Sinopsis
Elise Moore and David Fiore aspire to cover every time travel film ever made (in this continuum, at least). Together, we'll dive deeply and dialogically into this eternally compelling genre. Our discussions will draw from philosophy, psychology, anthropology, history, narratology, and aesthetic theory. We'll even try to wrap our minds around the physics, when the films demand it. It's an ode to paramours and paradox by two people who really give a flux.But wait! There's more!This is also the home of: Ben-Days of Our Lives: A Comics NostalgiaFirst of all, we know, we know we're not using the term Ben Days, or Ben Day Dots, with any great precision. If you want to dig into the history of comic book dots, and what they do and don't have to do with a process invented by a man named Ben Day, here's a great series of blog posts on the topic:https://legionofandy.com/2013/06/03/roy-lichtenstein-the-man-who-didnt-paint-benday-dots/Also, the name of our podcast, and attendant imagery, is probably making you think of an earlier era of comic books than the one we're going to begin by treating: the 1980s. The emphasis is on the days of our lives part rather than the Ben Days part. Then why have we got the Ben Days part? Because Dave really likes puns, and because we both like the serialized, soap opera elements of the superhero comics of our childhoods. Hello! We are David Fiore and Elise Moore, a couple of grad school dropouts, born in 1974 and 1975 respectively, with positively Proustian attachments to the superhero comics we read in the 80s. Dave, however, went really crazy for a few years and also read a ton of comics from the 1960s during this period, so it's possible that one day we'll stray outside the 80s. But in the meantime, we've got a lot of 80s titles we want to get through. Such as: the Wolfman/Perez New Teen TitansAmethyst (first mini-series and ongoing series)The Daring New Adventure of SupergirlGrant Morrison's Animal ManWe don't know much of anything about comic books from the 90s onward, so we'll try not to refer to them too much, because we'll just sound curmudgeonly. Whereas we'd prefer the tone of this podcast to be celebratory. We both have backgrounds in textual analysis, which we've also applied on our first podcast as a team, ANOTHER KIND OF DISTANCE: A TIME TRAVEL PODCAST, where we look at time travel movies. However, that's a project to cover every time travel podcast ever made, whereas here, we're only looking at comic books we want to cover. So we expect that we'll find more to our liking on this podcast: even if the titles don't always live up to our memories, the memories will probably dispose us to treat them with respect and affection. So if you love these titles too and we're not aware of other podcasts devoted to them please put your earbuds in place, sit back, and remember with us!Our adorable and handily legal Facebook cover photo art was created with the help of Freepik.com and Addtext.com.And that's not all!This is also the home of - We're Not Gonna Talk About Judy; A Twin Peaks Season 3 PodcastAnd....... it is soon to be the home of.... an as-yet-unnamed podcast which will take an in-depth look at American Transcendentalism and its many cultural, political, spiritual and philosophical manifestations!
Episodios
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The Hollywood Studios, Year-By-Year – MGM, 1932 – Red Dust & Red-Headed Woman
17/04/2020 Duración: 01h26minGet excited about this one! In our MGM 1932 episode of The Studios Year by Year, the Culver City colossus hits its stride and proves that you don't need auteurs when you have scripts, directors, and stars. It's a Jean Harlow double feature, playing two wildly different characters in RED DUST (dir. Victor Fleming) and RED-HEADED WOMAN (dir. Jack Conway). In addition to Harlow, we discuss '30s screenwriters, Clark Gable's evolving persona, and MGM's vs. Warner Bros.' treatment of the sexual social climber. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Red Dust (dir: Victor Fleming) 0h 49m 02s: Red-Headed Woman (dir. Jack Conway) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.* Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com Theme Music: “What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?” – Le Tigre
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Acteurist Oeuvre-View – Season 1 – Jennifer Jones: Tender is the Night (1962) & The Idol (1966)
10/04/2020 Duración: 01h36minIt's a bittersweet episode as we bid farewell to our Jennifer Jones series with first viewings of her final two starring-role films, Henry King's TENDER IS THE NIGHT (1962) and Daniel Petrie's THE IDOL (1966). We find our heroine once again playing characters embroiled in dark Freudian psychodramas, and consider how King's film alters F. Scott Fitzgerald's alternate universe roman à clef, and whether or not Petrie's film deserves its obscurity. From saint to fallen (?) idol: our examination of Jennifer Jones, Acteur is now complete. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Tender is the Night (1962; dir: Henry King) 0h 38m 57s: The Idol (1966; dir: Daniel Petrie) 1h 24m 00s Jennifer Jones Oeuvre-View –Concluding statements and non-binding Top 5 lists +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece “Making America Strange Again: Gangs of New York” in issue #80 Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright
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The Hollywood Studios, Year-by-Year – Paramount, 1932 – One Hour With You & Love Me Tonight
03/04/2020 Duración: 01h19minThis time on The Studios Year by Year it's a rather unfair pairing of Lubitsch's (or Cukor's?) ONE HOUR WITH YOU with Mamoulian's LOVE ME TONIGHT. They have less in common than you'd think for both being operettas starring Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald made by Paramount in 1932. Looking for something to lift your mood while you're waiting for quarantine to lift? We confirm with this viewing that LOVE ME TONIGHT is one of the most delightful and inventive movies of the 30s (or any decade). Mamoulian once again proves himself a cinematic pioneer... that no one has caught up with yet. And in our Fear and Staying Home in Toronto segment, we compare the Borzage and Selznick A Farewell to Armses. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: One Hour With You (dirs: Ernst Lubitsch & George Cukor) 0h 26m 15s: Love Me Tonight (dir: Rouben Mamoulian) 1h 07m 56s Fear & Staying Home in Toronto +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedu
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Acteurist Oeuvre-View – Season 1 – Jennifer Jones: A Farewell To Arms (1957) & The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1957)
27/03/2020 Duración: 01h05minIn our penultimate Jennifer Jones episode, we consider whether Selznick's final production, A FAREWELL TO ARMS (1957), is Hemingway's vision of war or Selznick's, and contemplate Selznick as Auteur. Then we turn to THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET (1957), which is not exactly the staid literary costume drama Elise was expecting. The Jones oeuvre continues to intrigue! Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: A Farewell To Arms (1957; Dir: Charles Vidor; Prod: David O. Selznick) 0h 42m 40s: The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1957; Dir: Sidney Franklin) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece “Making America Strange Again: Gangs of New York” in issue #80 Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.* Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com Theme Music: “What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?” – Le Tigre
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Fear and Moviegoing in Toronto – Winter 2020: TIFF Cinemathèque – Let’s Dance: The Films of Angela Schanelec – The Dreamed Path (2016) and I Was At Home, But… (2019)
21/03/2020 Duración: 02h05minFor our first COVID-19-era Lightbox retrospective episode, we look at the enigmatic cinema of Angela Schanelec. We focus on her two most recent films, THE DREAMED PATH (2016) and I WAS AT HOME, BUT... (2019). Then, in our final, presciently-named Fear and Moviegoing in Toronto segment for “the duration”, it's the last Bressons of TIFF's anniversary retrospective that we were able to see (LANCELOT DU LAC, A GENTLE WOMAN, and his only (?) comedy, FOUR NIGHTS OF A DREAMER), plus we celebrate the emotional generosity of Coppola's PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Schanelec Prolegomenon 0h 07m 21s: The Dreamed Path [German title: Der traumhafte Weg] (2016) 0h 39m 13s: I was at Home, But… [German title: Ich war zuhause, aber] (2019) 1h 22m 28s: Pre-Quarantine cinemagoing: Une femme douce (1969); Quatre nuits d’un rêveur (1971); Lancelot du lac (1974) [all Dir: Robert Bresson]; Peggy Sue Got Married (1986/dir: Francis Ford Coppola) @ The Rev
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The Hollywood Studios, Year-by-Year – Universal, 1931 – A House Divided and Waterloo Bridge
14/03/2020 Duración: 01h53minUniversal, 1931: we discuss one of the greatest movies of the 30s, James Whale's WATERLOO BRIDGE, and William Wyler's Oedipal horror movie, A HOUSE DIVIDED. And in our Moviegoing in Toronto section: erotic pedagogy in Jacqueline Audry's OLIVIA (1951), Christian anarchism in Frank Capra's YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU (1938), and more Bresson. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: A House Divided (dir: William Wyler) 0h 29m 57s: Waterloo Bridge (dir. James Whale) 1h 03m 17s: Winter cinemagoing: Chronicle of the Years of Fire (1975; dir: Mohammed Lakhdar-Hamina)/ OLIVIA (1951; dir: Jacqueline Audry)/ YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU (1938; dir: Frank Capra) / LES DAMES DU BOIS DE BOULOGNE (1945), AU HASARD BALTHAZAR (1966), MOUCHETTE (1967) & PICKPOCKET (1959) – all dir: Robert Bresson. +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece “Making America Strange Again: Gangs of New York” in issue #80 Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at
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Acteurist Oeuvre-View – Season 1 – Jennifer Jones: The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956) and Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955)
05/03/2020 Duración: 01h32minIn this week's Jennifer Jones episode, we view our heroine in two new lights: as wife (in Nunnally Johnson's 1956 social problem epic, THE MAN IN THE GRAY FLANNEL SUIT) and spinster (in Henry Koster's GOOD MORNING, MISS DOVE 1955). Then, in our Moviegoing Section, we discuss Joseph Mankiewicz's THE GHOST & MRS. MUIR (1947) as the Hollywood Gertrud, along with Bresson and the pleasure of asceticism. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956; dir: Nunnally Johnson) 0h 36m 16s: Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955; dir: Henry Koster) 0h 50m 04s: Winter cinemagoing: The Ghost & Mrs. Muir (1946; dir: Joseph Mankiewicz) @ The Paradise on Bloor; Week One of The Poetry of Precision – TIFF Cinematheque’s Robert Bresson retrospective – Les anges du péché (1943); Journal d’un curé de campagne (1951); Un condamné à mort s’est échappé (1956); Procès de Jeanne d’Arc (1962); The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956; dir: Alfred Hitchcock) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Epi
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The Hollywood Studios, Year-By-Year – RKO, 1931 – Kept Husbands & Lonely Wives
28/02/2020 Duración: 01h18minLONELY WIVES (dir. Russell Mack) meet KEPT HUSBANDS (dir. Lloyd Bacon) in our RKO 1931 episode of The Studios Year-by-Year. Edward Everett Horton sex farce or battle-of-the-sexes melodrama-played-for-farce—this one has got it all. And in our Moviegoing in Toronto section, a Mary Pickford and Clara Bow double feature has us thinking about feisty Victorian maidens and heroic modern gals. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Kept Husbands (dir: Lloyd Bacon) 0h 29m 44s: Lonely Wives (dir. Russell Mack) 0h 56m 04s: Winter cinemagoing: ROSITA (1923; dir: Ernst Lubitsch) @ TIFF Lightbox; IT (1927; dirs: Clarence G. Badger & Josef von Sternberg) @ The Fox Theatre; THE NAKED SPUR (1953; dir: Anthony Mann) @ TIFF Lightbox; THE STRANGE CASE OF ANGELICA (2010; dir: Manoel de Oliveira) @ TIFF Lightbox +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece “Making America Strange Again: Gangs of New York” in issue #80 Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise
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Acteurist Oeuvre-View – Season 1 – Jennifer Jones: Beat the Devil (1953) & Love is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955)
21/02/2020 Duración: 01h15minThis time on our Jennifer Jones ‘cast it's two movies based on novels by Communists, bafflingly made during the early Cold War era, one a failure and one a hit. We start with the failure, the original Dirtbag Left hang-out movie, John Huston's BEAT THE DEVIL (1953). It was based on a novel by Claud Cockburn (one-time Stalin apologist), with script contributions from Cockburn and a hot young novelist named Truman Capote. Then we turn to another critique of colonialism, Henry King's Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955), based on the semi-autobiographical novel by Han Suyin (future Mao apologist). It's a radical field day! Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Beat the Devil (1953; dir: John Huston) 0h 39m 59s: Love is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955; dir: Henry King) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and
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Valentine’s Day 2020 Special Subject – Valley Girl (1983) and Moment By Moment (1978)
14/02/2020 Duración: 01h51minWhat better befits a Valentine's episode than a couple of films about star-crossed lovers. First, it's punk (Nicholas Cage, in his first starring role) meets prep in Martha Coolidge's low-key, surprisingly affecting teensploitation cult classic VALLEY GIRL (1983). Then, John Travolta in his sex symbol prime drifts up on the beach of middle-aged one percenter Lily Tomlin in MOMENT BY MOMENT (1978), the only movie directed by Tomlin's partner and collaborator, Jane Wagner. We find out whether it's really the unprecedented-in-cinematic-history disaster that the internet continues to claim it is. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Valley Girl (1983; dir: Martha Coolidge) 0h 45m 10s: Moment By Moment (1978; dir.: Jane Wagner) 1h 26m 44s: Winter cinemagoing: Angela Schanelec retrospective + our coverage announcement; NOW, VOYAGER (1942; dir: Irving Rapper); THE KILLERS (1946; Robert Siodmak); THE KILLERS (1964; dir: Don Siegel) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s
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The Hollywood Studios, Year-By-Year – Fox Film Corporation, 1931 – Bad Girl & The Yellow Ticket
07/02/2020 Duración: 01h39minBack to Borzage for Fox 1931 with the inaptly-titled BAD GIRL, plus Raoul Walsh's THE YELLOW TICKET. Deconstructed masculinity in Depression-era New York! Sex worker registries in czarist Russia! Boxing ring cuddles! Nude bathing in women's prisons! Lionel Barrymore chewing the scenery, James Dunn having male hysterics! This episode has got it all. And then Elise tries to suss out connections between I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE (1943) and Maya Deren. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Bad Girl (dir. Frank Borzage) 0h 43m 19s: The Yellow Ticket (dir. Raoul Walsh) 1h 11m 17s: Winter cinemagoing at TIFF Lightbox: FILM SOCIALISME (2010; dir. Jean-Luc Godard); TAIPEI STORY (1985; dir. Edward Yang); I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE (1943; dir. Jacques Tourneur) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.*
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Acteurist Oeuvre-View – Season 1 – Jennifer Jones: Ruby Gentry (1952) and Stazione Termini (1953)
31/01/2020 Duración: 02h02minA transitional Jennifer Jones episode: from another summary of the Jones persona, King Vidor's RUBY GENTRY (1952), to a new era of filmmaking and a new kind of role in De Sica's TERMINAL STATION (1953). We give our verdict on the director's cut of the latter, the first time either of us has seen it. And in Moviegoing, Elise holds forth on PSYCHO and the Art of Hitchcock, and we briefly discuss Parajanov's THE COLOR OF POMEGRANATES and what's not funny about Lubitsch's THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Ruby Gentry (1952; dir. King Vidor) 1h 29m 50s: Stazione Termini (1953; dir. Vittorio De Sica) 1h 01m 00s: Winter Cinemagoing: Gone to Earth (1950) at The Royal; Psycho (1960; dir: Alfred Hitchcock), The Color of Pomegranates (1969; dir: Sergei Parajanov) and The Shop Around the Corner (1940; dir: Ernst Lubitsch) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of
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January Special Subject – The Alpha and Omega of Josef von Sternberg – The Salvation Hunters (1925) and Anatahan (1953)
23/01/2020 Duración: 01h24minThe alpha & omega of Josef von Sternberg's oeuvre, 1925's The SALVATION HUNTERS and 1953's ANATAHAN, prompt us to consider whether the stormy marriage of auteur and system can sometimes be more conducive to artistic accomplishment than creative independence. Then, prompted by recent moviegoing, we announce upcoming episodes/series on Ritwik Ghatak and Margaret Sullavan. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: The Salvation Hunters (1925) 0h 32m 39s: Anatahan (1953) 1h 01m 00s: Winter Cinemagoing: The Cloud-Capped Star (1960; dir. Ritwik Ghatak) and The Mortal Storm (1940; dir Frank Borzage) – +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.* Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com Theme Music: “What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?” – Le Tigre
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The Hollywood Studios, Year-By-Year – Warner Brothers, 1931 – The Maltese Falcon & The Last Flight; with bonus discussion of Little Women (2019), The Souvenir (2019) and more!
17/01/2020 Duración: 01h39minThis week, for Warners Bros. 1931: THE MALTESE FALCON (dir. Roy Del Ruth) and THE LAST FLIGHT (dir. William Dieterle). Warners is an early adopter of Dashiell Hammett, but is his least political novel a good fit for the most political studio, or not? And Dieterle, in his first English-language film, turns Warners into Paramount and tackles the Lost Generation, introducing themes that he'll continue to explore in his WWII films with Joseph Cotten. Then, in our Moviegoing section: we exchange thoughts on a couple of new movies about young women becoming artists that couldn't be more different, Greta Gerwig's LITTLE WOMEN and Joanna Hogg's THE SOUVENIR. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: The Maltese Falcon (dir. Roy Del Ruth) 0h 30m 47s: The Last Flight (dir. William Dieterle) 0h 59m 19s: Winter cinemagoing section: LITTLE WOMEN (2019; dir. Greta Gerwig); THE SOUVENIR (2019; dir. Joanna Hogg); VERTIGO (1958; dir. Alfred Hitchcock) and THE CRUCIFIED LOVERS (1954; dir. Kenji Mizoguchi) – +++ * Ch
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Acteurist Oeuvre-View – Season 1 – Jennifer Jones: Gone to Earth (1950) and Carrie (1952)
10/01/2020 Duración: 01h43minThe masterpieces keep coming in our Jennifer Jones series. This week it's Powell and Pressburger's Gone to Earth (1950), a meta melodrama that clearly gave Kate Bush some ideas, and William Wyler's Carrie (1952), a noirish costume drama about the precariousness of the American middle class. Then we say farewell to TIFF's Scorsese retrospective with our Top 10s and discussion of MEAN STREETS and AFTER HOURS. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Carrie (1952; dir. William Wyler) 0h 46m 24s: Gone To Earth (1950; dir. Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger) 1h 25m 16s: Winter Cinemagoing Audio Journal – Hasty Scorsese Top 10s +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.* Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com Theme Music: “What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?” – Le Ti
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Hollywood Studios, Year-by-Year – MGM, 1931: Possessed and Susan Lenox: Her Fall and Rise
03/01/2020 Duración: 02h08minIn our first MGM 1931 episode, we look at two very different fallen woman movies, POSSESSED (dir. Clarence Brown), starring Joan Crawford and Clark Gable, and SUSAN LENOX (HER FALL AND RISE) (dir. Robert Z. Leonard), with Gable supporting (in the technical sense only) Greta Garbo. POSSESSED, taking cognizance of the Depression, leans as far left as MGM will ever get, while SUSAN LENOX shows us how patriarchy can be worse for men than it is for women—and sister, is it ever bad for women. Then we talk Scorsese, historical accuracy, and why Jordan Belfort did nothing wrong, covering BRINGING OUT THE DEAD, GANGS OF NEW YORK, THE AVIATOR, and THE WOLF OF WALL STREET. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Possessed (dir. Clarence Brown) 0h 52m 59s: Susan Lenox: Her Fall and Rise (dir. Robert Z. Leonard) 1h 26m 55s: Holiday Cinemagoing – Scorsese and History +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze”
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Christmas Special Subject 2019 – Four Daughters (1938) & The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (1944)
24/12/2019 Duración: 01h39minIn the first There's Sometimes a Buggy Christmas episode, we discuss two studio-era Hollywood movies that you never knew were Christmas movies: Michael Curtiz's FOUR DAUGHTERS (1938) and Preston Sturges's THE MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK (1944). Hear us explain how Four Daughters anticipates both Casablanca and Blue Velvet, and learn why Christianity is the ultimate comedy. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: Four Daughters (1938; dir. Michael Curtiz) 0h 46m 55s: Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (1944; dir. Preston Sturges) – +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.* Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com Theme Music: “What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?” – Le Tigre
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Fear and Moviegoing in Toronto – Autumn 2019: TIFF Cinemathèque - News From Home: The Films of Chantal Akerman
21/12/2019 Duración: 02h48minIn our 2nd episode devoted to a TIFF retrospective, we cover News From Home: The Films of Chantal Akerman and share with you our excitement about a new favourite director. Topics that come up in the course of discussing Akerman's obsessional-yet-variegated filmography include Freud, mothers, the historico-geographic basis of identity, the nature of desire, passivity, projection, politics, Hitchcock, comedy, ghosts, gender. Films discussed in depth include NO HOME MOVIE, JEANNE DIELMAN, LA CAPTIVE, JE TU IL ELLE, LES RENDEZ-VOUS D'ANNA, A COUCH IN NEW YORK, and the US-Mexico border documentary FROM THE OTHER SIDE. Then, in our Recently-Viewed section, we discuss two more Scorseses, THE AGE OF INNOCENCE and THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST, and two movies viewed in one day on either side of NO HOME MOVIE (like the two crucified thieves), William Wellman's 1937 A STAR IS BORN (the best version, in our opinion), and Michael Mann's epic cops-and-robbers movie HEAT, wherein an outrageous Pacino tenderly yet relentless
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The Hollywood Studios, Year-by-Year – Paramount, 1931 – City Streets & An American Tragedy
13/12/2019 Duración: 01h37minOn to 1931 and back to Paramount for a Sylvia Sidney double feature: a genre exercise from Mamoulian (CITY STREETS) and a finger exercise from Sternberg (AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY). We debate whether Sternberg's version serves or travesties Dreiser's novel, and whether it matters. Then, the return of Scorsese Corner to discuss TAXI DRIVER, RAGING BULL, and (Dave's favourite Scorsese movie) NEW YORK, NEW YORK. Start spreading the news. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: City Streets (dir. Rouben Mamoulian) 0h 28m 44s: An American Tragedy (dir. Josef von Sternberg) 0h 56M 36s: Fall Cinemagoing Update – Paradise Cinema Opens! (Trouble in Paradise - 1932) + Scorsese Corner: Taxi Driver (1976); New York, New York (1977); and Raging Bull (1980) +++ * Check out our Complete Upcoming Episode Schedule * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Brig
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Acteurist Oeuvre-View – Season 1 – Jennifer Jones: We Were Strangers (1949) and Madame Bovary (1949)
06/12/2019 Duración: 01h21minJennifer Jones exhibits a new level of craft in two very different roles in two 1949 movies, WE WERE STRANGERS (dir. John Huston) and MADAME BOVARY (dir. Vincente Minnelli). Elise and Dave ponder how these movies, respectively daring for their revolutionary politics and gender politics, ever got made. Dave identifies the greatest scene in any movie ever. Elise tries to explain Flaubert's relationship to Romanticism, realism, aestheticism, and all other relevant isms. Time Codes: 0h 01m 00s: We Were Strangers (1949; dir: John Huston) 0h 31m 20s: Madame Bovary (1949; dir. Vincente Minnelli) +++ * Find Elise’s latest published film piece – “Elaine May’s Male Gaze” – in the Elaine May issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room* *And Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.* Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com Theme Music: “What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?” – Le Tigre