Browse > Home / Archive: December 2007

| Subcribe via RSS

FilmCouch, One Year and Counting…

December 28th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

FilmCouch is one year old! And what a year it has been. In the course of 2007, we’ve gone from being a little-known movie podcast, to being a Webby-nominated little-known movie podcast.

Without further ado, here is my list of favorite FilmCouch moments of 2007:

FilmCouch #22 - Remakes Paul, Adam and I discuss remakes, both real and imagined. Adam wonders who would fill the cast of Pulp Fiction if it had been made in 1975, and Paul envisions a 1971 version of The Matrix called The Dot-Matrix, a young Robert Redford frees his mind in an Indian sweat-lodge ritual, and must destroy his dot-matrix punch card so he can remove himself from “the system.”

FilmCouch #33 - No End In Sight Charles Ferguson’s methodical investigation of what went wrong in the occupation of Iraq deeply affected Paul and I. There was a lot of hand-wringing, cigarette-smoking, and passionate debating that took place to get this episode made.

FilmCouch #35 - Mumblecore 2007 was a banner year for a small group of no-budget indie filmmakers including the Joe Swanberg, Aaron Katz, and the Duplass Brothers. Ultimately all the buzz, and particularly the label “Mumblecore,” may have done more harm than good. In this episode we sought to cut through the chatter with two simple questions: Are the movies good? If so, why?

FilmCouch #38 - Into the Wild We interviewed Sean Penn about his struggle to turn the non-fiction man vs. nature tale into a movie. Then we compared it to a lost Harrison Ford gem, The Mosquito Coast. The verdict? Ford: 1 Penn: 0.

FilmCouch #39 - The Economy Paul and I discuss Paul Haney’s issue doc, The Price of Sugar, a sobering look at where our sweets come from. And for a look at the opposite end of the have-and-have-not spectrum, we reflect on Oliver Stone’s classic, Wall Street.

Tags: , ,

FilmCouch #50

December 21st, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

There Will Be Cha Cha HeelsThere Will Be Blood opens Dec 26 and there’s so much to say about it. Too much, really, so we narrow it down to our favorite moments. For the holidays, the five most misguided ideas ever inserted into Christmas moviedom.

    Meet Me in St. Louis
    Female Trouble
    Gremlins

    Star Wars Holiday Special

    Pinocchio’s Christmas

FilmCouch 50

There Will Be Blood

Tags: , ,

FilmCouch #49

December 14th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

Andrew Wagner, Will SmithI am Legend opens tonight, how does Will Smith surviving the apocalypse stack up in the small pantheon of post-apocalyptic movies? Where does the no budget, camp-fest Saucy Flyer UFO PI fit in? Also, interviewing filmmaker Andrew Wagner (The Talent Given Us) about how he makes films from one truth, “Life is hard.” Starting Out in the Evening is his new movie in theaters now.

FilmCouch 49
(Subscribe to FilmCouch in the iTunes store and an episode will download each Friday.)

I am Legend, Starting Out in the Evening, The Talent Given Us

Tags: , ,

FIlmCouch #48

December 7th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

Billy and JavierThe return of Billy the Kid and Jennifer Venditti. The story of a first time filmmaker that began with an interview at SXSW in March concludes in a conversation with Jennifer this week. Spoiler: It’s a happy ending. Revisiting No Country for Old Men. Karina’s beef with the Coen Brothers caused a stir among listeners and we pick up the debate again. It only gets more heated.

(Subscribe to FilmCouch in the iTunes store and an episode will download each Friday.)
FilmCouch #48

Billy the Kid, No Country for Old Men

Tags: , ,