If you like this episode, please check out Katie and Sarah Horrocks' previous conversation about Jean Rollin and Jess Franco films on Trash Twins.
0:00:00 - 0:19:48 - Only God Forgives (2013), directed by Nicholas Winding Refn, starring Ryan Gosling, Kristen Scott Thomas, Vithaya Pasingarm, Ratha Phongam, Gordon Browne, and Thom Burke.
0:19:48 - 0:26:59 - The Wild Bunch (1969), directed by Sam Peckinpah, starring William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Warren Oates, Robert Ryan, LQ Jones, Strother Martin, and Ben Johnson.
0:27:00 - 32:02 - Django (1966), directed by Sergio Corbucci, starring Franco Nero, Loredana Nusciak, Jose Bodalo, Angel Alvarez, and Eduardo Farado.
0:32:03 - 0:38:58 - Made In USA (1966), directed by Jean-Luc Godard, starring Anna Karina, Jean-Pierre Leaud, Laszlo Szabo, Ernest Menzer, and Marianne Faithful.
0:38:59 - 0:57:13 - Fascination (1979), directed by Jean Rollin, starring Franca Mai, Brigitte Lahalle, Jean-Pierre Lemaire, Fanny Magier, Muriel Montosse, and Sophie Noel.
Our outro music this week: is "Wanna Fight" by Cliff Martinez from Only God Forgives. And our intro, as always, is from Escape From New York.
You can download episodes directly from itunes and rss. For a quick look at who has been on the show before and what movies have been discussed in each episode, look at our one-page episode guide. This is a Patreon-supported podcast, subscribing to the show can give you access to monthly criticism from Sean, Tucker, and Morgan.
You can follow the show on twitter, tumblr, letterboxd and facebook. If you like this show, please check out Tucker’s other podcast Comic Books Are Burning In Hell (also located at TFO and here), TFO's music podcast Beat Connection with Marty Brown and Nate Patrin (at TFO and here), and Katie Skelly & Sarah Horrock’s Trash Twins (located here and here). The hosts are on twitter too - Tucker,Morgan, and Sean.
No, I'm busy.
Bickle and Comic Booms are Burning in Hell should be the only podcasts allowed to talk about Refn
Posted by: Taylor | 2016.09.20 at 11:16
Funny you guys should mention Refn's approach to pacing—there's a great and funny bit in the doc where Refn is urgently (and lamely) explaining his approach to scenework to Gosling: "violence in movies is just like sex, it's about the build-up and not the release" only to have Gosling keep deflating it by turning to the camera and slyly repeating his words verbatim. There's also a great bit where Jodorowsky kind of shrugs off the question of whether Refn and Corfixen should get divorced... I kind of enjoyed it, but watching Refn pace around whining to his wife and the camera is pretty funny to me!
Posted by: George Elkind | 2016.09.20 at 20:18