091 – Zodiac

2007 was a stacked year for the major names in cinema offering bleak masterpieces and one that got left in the dust was David Fincher’s Zodiac. The film meticulously details the notorious serial killer’s exploits and aftermath with a large ensemble and the obsessive attention to detail that has become synonymous with the auteur. Arriving before The Curious Case of Benjamin Button would finally thrust Fincher into the Oscar fold, Zodiac was originally intended for the 2006 Oscar race before jettisoned off to the following March only to be forgotten at the end of the Oscar year.

We make no qualms with gushing about this one – among our favorites of that decade, the film is a flawless epic of paranoia and sustained tension. This episode, we are talking about Fincher’s rise from Alien 3 failure to current Oscar staple, Robert Downey Jr.’s MCU comeback, and songs that can be both horny songs and scary songs.

Topics also include our Fincher rankings, Zodiac‘s internal competition for a Supporting Actor nod, and the film’s impressive visual effects that create a San Francisco of the past.

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090 – Magic Mike

Based loosely on star Channing Tatum’s experience as an exotic dancer, 2012’s Magic Mike lured director Steven Soderbergh out of his ongoing “retirement” and became a summer smash. Women loved it, men loved, the critics loved it – except the Academy did not. Though released during the full swing of the McConnaissance, it would take another year for Oscar to honor Matthew McConaughey, overlooking his charming, thong-clad villain performance here, despite love from some major precursors.

This episode, we fire up the Ginuwine to discuss Tatum’s rising movie star career from beefcake to surprising comedic talent to his current downshift in visibility. We also look at Soderbergh’s career post-Oscar, including his reticence to play the Oscar game that might leave films like this (and Contagion) out of the running.

Topics also include the 2012 Best Supporting Actor field of all previous nominees (and who we think might have had sixth place), the forgotten Alex Pettyfer, and the multiple onscreen appearances of Channing Tatum’s bumbum.

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089 – The Rainmaker

Francis Ford Coppola is a legendary director among Oscar lore thanks to the Corleone family, and this week’s episode pairs him with a name that resulted in much ‘90s cinematic prestige: John Grisham. After a string of hit adaptations that danced with major Oscar consideration, Coppola took his shot at Grisham’s The Rainmaker. But despite good reviews (and a Globe nomination for supporting actor Jon Voight), the film earned mild box office that halted the Grisham hot streak. Led by an emerging Matt Damon, the film was also overshadowed just one month later by the release of Good Will Hunting.

This episode, we revisit the box office success and Oscar near-success of films adapted by the mega-popular works of the legal thriller / airport staple John Grisham. We also discuss Coppola’s late career phase of largely unseen and unheralded films, the stacked 1997 Best Actor field, and The Rainmaker’s bursting cast list of glorified cameos and supporting players.

And this episode brings the return of two of our favorite topics: Claire Danes and the Entertainment Weekly Fall Movie Preview.

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088 – Alfie (with Griffin Newman)

We’re taking it back to Jude Law’s infamously busy 2004 this week and we’ve got a special guest to help dissect it. Actor and cohost of the Blank Check with Griffin and David podcast Griffin Newman joins us to discuss Alfie, the modernized remake of the 1966 Best Picture nominee with Law filling Michael Caine’s previously star-making shoes.

In a 2004 that also filled his resume with Closer, I Heart Huckabees, and Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, Alfie was was one that was most bent on turning Law into a bonafide movie star – and the biggest bomb with audiences and critics. Not helped by an updated take that is significantly more shallow than the original, this film suffered from a star overexposed to audiences both onscreen and in the tabloids. This episode, we look at Law’s quick turnaround from omnipresence to punchline, and his eventual reemergence as a character actor.

We also take a look back at the career of director Charles Shyer and his quality drop-off after the end of his personal and creative partnership with Nancy Meyers, and the one-two punch of Chris Rock and Sean Penn commenting on Law at the Oscars. Topics also include the era of metrosexuality, London as a terrible stand-in for New York City, and Beyoncé performing three Original Song nominees at the Oscars.

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