Film Versus Film público
[search 0]
Mais
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Artwork
 
A nerdy and fun comparison of two films by a Film Professor, Comedian and Cinephile who grew up together watching movies in the 90’s. Featuring Craig Anderson, Bruce Isaacs and Herschel Isaacs. https://www.instagram.com/filmversusfilmpodcast/
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
Today we’re going behind the scenes of movie-making, with two films that lift the veil on the Hollywood studio system. Both films have a happy ending, even if they shouldn’t have. That’s right, today we’re talking about Robert Altman’s The Player and Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.…
  continue reading
 
One film is the story of a sick kid in bed hearing a love story, and the other, a love sick kid in bed, erasing a love story. One, a comical swashbuckling romance, and the other a mystery un-love story that became the poster child for the genre known as ‘mind-benders’.Por Film Versus Film
  continue reading
 
Join us as we draft the 10 Worst "Best Picture Winners" from the Oscars from the past 23 years. Then, join us next week for our predictions for 2024, followed by our 'results card' and finally an episode where we draft the 10 Best from the new millennium. Normal episodes will resume shortly after.Por Film Versus Film
  continue reading
 
We're taking take on two classics of the Holiday season. Both films have become iconic Christmas classics and both films are about a patriarch, on Christmas Eve dealing with family tensions, work tensions and that annoying wooden staircase railing. It's Frank Capra’s It’s A Wonderful Life Versus National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation.…
  continue reading
 
Join us as we rank the 10 Worst Films that we've covered on the podcast so far in an exciting drafting game. Will Borat make the Top 10 Worst? Will the grubby assault storyline in Revenge of the Nerds push it to the bottom? Or will Ron Silver’s over-the-top performance place Blue Steel in last position? Listen as we battle it out!…
  continue reading
 
Two police stories set in the big city! One film stars Jamie Lee Curtis as a rookie cop who is being gas-lit by a psychopath, and the other stars a slew of Hollywood leading men in a movie full of intrigue. This week we’re looking at Kathryn Bigelow's Blue Steel and Martin Scorsese’s The Departed.Por Film Versus Film
  continue reading
 
Two fish-out-of-water comedies that took the world by storm, both of them broke box office records, both of them expanded the cultural lexicon and both films took their TV star lead actors all the way to the oscars. Today we’re talking about Crocodile Dundee and Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan.…
  continue reading
 
We’re heading to the old west and looking at the portrayal of two very different cowboys. One is a pretty horrible brother-in-law grappling with his sexuality, and the other is an old widow who wants to give it all away. Today we’re discussing Jane Campion's Unforgiven and Clint Eastwood's The Power Of The Dog.…
  continue reading
 
In this episode we look at two conspiratorial masterpieces that feature reluctant heroes who discover that the world around them is manufactured to control them. One film is directed by genre master John Carpenter and the other by a rising star of America's new black vanguard. Today we’re looking at 1988’s They Live versus 2023’s They Cloned Tyrone…
  continue reading
 
In this episode we are going behind the scenes with two incredible making-of-stories. One film charts the tumultuous production of one of the most famous films of the 1970’s Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now, and the other charts the hopes and dreams of a filmmaker who inherited the dream created by Coppola, but not the audience, or privilege. …
  continue reading
 
In this episode we’re infiltrating the third reich with two WW2 epics made 40-years apart. One is a 1960’s blockbuster, the other is a knowing homage to genres. Today we’re talking about Brian Hutton’s Where Eagles Dare versus Quentin Tarintino’s Inglourious Basterds. We also talk about watching Goonies in Capetown.…
  continue reading
 
A real tear-jerker, as we compare two of the most romantic films ever made! One is the story of two women who fall in love over the painting of a portrait, and the other a pair of neighboring cuckolds who refuse to commit the same act of love that has harmed them. Today we’re looking at Wong Kar Wai’s In The Mood For Love and Sceline Sciamma’s Port…
  continue reading
 
Today we’re looking at two ground-breaking horror films from the year 1960. Both films ushered in new eras of what was acceptable in the world of cinema, from morals and censorship, to form and the representation of serial killers, to the complicity of the audience. One film destroyed the director’s career, the other cemented the director as the gr…
  continue reading
 
Our special BarbieHeimer episode! One is about an iconic doll brought to life, and the other is about the biggest weapon of mass destruction of all time. Both films are about a huge cultural figure that defined the 20th century. Both films are about a character dealing with a giant ontological shift in their world, and both films are made by extrem…
  continue reading
 
Join us as we look at two perspectives on American capitalism. One a morality tale by a filmmaker who wears his heart on his sleeve, the other a carnival of excess. Join us as we compare the masculinity, and morality inside of Oliver Stone's Wall Street (1987) and Martin Scorsese's The Wolf Of Wall Street (2013)…
  continue reading
 
Today the big question is “who done it?” as we explore a classic celebration of Agatha Christie’s work, with 1974’s Murder on The Orient Express, as well as a contemporary throwback from 2019 with Rian Johnson’s Knives Out. How has the mystery genre evolved, and why do audiences continue to love it?Por Film Verse Film
  continue reading
 
In this inaugural episode, we discuss two very different films. One, a ground-breaking American horror film born out of the independent film movement of the 1970’s and the other, a sophisticated black comedy from contemporary South Korea. Both films deal with class and feature moments of shocking brutality, yet one is deliberate and designed, and t…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Guia rápido de referências