In Theaters Now
Director: Paul Thomas Anderson
Starring: Daniel Day-Lewis, Vicky Krieps, Leslie Manville
Month: January 2018
Talkie Talk #74: The Polka King / Biopic Games
Strike up the polka, the band is in town, it’s The Polka King, based on the real life Jan Lewan. We use that film to talk about Biopics, and have fun doing our little quizzes! It’s a blast.
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Homework Assignment: The Polka King (1:00)
Main Topic: Biopics Quizzes (14:23)
New Homework Assignment: Talk of Fame consideration Beetlejuice (Crackle) (38:09)
Warning: Some mild language. Some language is picante.
> Intro theme courtesy of The Willow Walkers
> Outro song “Extemporaneous Birth” courtesy of Boo Reefa
Talkie Talk #73: Watchlist / News – 1/24
Back to normal, which is great! We discuss our watchlists from the previous two weeks, and then the week’s news.
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The Watchlist (1:00)
TJ: Dunkirk (1:08), The Post (1:36), Battle of the Sexes (4:48), Killing of a Sacred Deer (6:05), Mudbound (10:09), The Travelers (12:42)
Brent: A Ghost Story (15:08), The Game (16:36), Donnie Brasco (16:59), Terror in Beverly Hills (18:19), Drunk, Stoned, Brilliant, Dead: The Story of the National Lampoon (22:02)
Chris: Planet of Dinosaurs (23:31), Wonder Wheel (24:36), Bright (29:18), Justice League (32:15), I Tonya (39:13), Rough Night (40:51), The Shape of Water (43:28), Playing Breath of the Wild (45:58), Snipperclips (46:22), Top Chef (47:58)
David: Mr. Roosevelt (51:37), Blade Runner 2049 (53:19), Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (53:59), The Assassination of Gianni Versace (57:00)
Breezy on the Streets (59:11)
59:26 – Secret Crocodile Dundee movie coming out?
1:01:22 – Paddington 2 – the best movie of all time?
1:02:36 – Scarlett Johansson’s salary on Black Widow
1:04:59 – Nintendo Switch cardboard accessories
Warning: Some mild language. Some language is picante.
> Intro theme courtesy of The Willow Walkers
> Outro song “Extemporaneous Birth” courtesy of Boo Reefa
Milestone Markers: The 90th Academy Awards Factoid Roundup
Rachel Morrison goes from being the first female cinematographer nominated in the American Society of Cinematographers, to the first female nominated for Best Cinematography Oscar in Mudbound.
Dee Rees is the second African American woman nominated for Best Screenplay for her directorial achievement Mudbound – first since Suzanne De Passe for 1972’s Lady Sings the Blues.
Jordan Peele has a bunch of stats – only the fifth African American nominated for Best Director (John Singleton, Lee Daniels, Steve McQueen, Barry Jenkins) – and also, only the 3rd to be nominated for Writing, Directing and Producing in his debut (after James L. Brooks, Terms of Endearment, and Warren Beatty, Heaven Can Wait).
Greta Gerwig is the fifth woman ever nominated for Best Director, following Lina Wertmuller (1976 – Seven Beauties), Jane Campion (1991 – The Piano), Sofia Coppola (2003 – Lost in Translation), and Kathryn Bigelow (2009 – The Hurt Locker).
With the score from Star Wars: The Last Jedi, John Williams now has fifty-one (51) nominations in Best Score and Best Song combined. To put that in context (which is impossible), if you take every nominated actor/actress this year and add up all their lifetime nominations (and subtract Streep for being Streep) – you’d only have 49 nominations across 19 people.
Speaking of The Last Jedi, with the four (4) nominations this year (Score, Sound Mixing/Editing, Visual Effects), every Star Wars film ever released has been nominated for at least one Oscar – Episode I-3, II-1, III-1, IV-10, V-3, VI-4, VII-5, RO-2, VIII-4. Total of 33 Oscar nominations – I would wager this is more than the Star Trek franchise has.
Phantom Thread only had one precursor guild nomination prior to getting to Best Picture: The Costume Designers Guild (CDG), which nominates fifteen (15) films per year. Compare to The Shape of Water and Dunkirk which had nine (9) guild nominations before Best Picture.
There are two nominees this year who are already Triple Crown of Acting winners (acting Tony, Emmy, Oscar) – Christopher Plummer (Tonys for Cyrano and Barrymore, Emmys for The Moneychangers and Madeline, Oscar for Beginners) and Frances McDormand (Tony for Good People, Emmy for Olive Kitteridge, Oscar for Fargo).
Christopher Plummer – already the oldest acting winner for 2011’s Beginners – is now the oldest acting nominees in an acting category at 88 years old and second oldest ever nominee in any category for Best Supporting Actor in All the Money in the World…
… Second only to documentation Agnes Varda, who, at 89, is getting a Lifetime Achievement Award Oscar and is nominated for Best Documentary (Faces Places).
Timothee Chalamet, for Call Me By Your Name, is now the youngest Best Actor nominee since Mickey Rooney in 1939 (Babes in Arms). They invented acting in 1938, so that’s something.
With Rockwell and Harrelson both nominated for Supporting Actor for Three Billboards, this is the first time since 1991 (Bugsy – Keitel and Kingsley) since two actors were nominated for the same film in Supporting Actor. This has happened 10 times in Supporting Actress since then.
Blige in Mudbound (image: NYT)
Mary J. Blige is not only nominated in her acting debut (Mudbound), but is also the only Supporting Actress nominee in history to be also nominated for Best Song in the same year (“Mighty River”).
With this year’s nom, Octavia Spencer now ties Viola Davis as the most nominated African American woman in Academy history. It seems crazy that it only took three (3) nominations to do so.
Get Out is the first February release to be nominated for best picture since Silence of the Lambs in 1991.
Logan becomes the first comic book movie since 1931’s Skippy (a comic strip adaptation) to be nominated for its screenplay. Other comic films nominated by the Writers Guild of America (WGA) but not the Academy include Deadpool (2016), Guardians of the Galaxy (2014), and The Dark Knight (2008)
Best Documentary nominee Strong Island‘s director Yance Ford is openly transgender – only the third transgender person ever to be nominated, and the first ever transgender director in any medium – other two nominees were in best song score (Angela Morley, The Slipper and the Rose and The Little Prince) and best song (ANOHNI, from Racing Extinction).
In Foreign Language, The Insult becomes the first Lebanese movie nominated for Best Foreign Language Film.
The Three Amigos of Mexican Cinema are now all nominated for best director – Guillermo Del Toro (The Shape of Water) joins his brothers-in-arms Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity) and Alejandro González Iñárritu (Birdman and The Revenant), and is also a favorite to win.
Four of the five Best Actress nominees also represent Best Picture films (Three Billboards, The Post, The Shape of Water, Lady Bird) – compared to last year, with only one nomination representing a Best Picture (La La Land).
Dear Basketball… it’s Kobe again. (image: IMDb)
Kobe Bryant, with the Dear Basketball animated short, is the first professional basketball player to be nominated for an Oscar. LeBron James hears this, and adds a goal to his goal-adding-app.
Great milestones in all, but… Number of minority actors nominated decreases from seven (7) in 2017 to four (4) in 2018. Bummer.
Talkie Talk #72: 90th Academy Awards Nomination Predictions
Another VSP – Very Special Podcast. January 23rd – the day the 90th Academy Award Nominations come out. Here at The Media By Us, we’re doing our predictions for every category – somehow, one of us is going to be the most accurate and will have all the kudos. Anyway, it’s fun again to talk about the movies of 2017.
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Main Topic: Oscar Nomination Predictions (1:07)
Live Action Short (2:30)
Documentary Short (4:13)
Animated Short (6:38)
Foreign Language Film (8:35)
Documentary Feature (10:25)
Animated Feature (12:52)
Visual Effects (15:50)
Sound Mixing/Editing (18:26)
Original Song (21:13)
Original Score (23:53)
Production Design (26:18)
Makeup & Hairstyling (28:00)
Film Editing (31:02)
Costume Design (32:11)
Cinematography (35:17)
Original Screenplay (38:50)
Adapted Screenplay (41:30)
Supporting Actor (44:08)
Supporting Actress (47:24)
Lead Actor (49:06)
Lead Actress (53:13)
Director (55:09)
Best Picture (58:16)
Homework Assignment: The Polka King (Netflix)
Warning: Some mild language. Some language is picante.
> Intro theme courtesy of The Willow Walkers
> Outro song “Extemporaneous Birth” courtesy of Boo Reefa
Talkie Talk #71: Best (and Worst) of 2017, Part 2
The year is over! Check out Part 1 for our best in games, TV and worst of 2017 movies. Part 2 (this one) has our personal top ten films of the year. Fun fact: everyone has a different #1!
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Main Topic: Best (and Worst) of 2017
Top Ten Films of the Year (0:56)
David
10. Wonder Woman
9. Okja
8. Logan
7. Colossal
6. The Lost City of Z
5. The Big Sick
4. Get Out
3. Columbus
2. Dunkirk
1. Lady Bird
TJ
10. I, Tonya
9. The Big Sick
8. Dunkirk
7. Lady Bird
6. Baby Driver
5. Band Aid
4. Colossal
3. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
2. Get Out
1. The Florida Project
Brent
10. Star Wars: The Last Jedi
9. Wonderstruck
8. Lady Bird
7. It
6. Phantom Thread
5. Dunkirk
4. Blade Runner 2049
3. Columbus
2. The Big Sick
1. Get Out
Chris
10. The LEGO Batman Movie
9. Coco
8. Star Wars: The Last Jedi
7. Baby Driver
6. The Big Sick
5. Logan
4. Dunkirk
3. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
2. Get Out
1. Blade Runner 2049
Honorable Mentions (1:25:18)
Next Podcast: Oscar Predictions (Nominations out on 1/23)
Warning: Some mild language. Some language is picante.
> Intro theme courtesy of The Willow Walkers
> Outro song “Extemporaneous Birth” courtesy of Boo Reefa
Talkie Talk #70: Best (and Worst) of 2017, Part 1
The year is over! In a year-end blow-out, we’re talking about the best of times (our top lists for video games and TV) and the worst of times (our lists of the worst movies of the year). Part 2 will have our top 10 films of the year.
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Main Topic: Best (and Worst) of 2017
Best Video Games of 2017 (1:16)
David
5. Until Dawn
4. South Park: The Fractured But Whole
3. Final Fantasy XV
2. Stardew Valley
1. Persona 3
Chris
5. Hollow Knight
4. PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds
3. Cuphead
2. Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
1. Super Mario Odyssey
Best TV of 2017 (25:22)
David
5. Legion
4. The Good Place
3. Mindhunter
2. Halt and Catch Fire
1. The Leftovers
Brent
5. Survivor
4. American Gods
3. Stranger Things
2. American Vandal
1. The Leftovers
Worst Movies of 2017 (42:05)
TJ
5. Phoenix Forgotten
4. The Dark Tower
3. CHiPs
2. American Assassin
1. Naked
Chris
5. The Emoji Movie
4. Geostorm
3. The Dark Tower
2. The Circle
1. Fifty Shades Darker
Brent
5. Shimmer Lake
4. Fifty Shades Darker
3. The Dark Tower
2. The Mummy
1. War Machine
David
5. The Baby Sitter
4. Shimmer Lake
3. Death Note
2. Small Crimes
1. War Machine
Next Podcast: Top Ten Films of the Year
Warning: Some mild language. Some language is picante.
> Intro theme courtesy of The Willow Walkers
> Outro song “Extemporaneous Birth” courtesy of Boo Reefa
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Now in Theaters
Director: Martin McDonagh
Starring: Frances McDormand, Woody Harrelson, Sam Rockwell
Chris: Hi everybody! Thanks for joining TJ and I for our chat about the, at times wildly uncomfortable, but mostly enjoyable movie Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. It is perhaps my favorite movie of the year that features punctuation in the title. I really enjoyed it and thought it was a hoot. TJ, how did you feel, generally, about the movie (which we will hereafter abbreviate into something cutesy like 3BB)?
TJ: Fantastic. One of the best of the year so far. The only negative thing I have to say about it is that it was billed as a black comedy, when in actuality, it felt like a very serious, melancholic, drama, with amazing snippets of comic relief.
Chris: Yeah. I mean Sam Rockwell’s character is responsible for some of the funniest moments in the movie but is almost certainly the most troublesome character. He is so oblivious to anyone other than himself and his mom, he’s a bad cop, racist, sexist, and he’s the character who seems most ripped from a Coen brothers’ movie. What’d you think of Rockwell’s performance (or anyone else that really shined)?
TJ: The acting all around is what I would write home about. Frances McDormand cements herself here. She’s one of the best of our time. Sam Rockwell and Woody Harrelson also boost their already fantastic resumes. There’s a chance that this movie has iconic roles for three superstars when we look back on it years from now. Not to mention the great supporting cast. Lucas Hedges, John Hawkes, Abbie Cornish, and Caleb Landry Jones were all great. I was a particular fan of Sandy Martin. Her appearance is another thing that makes us feel like this should be more comedy than drama when it’s just not. You know her from It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, but her role here as the mother to Rockwell is heartbreaking and real.
Having said all that…McDormand steals the show when she’s on screen.
Chris: Absolutely. My favorite scene is Frances McDormand and Lucas Hedges in a quick back and forth featuring one of Martin McDonagh’s favorite 4-letter words. Also, McDormand’s “I am become death” attitude is phenomenal. You forgot to mention Peter Dinklage, whose arc is that of a bullied admirer of McDormand’s character. He’s really great as well. I can’t think of a performance that felt phoned in. Samara Weaving was hilarious as John Hawkes’ new boo. He, by the way, is also great, and REALLY intense.
So the acting rocks… what did you think of the overall story? Seem pretty typical for a McDonagh film?
(FOR ANY READER, THIS IS YOUR SPOILER WARNING, AND THIS IS A MOVIE THAT COULD BE SPOILED)
TJ: Loved it. On the surface it’s a story about grief and recovery. Then it becomes so much deeper. McDonagh does a fantastic job at showing you that the Police Chief (Harrelson) is a multi-layer character. And if that isn’t hard enough to pull off, he does it with Officer Dixon (Rockwell). He’s a “if it ends with -phobic he’s probably it character” and gives him life. It’s a character study of all the residents in this small town with the disappearance of Mildred Hayes’ daughter as a catalyst. The billboards are a MacGuffin for more than just the protagonist. Everyone just wants something different out of them. They are there so we see the true colors of these characters.
Chris: I listened to a podcast recently where someone mentioned that the script is only 86 pages for a 2 hour movie. What efficient story telling. Seems like the kind of script that McDonagh gravitates toward. In Bruges is similarly paced where everything revolves around the titular city while all of the work happens within the dialog of a fairly small cast. The city Bruges is an important symbol to Gleeson, Farrell, and Fiennes that has a different meaning to each whereas in 3BB there are words literally printed on them that state Hayes’ attitude.
Speaking of his prior works, do you have a ranking of his movies? Have you seen them all?
For me it’s In Bruges > 3BB > Seven Psychopaths
TJ: This was actually my introduction to McDonagh. Really excited to go see the other two. And the Oscar Winning short from 2004, Six Shooter.
Chris: I think In Bruges, for me, is a Talk of Fame nominee. Anyway, is there anything else you want to cover before we go live with this?
TJ: One more question. Is this a perfect movie? If not, what about it isn’t good?
Chris: Hmmm. Perfect movie is hard. I don’t buy into the criticism that there is too much moral ambiguity in the characters. I think that people are morally complicated and 3BB does a good job at portraying it.
So maybe, yeah. I am wracking my brain trying to think of something. And I guess it would be that if you are REALLY sensitive to uncomfortable situations then this isn’t for you. But that’s just not true for 99.9% of the population. I would blindly recommend it to pretty much everyone.
What do you think? Did you have something in mind?
TJ: If I have to pick something it’s probably that some of the ancillary characters aren’t necessary for the story they are telling. Specifically Peter Dinklage and Caleb Landry Jones. They don’t seem to affect the story as it progressed. They were just little side stories. They were interesting, and acted well, but I’m not sure they were important enough to be told. They didn’t tie in to our three main characters they way everybody else did.
Chris: I agree about Dinklage, but the CLJ story helped build the universe. He was also the perfect “fuck authority” foil for Hayes and also target for the Ebbing PD.
Any parting thoughts so we can wrap this up?
TJ: Fair point on CLJ. He had some good chemistry late with Rockwell as well. Just a fantastic film that I’d absolutely recommend to anybody over the age of 18…
Chris: Agreed. I would also recommend it to all. Anyway, thanks for chatting with me TJ.
TJ: Fo sho.
Talkie Talk #69: New Year’s Watchlist / Jumanji / I, Tonya / Bright – 1/12
The gang’s back in auld lang syne mode as we discuss our Watchlists over the end of year hiatus. And yes, it’s as exciting as that sounds.
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The Watchlist (1:25)
David: Wonder Woman (1:30), Logan Lucky (5:15), Dunkirk (6:20), The Batman Films, (11:25), Black Mirror Season 4 Ep 1 (17:47), Playing SNES Classic (19:15)
Chris: Star Wars: The Force Awakens (22:33), Clueless (23:10), Wilson (27:05), Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (29:53), Godless (48:15), Playing Mario Kart 8 (33:35), Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (35:00), Super Mario Odyssey (37:34)
Brent: The Godfather (39:50), Bananas, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (but were afraid to ask) (41:00), The Purple Rose of Cairo (43:07), Playing The Uncharted Trilogy Remastered (46:45)
TJ: Barton Fink (50:07), A Muppet Family Christmas (52:15), The Disaster Artist (53:05), Kingsman: The Golden Circle (55:15), American Assassin (55:56), Bright (57:00), The Greatest Showman (58:24), Coco (59:16), I, Tonya (1:00:15), Downsizing (1:03:47)
Breezy on the Streets (1:06:13)
1:06:13 – Recapping the Movie Guild Nominees (Oscar Lead-up!)
1:10:10 – Also recapping some of the Oscar category shortlists
1:12:20 – Flight of the Conchords HBO special coming out this year1:02:14 – Golden Globe and SAG nominations Out
1:12:54 – Trailer for Game Over, Man from Workaholics crew
1:13:15 – Sexual misconduct allegations against Paul Haggis, Bryan Singer, Max Landis
1:15:00 – Amazing trailer for A Quiet Place, also Slenderman (nope)
Next Week’s Pods: Top Ten 2017 Lists! Oscar predictions!
Warning: Some mild language. Some language is picante.
> Intro theme courtesy of The Willow Walkers
> Outro song “Extemporaneous Birth” courtesy of Boo Reefa
I, Tonya (2017)
In theaters
Director: Craig Gillespie
Starring: Margot Robbie, Sebastian Stan, Allison Janney, Julianne Nicholson, Bobby Cannavale