like green screen, but not, you know,
like purposeful, you know, kind
of green screen. And it just felt that, that was my favorite visual moment in the whole
movie was the statues and the, and the sort of dilapidated parts of New Rome. That worked
on me totally.
And it's, it's a bit of a sledgehammer, but I feel like it is very clear what it's trying
to say. It's not as messy as some of the other stuff.
But that's where it delivers being a fable, is the thing.
That's like, I want it to, yeah.
I want it to be a fable.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
When you saw those statutes, you're like,
we have title finally.
So...
Robin, I have a movie for you called The Fableman's
that you might enjoy more.
Yeah, it's a real fable, yeah.
Fable oriented.
It's about a little mouse.
So... Oh, that's Fable Goes West, I apologize. It's an American Tale, Fable, yeah. Fable-oriented. It's about a little mouse. Oh, that's Fable Goes West.
I apologize.
That's an American Tale, Fable Goes West.
Caesar's car stops in front of a mysterious, glowing flower stall that appears in the middle
of the street.
Julia sees this and says, that doesn't make sense.
And I'm like, it doesn't make sense.
You're right.
And then he takes the flowers he buys
and goes up into a dilapidated apartment building.
She pursues him.
In his mind, he sees that he's walking into
like a well-appointed room with attendants
and his wife is in the bed.
But in reality, he's just like sitting on a bed, right?
Like there's no wife there at all.
He's like-
He's hallucinating that his wife is still alive
and is being cared for and he's visiting her.
And Julia seems to see both reality and the hallucination.
Like she will seize reality,
but seems to understand, oh, he thinks his wife is there.
And Claudio is also spying on this as well,
but he doesn't see the hallucination, I don't believe.
It's also, I never could quite figure out why,
I know why Claudio gets mad later.
I could never quite figure out why Claudio cares
about Caesar right now.
He has like a burn book of all the people he doesn't like
and Caesar Catalina's written down on that.
Maybe that's it, this character doesn't need a motivation.
I mean, and Shia LaBeouf,
I think he's harnessing his natural unlikeability
for this character in a really strong way.
No, that's true, you don't need a backstory.
You're like, oh, this guy's's just you know, he's just a jerk
He doesn't like this guy. Yeah, I just assumed that Caesar Catalina like I don't know
Accidentally threw some logs in the fire when they're sitting around the fire and it burned off shy LeBos eyebrows
So that's why he hates him because he has he has like painted on eyebrows or something
Yeah, just like Superman and Lex Luthor. Yeah
Okay, so Like painted on eyebrows or something, right? Yeah, just like Superman and Lex Luthor, yeah.
Okay, so shortly after this,
I guess it's like the next day or something,
Caesar takes Julia up in his private elevator
to the top of the design authority
where he has his, I don't know, thinking area,
which is like a clock on its side
and a bunch of ledges and girders
that looks kind of like the...
To me, it looked like a set for a play, right?
And where they can gaze down upon all of New Rome
and kind of see as everything moves.
Maybe it's sort of like they're hanging out
on top of a mobile.
Like you put over either a baby or you'd have an art gallery
on either side of the sort of spectrum of mobiles.
I think around now he kind of explains what he's doing
or what he's thinking, but I don't really remember
this scene outside of them just hanging out on clocks.
Yeah.
Meanwhile...
I think there's nothing, in my notes,
there's nothing particular, my notes, there's nothing particular.
It just says clocks.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, we get a wedding between Wild Platinum and Crassus the Banker Guy.
I don't remember his last name.
Is that his last name?
I think Crassus is his last name.
Yeah, that's John Voight.
Yeah, John Voight.
Okay.
So this is clearly Wild Platinum took it, this is a power play for her.
She wants access to his money.
He's Hamilton Crassus III.
Thank you, Hamilton Crassus III, thank you.
And so we have a big fancy wedding.
It has, it's a wedding that has everything.
It has gladiators, it has guys riding chariots around on the inside of a coliseum.
Caesar shows up and a pop star shows up wearing a dress made out of...
That was his wedding.
Yeah.
To me, honestly guys, I was just like, oh, they all went to the circus.
And I was like, fine with that as an explanation.
I'm just like, they're at the circus now.
I don't know if it's necessarily the wedding, but it's a celebration of their, of their
betrothal though, right?
Maybe it's the reception, who knows.
Yeah, but that's why they're doing it.
Yeah.
And there's a pop star wearing, I can't remember if this is the same pop star from later, Vesta
Sweetwater, who shows up wearing a dress made out of Megalon, which is...
This is Vesta Sweetwater.
This Megalon dress is perfect camouflage.
Does not matter for later.
There's no moment where you're like,
oh, you can use Megalon if you cover yourself like the predator can't see you or something.
That doesn't matter.
No, it's just a one-off idea that it's a dress made out of Megalon
where there's cameras in the back that project what's behind you on the front,
so you turn invisible.
And that's it.
It's just an effect.
There's a ton of Roman stuff.
We haven't really even talked about the outfits and stuff.
Like everybody has like vaguely futuristic Roman outfits.
You know it's futuristic because like men's suits
have slightly different collar cuts.
Yeah, like sometimes they don't have,
it's like a severe suit cut, but they also have little,
they have like little laurel wreaths behind their ear,
you know, leaves behind their ears.
So it's like...
Kind of epaulettes to make them,
their shoulders very broad, lots of capes and stuff like that.
It's the kind of stuff that has been done on stage
in productions of Julius Caesar since at least the 1930s.
Where it's like,
hmm, we'll pull out how it's like modern political times
by having everyone wear suits,
but they still have like Roman haircuts,
that kind of thing.
You know, Roman talked earlier about
when the movie started to sort of lose him,
and I want to present-
I think you meant when he lost himself in the film,
right, Roman?
He lost himself in the moment.
No, I want to talk about the inverse,
where the movie, which up until this point,
had only baffled and dismayed me, started to get me a little bit.
And that like during this whole circus sequence,
I'm like, oh, like it started to engage me
in spite of myself, partly because I was like,
oh, I don't need to care what any of it means.
Like at least the movie at this point
was throwing a bunch of stuff at me.
And I appreciated that.
Like this is one of the sequences maybe
before they started running out of money.
It felt very full of splendor and ideas
and none of it necessarily hung together
in any thematic way that made any sense to me.
But I'm like, oh, okay, movie.
It's kind of delivering the bread and circuses
to placate people in the audience.
Yeah, I'm one of the idiot rabble.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're like, finally, I can relate to someone in the movie,
the people screaming for blood in this dance.
It is thrown a lot.
But I think the point, which is easy to get into,
is the sneering at the wealthy
and you know, sneering at their excess and stuff like that.
And it just, it's totally, I mean, it works, that works.
And Caesar seems to be doing his best to play along,
but he is clearly kind of disgusted
by this whole situation.
He ends up getting very drunk
and getting himself into trouble.
Meanwhile, scheming little Claudio,
who is, I think he's in drag at this point,
he sneaks into like the control booth
and he frames Caesar and Vesta Sweetwater,
who is a Taylor Swift style pop star
and the idea is that she is supposed to be
a young virgin, right?
Yes, she's both made a big deal out of,
I'm going to keep myself a virgin
and she's presenting herself as being younger than she is.
Which we will learn later.
Yeah, this is like statutory rape it seems, but it's, yeah. Yeah, this is like statutory rape, it seems,
but it's not actually.
Yeah, but isn't the premise of all this,
like that these old men, the old rich oligarchy
is betting on her virginity, like betting,
is that happening?
I believe that's true, yes.
They're like betting that she's gonna keep her promise,
right, like they're not auctioning off her virginity, right?
I thought that's what that was happening there.
Like that, but you guys took notes, I didn't.
Somehow the economy of the city is balanced
on her promise of staying a virgin until marriage, yeah.
Yeah, I thought they were sort of like bidding
to keep her a virgin somehow,
but I don't know what the mechanics of that would be.
It's ancient Rome stuff though,
because it's like, right?
Like the Vestal Virgins, their virginity was one of the things underpinning the safety,
the spiritual safety of Rome.
That's part of the issue with trying to compare, do a metaphor where you're like, ancient Rome
is like nowadays, is that the basic foundational underpinnings of society are so different
compared to ancient Rome.
Like Rome, yeah, they had a Senate.
Yeah, that's true. But also like religion and politics were the same thing.
And like, it was just taken for granted
that if the city was having trouble,
you'd make some sacrifices to the gods
and hopefully that'll keep things right.
The way you thought like-
In a way, don't we do that these days, Alan.
You're right, Steve.
I'm the one who's being naive.
But I did interpret this as way more sinister
than maybe it was.
Yeah, my notes say fundraiser, question mark,
pledging for purity, question mark.
Yeah, I think they are,
I think it's like a marathon fundraiser,
where like you're pledging someone to run a marathon.
I think they're pledging for her to just stay a virgin.
And so when they see her on tape,
supposedly in bed with Caesar Catalina.
Yeah, they're like, I wasted all that money.
Yeah, and everybody, and they're like,
the underpinning of our city is all wrong.
Yeah.
Yeah, everyone is incensed by this.
Like the crowd is, is bang for blood.
This is after her big musical number though, right?
Yeah, after her big musical number.
I didn't talk about it,
but do you want to talk about it?
Did you have opinions?
She does this big musical number
where there's suddenly like six of her singing all at the same time.
And again, doesn't make sense.
Doesn't really work thematically. Never explained.
But it's a cool thing.
Not bad.
It's a cool looking scene.
And I have to say, actually, the Vesta stuff is her, the last we see of her character is one of my favorite moments in the movie also.
But we'll get to that. Yeah.
Please get to it because I don't have it written down in my notes.
That's where, okay, well, when it's, I don't remember what happens here, but like the scandal
comes out that this video has been shown by everybody to, you know, Shia LaBeouf arranged
for this video to be shown on the Jumbotron of her in bed with Adam Driver. And then suddenly,
like the screen fills with fire and there are headlines that are like, Vesta reimagines herself.
And suddenly she is singing like a bad girl song.
Now she's reimagining herself as like a sinful bad girl.
And she's a superstar again. And it's so, it feels so much like
Frances Ford Coppola is like, who are the scenes into?
Taylor Swift? What does she do? Okay, I'll do something.
This is my understanding of what that is. And it happens.
So it's like the movie suddenly turns into an
Advertisement for something else for some other movie. Yeah
I think that that's a little sequence that happens a little bit later and it's done like a totally like classic MTV news style
Like explosion bit and then like scenes of societal collapse. Okay
Adam Driver Caesar Catalina gets too drunk gets beaten up by some guys
He gets whisked away.
The cops arrest him for statutory rape because of the video.
But then Julia goes into the archives and finds out, actually,
Vesta Sweetwater is older than she's been telling everybody.
So she exonerates him.
Problem almost immediately solved.
But also, don't we find out that the video is fake later on?
The video is fake too.
They like double up the explanations of like,
why this is fine.
It feels like the movie is fainting towards fainting,
F-E-I-N-T, not fainting like, oh, stars and garters.
Oh, I keep thinking of-
Like pearls.
The vapors, yeah.
It's taking a faint towards,
this guy might be a genius, but he's not a good guy.
But instead the movie is very quickly be like, no, no, no,
he's a good guy pretending to be a bad guy.
And he tells Julia, you gotta pretend to be bad
or people lose interest in you or something like that.
And they're like, not only was she not a minor,
he also didn't have sex with her anyway.
So it's fine, he's double good.
He's nothing to it.
He's a sturdily insane.
So around now we have Caesar and Julia meeting on top of his girder watch ledge
and they have a conversation and with her help
he's able to stop time again.
He had kind of lost his powers for a little bit.
Like Spider-Man, sometimes he loses his powers
when he's in a bad mood or depressed.
Exactly, and then they have a kind of sloppy makeout session.
I thought that was pretty great.
And then we get, and they like decide to work together
and we get a montage of them like kind of falling in love
and doing some work at the design authority.
Which by the way has really boring design.
Like I really wanted those jackets to pop a little bit more.
I was really bummed about that
because I was like design authority,
all right, let's spend some time with the design authority.
Nothing, nothing.
Yeah, yeah.
Mugler would be upset.
Robert Moses would be upset.
He was all about, say what you will about him
in his early work at least, he's got a real design eye.
Yeah.
Claudio, meanwhile, one scheme foiled,
he's got more schemes to be had.
He starts trumping it up, he sees what's going on,
and he's like, starts getting the masses all angry,
they start backing him.
Later on there's a scene where he's giving a stump speech
and the stump is literally carved
into the shape of a swastika, is that right?
It's pretty messed up.
Okay.
I think that movie's pretty subtle,
I don't know if something like that would happen
in this movie.
We find out that Julia is pregnant.
Uh-oh!
There's a baby on the way.
Master builders build a baby.
Mayor Cicero doesn't like this idea.
He doesn't like the idea that they're going to have a kid.
So he basically tries to buy off Caesar.
He's like, hey, you can do whatever you want,
just don't, like, leave my daughter out of this.
Get out of this.
Stuart, you're doing a great job of condensing this movie.
Did you skip over the part where the mayor has a dream
where a cloud with a hand grabs the moon
and his wife accurately says that that's an omen?
Yeah, okay.
Probably.
I just want to make sure that we get the full... I'm full. I don't want people to listen to this and be like, this movie doesn't sound that crazy.
And it's like, oh yeah, what about the scene where the mayor has his dream about a cloud
grabbing the moon?
Yeah, it doesn't really figure into much, but it looks cool.
I don't know when it happens in the movie, so I just want to say the visual that has
stuck with me, there's like, they're under the water
and there's some like people who are rocks.
They're like painted as rocks and then they sort of move
and you see that they're people
and it is like just like half a second.
But I was like, that's a really gorgeous image
right in the middle of this thing
that I'm not sure what it's saying.
Yeah, and there's like tons of stuff in here.
Like there's moments where Caesar is like,
has like a floating mirror that shows his memories
made out of Megalon.
Yes.
And then-
Megalon mostly, Megalon is like Herbie the robot
from the Fantastic Four cartoon,
or like who's the little alien
that hung out with the Flintstones?
What was that guy's name?
The Great Gazoo.
The Great Gazoo.
The Megalon is just kind of a lump that kind of floats
in the air around Caesar's apartment
and does stuff sometimes, but he'll just be working
and the Megalon will kind of float too close to him
and have to push it out of the way
because it's getting too close to his face.
And it's like, it's such a strange, like goofy thing
to have, oh yeah, this is the miracle medal of the future.
Anyway, I got a lump of it
and it just floats around my apartment.
It's kind of irritating.
And they have like a family dinner at one point
where they invite the mayor and his wife
and they're like playing cards
in this like weird magical Megalon house, right?
Yeah.
And they're discussing string theory and shit.
It's like a Megalopolis exhibit.
It's like an exhibit of what Megalops would be like
or something like that.
Yeah, does that come after the destruction of the city?
That's before the destruction of the city,
but after we learn that a Soviet satellite
is falling to earth and will crash into the city.
Why, I forgot about that satellite.
There's a Soviet satellite that, yeah,
they're like, anyway, its orbit has decayed,
it's going to hit the city, and they're like,
whoa, and then they don't do anything about it for a while
Nothing to realize that taking these notes in the dark. It was a lot easier to take notes on Madame Webb
a more straightforward film that you know follows a screenplay formula that has been entrenched in Hollywood that
So yeah by this point, I think we've also, Adam Driver has also kind of shown us
some of the visual visions of what Megalopso looks like
and the buildings all look like plants
and the ideas like the buildings grow as people need them.
Like there's homes for everybody
because the buildings can grow and change
with the needs of the people, which is a beautiful idea.
Roman, how close are we to that?
Yeah, I mean...
Has anyone tried that yet?
Growing buildings?
I mean, in a way, like,
Hunter Vassar was like really into,
like, mold and letting things grow
because it was like true organic space
and that the straight line is the godless line
and you're going to want like...
Oh, Jeff VanderMeer.
You're going to want...
Of course, he died from the mold in his lungs,
I assume.
Totally.
There have been big lofty ideals about a kind of organic architecture, like in a literal
way, to make it.
And then there's the term organic architecture, like Frank Lloyd Wright style, that just means
it's reactive and changes to people's needs. So that's all kind of that those ideas are out there that that is the closest thing this
sort of dunderheaded movie gets to an idea.
Like that and, and it's the first time you sort of get to this.
Yeah, like what does this utopia mean that it's that it's like organic and reactive and
serves people is actually that that's like organic and reactive and serves people
is actually that, that's an actual idea.
Everything else has just been like glowing walkways
and nonsense.
Like where I'm like, what is this for?
Like, what do you, you have to have like,
utopias like have to have a concept or something.
And this one truly does it.
Like what is the you part of the topia?
Like what does it do?
Yeah.
It really is, It's really weird.
But that's one idea.
Like that'd be great.
Like having a magical substance that requires
like no thought or care or design or whatever,
like politics and it just doesn't stay.
Creates no waste, requires no energy to,
it just does it all.
And this is like a huge problem.
Like that you're gonna use some technology
that's going to save us,
rather than people like coming together
and actually coming with solutions
and working stuff out is like,
it's just a nonsense idea that you're exploring
for a couple of hours.
You say that until Megalon works its magic, yeah.
Speaking of Megalon working its magic,
at this point, Caesar Catalina,
probably right on the verge of explaining
everything about his utopia,
meets with a young 12-year-old fan
who actually turns out to be a hired assassin
and shoots Caesar in the face.
Yeah.
Okay, so this is after,
this is then after the city is destroyed
by a satellite falling to earth, right?
Because like...
Yeah, maybe.
Like this is a... Yeah, this is an amazingly large thing to happen
and then not really be addressed that much.
Like we get some like scenes of catastrophe,
like shadows being cast on the wall.
The reason I bring it up is just because that card game,
I was wondering about,
one of the things that strikes me about this movie is,
as we said, this is a movie that Coppola has been writing
for decades and decades.
I can only assume that the screenplay grew and grew and grew
and at certain points it feels like they just shot
every other 20 pages of it.
Because people's relationships to each other
will change wildly between scenes without explanation.
Like Juan Carlos Esposito was just saying,
like trying to pay off Adam Driver
to get away from his daughter.
And then in the next scene, they're all sort of like,
they don't love each other,
but they're having a genial card game together.
I'm like, okay, well what happened here?
And the only thing I can think of is like, oh, the city was destroyed, so they all game together. I'm like, okay, well what happened here? And the only thing I can think of is like,
oh, the city was destroyed, so they all came together.
But it's not said or anything.
I don't know.
I'm looking at my, because I wasn't sure
if I was going to have to do the summary today or not.
So I took some notes also.
Please, please, yeah.
There's also, but you're right Dan,
because like Dustin Hoffman's character,
who's an assistant to the mayor, he dies off camera.
We hear about it.
Oh yeah, he's dead now.
We get one scene of like a thing toppling
and falling on him
and I'm like, that had to have been a whole sequence.
And Shia LaBeouf runs for his position of alderman
and his guy, and then it's after that that the mayor goes to Caesar and says,
if you leave my daughter, I'll give you the evidence that I lied when I was prosecuting you
and you'll be able to destroy me and I'll put my support behind your projects and
At the same time Wow platinum approaches Kelly and it's like hey look
Why don't you come back and be with me again and you can have all of Crassus's money?
Everyone wants to be in the Caesar Catalina business. Yeah, no, no, no, and that's when real Kelly caper
Yeah, and she sees day seems to hypnotize Crassus into giving her control over the bank.
And then Caesar is shot in the head by this child who...
He should have been suspicious when a kid asked him to sign his book for him.
Like, there's no way this kid is reading Caesar Catalina's book.
I don't know, man. Everybody loves Caesar Catalina. I think that's pretty clear.
But then with Stuart, how do they heal him?
So he has this moment, at this point, I don't know about you guys, I'm like, wow, they killed him, that's crazy.
And he has this weird death dream,
but then they end up healing him
by fusing his head with some Megalon.
They just stick Megalon on his head,
on the open skull that's there,
and this truly is an amazing building material.
So we, at this point, Caesar then goes.
Oh, but then having the Megalon in his face
gives him lots of new powers and things like that?
Like the multiple man?
Yeah, he shows up at Hamilton Crassus' apartment.
Claudio tries to harass him.
Wow Platinum tries to make a move on him.
But he reveals his megalon, half human, half megalon face,
and it causes multiple images,
and everybody is wowed by the majesty of his face.
Especially Wow herself.
Exactly.
So he's going there because she's frozen all of his bank accounts,
using her power at the bank, in order to force him to something.
Force his hand, yep.
And then, yeah, she off's herself again, and, but,
Krauss kind of interrupts it, but now, who does Wow set her sights on?
If she can't control Caesar Catalina?
Of course, she's gonna she's gonna pick I guess the next best thing and that's Claudio Crassus. That's right
And so she we have a little sex scene. You're probably into this right Dan
It was like a like a like a Game of Thrones style sex position scene
It was kind of like a Game of Thrones style sex scene where it's all about power and you feel like
Is this is this what they think sex is like?
Or she's like, stick your face in my butt.
Okay, now go over there, lie down there.
I mean, it can be like that.
Yeah, yeah, you're doing it right.
It can be like that, that's true.
By the way, I just really love being on this Zoom call
and watching Roman's face as he relives the plot.
Like he's like, oh yeah, that did, that is a thing.
Like what?
I have been going through that where I was just like,
the satellite, yeah, oh my God.
Yeah, I'd forgotten about the satellite.
That really is, oh my God, this is a bunch of nonsense.
Like I had streamlined it into like a much tighter movie
in my memory than all this.
And you missed all the good parts,
you forgot all the good parts.
Long winding road. Here's my note for that satellite, I wrote, than all this. You missed all the good parts. You forgot all the good parts.
You have a long winding road.
Here's my note for that.
I wrote, the mayor learns the Soviet satellite
may crash into the city dash.
And then it does question mark.
So it did happen.
And I think the upshot of that is the idea
that it now has opened up even more land for building on.
They're in real life.
The real Ramamos had to evict people.
He didn't have Soviet satellites doing the job for them.
This is just a stew of really, truly problematic
and nasty, great man, like tropes,
that like he's canceled for like 20 seconds,
but he's such a genius.
Like, obviously all that stuff that they say about him
is fake, you know, and should be forgiven in the first place
because he's so great, or is all made up,
and a bunch of these me Too made up nonsenses
is coming after him and trying to take him down.
All the people are conspiring in these horrible ways.
And there's no notion that Adam Driver is just wrong.
You know what I mean?
And also the idea of how necessary destruction is
to build something. And then there's this God particle that fixes everything so that no one has to have like
actually hard thought and compromise.
And it's just, it's just, it's just, it's just bad stuff.
I mean, this is real, like, like 13, 14 year old, like I can't believe an old man wrote
this.
You know what I mean? Like this is like, this is like this is what it feels like something made by somebody very young
or very old I feel like I believe in either a very young man or a very old
man yeah I guess very stoned man which apparently was a Gary old man Gary old
man it uh it feels a lot like Gary old man and a Gary old man and a Gary old
man and very old bananas And it feels a lot like somebody like... Gary Old Banana, Gary Old Banana, Gary Old Banana.
Gary Old Bananas?
It feels like somebody was like...
I know what you're singing.
Somebody was like, I want to, like Coppola's like,
I want to make a movie about city planning.
And then he got high and read like one Yoderowski Metabaron's book.
And he's like, I'm going to do it like this.
Yeah, it kind of feels like, yeah, he's like,
should I read The Power Broker or the Ink Call?
I'll read them both, I'll just alternate pages.
Exactly.
Okay, so.
So wait, I wanted to ask you guys, so this next part,
I wanted, so Stuart, summarize it,
and then I've got a question for everybody, okay?
Because I just want to let you know,
I have a question about.
Well, I was just talking about Wild Platinum and Claudio
scheming to take over the bank.
They do it over sex, and then Crassus collapses.
A sex-deeding. Yeah. I'd like two it over sex, and then Crassus collapses. Yeah.
I'd like two eggs over sex, please.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
My Google calendar says sex meeting at 10 o'clock.
Okay.
So, yeah, so then Crassus collapses.
He seems to have what, like a stroke or?
He has a heart attack or a stroke, yeah.
Yeah, and he collapses, leaving Wow and Claudio in charge.
Now, then it seems like spring comes,
you see flowers blooming,
and Catalina and Julia get married in their car.
Laurence Fishburne sits in the driver's seat
and they sit in the back, not Adam's driver's seat,
but the driver's seat of the car.
Thank you, yeah.
And marries them.
And then there is a montage of December holidays
in this kind of Abel Gans's Napoleon triple screen thing
and suddenly it's winter again.
And I was like, did I hallucinate that it was spring
and now it's winter again?
I don't know what, and it can't be the next year
because the baby is the same age as when they got married.
But let's explain, did you guys have any sense of why
there's suddenly a montage of winter holidays? I would have to remember.
I also have to ask, Elliot, my notes, I just wrote down Elvis.
What does that mean?
Yes.
So an Elvis impersonator is out on the street singing America the Beautiful.
I think as part of Claudio's like pandering to the masses, I'm not sure.
Maybe it's a busker and it's a statement about the plastic artificiality
of American value ethics.
Yeah, that happens.
I'm not quite sure.
I love this new bit Stuart deciphered his notes by the way.
Jesus Christ, what did I write?
Yeah, I don't know what's going on with that.
I mean, I did write winter holiday montage in my notes.
Yeah, that happens.
So around now-
And it goes on for a while. It goes on for a while that we're watching people opening presents, people my notes. Yeah, that happens. So around now... And it goes on for a while.
It goes on for a while, that we're watching people opening presents, people spinning dreidels,
people celebrating Ramadan.
Yeah, everybody's representing, I love it.
Well, everybody, I mean, three religions.
Now, the city is inflamed with riots.
The masses are rioting against the mayor, inflamed by Claudio, of course. The mayor's family has to escape through a secret train car tunnel.
Yep, they go through the antique subway car tunnels that have been closed off
for three years in the city.
You know, there's that I looked like I think it was the subway station
that is beneath City Hall that has been closed ever since September 11th.
I mean, it's not been in use for a long time, but it was closed to tours and things
after September 11th. I think that it looked like that place.
I wonder if they shot it there. It's possible.
This is around when Wow Platinum and Claudio are celebrating their good fortune.
They have successfully taken out their rivals.
Nothing bad could ever happen to them.
And they wander into the bedroom of Hamilton Crassus III.
You know the old saying, Pride goeth before more success.
The old aphorism, yeah.
So they go into Hamilton Crassus' bedroom
and something, it seems like he's pitching a little tent.
I want to get Roman's take on this.
By far the best, I saw this movie in a theater,
it was just me and four other people,
not strangers, not people I knew.
They were watching the movie stone-faced,
very serious, and when this line came out, I laughed so loud,
and nobody else in the audience reacted, and I did not regret it at all.
And so, does anyone want to say what...
Well, Elliot had been like,
John Voight has the best line of the movie,
and the whole time, like, did I miss it? Was it one of those?
Like, was it just a line that is silly
because Elliot's smarter than me?
Well, I haven't told us all about that,
but let's get Roman's...
Well, I have to be refreshed to the exact line.
I remember the moment.
I'm not quoting it direct.
I mean, I'm trying to quote it.
I can quote it direct.
Oh, yes.
So this you wrote down in your notes.
So turning to his son and wife,
he says, what do you think of this boner I got?
But then he reveals what the boner is.
It's a crossbow.
It's so funny, he whips the blanket over
and he's got a crossbow and it's like,
it's so, this is, if the whole movie had been at this level,
I would have been like, yes, a thousand percent, you know.
But the last thing I expected was him to say,
hey, what do you think of this boner I got?
Seemingly, totally sincere.
You don't know it's a trap at that moment.
And I was like, this movie, I can't guess.
And they're so shocked, he shoots wow and kills her.
And then he shoots Claudio and hits him in the ass.
And Claudio manages to escape,
only to eventually be beaten up by his own mob.
We'll get back to, of course, the most important thing, Roman's reaction again in a moment.
To John Voight's boner, yeah. Or alleged boner.
The interesting thing to me is this is a world where guns exist,
because we saw Adam Driver get shot in the head.
So he made a real choice, I'm going to kill these people with a crossbow so I can do this boner bit.
You know?
You think a gun wouldn't have been able to make enough
of a tent in the seats?
I mean, he's a prideful man.
No, that's true.
So I think there is a, my guess is.
The theatricality of it though is.
I think it's the theatricality.
I think my guess is he needed a way for Claudio
to survive and escape.
And an arrow to the butt is a classic slapstick way to get somebody to leave a room.
But also, as we're recording this before our Caddyshack 2
flop TV episode, a movie which also includes someone getting hit in the butt with an arrow.
But...
Somebody find out on Saturday.
I mean, find out on Saturday before this episode comes out.
But there's also a, I assume,
I wonder if there's something he's playing off of,
some either ancient thing or some story he knows
that involves an arrow that he's referencing,
since there's so many references in this movie
to other things that are floating around
in Francis Ford Coppola's head.
Yeah, that's the problem with this movie for me.
Well, one of the many problems,
but I'm apparently an atypical man
in that I think of the Roman Empire almost never,
so I don't have the background in history
that I would need to understand all of the...
What about their turtle formation,
where they lock all their shields together,
you don't ever think about that?
I'm thinking about it now.
They look like a turtle, but with spears. Dan, how often do you think about the Civil War?
Because that's the other thing I feel like American men think about a lot.
Rarely.
I think about...
Do you think about ghoulies going to college?
Is that a thing you think about?
Oh, ghoulies go to college. So that's your Roman Empire.
Movies about small monsters.
Ghoulies and gremlins and munchies.
Yeah, Frankie Freeko, available on VOD right now.
Some stealth marketing for Frankie Freeko right there.
Metering the voices of the floppy.
Yeah, I mean, it's pretty open.
To answer your question, Elliot,
when this happened in the movie theater,
it was when Audrey Plaza got shot, actually,
where I was like, I was like,
oh, I was like, all right, you know, like something's happening.
Like I was kind of delighted, but it was like, it was the real classic, just this was so
different and shocking.
I mean, the, you know, when Caesar got shot in the face, that was a little shocking because
it had a real pop sound, like, like a Godfather movie pop, you know, like a, like a real,
like, I was like, I was like, oh, I remember that guy.
I like that guy's movies, you know, like a real, like I was like, oh, I remember that guy. I like that guy's movies, you know?
Yeah, I mean, the guy who directed
maybe the greatest person being shot in the head scene
in any movie ever made, you know, that whole sequence.
Totally, but the, but-
And then the second greatest guy being shot in the head
moment when Mo Green gets killed.
The best.
At the end of the same movie.
He's really good at shooting people in faces.
And-
I mean, he was in 1972.
It's kind of wasted in this movie to tell you the truth.
But that was a moment of delight
just because of the shocking violence.
Like I had no idea that that was what was about to happen.
So it was kind of like, all right, this thing's a lot.
But him talking about his boner just left you cold.
Well, no, I mean, I think the boner part was like,
it really happens kind of all at once.
There's not a lot of time in between,
so I didn't have processing time.
Yeah, I was taking a big slurp of my soda
and just spit it all over.
Speaking of fearing missing this,
I knew that there was this line,
all I'd heard about was this line
about how John Foy had this great line,
and the movie is very long.
Well, it's not that long, but it feels long.
It's like about two hours, little less very long. Yeah. And I- Well, it's not that long, but it feels long. It is, it's like about two hours,
little less than 220, you know.
Yeah, okay.
It's longer than, to my mind,
the ideal length of a movie, which is less than two hours.
I mean, it's longer than train
and comes into a station.
It's longer than the first movies.
It's longer, the important thing is,
it's longer than my bladder can stand.
So all through this movie, I was like,
I gotta wait out for this John Voight line.
And then I finally, I'm in physical pain.
I have to leave the theater.
Were you pinching it with your fingers?
It's not, no.
You were literally pinching your urethra shut
with your fingers?
Yeah, I was pinching my urethra shut.
Like you're trying to control a fire hose?
I had to pee so badly.
I was hurting.
Roman is really rethinking dropping this into the 99 BIP.
I thought to myself, surely, surely,
it will not happen at this exact moment.
If I run to the restroom, I will not miss this iconic line,
and of course it is exactly when this happens.
Oh no.
And then you came back and the audience
was rolling on the floor like.
Well, I mean, fortunately. They were cheering, firing guns into the air, singing all lads I, yeah, all this happens. Oh no. And then- And you came back and the audience was rolling on the floor like- Well, I mean, fortunately-
They were cheering, firing guns into the air,
singing all that time, yeah.
So I looked up the line and fortunately,
someone had put most of the scene on TikTok,
not the boner line.
Like, I saw the rest of the scene that I had missed.
Leaving a lot of gold on the table.
Well then in the description it was like,
like dude, right before before this the guy said this
line about his boner.
Because apparently like they whipped out their phone they're like oh man I missed the key
point but something else crazy has got to happen with this setup.
You know.
Because the other thing is it's not like it's an it's not a funny line in and of itself.
What is funny is that it is appearing in this otherwise serious minded allegorical movie
said by John Voight in a scene,
near what you have to assume is the climax of the film.
There's something about how it is the least eloquent thing
I think a character has said in any movie I've seen in years.
Yeah.
Yeah, what a performance.
Okay, so as we said, Crassus gets his revenge.
The riots are running wild around New Rome.
Caesar appears as like a hologram or something,
and he gives a speech talking about like time
and things like that, and calms everybody down,
and like shows visions of his utopia.
Is that correct? Is that what happened?
Yes, this scene, so this is the classic,
the man of genius comes out and he gives a speech
that enthralls the crowd and calms their passions
and wins them to side.
And the speech he gives is so, it's just such vaporware.
It's such empty conceptual nonsense.
And it does not speak to any of the actual needs
that these people have shown up to this point
and why they're reacting.
It's like, say what you will about Donald Trump,
the terrible, terrible person, just an evil bad man.
But when he speaks, he is directly reacting
to the needs he feels in the audience members
that he is talking to,
the ones he wants to appeal to.
Whereas Adam Driver, when he's giving the speech,
I'm like, I don't even know.
I don't know who you're winning over with what with this.
And so to see the audience kind of,
the crowd be like, you're right, you're right.
What a true leader.
Yay, platitudes, yeah.
As an audience member in the theater,
I was like, I don't understand what he's saying.
This doesn't mean anything to me.
And this is another part where I'm just like, so I'm so out with this movie where it's like,
where it's like, it truly tries to have it both ways.
Like it, it has great contempt for almost all the rich people, which is fine.
Like you can hate all the rich people all you want.
The job creators from it?
Crassus totally sucks and all the Crassus family sucks.
Obviously it has this exception for Caesar
because it was sort of genius.
And what it rests on is this idea
that you have to serve the people,
give the people what they need,
but it has complete contempt for the people.
They're just this dumb mass of people that follow Claudio
or they're this dumb mass of people that follow Claudio or they're this dumb mass of people
that are just like wooed by nonsense language.
I mean, there's no actual common people represented
at all in the movie.
Yeah, there's no, the only characters we see
who come close to being actual on the ground people
are that one guy who plays the tuba in the marching band
in that one scene.
And the kid who shoots Caesar in the face, I guess.
But you're right, there's no ordinary citizen point of view
ever presented in this.
A movie where you have to assume hundreds,
if not thousands of people are killed
by a falling satellite that devastates the city.
And that is, and that's like,
I just watched Life Force recently.
And that's a movie about a nude space vampire
that sucks the life out of people.
And that showed more feeling
for the ordinary everyday English person
than this movie shows for the people of New Rome.
It's ostensible ideas are about like serving people
in the public and how to make a society.
And society is completely unrepresented
in any realistic or meaningful way.
They're all just, they're all really just pawns
who are like dumbasses who follow Claudio
or sort of dumbasses that are wooed by nonsense language.
And it's just like, it's weird.
Like I totally get that.
You can have Shakespeare plays that are all about
kings and shit.
You know, that's fine.
Like you don't need, the commoner has to be represented
in every comedy.
I'm trying to warm up the tragedies and there is kings and shit. I'm so desperately trying to think of what You know, that's fine. Like, you don't need, the commoner has to be represented in every, every media.
The tragedies and there is kings and shit.
I'm so desperately trying to think of what Shakespeare title I can turn into a pun about
another word for shit.
But it's just, it's...
B. Amlet?
No, that doesn't work.
What?
I said King Smear.
King Smear, that works pretty well.
Yeah, yeah.
Toilets and Cressida?
Does that work?
No. Yeah. Why did we go Toilets and Cressida? Is that right?
Why did we go down this road of all the roads?
Okay, speaking of roads, so Caesar promises these magical floating glowing robes that
are all like the Rainbow Road in Super Mario.
Claudio's mob turns on him.
Crassus is overcome by the glory of Caesar's vision, so he leaves all of his riches to
Caesar Catalina. So that's going to allow him to build this utopia. Mayor Cicero and his family
join Caesar on this voyage. They stand upon this glowing bridge. People are all very excited. They're
celebrating. And he manages to stop time for everyone except for little baby Caesar and
Julian Caesar's baby.
And let's say this is a very strange looking shot too. This is a shot from below. They're
all like standing on glass or something like shooting through it. And there's like green
screen behind them.
This is also, this is such an upsetting moment.
I think it's supposed to be a moment of like,
hope for the future, like this ability to exist
outside of time and be a creative genius
is now in their child as well.
But it's like, time has stopped, except for this baby.
Who's going to feed this baby?
Like who's going to unstop time?
Not since under the skin have I been more worried
about an onscreen child who's being abandoned in front of me.
But the baby is the one stopping time, right?
Maybe.
It must be because the others are frozen.
Because she's the one's moving and everyone.
But I thought she, but I thought,
doesn't Julius hate to tell Caesar to stop time?
Maybe I'm, maybe I'm misremembering it.
I don't know.
But then they're frozen.
Like, I mean, I think she does, but it doesn't really make sense.
Well the baby doesn't know what she's doing.
It's very upsetting to me.
It's a very upsetting movie.
The feeling I get is that they're leaving the future for the next generation.
For the sequel, Megalopolis 2, Babyopolis.
My notes then say pledge allegiance.
Did something happen after this?
Was there like a speech or something?
There's a title card, and I think it's the narration read by children.
Yes. Oh yeah.
And it's like, we pledge allegiance
like to the human race or something like that.
I pulled this up in front of me
because I wanted to make sure we had it.
Because it meant so much.
You printed it out and laminated it.
You put it up on the wall.
I pledge allegiance to our human family
and to all the species that we protect.
One earth, indivisible, with long life, education,
and justice for all, is what the kids say.
So stick that on a placard in front of your house
for the next election, the values in this house, yeah.
Look, the problem with that
is that it comes to the end of Megalopolis.
I do like the idea of a pledge that is not a nationalistic
sort of just like pledge to us.
We can all stand behind the values of the human race
and everybody getting justice and education.
It doesn't fit with this movie.
No, no, the movie doesn't really.
It's a real Robert Moses viewpoint movie where it's like the
people don't know what they want. The people are sheep. They have to be shown by a genius
what is best for them. And someone needs to make the decision. It is a movie that I think
is the person making it thinks they're making a pro democracy, pro equality justice movie,
but they are making a essentially in many ways aist movie about, because there is one man who understands
and he needs to take control
and you should not question him
and no matter what he does.
And I'm just, and maybe I'm just mad
because I realized I should have said,
Toilets Andronicus,
because Toilets And Crested is a poem, right?
Like it's not a play.
No, Toilets And Crested is a play.
Is it a play?
What am I thinking?
What's his epic poem then?
I don't know.
I am less familiar with this poetry.
Shakespeare, if you're listening,
write in and tell us which play you want to have
a toilet in.
We had two English majors on this podcast.
Yeah, I mean, we're getting into the final judgment
sort of area, but like that's,
there's much that is striking about this movie.
There are parts of it that sort of took me sort of in spite of myself.
But you're right.
Guys, Toilets and Cressida, I was thinking of the poem by Chaucer and then Shakespeare
both play in it.
That's right.
Yeah, yeah.
So Toilets and Cressida were...
Okay, let me just amend the scoreboard.
Okay, get it out.
On further review, the call against Toilts and Cressida has been overturned.
You've crystallized something for me, Elliot. The only thing that makes sense to me
about this movie as a statement,
the only way I can read this is Francis Ford Coppola
being like, geniuses are good and above everyone
and they shouldn't be questioned and maybe I'm one
Because
Maybe from the record when he's talking. Yeah, politically it's all over the place doesn't make any sense. It's not staking out any particular
Understandable philosophy, it's just a bunch of stuff that happened
So instead of a fable it should say a bunch of Megalopolis a bunch of stuff that happened. So instead of a fable, it should say a bunch of stuff.
Megalopolis, a bunch of stuff that happened.
Which is literally like the fifth chapter in every Dogman book.
It's called Chapter 5, A Bunch of Stuff That Happened.
Or A Bunch of Stuff That Happened Next.
So maybe Fransfra Coppola should have made that Dogman movie.
Stuart, what do you think?
Dogman, yeah, I think he should have made that movie.
Is that where...
Are those the guy, the player, character race you can play in rifts
that have the body of a human but like the head and some of the traits of a dog?
Is that Dogman?
I mean, that's kind of like a sinusophilic or canosophilic.
That's the kind of thing you see sometimes in Old Tales of the Saints.
Some of them have dog heads.
But no, that's not what Dogman is about.
He's a police officer with a dog's head.
Oh, that's too bad.
And it's his best selling book of,
a series of books for children.
We should get into our final judgments,
but before we do, I just wanna give.
Oh, I thought we had started already.
I wanna give Stuart some plot-its
for how he handled that.
That's cool, anyone else wanna give me plot-its?
Earlier.
Yeah, I'll give you all the plot-its.
No, I just, you know, I was keeping an eye on time
and early on I'm like, oh man, we're never, this is gonna be a four-hour episode but Stuart you you got us through
The trick is forgetting things like satellites falling on yeah
But of course this is where we give our final judgments whether we thought that
Michaelopoulos was a good bad movie, a bad bad movie, or a movie
we kind of liked.
Is it a movie where you get some joy out of its badness?
No joy to be found in Mudville?
Or did we actually like it a bit?
I am going to say good bad in the sense that you so rarely get something this personal and big.
Like I kind of, in a weird way,
didn't know whether we should do this at first,
like until, you know, like we got so many people,
you gotta do Megalopolis,
I wanna hear what you say about Megalopolis.
But part of me was like,
well, I don't wanna like take someone down for like,
a passion. I don't wanna give the masses
what they want, I'm a genius,
I know better than they do. Well, I feel bad about like taking like, for like a passion. You wanna give the masses what they want? I'm a genius, I know better than they do.
Well, I feel bad about like taking like
a passion project down.
Like even if it's misbegotten,
like I do appreciate the swing.
I don't think that this movie is successful
and there's large chunks of it that are boring but I say good bad in
the sense that like I would not discourage anyone with any curiosity
about curiosity about this movie from seeing this movie because it is quite an
experience you know if you're interested if you're willing to commit the time
yeah sure watch it because there's gonna be some stuff in it that's gonna have
you grasping your head and shaking your fist to the heavens
So that's what I say sure. What do you think?
Yeah, I mean I feel I have less of a issue with like
targeting passion projects because I feel like passion projects often suffer from a certain amount of like
great man syndrome and delusion of genius
But I don't know, I feel like this movie
would fall somewhere in the like between a good bad movie
and almost like there's parts of it
that are a movie I kind of like.
I mean, it's, I feel like time is going to be kinder
to this than at least current critics are.
I feel like it reminds me in a lot of ways
of either a Neil Breen movie or if
Neil Breen had directed the Star Wars prequels because it feels a lot like
those movies like they're they're like it at least it doesn't feel like mass
produced garbage but it is still kind of like garbage so I guess that's not a
direct answer but like I'm glad I'm glad this movie exists, and I feel
like if you're interested in it, you should check it out.
It's a mess.
I feel similar to Stuart.
I think it's good bad with it.
There's some things about it that I like that are enough to make it a movie I am glad to
have seen, you know, even if I'm never going to watch it again, probably.
And I feel I think you're right that with your kids, well, eventually, eventually, Dad,
can we watch Megalopolis?
You're not ready yet.
You wouldn't understand.
Meanwhile, I'm trying to get them to watch Metropolis, another kind of politically mushy
movie set in the city of the future.
And they have no interest, even though it's that's a great movie.
But they there's I think the future film critics will look back on it knowing what it is and being able
to pick out the few kind of pearls that are in the morass of sludge rather than us looking
at it now expecting something different than it is, which is what we're expecting is a
coherent story with interesting characters.
And instead, future generations will be like, well, that was a fascinating capstone
to Francis Ford Coppola's career.
And now we can, the same way that I just finished reading
Patrick McGillian's biography, Alfred Hitchcock,
and in that he's able to treat Hitchcock's later movies,
which at the time were considered abysmal
and which are certainly not among his best.
But now you can look at them and be like,
here's the good things in them,
here's the not so good things in them.
I think it'll be kind of like that. But at the moment, it's
kind of nice to watch this movie now at a moment when you're, it's rare that I see a
movie that has this level of production behind it and this level of artistic vision behind
it where I'm like, what, like, what is he doing? Like, why is he doing that? And there's,
that's something I like you're saying, in an era of mass produced casinos
made for the people by the mayor, that's something to be at least glad that someone's willing
to put the shares they sold in their winery where their mouth is.
Roman, what do you think?
You loved it, right?
I think that, what is it like 15 years of watching bad movies has rotted y'all's brain, because this is a bad, bad movie.
Like, this is like...
This is...
Like, it's...
Roman, I've seen things you couldn't imagine.
Crap movies glittering off the shoulder of...
A Robocop remake.
Here's the thing.
I think this is a bad, bad movie,
and I think that if you compare it to other...
This is like a false premise of like,
it is interesting whereas all like superhero movies
are boring, at least this thing exists
and it has some kind of vision, whatever.
But that is not what you are,
what this thing is occupying space of.
It is occupying the space of like,
take time to stare at a loved one's face for two hours
or something like that.
Roman, if that's the way you think,
you're never gonna be able to make it this business.
I was never gonna do that, that's the thing.
Literally do anything and learn a language.
I meant to be.
Certainly there are better ways to use the limited time
you have on Earth, for sure, yeah, yeah.
I mean, it's just, if it had this vision
and was messy and was chaotic and whatever,
but it's just like as you dig into the ideas of the movie, I think those ideas are bad
and dangerous ideas.
Like, I think that they actually are pernicious, like, that make the world a worse place.
That's why I kind of, I was almost wooed by this idea of like the passion project that you don't want to take on and criticize. Except for that the passion
project is kind of this weird, like defensive great man genius that that this this idea
of this fake populism of like caring about the people and that even the movie cares about
people and serving people, but then ignores them, ignores their needs.
That there's this phony, like kind of me too crisis in the middle of this thing that's
completely dashed by facts that exonerate this man.
All that sort of stuff.
If it was, if the underlying core of this was sort of more benign or innocuous, I would
have more
charity towards its big swings.
But I think that it actually has terrible ideas at its core.
I feel like that almost makes it more interesting to this guy.
More interesting.
I get that.
Yeah.
And so like if you're like, again, if it's like...
In case you're worried that this movie is going to sway people.
Right.
I mean, I don't think it is either, but I just feel like it should be held accountable
for its dumbness.
You know, like-
But I would argue it does,
because he like spent so much of his money
for a huge flop that is being publicly pillory.
Yeah.
Saying he owned himself.
But you know, and I know this too,
because we went, we're all,
like I'm a little older than you guys are,
but like you've watched.
You look great.
But, thank you.
But like you've watched like really misguided millennials
in Gen Z resurrect the Star Wars prequel trilogy
and talk about its secret genius.
And you're like, no, you don't understand.
We were there.
It's fucking awful.
Like you have to trust us on this.
The book is closed on that matter.
And you're right.
This is going to be resurrected
and people are gonna find things in it.
And it's just gonna be just,
that's gonna be such an irritating process to witness
in 20 years.
Because it truly is like of the moment,
just to take it in the moment,
it is dealing with these ideas of populism and politics
and greatness and being sort of,
great men being sort of like somehow thwarted
in their great, like what's so crazy about the movie
is like with all this crazy stuff that happens, like, you know, everything is just given to
Caesar.
Like he, you know, he has this magic particle that heals his face, like the richest man
in the world gives him all the money he needs to do his thing.
A satellite clears the land for him to build his thing. It's just like, it is full, like this moment
of like billionaires and so-called geniuses
and bad populism and pretending to serve people.
Like these are bad ideas to play with poorly right now.
And that's what I think, that's the part
that really like incenses me about it as a movie.
So, so.
You've given the passionate,
swaying the masses speech that the movie fails to be.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that's fair.
I'm one of the dumb masses.
I wanna follow this guy.
Tell me about your utopia, Roman.
But I want it to be so much better.
Like I can deal with all the nonsense of it.
In fact, one of the things I think it's the most,
the miracle of this movie is that I think Adam Driver
at the center of this comes out pretty unscathed.
Like he is, he commits to this nonsense
in this way that is almost,
I just don't even know how he does it.
Like he, you know, he sounds like he just leans into it,
but he's not hammy.
It's like, that's the part where I'm like,
I liked him more coming out of this movie than,
not than I ever have,
but like it just added to my esteem of him.
Well, it's something that we see a lot in the movies
on the podcast is that when you are an actor
who's in a movie that doesn't make sense or is not good,
you never win points by being openly disdainful
of the movie or by acting like you know it is.
I think one of the things that helps
with Adam Driver's performance is when he's saying nonsense
or he's doing things that doesn't make sense,
he is still acting as if the things that he's doing
make sense and are rational and coherent.
And I think you're right, he comes out of it.
I mean, I feel like there's most of the main performers in's come out pretty well, you know, they're goofy and stuff
But I'm just surprised like how he comes out like he there's a lesson in here with like watching him and maybe that's worth watching
Which is like even in life or in a movie or as a piece of art or whatever
Just lean in and do the thing you will be cooler if you just do it rather than try to resist
Yeah
well
That's also like from what I understand
from hearing people talk about it,
like he had a much better sort of experience on the movie
because he leaned into the working process of the movie.
And I understand that like, you know,
if you don't want to lean into that, that's fine.
Cause it sounds like this was not a good working experience
for a lot of people.
If you don't want to be told to do something different
every single moment in the difference,
or a couple of suddenly kiss you.
Or harass, yeah, yeah.
So I'm not necessarily making an argument to ignore that,
but I am saying that he seemed to embrace,
okay, as an artistic thing, I'm going to roll with this
and be collaborative and really commit to it.
And that's probably part of why he does come out feeling like he.
I mean, we also, I don't think we need to get into it,
but I'm sure there was also an element of Francis Ford Coppola
probably treating him better than he treated other people.
Because he's the star that he identifies with in the movie.
And he loved 65.
So he saw that and he was like,
you were shooting dinosaurs. No, no, Francis, those weren't real dinosaurs. He's like, he saw that and he was like, you were shooting dinosaurs.
No, no, Francis, those weren't real dinosaurs.
He's like, I saw that movie you made
where you got away from that comet
that hit the earth with the dinosaurs.
So I'm having a satellite hit the city.
Let's see if you can get away from that one.
And then Francis Gribble was watching his own movie
and he's like, son of a bitch did it again.
He got away from another thing falling out of the sky.
Like...
And Adam Driver's like, Francis, you made this movie.
Like you knew it was going to happen. I don't think so. I don't think so. I don't know how you did it. And Adam Driver's like, Francis, you made this movie.
You knew it was going to happen.
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
I don't know how you did it.
Doesn't seem like my movie.
I mean, my movies are good.
This one, I don't know.
What if it was like Severance, where when he went to set,
he had a different personality than when he left set.
Probably.
I have one more thought about Francis Ford's co-player.
And that is, I think this blank slate that he's given here is his real downfall.
It's like one of the great things about Francis Ford Coppola, I think when he hits, is he's
a more of a documentarian than a ground up filmmaker.
Like even like the conversation movie I love, and it's a movie that kind of doesn't have
an ending, but it's just sort of like, it's assembled in a way by different performances and having him like surface meaning through
this.
And I think that he, he in the, and the reason why I like, you know, kind of like, like even
Apocalypse Now, one of the reasons why it works is like, he's just there documenting,
documenting, and he turns it into a thing.
But if he has a green screen capability and he's writing from the ground up,
he's like, he's a good writer of other,
he's a good writer of taking things that he's filmed
and assembling into things that matter
and have meaning and are great.
But if he's starting from a type of La Rossa,
he just doesn't have,
there are no foundational good ideas here.
Even like Graham Stoker's Dracula,
he's operating with an existing book.
Yeah, totally.
Yeah, all of it, I mean, his greatest movies,
aside from the conversation,
they're all adaptations of something, you know?
Right.
And I think you're right that one of his great strengths,
like that opening sequence in The Godfather,
the thing that, the power of it
is you feel like you're there.
Like you feel like you, and it feels like he just had a,
he hosted an Italian wedding in the 40s
and you were there, you know.
I would love to see his late stage documentary.
Like there's something about his mind,
it's about adaptation and filming
and putting stuff together and creating meaning.
But the idea of him starting from zero,
the reason why I think
he's written something that is extremely juvenile is it feels like he's writing something for
the first time.
Yeah.
But he has the ideas and calcification of his brain of an older man.
And yeah, that's why it really doesn't work and why he can be great in this one area,
which is this kind of like interesting
narrative filmmaker of pastiche rather than this whole thing that he creates this whole
cloth in white.
It's a big green screen nonsense.
You know?
And it's clearly been through like so many drafts that I imagine that he's like all the
stuff that should be explained that we don't understand in it.
Like he's like he's lived with it so long.
He's like, oh, the audience knows. Like he no longer has perspective.
They know what Megalon is.
To realize what hasn't been told to them.
But anyway, this thing's a mess.
That's what our opening should have been.
More like Messolopolis.
Mm.
You never know what you'll learn more about on the Celebrity Trivia Show Go Fact Yourself. For over 150 episodes, we've welcomed guests like DJ Jazzy Jeff, Audie Cornish, and Andy
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The Flophouse is sponsored in part by Factor.
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I don't know, you can do that too.
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Stuart, please save me with another advertisement.
Yeah, we're also sponsored by Squarespace.
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And in addition, we also have a Jumbo-tron.
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And we've got another Jumbotron, this one of a little bit more personal nature than the last one.
This is a message for Bryce, and the message comes from Josh.
And the message reads as follows.
Hello, Bryce. Yes, you, Bryce! Your brother, Josh, bought a Jumbotron for your birthday,
and now one of the floppers is talking directly to you.
Is it blowing your mind?
I bet it is.
I bet you're super distracted now,
and you messed up that piece of steel
you were cutting with a laser, whatever it is you do.
Anyhoo, happy birthday, brah.
What a sweet and also taunting Jumbo-Tron.
I thought it was funny when I was handing these out.
I gave this to you because you could roll into the next
thing, but I was like, I want to hear Elliot say bra too.
That's also part of my personal joy.
Yeah. It's what I call my own brother, not,
that's not what I really call him.
You're like, Hey, brozario Dawson.
That's what I call him. Yeah. Yeah. I call him broseph of Arimathea, yeah.
But hey, we got one more thing to mention.
This is a Flophouse thing.
You heard about it at the very top of the show
and you're gonna hear it about it again now.
That's Flop TV.
That's right, Flop TV is back.
The one hour televised,
by which I mean video on your computer,
version of the Flophouse.
It's like getting a whole TV show of the Flophouse.
Every first Saturday of the month,
we've been doing it from September through February.
And the next one is coming up the day after we record this.
So it will have happened a week ago
when you hear this episode.
Did you miss it?
That's okay.
The video for the episode is still getting up online.
And if you buy a season pass or a ticket,
you'll be able to watch it.
So this season is all about sequels because it's our second
season, flop TV season 2 the sequels, we talked about Robocop 2, we talked about
Break-In 2, and as of the time this episode comes out we'll have just talked
about Caddyshack 2. We're doing it the first Saturday of every month at 9 p.m.
Eastern, 6 p.m. Pacific, and you can either buy tickets for individual shows
there's a favorite movie that you just love and you do not want to hear the others.
Or here's my recommendation, get a season pass.
It's six episodes for the price of five.
That's a little tip from Elliot.
You know, you just don't tell anybody I told you that.
Go to theflophouse.simpletix.com.
Again, that's theflophouse.simpletix.com and get your tickets.
We got a lot of great movies coming up.
We've got Highlander 2, Ski School 2, and of course we round out the season with Ninja Turtles 2, The Secret of the Use.
It's gonna be too wonderful.
Right guys?
Too wonderful.
That was like a ghost was repeating me. Yeah.
Let's answer a couple of questions from listeners. This one is from Nilo last name withheld. This is from ff Coppola
Or perhaps Nilo. I don't know but they write
Intergalactic greetings floppers. I have a gigantic projector built in space capable of projecting a movie onto the moon
What should I show on it? And of course, the first thing that comes to mind
is from the earth to the moon.
You want to see that moon man get a rocket in his eye.
Yep.
Yeah, everybody's gagging for it.
Everyone wants that.
Look up and be like, ugh.
You want to see this biggest,
finally the real moon's going to get the just deserts
that the film moon got.
Finally the stand up and cheering moment of the year.
But what else? A moonfall, maybe?
I was gonna say Akira for that scene when Tetsuo blows up part of the moon.
I mean, so I'm gonna think about this a little more practically.
We don't have sound, right? Because it's just being projected on the moon.
Yeah, Akira works perfect.
So you have to tune your radio to a certain, like, frequency.
Oh, maybe, yeah.
I'm trying to think of something that would be kind of like that the visuals would pull
all of humanity together as one shared family.
Once it's projected on the moon.
One Week by Buster Keaton.
I don't know.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah.
I mean, you're basically talking about the biggest movie in the park that you can imagine
for the summertime.
And so it's going to be like Toy Story.
I don't think it's going to work. Worst things you can go for the summertime. And so it's gonna be like Toy Story. I don't think it's gonna work.
Worst things you can go with than Toy Story.
No, but it's gonna be some Pixar movie
that you can bring all the kids to and then, and that's it.
Well, listen, I wanted to be family friendly
because if my kids are out looking at the moon,
I don't want them seeing something
that they shouldn't see, yeah.
Different kind of moon.
What shouldn't they see?
I mean, it's on the list.
I mean, I don't think they're ready for Akira.
Ghost Goblins.
Well, when are your kids going to be ready for Akira, Elliot?
Daddy, daddy, why is Tetzel expanding into a techno-organic mass?
Why is he crushing Kowri when he's trying to love her?
One of these crimes of the future.
So, Dan, that's your vote is crimes of the future.
Are you saying Roman?
Sorry.
I saw Paris is burning and Lincoln Center outside and that was a lovely experience.
So I could be one that you could do.
That'd be great.
I like it.
This second and final letter is from Anne Marie who writes, hey y'all, and this is clearly in response
to our recent break into Flop TV episode we had.
I wanted to add- Tickets and season tickets
available now for Flop TV season two.
I wanted to add an additional theory
about how someone could dance on the ceiling.
A few years ago, I played dancing on the ceiling
for my then four-year-old niece,
and she said it was her favorite song.
I showed her the music video,
and she kept asking, how did he do that?
And then posited that he had sticky stuff on the ceiling
so he could stick to it like a bug.
So there's another-
Yeah, that's how bugs stick to things.
Alternative- That's a good theory.
Well, it's not really-
I don't think it's really how they stick to stuff. Thatative... That's a good theory. Well, it's not really...
I don't think it's really how they stick to stuff.
That's how it works in Inception, too, right?
Is Chrissy Nolan just smeared sticky stuff all over the ceiling and...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt bounced off of it?
No.
So, was there a question there, Dan?
No.
No, it was just sharing an idea?
It's just a charming tale of a child's imagination.
Sort of like, you know, I don't know, E.T. I guess it's not an imagination, but it sparks imagination.
Anyway.
I mean, I love old special effects are great.
The greatest special effect of all time is Kermit riding a bike.
It'll never be beaten. It'll be the greatest.
Like that's the thing that's wowed me the most for all my life.
There's also a scene, a woman turns, goes from nice looking to evil looking in camera
in a movie called The Octopus in a way that uses make up that only shows up in certain
colors of light and they had to gel their movement.
And that effect, it's from a movie from the 30s and the effect looks amazing.
Yeah, I still think the best special effect is that scene where the guy falls over in
the movie The Gate
and he turns into a bunch of little guys.
Yeah, that's pretty good.
Yeah, that's pretty amazing.
I follow it.
And also there's the moment in Throne of Blood when Tashiro Mufune gets an arrow through the neck.
And I'm always like, did they really kill him?
On that note of crucibility, let's move on.
Actually, Elliot, I just checked.
To sure, Maffune's dead.
Oh no.
They did it.
Officer, arrest Akira Kurosawa.
We've resolved the cold case.
Let us move on to our final segment.
Our final regular segment of the show, which is...
Dan, I'm looking as you scan through your letter box,
I see Dick's the Musical on there.
That scene with Nathan Lane spitting lunch meat
on those puppets, isn't that great?
I appreciate the spirit of Dix the Musical.
I didn't enjoy it as much as I think you did.
So why are you recommending it, Dan?
I'm not, this is, again,
I haven't even introduced the segment, which is-
I'm just looking over Dan's shoulders.
We're recommending-
It scrolls through letterbox.
We're recommending movies that we have seen of late or just like that might be a better
use of your time than say Megalopolis, take Roman's advice, either stare at your loved
one's face or watch one of these.
Just stare at their face for the full runtime of Megalopolis, which is like two hours and
18 minutes.
They'll be like, what are you doing?
Can you stop that?
Is Megalopolis showing on my face?
I recently, I just rewatched Lost Highway,
which I hadn't seen since around the time it was new,
David Lynch's Lost Highway.
And, you know, because I'd seen it when it was new,
it kind of had never struck me like,
oh, how much this is a dry run for Mulholland Drive.
Which is not to say it's not valuable in its own right,
but it's like, oh, okay, you're revisiting so many of the themes,
and I didn't even think about that.
Of sort of, you know, Lynch's films,
I think it's a bad idea to try and just decode them,
but if you're going to go down that road, like there's a lot about sort of...
Is that road Mulholland Drive?
Yeah.
Disassociation after sort of a horrible event, trying to make sense of your life through
these like sort of fantasies.
Lost Highway was his first trip down that lost highway to Mulholland Drive.
And you're going to want to go down Lost Highway, you're going to take a highway to Mulholland Drive.
You're going to want to go down lost highway.
You're going to take a turn onto Mulholland Drive.
Yeah.
And it's going to get you to the Inland Empire.
Yep.
If you want to see Bill Pullman just wail on a saxophone as well,
that's your best chance.
I don't know.
Some would say your only chance.
There's not much to say about it.
I mean, if you like Lynch and you haven't seen it, that's strange.
If you haven't watched it, if you're not a Lynch person, maybe it's not a good start.
What if you're like a huge Robert Blake fan?
Yeah, but not as movie, more as personal life.
Not as eyebrows.
I love Robert Blake.
I just hate when he has hair below his forehead.
Have I got a picture for you?
Is there a movie for me?
Anyway.
That's one of those movies. I love Robert Blake. I just hate when he has hair below his forehead.
Is there a movie for me?
Anyway.
That's one of those movies, I feel like Lost Highway is the opposite of Megalopolis in that it is a movie that when it came out, I remember the reviews were like, what?
Scathing.
They were scathing because it had a non-linear, not totally rational plot.
But you watch it now and you're like, oh, like now I know what Lynch does.
I understand what he's doing.
Honestly, the fact that film reviewers saw at the time
and weren't like, oh, it's a David Lynch movie.
I have to watch it through David Lynch glasses.
Yeah.
I don't know if I ever told this story,
but I remember seeing it like the very small
independent theater in my hometown.
And it was a late screening and we got out
and I was driving my friends home.
And I remembered, you know, driving up to a red light,
the light turned green and then it turned red again
and I had just sat there the whole time
because my brain was processing what I just watched.
Yeah, a lot.
Let's go in the same order we did our judgment.
Stuart, what do you have?
Okay, I'm going to recommend a movie
I saw a couple weeks back.
I saw Anora, the new Sean Baker movie. It's
a I guess a offbeat comedy
love story about a
young sex worker who
Marries the son of an oligarch in Brighton Beach
Brooklyn, it's a very New York movie in that way.
There's a scene where they fucking go to Tatiana's
in Brighton Beach and I was like, whoa, I go there.
And yeah, I mean it has-
I'm Nora.
Yeah, I'm like a Nora.
Yeah, I mean, I feel like it really captures
the like rush and craziness of like love and hope,
and also like hoping against the crushing power captures the rush and craziness of love and hope,
and also hoping against the crushing power
of capitalism and shittiness.
And then of course, things start to come back to Earth
and things get a little bit rough.
It's got an incredible central performance
by Mikey Madison as the title character.
Yeah, I think, I thought it was great, I love it. Yeah, I think I thought it was great.
I love it.
Yeah, check it out.
Cool.
I'm also going to recommend an offbeat comedy romance, but not the same one.
This is a, I'm going to want to recommend the movie You and Me from 1938.
This is a movie directed by Fritz Lang, director of Metropolis, the movie I mentioned earlier,
but it's a very different movie than Metropolis.
And Sylvia Sidney is a woman who works at a department store
and the department store makes a point of hiring ex-convicts
to give them a second chance at life.
And George Raft is one of those ex-convicts
and they fall in love.
She doesn't want him to know she's also an ex-convict
because when you're on parole
you're not allowed to fall in love
and you're not allowed to get married.
And so that she has to hide from him
that she is also a convict
and that the
the repercussions of that involve him getting back involved in crime and
it's a surprisingly sweet movie for a movie about
criminals directed by Fritz Lang and it also has some musical numbers in it with some of the music written by Kurt Weill
So it's a like it's a it's a real strange movie. It's this kind of somewhat anti-capitalist
romance drama comedy crime movie
With but with Sylvia Sidney George Raft, but I really loved it. I really enjoyed it
it's the kind of movie that you could crank out in the 30s because they were making so many movies that
Sometimes one of these popped out where it was like this is kind of a stranger movie than it had any right to be
it could have been a pretty down-the-mid middle movie, but there's some great scenes in it.
And, you know, Sylvia Sidney's been on my mind
since there's that new Beetlejuice movie.
She's not in the new one,
but you know, since she was in the old one, you know.
So that's you and me.
Play Juno.
I was having a hard time thinking of what to recommend,
but I think the one I'd settle on
is Hearts of Darkness of Filmmakers Apocalypse, which is the documentary Eleanor Coppola made
of Francis Ford Coppola making Apocalypse Now.
One of the things that ends the movie, Michaelopolis, is at the very end it says for Eleanor, which
is sort of like this moment where I'm feeling like kind of seething for this thing.
And then there's a sweet moment
of their long-term relationship
and how she was such a gifted filmmaker
as evidenced by this piece that did like make me think,
okay, he did what he wanted to, it's all okay.
And that was a nice sort of like homage to her, but she was an extremely
good documentary filmmaker.
It made me appreciate Apocalypse Now so much more.
It gave you so much insight into making a movie.
It's just like has so much drama.
It's so fascinating.
I really love Hearts of Darkness.
I saw it as a kid.
Well, not a kid.
I guess I was pretty soon after it came out.
I guess I was 15 or 16.
And Hearts of Darkness, not Apocalypse Now, I had not seen Apocalypse Now.
I caught this like on HBO or something.
And then I saw it afterward.
I'd kind of heard about Apocalypse Now.
And it just gave me the blueprint for appreciating another sort of like good mess of a movie.
You know, I think that's a good mess, Apocalypse Now,
in a lot of ways, but I love this.
It's one of the reasons why I love documentaries.
I think it's just expertly and beautifully made.
I think I also saw it before I saw Apocalypse Now.
I saw it with my like college girlfriend.
We were at her house in Cleveland
and we went to like, we were just like young film buffs
and we're like, what artie thing can we get?
We'll get this, I know it's a good documentary
and it is a testament to it,
like even without having seen the movie,
like this is fascinating in its own right
and then gets richer once you've seen the film
or like most people, you probably see Apocalypse Now first
and then catch it.
Well, I mean, it's weird.
I mean, I think people take things in a lot differently now.
And like, you never know.
But I think this movie is great.
I think it's actually better than Apocalypse Now.
But that's my own flavor of, that to me is like not defensible.
It's just taste.
You know, it's...
That's just a personal choice.
Dan, there are people who saw Spaceballs before Star Wars.
People watch things in all sorts of crazy orders, you know.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
These days.
I thought you were about to mention a documentary about the making of Spaceballs.
That would be fascinating.
There are people who see May the Schwartz be with you in a filmmaker's journey.
That's not what Balls of Fury was?
Yeah.
How'd they rig up that bit where Rick Moranis goes flying through the...
You don't have to watch the documentary to find out. Wasn't that real? Did they kill Rick Moranis goes flying through the... Sounds like the documentary to find out.
Wasn't that real?
Did they kill Rick Moranis?
Did they kill Rick Moranis in that moment?
All right, well, we should wrap this up with a big thank you.
No, I want to see...
Sorry, now I want to see a comedy sketch and a show where they're like, okay, they're trying
to lead actor on a movie set and they're like, we saved this last stunt to the end of the
shooting because you're going to die when you do it.
The only way to get the shot is to kill you while you do it.
Oh, okay, that's why we shot all your scenes ahead of,
so I don't know if that's a good idea.
No, it's okay, we shot the rest of the movie already.
We shot it already, we're done.
We're wrapped on that.
So this is your last thing you have to do.
We'll be covered.
Before we say goodbye, I want to just say thank you
to Roman for being on this episode.
We all know how busy you are and so we're always charmed when you make time for our
shenanigans.
Delighted.
Longtime fan and supporter.
I'm so happy to be here.
It makes me very, very happy.
What are you going to say, Ali?
If you want more shenanigans like this, just tune into the 99% Invisible Breakdown, The
Power Broker.
Exactly the same. It's exactly like this, just tune into the 99% invisible breakdown, The Power Broker. Exactly the same.
It's exactly like this show.
It's just like it.
Yeah.
Just cutting it up.
Before we go, thank you to our producer, Alex Smith.
He goes by the name Howell Doddy on the internet.
He does music.
He does Twitch streams.
He does a lot of stuff.
Look him up.
Thank you to our network, Maximum Fun.
If you go to maximumfun.org, there are a lot of great. Look them up. Thank you to our network, Maximum Fun. If you go to MaximumFun.org,
there are a lot of great other podcasts you can listen to
about culture, about comedy.
You'll find something you like.
But that's it for this episode.
For the Flophouse, I've been Dan McCoy.
I'm Stuart Wellington.
I'm Elliot Kalin.
I'm Roman Mars.
I'm going to take that again.
I'm Roman Mars.
That's it. What a professional. Bye. I'm Roman Mars. I'm gonna take that again. I'm Roman Mars. Professionalism undone.
Roman's like, let me make sure I say that the right way and then Suits like
On this episode we discuss Megalopolis. Do you want me to have one?
No, I'll just start it over again.
Stuart, you leaned in like you had one.
We're embarrassing ourselves in front of Roman.
No, no, no. Roman knows we're cool. This is the whole experience.
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