In the seat:
- Scott
- Sam
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
In the seat:
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
Part 5 of our 5 part Rock ‘n Roll series
Release date: 3/2/1984
Embassy Pictures
Directed by
Produced by
Written by
Cast
Rob Reiner
Michael McKean
Christopher Guest
Harry Shearer
1:03 2012 RPG Podcast Listeners’ Survey – TAKE THE SURVEY!
http://rpgpolls.com/fill/survey/2012-RPG-Podcast-Listener-Survey/The-Podge-Cast
3:28 Prometheus – Happy Birthday, David.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFyU10B5Jt0
4:05 David discusses watching Michael Fassbender urinate.
5:10 Host reviews.
8:00 This is the one time the pod didn’t open, why didn’t they show all the other times?
8:25 David (unless you’re Tony, then he’s Adam) has hairballs.
8:50 David’s the only one at the table who could shave and pull off a Wolverine.
9:25 David admitted that he fast-forwarded every time a song started… you what??
9:35 Big Bottom… Sex Farm.
9:40 I’m gonna plow your beanfield!
9:48 My silo is rising!
10:10 The hosts loved the cameos.
10:42 David: Who’s Angelica Houston? Jill: (sighing) Oh my God.
11:40 What Jill liked…
12:10 What Tony liked…
12:25 Rob Reiner’s awkward hand movements.
12:45 Rob Reiner in spandex? There isn’t a pod big enough!
13:12 Some else’s vomit. You can’t dust for vomit.
14:15 The bass player with the pipe, he’s the intellectual one.
14:45 Jill dared to say it… Nic Cage is not aging well!
15:00 David will take any Nic Cage he can get.
15:10 How did Lenny Kosnowski become David St. Hubbins?
15:52 Stonehenge sh*% was hysterical!
16:10 We have armadillos in our pants!
17:23 Trivia time with Jill.
18:00 Is Spinal Tap a real band?
18:40 Darrell discusses Spinal Tap’s DVD releases and copywriting issues.
19:20 Help, we are going into the pop business!
20:00 Well, we’re huge in Japan.
20:34 The hosts get sentimental with lyrics.
20:35 My baby fits me like a flesh torpedo, I love to sink her with my pink torpedo.
20:45 Talk about mud flaps, my baby’s got ‘em!
21:00 The looser the waistband, the deeper the quicksand. Or so I have read.
21:08 Drives me out of my mind. How can I leave this… behind?
21:27 Lick my love pump.
21:35 It’s a mix between Mozart and Bach.
22:00 Oh, she’s dead. What? No. Yeah. No. No, she’s not dead. You’re right.
22:45 Geoff: Part of the brilliance of the movie was the gradual deterioration of the band’s success as represented by dwindling Americana.
23:09 And the puppets have a bigger dressing room.
23:55 Odd sexual references to Deuce and Luke.
24:45 Mr. Bentley from The Jeffersons.
25:30 Their other movies; A Mighty Wind, Best in Show, For Your Consideration, Waiting for Guffman.
25:55 They named the drummers after the different “Curly” characters from The Three Stooges.
26:25 A nice wrap-up to the Rock Series.
26:35 David was disappointed by the lack of penis in the movie.
26:50 Well, there WAS the cucumber!
27:23 Instead of a movie where a nobody becomes a rock star (Rock Star), this was a movie about how a rock star can become a nobody.
28:00 Back to Rock Star, lamenting the fact that Jennifer Aniston didn’t get naked.
28:36 David wants Tony to record a parody video, playing the part of all three characters.
28:45 Challenge accepted (yet… I’ve seen no such video).
29:00 Spinal Tap-only karaoke at David’s Cinco de Mayo party.
29:44 Broken mailboxes and more vomit.
30:10 David’s beloved track pants.
30:30 Darrell wraps this party up by stating that This Is Spinal Tap is rated by The Library of Congress as one of the Top 100 Movies of all Time.
31:10 David’s turned on by lists.
31:20 Melina calls David to get the story straight.
32:30 Relationship pro-tip from David.
33:18 Is that Sauron’s University? U of I?
Your Producers for this episode were:
This episode was recorded: 5/9/2012
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
Thanks to Tad for his voice mail this week.
Congrats to Lena and Menolly for their 25s this week.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
In the seat:
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
Part 4 of our 5 part Rock ‘n Roll series
Release date: 9/7/2001
Warner Bros.
Directed by
Produced by
Written by
Cast
Mark Wahlberg
Jennifer Aniston
Dominic West
Initial comments by the hosts:
Darrell points out that this movie was inspired by what happened with Judas Priest when they replaced lead singer Rob Halford with Tim “Ripper” Owens (who had been in a Judas Priest and Pink Floyd tribute band.)
The consensus from all three hosts was that the movie was… okay… filtered, lackluster, problematic in how the story was told. The basis of the story was less about realizing your dream than it was in living someone else’s fantasy.
David wasn’t thrilled with Jennifer Aniston’s performance, but Darrell and Tony both thought she wasn’t all that bad. Their complaint was in how the character was written. Emily (Aniston) seemed completely oblivious to the “rock star” life and her reactions to hers and Izzy’s life were very unrealistic. The movie seemed to be pandering to much less of a rock ‘n roll audience than a mainstream audience.
Tony listened to the commentary track after watching the movie and stated that some of the most interesting parts of the movie seemed to have been cut out, including one scene in which Emily’s character had taken drugs with some of the other rock wives and girlfriends. The movie appeared to be designed to make Izzy’s character sympathetic so that the audience would approve of Izzy and Emily getting back together at the end.
Their biggest complaint was not in the acting or the actors, but in the editing, writing, deleted scenes. Tony would have liked to have seen Izzy’s character be a bit darker, which would have fit more into the story. They all thought Aniston was miscast in this role. She was still doing Friends at the time and they thought that having Aniston portray any type of unpleasant character might not have gone over well with fans of Friends.
One of the other issues the hosts brought up was that in Izzy’s life, there was no conflict; he liked his day job, he loved his music and his family and friends were supportive of what he did. Even when Emily broke up with him, there was no conflict! The only time Izzy faced any kind of opposition was when he brought some of his own music to Steel Dragon and they dismissed him. This is what ultimately caused Izzy to leave Steel Dragon (in the same way he joined Steel Dragon).
Many of the musicians in the movie are actual musicians:
Mark Wahlberg – Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch
Jason Bonham (Steel Dragon drummer) –Bonham, and he is the son of John Bonham (Led Zeppelin)
Jeff Pilson (Steel Dragon bassist) – Dokken
Zakk Wylde (Steel Dragon guitarist) – Black Label Society, and he played with Ozzy Osborne
Blas Elias (Blood Pollution drummer) – Slaughter
Brian Vander Ark (Blood Pollution bassist) – The Verve Pipe
Nick Catanese (Blood Pollution guitarist) – Black Label Society
Stephan Jenkins (Black Babylon singer) – Third Eye Blind
Your Producers for this episode were:
This episode was recorded: 4/25/2012
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
In the seat:
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
Congrats to the solo 25 for the week, Father Beast.
Thanks to Tad for the voice mail this week.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
Part 3 of our 5 part Rock ‘n Roll series
Release date: 11/9/1998
Miramax Films
Directed by
Produced by
Written by
Cast
Ewan McGregor
Jonathan Rhys Meyers
Christian Bale
Toni Collette
Eddie Izzard
Initial comments by the hosts:
Darrell isn’t a big fan of “flash-back” story telling but he liked this movie and thought it offered a nice little history of glam rock. Jill loved it, thought it had a lot of layers but didn’t see it as a historical piece. She looked at it not to look back at history but to look forward to where we are now. David thought he would hate it, but he really enjoyed it because it wasn’t about the music itself, it was about the human interaction. Tony liked all the pieces of the movie but wasn’t blown away by it as a whole. He thought that acting, the music and the visuals were great. Jill, being a big David Bowie fan, said she constantly finds new references every time she goes back to watch this movie again.
The hosts get into an interesting discussion regarding whether culture today embraces the different musicians/styles/visuals the way that Britain did in the early 1970s, and specifically whether America did versus the way Britain adapted to that style. They also agreed that the movie is more about Arthur’s (Christian Bale) character than either of the musicians.
Jill liked how the music was used to push the narrative along with abstract music video pieces, performance pieces and soundtrack pieces. It was also impressive that both Ewan McGregor and Jonathan Rhys Meyers both sang for this movie.
Tony brought up that he found the story line very similar to Eddie & The Cruisers in that the lead character faked his death and a reporter tries to figure out what really happened, but the similarity pretty much ends there. The story itself is more about the reporter trying to figure out who he is, his experiences, and how he related to that movement.
David appreciated that this movie tackled relationships not in a childish way, which he tends to see in music-themed movies, but in a more realistic way that shows relationships as “complicated, messy, and broken.”
It was agreed that all of the acting was outstanding, with extra kudos to Eddie Izzard for stealing every scene he was in.
David brought up the question of whether music played an integral part in your development as a person. Jill emphatically said “yes” and followed it up by saying that this movie is an indictment of the United States in that the cultural references die away in this country, more so than others. David stated that, which he has specific memories tied to some music, he doesn’t have any emotional connections to music. Jill found that this movie resonated with her in that you can be an “alien” and find a world of other aliens/alienated people, through music. David would have been perfectly fine if this movie had removed the soundtrack because the human narrative spoke more to him than the music did.
The parallel of podcasting is brought up, and both Tony and David talk about how podcasting (though not necessarily in the genre of movie reviews) is an essential part of their lives at this point. The friendships that have been gained over the years through this shared forum are often closer and/or stronger than friendships gained through childhood.
It was brought up that there were a lot of critical complaints about this movie that there was no real completion to the story lines. The hosts disagreed with those complaints; arguing that there were, in fact, completed story lines (What happened to Brian Slade?) and also arguing that there didn’t need to be a completion regarding Arthur Stuart’s character. You don’t know what will happen next with him, you just know that he will move on, move forward, and he’ll be fine.
Jill asked about the similarities between this movie and last week’s movie, Almost Famous. Tony correlated Russell Hammond and Stillwater to Curt Wild. One is about being the musician that they want to be and the other is about striving to be an iconic figure/performer that the fans will adore. Jeff Bebe (Jason Lee, Almost Famous) is the one who wants to be an icon, while Hammond just wants to play his music.
A few trivia bits and pieces:
Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Ewan McGregor sang their own songs, but a few of Rhys Meyers’ songs were overdubbed by Thom Yorke (Radiohead).
A great deal of the dialogue stems from the writings of Oscar Wilde.
The name of Brian Slade’s persona, “Maxwell Demon,” and his band, “The Venus In Furs”, are references to two of glam rock’s biggest artists: Maxwell Demon was the name of a band in which Brian Eno performed in England in the 1960s, and “Venus In Furs” is a Lou Reed and The Velvet Underground song. Both artists are on this film’s soundtrack.
Curt Wild’s character is largely inspired by David Bowie’s relationships with Iggy Pop and Lou Reed. Iggy Pop hailed from Michigan and, for a time, had long blond locks, while Reed was forced to undergo shock therapy for bisexuality as a teen and was also rumored to have had an affair with Bowie before their later falling out.
When Brian first sees Mandy, he asks “Do you jive?” This is what David Bowie reportedly said when he first saw his future first wife, Angela Bowie.
During the scene where we’re first introduced to Curt Wild’s character, during the Festival scene, Ewan McGregor was only supposed to moon the audience. He had been so inspired by Iggy Pop that he improvised and dropped his pants to his ankles and began to jump around the stage.
Your Producers for this episode were:
This episode was recorded: 4/11/2012
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS
In the seat:
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS