In a rare treat, two unmistakable character actors join the pod: Wes Studi and Dale Dickey. If you don’t know their names, you certainly know their indelible faces from movies like “The Last of the Mohicans” and “Winter’s Bone.” They star together in the tender, dusty new romance film, “A Love Song.” Studi and Dickey […]
Author Archives: Chance Solem-Pfeifer
Work Spouses
When your job is your life, a work spouse is there with a listening ear, comforting rapport, and maybe even soup–at least when that work marriage is functioning platonically and properly. On today’s episode, Noah’s work spouse, Elise, joins the program to break down what “Broadcast News” (1987), “Jerry Maguire” (1996), and “The Intern” (2015) […]
‘Apples’ Director Christos Nikou on Memory, ‘The Truman Show’ and Yorgos Lanthimos
The acclaimed new Greek film “Apples” imagines a world in the grips of an amnesia epidemic. Director Christos Nikou swings by the pod to remember the origins of his debut feature, as well as what he learned from working with Yorgos Lanthimos on “Dogtooth.”
Magic Mikes
For the 10th anniversary of “Magic Mike,” we make it rain critical reflection on Channing Tatum’s career-defining role and other standouts of the male stripper sub-genre like “The Full Monty” (1997) and “Chocolate City” (2015). Suffice it to say, if this episode had a stage name, it would probably be “Cash Rich” or “Threatened Masculinity.”
‘Brian and Charles’ Director Jim Archer on Profound, Rebellious Robots
First director interview in a minute! Today we’re talking to Jim Archer, who’s made a new comedy called “Brian and Charles” about a kooky inventor (David Earl’s Brian) who builds a 7-foot-tall robot (Chris Hayward’s Charles) anxious to learn all it can about this world of ours. Jim discusses some of the film’s documentary inspirations, […]
Fun With Nuns
Rap our knuckles and yank our ears if you must, but we watched three irreverent nun movies for today’s show. From the musical-comedy of “Sister Act” (1992) to the demonic possession of “The Nun” (2018) to the perverse wonderment of “Benedetta” (2021), these sisters play by their own rules in the face of retribution and […]
The State of Cage
Few would call Nicolas Cage a chameleonic actor, but his career is always shapeshifting like no other. On the occasion of Cage playing himself in “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent,” Chance is joined by fellow Portland film critic Ray Gill Jr. to review the new movie and then by returning champ Andy Crump to […]
Chance and Noah’s High School Reunion
Countless movies capture the exhilaration and horror of high school, but only a select few resurrect those qualities for high school reunions. On this episode, we reminisce on this delightful and harrowing subgenre, featuring “Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion” (1997), “Peggy Sue Got Married” (1986) and “Central Intelligence” (2016). There’s one universal takeaway: even […]
Miami Movies (X, The Outfit, Deep Water)
After a 2.5-year hiatus from watching movies in person, your trusty hosts recently took time away from getting sunburned in Miami to catch three new films. This month, we’re talking THE OUTFIT, DEEP WATER, and X. But these three titles have something in common beyond their release weekend. After some Oscars jibber-jabber, we talk claustrophobic […]
‘The Batman’ Is A Grimy, Overlong Hunt With Genuine Style
What did Tim Burton ever do that the entire machine of contemporary franchises was like, “Forget this cartoon bullshit; let’s make it realistic.” (Question withdrawn; we know what Tim Burton did.) But seriously, why the preoccupation with realism, and to what end? Why would The Lion King be better with photo-real animals? Why would the […]