The Press Box - The Best Movies at the SXSW Film Festival | The Big Picture (Ep. 442)
Episode Date: March 16, 2018The Ringer’s Sean Fennessey and Chris Ryan recap the best movies they saw at the SXSW Film Festival, including ‘Ready Player One,’ ‘A Quiet Place,’ ‘Eighth Grade,’ and more. Lear...n more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I was at the premiere, Stephen Spielberg, the director of the film, introduced it,
had a very interesting bit of phraseology at the top of his introduction,
which is, we did not make a film, we made a movie.
I'm Sean Fennessey, editor-in-chief of The Ringer,
and this is The Big Picture,
a conversation show with some of the most fascinating filmmakers in the world.
And also, some of the most fascinating editors and contributors and podcasters of theringer.com
joining me today,
Chris Ryan, the executive editor, my pal,
and also my travel partner.
We just returned from Austin, Texas, where we were...
You make me sound like I'm your bag guy.
That's right. You were holding all the illicit items in my bag.
No, no, we just returned from the South by Southwest film festival,
which is mostly why we were there.
You did a panel.
Yeah.
We saw a bunch of movies.
It's one of the most fun festivals of the year.
I would say it's not considered one of this sort of preeminent premiere festivals for the film world,
because Sundance has a certain persona,
Toronto has a certain persona,
Tell You Ride, can.
South by, though, I think is by far the most fun film festival.
Why is that, Chris?
Well, I think for you and I,
it is probably more still associated as a music festival,
and as a music festival,
as a boozy, emerging music conference
where you can go see all these bands
who've congregated all the way down in Austin,
usually on their way back from
or on the way out to tour.
So they're playing loose.
There's always a lot of cool surprises.
And there is a feeling of you wake up,
you kind of get your breakfast tacos in,
and you start seeing bands,
and you start seeing artists,
and you start having a couple of lone stars
that are complimentary.
That's where the bag man comes in.
Right, and you start,
that vibe starts going,
and somebody grabs you by the arm,
you're like, hey, I heard so-and-so's going to play down the street.
I heard this guy's,
this easy tops playing in a field in the middle of nowhere.
That is actually what the movie festival feels like.
That's true.
You wake up, you eat, you start seeing some stuff,
but maybe somebody you see this screening.
He's like, hey, I heard Ready Player 1's playing.
I heard this, I heard eighth grade is incredible.
I heard Thunder Road is incredible.
You got to, want to come see this with me?
They're going to show this at this hotel.
And it kind of starts to feel like this combination of a punk rock show,
a booze-fueled punk rock show with a movie theater,
and the crowds, especially for these big crash-bang genre movies,
respond in kind.
Let's talk about this.
that. The Paramount Theater is sort of the premiere theater there. That's where a lot of the
biggest premieres are. You know, across the festival, there's a number of different places to go see
the films, across the river. But the Paramount is really where a lot of this stuff happens.
You mentioned Ready Player 1. Stephen Spielberg's new movie comes out at the end of March.
There was a surprise premiere there, though, I will say, when we arrived at the place we
were staying, the folks who were hosting us there said, hey, you know, the worst kept secret in town
is that Ready Player 1 am preparing this weekend. And Ernie Klein, then the author of the
novel is an Austinite.
And so this is like kind of a big deal for us.
We're really happy. So we had a little bit of insight into the fact that it was coming out.
Yeah, there is a disturbing thing that's happening right now in Los Angeles where if you're
driving from the valley back towards like the east side or, you know, the more central part
of Los Angeles, I guess, you can see a minion hovering over on the skyline that's over
one of the studios there.
That's kind of what Ready Player One was like.
In Austin, there was a Ready Player One experience, an activation that actually, you know,
if I had wanted to wait in a two-hour line, like, would have a, would have a
mind checking out. But it was hanging over it and as it should because it felt like not only
does Austin celebrate its heroes, its local heroes really well, but also the ethos of this movie
and the cultural touchstones of this movie are the foundational blocks of which I feel like
this festival is built. Yeah, it's a great point. Not only is this a music festival and a film festival,
it's also an interactive festival. There's a lot of web gaming and tech.
at the time, and Ready Player 1 is kind of the convergence of all of those things.
So I was at the premiere, Steven Spielberg, the director of the film, introduced it,
had a very interesting bit of phraseology at the top of his introduction,
which is he came out, rapturous applause among the loud,
it was among the loudest and rowdiest film premieres I'd ever been to.
And he said, pointedly, I, like you, most of you, am a gamer.
I have been a gamer since 1974 when I had the first edition of Pong.
and I want you to know that I loved this story because I am a gamer
and I wanted to make this movie because I am a gamer
and then very specifically said
we did not make a film we made a movie
and then they showed the movie
and they treated it like a movie
and I thought that that delineation was very interesting
and it in some ways protected him
from some of the inevitable criticism of the movie
but also contextualized it.
It's a fun movie and it's goofy
and some of it doesn't work and some of it does
but it's in the parlance of our times,
it's for the fans, I think is what people would say.
What's your Ready Player 1 perception?
You didn't see the film, but what was the atmosphere
you were sensing around it?
Well, I think that there was a couple of,
I'm getting too old for this shit moments for me,
where people were coming up and saying,
like, I'm really interested in seeing
whether Spielberg accurately captures VR
or accurately captures my gaming experience.
And, you know, I think that that's,
That's absolutely totally valid.
I think that 20 years ago or whenever Jurassic came out,
people were probably equally skeptical about his use of animatronic and special effects to recreate dinosaurs,
which for the person who I was back then was literally the coolest thing I'd ever seen in my life.
And that's the thing that Spielberg does maybe better than any filmmaker ever,
which is capture wonder.
Both the audience's wonder and the characters within the films,
wonder. There's plenty of montages on YouTube of Spielberg faces, people looking at a plane whipping
by them, people looking at a brannosaurus in the horizon. And I was curious about, without giving
anything really away from RPO, which I'm sure you're going to get into it in depth later on,
are there any wonder faces? Or did you catch yourself slack-jawed in amazement like Christian
Bale watching a spitfire fly over his head? I would say that it is not quite on the level of Jurassic
Park where when that movie ended, I think a lot of people, a lot of movie lovers were clutching their hearts and being like, wow, movies will never be the same again.
Yeah, as they were with Jaws.
Right.
Very similarly.
He has that Titanic ability.
And it does feel like in some ways he's trying to have a third act in that way, where he's saying, I can make a movie that is 70% animated, essentially, that is 70% of video game and get you involved in the story and get you emotionally connected to it.
and also know that it is, you know, applying the tricks of nostalgia to tell a story,
he mostly pulls it off.
I was really surprised.
I went in very skeptical.
I think the atmosphere in our office is a little bit dubious of whether he's been able to pull this story off.
And in some ways, it really does work.
And I think this movie may be more than any other movie in the last five years is an expectation game.
If you go in hoping and praying that he's going to nail the.
the tone of the book exactly and hit all of those little dynamic like, well, there has to be
enough moments with the Ninja Turtles. There has to have to have moments with the Iron Giant.
If you go in with that, you will be frustrated and disappointed. If you go in with a blank slate,
you might be interested. If you go in with low expectations, you're going to be like, damn,
nailed it. Yeah, right. And that's fascinating. It's an interesting thing. It was the right
kind of movie, though, to premiere here. You know, last year, you and I saw Atomic Blonde together.
I saw a baby driver there last year. I saw another movie there. There's a
here called A Quiet Place, which is John Krasinski's new movie. That was the opening night premiere.
Similarly, very rowdy crowd. Interesting place to see it because a quiet place is probably the
quietest horror movie I've ever seen. The premise of the movie is obviously that there's a family
in some sort of post-apocalyptic society that cannot make noise. And if they do, there will be
grave consequences. Every time someone sniffled or coughed during this screening, it felt like the
truest pain you could imagine. Like, I've never heard such precise, resounding coughing.
Right. Because you're just not used to that experience where for 10 minutes at a time, there's no sound. Right.
It was pretty remarkable. You know, I think movies like that tend to be more effective. And I look forward to seeing Ready Player 1 in a quiet place, like in a theater with real human beings just to see if they're as captivated as I was. I don't know. What did you think? You know, we saw a horror movie as well.
Yeah. Similarly is a very response.
kind of thing. Blumhouse
productions, you know, responsible
for Get Out, among other many horror movies you and I
both really care about, had a big showing
at South By. Do you want to tell them about our
midnight on Friday? Yeah, well, you and I had talked a little
bit before we had gone, where I'd said, you know, I'm looking at the
slate of movies, and I'm kind of thinking about
concentrating on a couple of the horror films that might be there,
especially the ones from Blumhouse. So we saw
unfriended, colon, dark web, or maybe it's just unfriended
dark web, but it's not the dark web.
Dark web. And then I also, we also
saw Upgrade, which is a
film from Lee Wannell, which is also
coming out on Blumhouse, Blumhouse
Tilt. Now, you and I were really,
we've thought a lot about Blumhouse.
We've talked a lot about it, because not only
do we get a kick out of their
sort of lower budget genre stuff, but
this is a major player in the movie industry now
after Get Out and after, it kind of
started with Whiplash, which was sort of their
first foray into more dramatic
fair, and then Get Out, maybe,
you know, amusingly enough,
not necessarily intended to be an Oscar film,
but wound up being a real candidate for best picture.
So I think we were both curious
about what's going on with Blumhouse.
Where are they going to go next?
I can report that they're once doing the same thing
that they were doing last year.
They're still paying the bills with scary movies.
But I find them relentlessly formally inventive.
And I find them to be still one of the more,
permissive studios when it comes to allowing filmmakers to mess around.
So we saw this film unfriended, which is told entirely through Skype,
Facebook, and instant message screens.
It's terrifying.
It's also really disturbing.
The first unfriended is pretty scary.
This one is more like maybe we're all turning into really bad people because of the
internet.
And I think one thing that really jumped out at me while watching unfriended.
And even though, you know, we were eating pretzels and drinking beers at the Alamo draft house while we were watching it was my new found ability to process information in four quadrants on a screen.
And I know that is actually something that people have said about Ready Player 1 that there's stuff happening on the margins of the screen and then in the center of the screen.
But with unfriended, you'll have a chat box in the lower left hand corner.
You'll have the action that's sort of in the middle of the screen.
And then you'll have a clue, like an Easter egg up in the right hand corner.
And you can process all of that because we spend so much of our time staring at our laptop.
screen. So I found that movie
quite enjoyable, quite
disturbing, but
absolutely does what it says on the
package, which I think is what people want from
Blumhouse movies. They want to
be scared. They want
the makers of the movies
to take the venture
seriously and to treat them
seriously and to give them what they want. And I think
that they do a really good job at doing that, especially with unfriended.
Yeah, the interesting thing about unfriended
Dark Web is everything that you said
is right on. Not only is it, are we
processing the movie the same way that we process like our daily work lives with our laptops open.
But the speed with which everything moves is pretty remarkable. I thought unfriended was sort of a
1.0 version of that literally where things moved a little bit slower. We had to train audiences to
say like Skype loads like this and Facebook loads like this and a communication takes its time.
This is very rapid fire. There's a lot of Bitcoin. You know, there's a lot of trading, so to speak.
I thought the movie was very upsetting. I'm not sure that it was.
was scary, but I was unnerved in a way that I'm not often.
I would also say that they've realized now that there is a vernacular and even an emotional state
that comes with communicating with people online.
There's a, without giving anything away, characters communicate over Facebook Messenger.
But that thing that everybody is familiar with, with basically like, we're having a Facebook
like an instant message conversation, but one person is like waiting with baited breath for
response, but the other person is like, and now I'm getting in the shower.
And you're just like, hey, are you there?
Like what's the deal?
The blinking ellipsis of death.
And it's basically this anxiety that is now sort of part and parcel with modern day communication that I found fascinating to see translated into a horror movie.
So flip side of Dark Web is Upgrade, which you mentioned Lee Wano's new film.
You know, Lee wrote several of the Saw movies.
He's been responsible for a lot of horror movies over the last 10 years creatively.
This isn't quite horror.
No, this is way more...
mid-80s to mid-90s action.
Action, sci-fi.
Yeah.
Kind of reminded me of like lawnmower man or...
Virtuosity, maybe?
Yeah, virtuosity, Robocop, Matrix, Terminator, all touchstones for this movie.
And I think you're going to keep seeing, you know, there was just a report today about how Captain
Marvel is supposedly influenced by 90s action movies.
Like, this sort of has like a Shane Black vibe to it.
Shane Black will be back with The Predator this year.
Can't we?
Andy's action movie vibe that you and I kind of grew up on, it will be a very interesting
stress test for that to see if we actually wanted it back or not.
Yeah.
So what did you think of upgrade?
Yeah, I thought it was a really, really interesting idea.
Logan Marshall Green stars as this guy who, for the most part, in a sort of black mirror-ish,
undetermined point in the future is still defiantly, not living off the grid, but is just
like, yeah, I don't need all this stuff that you guys have like chips in my head to help me
log into this or get into that door or whatever,
but everything is self-driving cars,
everything is drones.
And he,
I don't want to give too much away from it,
but he finds himself in a very robocop situation.
Let's just put it that way.
There are super soldiers,
there are plots, there are conspiracies,
there's like a rise of the robots kind of thing.
I found that this is just a really good example, though,
of that's a movie
that there are a lot of people
out there who I think are like,
I would love to watch that movie.
They don't make movies like this anymore.
I have to learn 18 movies worth of
MCU mythology and know what an infinity stone is.
You don't have to do that with this movie.
It's got thrills, it's got fights,
it's got some thought-provoking stuff.
But then you're in and out.
And I thought that that was like,
that's a key for what they're doing right now.
For as much as they make sequels,
I think that they're providing a serotonin hit
for people who like genre movies
but don't really need to get into who dark side is all the time.
We're going to talk a little bit more about horror movies when we come back,
but we're going to get a serotonin hit for our sponsor, so let's take a break.
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Welcome back to the big picture.
Chris Ryan.
We're talking about
South by Southwest Film Festival.
We were talking horror,
and I saw my word,
a deeply scary horror movie
that is going to be released
this summer called Hereditary.
It's made by a first-time filmmaker
named Ari Aster.
Holy shit, Chris.
It's very dark.
I'm very reluctant to spoil
too much about this movie,
but I will say I saw it
at 1 o'clock in the morning.
Yes.
All the way on the other side.
side of town. I'll do a little personal anecdote shortly after I finish talking about the movie.
It's essentially about a family coping with the death of a matriarch and everything that unravels
from there. And it stars Tony Colette. And in an interesting 20 years later kind of reflection
of her role in the sixth sense as a mother making an effort to connect with her children.
And Gabriel Byrne stars as her husband. And they're the cast, particularly the young actress who
plays their daughter and the young actor who plays their son are incredible. And Ann Dowd also
has a very prominent and fascinating role in the movie. This is going to be a thing this summer.
And it features what I would say is the single scariest shot I've seen in like five years in a
horror movie. That said, while I was attending a horror movie, you were doing something horrifying
as well, maybe.
I was heavily, I was weighing whether or not to go to Hereditary.
It was my last night.
I had a 8.30 a.m. flight, which I figured me, it meant getting up at around six.
And I was doing the math, and I figured hereditary, if it starts at like 1230, because
they were like waiting for Ready Player 1, people to get out.
When it really gets going, I'm not going to be back at home until about three or four,
which gives me two hours. And I'm just like, I got too much to do this week to kill it.
So I didn't go to Hereditary.
I did go to an A-24 party, great party.
And at one point, your friend of the pod,
Sure.
Darren Aronovsky was just like sitting by himself over there, like on a couch with the scarf.
I'm wearing a scarf, of course.
Next thing I knew, Aronovsky is sitting like an inch from me on the arm of the couch that I'm sitting on wearing a cowboy hat and the scarf.
So he's getting more and more like Jeff Bridges and True Grit as it.
the night goes long. Oh, so he was not originally wearing a cowboy hat. No, the cowboy had appeared.
It manifested. It was like one of those things like, you know how at my birthday, my 40th birthday
party, I like all of a sudden was wearing a hat? That's so true. That did happen.
Because like Juliet's friend, Dan bought me one. Do you think that? Don't know if that happened with it.
I think someone was like, check this hat out and Darren Aronovsky was like, great hat.
And he was like, that's my hat now? Maybe. Wow. So he's holding court. And while we were sitting there,
I came like, he's like, what are you going to say at Darren Aronovsky? It's like, loved your film.
Loved your film. Love your film. Sure, maybe.
A lot of people were saying that to him.
I was trying to be more creative.
I didn't actually use this bit, but I thought I'd share it with your listeners.
When we were sitting there, Eddie Money's Take Me Home Tonight was playing.
And I was like, how long do you think Darren Aronofsky would let this get away go?
If I went up to him and I was just like, hey, man, you know, I know people probably come up to you all the time and bother you.
I don't want to ruin your party.
Just wanted to let you know that Take Me Home Tonight is an incredible song.
And I thought it was great that you brought Ronnie Specter back.
and I actually have my first kiss to that song
and it's just so awesome
and get to hear it out
and like how long would he let it go
before he was like
get the fuck away from me
probably not very long
yeah I don't think so either
he's very he's like
not an imposing stature-wise
but like I wasn't like
I'm gonna go like just chop it up with Darren
he's a serious artist Chris
and should be treated as such
while you were
thinking of take me home tonight
I was saying take me home tonight
at the end of the hereditary screening
and then something very bad happened to me
I was in a car sharing
service on a ride home back to where we were staying at 3.30 in the morning, got into a car
accident. Someone rearended us. That must have been pretty spooky. Well, after seeing hereditary,
I was, I was not well. I was unhappy because of how traumatizing the movie is. And to get
hit by cars, obviously always very frustrating and confusing, disorienting, particularly when you're
in a ride-sharing service, particularly when it's 3.30 in the morning, particularly when you're in a
city that is not your own, you're forced to stand on the side of the road waiting for the police.
Also, my driver did not speak English.
That's too bad.
So it was quite a confuse.
I felt like I was in a little bit of an A24 horror movie with my own design.
I do have something I wanted to ask you.
The director of Hereditary is, I'm very glad you're safe.
I'm fine.
Thank you, Chris.
This is the first time you've mentioned that.
No, that's not true.
I was like, I was very concerned when you told me about this the first time.
Yeah.
But I do want to ask you a question about Ari Aster, who directed Hereditary, correct?
Yes.
One of the cool things about this festival,
is that this year and last year
is it does still do what
I think the potonic ideal
of what you want from movie festival
which is yeah it may be
anoints quiet place and ready player one
but the cool thing is to find out about Ari Aster
Who's that guy?
To find out about John Cummings
to find out about Elijah Bynum last year
who directed Hot Summer Nights
which is yet to come out
but I think is coming in the spring.
Noel Wells who people may know
from Master of Nome but directed Mr. Roosevelt last year
and I think is on streaming service
is now, to get to see people
their early stuff where you're like, oh, I bet that this person's
going to be a thing in a couple of years.
So Ari Aster, going to be a thing?
100%.
I think he is, it seemed as though he did a Q&A with Elijah Wood
after the screening of the film.
And he seemed a bit surprised, I think,
by how overwhelmingly people had received his movie.
This movie debuted at Sundance.
And at Sundance, people were like,
God damn it, this is really scary.
Yeah.
So I don't think that that was necessarily shocking to him
that people were scared at his movie.
but it seems as if it's moving into that space
that like maybe the witch occupied a couple of years ago
where this will be sort of the boutique horror movie
that people really, really like and admire.
Did you see anything else where you were like
this director is for real?
I saw a few things.
On the A24 tip, I also saw eighth grade.
And there was an interesting trend this year
of people who were known for other things
getting involved in filmmaking
and making their directorial debut.
So Bo Burnham's eighth grade,
stand-up comedian,
comedy special director
now as a feature film director
this might be the best movie
that I saw at the whole festival.
It's about a young girl
who's in eighth grade
at the tail end of her eighth grade year
played so winningly by Elsie Fisher
in this incredible performance
that feels very real.
And the movie is essentially about
without giving away too much for people
the collision of your online persona
with your real life awkwardness.
And that also was a bit of
a bit of a sub-theme. There is a sub-theme of that
to Ready Player 1. Unfriended, yeah. Unfriended is also
very much like that. Who we can be
on YouTube versus, or on
Snapchat, or on Instagram, versus who
we really are, and how we really interface with people.
Do you know who doesn't have any split in this personality?
The God, Josh Hamilton.
So Josh Hamilton
is absolutely wonderful
in this movie. He's been one of my favorite actors
for like 20 years, but nobody, you know, like
if you just see him in,
you know, Noah Baumbach movies
or whatever, but God damn, I love him.
of Josh Hamilton.
He's a heartbreakingly special father
in this movie.
That's great.
I would recommend this movie
to every single person
that is still listening
to this podcast.
I really, really,
really enjoyed it.
And maybe we'll have
Boe on the show later this year.
I saw a couple of other things.
Another person who
was not a filmmaker
until now is Boots Riley.
Boots is the lead emcee of the coup,
the famous Bay Area
revolutionary and sighting
rap group.
His movie is Sorry to Bother You,
which kind of kicked up
a lot of
internet interest over the weekend when the trailer premiered immediately after the screening at Southby.
This movie also premiered at Sundance. It stars Lakeith Stanfield and Tessa Thompson, among many other people.
Pretty much a bad idea to try to explain what happens to this movie.
Lekeith Stanfield is a young guy looking for a job who gets a gig at a telemarketing agency,
and then it unravels into like a fascinating satire of American life.
Okay.
Get ready. Brace yourself for Army Hammer.
It's a whole new generation of Army Hammer that I think we're all very excited about.
Chris, you and I also saw a fun, strange movie.
Yeah.
Called the Legacy of White Tailed Deer Hunter,
directed by Jody Hill,
who's a personal favorite of both of ours.
Jody co-created Eastbound and Down,
Vice Principles.
He directed Observe and Report.
He's a longtime collaborator with Danny McBride.
Danny McBride co-stars in this movie with your boy.
Josh Broan.
Josh Brod.
Who was looking swole at the premiere.
He popped out with Jody, with the writer,
with Danny, and with the kid,
Montana Hughes, I think his name is,
who let me tell you something.
They, the people who made this movie
are super enamored with this kid
because he gets a lot of screen time
despite Sicario and, you know,
and Eastbound being in the movie.
It's not like he really gets a lot of screen time.
This movie was, I think, shot in 2015.
1615, yeah.
1615.
And Jody Hill, it's interesting.
You get a lot of different speeches
from the stage when a filmmaker comes out
and introduces their film.
And Jody Hill seemed more relieved than anything,
that this was done, that this was finally getting to people.
And he referred to it as their revenant, I think.
Yeah.
And it was shot, you know, I looked like in the winter,
in the mountains in North Carolina,
there it is very much a, you know, a love letter to the wilderness.
You know, in the tradition of all Jody Hill and Danny McBride things,
It's one part taking the piss out of something,
but also one part, like, secretly being really into something,
which I think is the reason why people respond so strongly to their work.
It's like, yeah, like, Kenny Powers is a douchebag,
but, like, everybody kind of, like, loves the idea of partying
while playing minor league baseball.
Like, that sounds awesome, you know?
Yeah, and also every time we feel like we've had one dick joke too many,
a father looks a son in the eyes and says, I love you, son.
Yes.
And you're like, oh, my God.
Yeah, and then the son kicks him in the balls.
Yeah.
That's true.
This movie is coming out on Netflix.
July.
July.
Okay.
So it's interesting.
I think that I'm having a little bit of a distortion field when it comes to movies that are on Netflix now.
I did enjoy it.
I laughed a lot.
I don't think anyone is going to call it the next caddyshack.
But I think it's part of a larger thing where is Netflix actually making good stuff?
or are they just picking up the stuff that other people maybe don't want?
Do you know anything about the trajectory of this film's development or release?
Like, was it always, it wasn't always going to be a Netflix movie?
I'm honestly not sure.
I know that it had been in production for a long period of time and then at some point.
I think the narrative was that it was essentially like saved by Netflix in some way that they had decided that they were distributed
because they're currently in the business of taking properties that maybe don't necessarily have a home or their future is unclear.
and giving them a big platform.
So, you know, we saw that with the Cloverfield paradox earlier this year.
We saw that internationally with annihilation.
I'm not sure if it's not quite the same where those properties were picked up from a major studio.
But, you know, they're going to give a big platform to a weird movie that I think would be hard to sell theatrically.
Yeah.
I think it'd be tough to say Josh Brolin is a deer hunting dad trying to reconnect to this son.
Danny McBride's here for dick jokes.
That's, that's, we don't have a lot of.
lot of movies like that. I'm actually kind of bummed out that we don't have a lot of movies like that
in movie theaters anymore, but we don't. And so... It's a very lo-fi indie version of what I think
they're trying, they can get away with getting Game Night into the theaters because I think Game Night
does exactly what it says on the package. I don't know if I've used that phrase already once before,
but it just does exactly what it says it's going to do. And when you see the trailer for Game Night
and then you see Game Night, you're like, yep, that was the movie. I was promised. I don't know
you really advertise White Tail because it's kind of sad in places.
In the room, here's what it felt like.
Daddy daycare meets deliverance.
That's what they were pitching.
And that's pretty funny.
But it's hard to sell.
It's hard to imagine what the Super Bowl commercial.
I thought there wasn't enough deliverance.
I think I would say it put it that way.
I think that when I see a movie by Jody Hill,
I'm hoping almost that it goes there.
I almost wish that they had a higher stakes in this movie
instead of what winds up being the sort of the,
the Danu Ma of the film is fine, but you go to see this film,
you're going to be fine with it for the jokes.
Hilariously, Scoot McNary and Carrie Coon are in this movie for one scene,
and I think it might actually just be like two years before Carrie Coon became a thing.
So it's just wild that Carrie Coon just like pops up as the suburban mom
and does like two phone call scenes, and that's it.
I think I would have loved to have had her back.
Oh, sure.
She could have had a much bigger role in the film, as could Scoot.
who I think that's a he's in the Chris Ryan Hall of Fame.
Oh, absolutely.
I want to take an opportunity to just talk about one other smaller movie that I saw that I think
people will be hearing a lot about.
I would not be shocked if it was in the Oscar conversation later this year.
So, documentaries is called Won't You Be My Neighbor?
It also debuted at Sundance.
It was directed by Morgan Neville, who made 20 feet from stardom.
Morgan also made a few episodes of the recent David Chang series, Ugly Delicious.
Oh, cool.
It's about Mr. Rogers.
I grew up with Mr. Rogers.
It is essentially cradle to grave story of Mr. Rogers.
Everything that he did and was his persona as a public person, his private life.
I never cry in movies ever.
I am dead inside.
Chris, you can affirm this.
I was weeping for the final 20 minutes of Mr. Rogers.
It's a very direct, straightforward hagiography of a person that we feel like we know pretty well.
And I wouldn't even say necessarily that there is a.
a mountain of revelation in the movie,
but the way that it is told,
and the people that Morgan talks to during the movie,
and the way that they talk about Fred Rogers
is just remarkable.
I can't even imagine another person to fit this.
It's very strange to hear you unc cynical about something.
Oh.
No, I don't mean that because you're, like,
you're a skeptical person,
and you've seen a lot of movies.
One of the things I wanted to talk to you about
is the volume of movies you saw on there.
But this was a rare response.
from you where you just seemed almost like you had your breath taken away.
Yeah, and it's nothing formal.
It's a very straightforward.
Like this will premiere on, it'll be in theaters, I'm sure, in a limited theatrical release,
but like most people will see this on independent lens on PBS.
You know, that's the kind of movie it is.
It's an authorized biography of a nice man who did something unique in the world of television.
But his general philosophy and premise for life is, feels radical.
Yeah.
And he is the living embodiment of kindness and listening.
And it just in this moment, and I'm not going to,
I'm certainly not going to do a political spiel about this,
but in this moment, that feels, it just felt astonishing.
It was like a real revelation for me.
So I would highly recommend that to people,
especially people like me who grew up listening to Mr. Rogers.
Did you see the Chinese live streaming doc?
I didn't.
So that's what our colleague Cam was pretty fired up about that.
Yes.
Please like me?
Yes, Cam Collins was a jury member on the documentary side of things down in Austin this year.
And he got in a cab with me on the way to Ready Player 1 and he was like, best movie I've seen so far is.
People's Republic of Desire.
Oh, so it's not please like me at all.
It's not pleased like you at all.
How Wu is the director of the film.
It's essentially about performers acquiring social media following via live streaming.
Right.
and particularly overseas
in Asia.
And apparently it's
unnerving and upsetting.
And there is, can you sense a through line here
from unfriended
through 8th grade, through People's
Republic of Desire, this like,
you know, dark
sadness. Reckoning
with our digital selves. That life on the internet
creates. Yeah. It is a
fascinating idea. So maybe it's obvious, like, that's why you responded
to Mr. Rogers. It was like the most
pure distillation of
of kindness, of human empathy.
Analog.
Yeah, sure.
Let's get back to PBS.
Let's get back to puppets.
Let's get back to men looking each other in the eye and saying, like, I care about you.
I have your back.
Somewhere a Rick and Morty fan is dialing up an at to you.
Yeah, die slow, scumbag.
I'm sure that's what my mentions will be full of.
Chris, anything else you want to say about Southby?
The wonder that is the South by Southwest.
Well, I wanted to ask you, was there anything you missed that you were really excited to check out?
anything you're kicking yourself over.
Yeah, there were a couple of things that I missed.
I think first and foremost, I missed
Fast Color, which is Julia Hart's
movie starring Goo Goo and Batha Raw.
That is a new kind of take on a superhero
movie, a much more grounded superhero movie
for lack of a better phrase,
that everybody that I talked to who saw
was head over heels about.
Jan Yamato wrote a great piece in the LA Times
about it during the festival.
One of the bigger
commercial premieres
are our colleague,
Juliet saw Blockers, Kay Cannon's new comedy starring John Sina and Lesney Man.
I did not encounter a single person who saw it who said a bad thing about it, which is a good sign.
And, you know, South By also has this fun history of premiering big time studio comedies like
neighbors and sausage party and movies that are basically kind of earmarked for that summer success.
So Blockers is actually out April 6th.
That's going to be pretty soon out in the world.
There were a few other things I missed.
I missed blind spotting.
That was a big movie
starring to V. Diggs
that came out at Sundance.
You know, your boy
Adam Pally had a movie
most likely to murder there.
A horror comedy.
Didn't get a chance to check that out
with Rachel Bloom of
ex-girlfriend.
My crazy ex-girlfriend fame.
So yeah, there were a few things.
I mean, I think you mentioned
Jim Cummings.
Yeah, Thunder Road,
which won special jury prize?
And, you know, I had this,
one of the cool things is that
I bumped into a guy at a party, actually, who just came up and started talking to me,
and his lovely guy named Trace, who worked for a commercial agency.
Basically, like, he works in finding directors for commercial work.
And it seems like I actually didn't even know this, but that is like a quite a...
It's like watching guys play AAU or something.
You know, you can find who's next there.
And he had said that, you know, Jim Cummings was a name that people had been throwing around.
That is...
And he directed this film Thunderworld, which is based on a short that I think...
think he had
Sundance?
Yes, in 17.
Yeah, and so I'm really excited
to see that.
It sounds like
the kind of
sort of complicated
character drama
that we all long
to see on the big screen
more and more.
This has been a complicated
character drama
between us from car crashes
to Aaronowski.
I'm doing great.
Chris,
thank you so much
for doing this.
Thanks again
for listening to the big picture
this week.
If you want to read
more about movies,
I suggest you check
out the ringer.com.
There's a very,
very funny piece
written by.
my colleague Andrew Grudadarro called Revisiting the 2001 Lara Croft Tomb Raider red carpet
in all its glory.
Andrew wrote this because of course there is a new version of Tomb Raider in theaters this weekend
starring Alicia Vikander.
I suggest you look back on what the fashion choices were of the movie stars during
Angelina Jolie's version of this movie because they are brutal.
And for more movie coverage in general, go to the ringer.com.
And for an interesting conversation about how we talk about and think about movies,
check out Damage Control on the Ringer podcast network.
And on this feed, Channel 33, K. Austin Collins and Justin Charity had a spirited conversation about some of the complexities of a wrinkle in time.
Thanks for listening today. See you next week.
