CB Podcast Ep. 105 – “Game Night” Review

This week, the bros bring you the second edition of Filmstruck 1st of tha Month as they look at Guillermo del Toro’s debut film, Cronos. Then they predict who will win at this Sunday’s Academy Awards and wrap up with a review of the new comedy, Game Night.
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Credits:

  • Hosts: Josiah Wampfler, Sam Wampfler & Jacob Wampfler
  • Produced by Josiah Wampfler
  • A Cinema Bros Network Podcast
  • Theme Music by Josiah Wampfler. Film clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders
  • Music clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders.
  • Visit our website for show notes as well as articles covering film, television, video games, music & more!
  • Email us at cinemabrospod@gmail.com

Jake’s Top Films of 2017: 20-11

By Jacob Wampfler


20. Wheelman

Directed By Jeremy Rush

wheelman

Jeremy Rush’s film debut is nothing short of spectacular. I mentioned the film in out best new directors article and our top shots round-up, but even that seemed hollow to me. To neglect Wheelman as an entire film would be a mistake. It’s a brilliant, economic, heart-pounding thrill ride, and I loved every moment of it’s getaway driver insanity.

Since I’ve already addressed the camera work and direction elsewhere, this is my ode to Frank Grillo. In true getaway driver fashion, we only know Grillo as the titular wheelman. He’s enigmatic, timeless, and he carries the world on his shoulders. Restricted to his car as the primary conceit of the film, Grillo conveys the quiet panic of a man who will protect his family by any means necessary. Wheelman establishes Grillo as a more than capable leading man, and I truly hope that other filmmakers and studios are paying attention. His range in the film is impressive. He goes from sadness to rage to iron resolve on a dime throughout, and he does it all behind the wheel of his BMW. I hope other studios are taking note of this new distribution model set forth by Netflix. Low to mid-budget genre films are on the rise thanks to the streaming giant, and I would love to see more films like Wheelman in the future.

Currently Streaming on Netflix

19. Win it All

Directed By Joe Swanberg

Win it All

As I think back on this film, I can’t help but smile. I love Jake Johnson, and Joe Swanberg gave him the perfect vehicle with Win it All to be the most Jake Johnson-y he has ever been on-screen. Eddie, the recovering gambling addict, is a disheveled, train-wreck of a guy throughout the entire film. But we love him for it. In Eddie, Swanberg gives us someone to root for, someone that we truly hope can get a handle on his addiction. With this film and To the Bone, Netflix gave us two fantastic films in 2017 about what we struggle with as human beings. Win it All has the right balance of levity and honesty, while also leaving us with hope for those who struggle with addiction.

In addition to Johnson, Swanberg pulled out his seemingly endless contact list to get Keegan-Michael Key and Joe Lo Truglio on board as Gene and Ron, Eddie’s sponsor and older brother respectively. As with all of Swanberg’s films, Win it All has a lived-in mumblecore vibe despite it’s top notch cast. We feel the conflict and sheer hilarity of situations in which Eddie puts himself. Yet we also feel his sadness as he goes to a gamblers anonymous meeting and shares his struggles with fellow addicts. Swanberg affords Eddie a humanity that is oddly rare for films about addiction. Eddie is a normal guy, trying to get through the day like the rest of us. With Win it All, Swanberg gave us a hidden gem of 2017 and a delightful optimism sorely needed in our world today.

Currently Streaming on Netflix

18. It Comes at Night

Directed By Trey Edward Shults

It Comes at Night

Words can’t even begin to describe It Comes at Night. I’ve tried to bring myself to re-watch this film a few times since I originally viewed it in 2017. I have it ready to stream, all I need to do is push “play”…and I can’t do it. To watch this film is a descent into darkness I have rarely seen elsewhere. However, it’s a darkness that is all too real in our world. The paranoia and madness with which these characters treat one another is so familiar that it’s nauseating. I’m avoiding plot details for obvious reasons; It Comes at Night is not what you think. Poor marketing is somewhat to blame, but I kind of enjoyed the head-fake with all things considered. However, be warned. This film’s ending is so bleak, so merciless in it’s view of humanity that it left me speechless. Trey Edward Shults is a new director to watch, and It Comes at Night is one hell of a calling card.  

Currently Streaming on Amazon Prime Video

17. Lady Bird

Directed By Greta Gerwig

lady bird

It’s confession time for this Cinema Bro. I wanted to hate Lady Bird. With all the positive buzz and (in my assumption) hipster Greta Gerwig in the director’s chair, the old curmudgeon that resides within me walked into this films with arms crossed. My bad attitude and close-mindedness is precisely why Lady Bird triumphs. It softens even the hardest of hearts, in my estimation, and it shows us a picture of youth that is nearly universal. I laughed and cried throughout, and I am so thankful that this film was made.

For me, Lady Bird is also very personal. I graduated from high school in 2005, and the entire film takes place in the early 2000’s. As Lady Bird tries to use the dial-up internet she also sees images of the war in Iraq on her TV screen and hears Justin Timberlake’s music at a party. Both sadness and hopefulness permeate the entire run-time of the film, and Lady Bird’s relationship with her mother hit close to home for me. Laurie Metcalf’s performance, especially in a scene toward the end of the film, cut right to my heart. Friendship, hope for the future, and teenage bitterness are conveyed with the accuracy of someone for whom these experiences are still fresh and real. Gerwig has established herself as a fantastic young talent, and Saoirse Ronan delivers yet another fantastic performance in one of the most wonderfully joyful films of 2017.

Currently in Theaters

16. Lady Macbeth

Directed By William Oldroyd

Lady Macbeth - Still 1

It occurred to me after watching Lady Macbeth that this film is 2017’s version of The Witch. Indie studio A24 specializes in delivering these dark, twisted tales that are hardly what they seem at first glance. Lady Macbeth does not disappoint in this respect, and it adds another complicated layer to the story of a young woman pushing back against those who oppress her.

Director William Oldroyd has a significant background in stage production, and he exercises that to great effect in Lady Macbeth. The camera is static and the estate in which Katherine lives is maddeningly creaky and old. Oldroyd uses this to his advantage though, and he makes it clear that Katherine’s activities in and around the mansion do not go unnoticed. No matter to Lady Katherine though. She doesn’t seem to care what anyone thinks of her. As such, Florence Pugh gives a startling performance as the lead, so much so that she eclipses nearly every other performance in the film. This is by design however; Katherine’s dominance is the central theme of the film and she will not let anyone stand in her way. This period piece left a lasting impression on me, and I simply cannot wait to see what Oldroyd and Pugh do next.  

Currently Available on VOD & Blu-ray/DVD

15. Good Time

Directed By Benny and Josh Safdie

Good Time

I would be hard pressed to describe precisely why Good Time resonated with me so much when I watched it last year. It’s an exceedingly rare film, one that defies genre in some respects and also features only a couple actors that you’ve ever seen before. It’s certainly not fun viewing either. After all the film is about a young man, Connie, who brings his developmentally disabled brother with him to rob a bank. As the story unfolds, however, this becomes more than your average New York crime film. There’s philosophical depth to its message, and the Safdie brothers set out to highlight societal issues while also not letting Connie off the hook.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Robert Pattinson’s performance in the film. It’s honestly the glue that makes everything stick together. It would be very easy for a film like this to unravel quickly without a strong, anchoring central performance. Pattinson gives us that anchor and then some as he cons his way through the seedy New York City nighttime. As he desperately tries to rescue his brother, Nick, from prison we quickly realize that he will do anything and use anyone to accomplish his endgame. Pattison’s performance combined with an audacious visual aesthetic and pulsing score make Good Time a rare cinematic experience, one that I will be sure to revisit in the near future.

Currently Available on VOD & Blu-ray/DVD

14. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Directed By Martin McDonagh

Three Billboards

When I found out this film was being made over a year ago, I knew it would make my year-end list in whatever year it was released. I am an unabashed film disciple of Martin McDonagh (and his brother, John Michael) and I love nearly all of their films. When I first saw Three Billboards, I knew that it was certainly the most ambitious film I had seen from either of the McDonaghs. That’s actually somewhat impressive given that Martin’s previous film, Seven Psychopaths changed my definition of the term “meta” and made me look at film and storytelling  differently than ever before. Fantastic performances set aside, I truly believe that Three Billboards is a flawed, zealous masterclass in storytelling, and I hope it might be looked upon with a bit more grace as time goes on.

It’s no secret that Three Billboards has been embroiled in controversy since it started receiving awards. The two main criticisms are it’s treatment of the racist police officer Dixon (Sam Rockwell), and the lack of agency given to the film’s characters of color. I won’t defend those things outright, because those concerns are valid. There are certainly problematic elements contained within this film. However, I will propose that McDonagh actually created the film to be problematic on multiple levels. Recently breaking his silence on the critical backlash to Three Billboards, he said outright, “It’s supposed to be a deliberately messy and difficult film….” McDonagh has never been a filmmaker to care much about his audience’s feelings, and he continues that trend with Three Billboards. Is it offensive? Absolutely. However, it’s in this offensive, messy tale of an enraged mother and a racist police officer that we see bridges built and old wounds being healed. Forgiveness is possible in McDonagh’s Ebbing, Missouri and it doesn’t mean you have to forget the damage that came before it.

Currently in Theaters

13. The Lost City of Z

Directed By James Gray

The Lost City of Z

The Lost City of Z is an exceedingly special film. It was shot on 35mm film by a filmmaker who revels in old school Hollywood. James Gray began his career with a handful of crime films and then pivoted his attention with The Immigrant to period dramas. The Lost City of Z is said to be his finest film to date, and I can absolutely see why. It’s a sweeping, epic adventure of a day gone by, and one can’t help but get caught up in it’s magical beauty.

When Gray set out to make this film, he had a difficult task in front of him. History tells us that the British explorer Percy Fawcett went on eight expeditions to South America over the course of almost 20 years, 1906-1925. On his final expedition, Fawcett vanished along with his oldest son, Jack. It stands to reason that Gray had to get creative with his script and the way in which he told this story. What unfolds for the viewer is a slow, deliberate tale of a man obsessed with the unknown. Fawcett was after a lost city that he dubbed “Z,” and we will likely never know what became of him after his disappearance.

Charlie Hunnam was brilliantly cast as Fawcett in this film, and Robert Pattinson and Tom Holland log fantastic supporting performances as Fawcett’s fellow explorer and oldest son respectively. Hunnam conveys the determination and loneliness of a man searching for life’s greatest mysteries, and it’s one of the best performances of his career. Sienna Miller also stands out as Fawcett’s long-suffering wife, ultimately left behind a widow. Despite its sheer wonder, the film is tinged with deep sadness throughout. Although we may not know what happened to Fawcett in the end, we can yet hope that he ultimately found that for which he was searching.

Currently Streaming on Amazon Prime Video

12. The Shape of Water

Directed By Guillermo del Toro

The Shape of Water

With The Shape of Water, Guillermo del Toro has given filmgoers a movie that is desperately needed in multiplexes and art-house theaters everywhere. This film is poignant, intelligent, and heartfelt, and it also addresses a number of societal issues that still plague our culture daily. It’s also a science fiction film – but it’s not a sequel, reboot, rebootquel, or anything of the sort. In addition, it features knockout performances from stellar actors. If you had told me 2017 would give us Michael Shannon, Richard Jenkins, Michael Stuhlbarg, and Octavia Spencer in the same film, I would have laughed in your face. Yet here we are. The Shape of Water is currently nominated for thirteen Academy Awards, and if it won all thirteen it would be one of the most deserving films to do so.

And then there is Sally Hawkins. Before The Shape of Water, I had only seen her in a handful of films. Here, she gives one of the best performances of 2017 (if not the last decade), all without saying a word. We feel her longing for love and meaning as she emotes with her eyes and body language. Sometimes she is gleeful and almost childish. At other times she is fierce and determined. All things considered, she makes this film exactly what it is. Del Toro and his screenwriting partner Vanessa Taylor gave their talented cast a wonderful script, and cinematographer Dan Laustsen brings it all together with nothing short of dazzling camerwork. This film is the whole package, and I am supremely glad that Del Toro set out to make this enchanting tale of love and sacrifice.

Currently in Theaters

11. Colossal

Directed By Nacho Vigalondo

Colossal

Colossal is one of my most beloved films of 2017. That may seem odd, given the subject material, but let me explain. It’s defies just about any genre tag you could try to give it. Is it sci-fi, drama, romance…what is it? There is no way this film should actually work, by any stretch of the imagination. Even thinking back on the plot, this becomes immediately apparent to me. An alcoholic woman is kicked out by her boyfriend and moves back to her hometown only to find out that she has a mysterious connection with a kaiju monster terrorizing South Korea…huh?!?!? However, it’s in this sheer insanity of a story about kaiju, addiction, and abusive relationships that we are pulled in and reminded of our own demons. We hurt others and we are wounded by others just the same. Don’t let the skyscraper-sized monsters fool you – this is a film about all of us.

One thing that still sticks with me long after viewing Colossal is Anne Hathaway’s performance as Gloria. She is a complicated, loveable mess who keeps falling into the same destructive patterns over and over again. I’m truly upset that she was never considered for any awards for this performance. She completely and wholly sells Colossal as a serious film about addiction and toxic relationships, and I loved every second of her performance. I won’t say much about Jason Sudeikis as Gloria’s childhood friend Oscar. Let’s just say he plays against type in this film, to say the least. I don’t know how director Nacho Vigalondo got this film made, and quite frankly I don’t care. We need more creative cinema like Colossal, and I truly hope that we see more of the same from Hathaway and Vigalondo very soon.

Currently Streaming on Hulu

 

For Jake’s Top 10 films of 2017, please listen to the Cinema Bros’ Top 10 Podcast HERE

 

 

Cinema Bros’ Top 35 Shots of 2017

Cinematography is, in many ways, the most important aspect of the film. As the pen (or computer now I suppose) is to the writer or the brush is to the painter, so is the camera to the filmmaker. Cinematography is the language of cinema. Yes, the acting, costumes, set, sound and writing are also important, but choosing what to show the audience (or what not to) and how to show them is what makes movies, movies.

So, in order to recognize the great work cinematographers did last year, we have compiled our Top 35 Shots of 2017:

** We recommend you turn your screen brightness up. If you would like to view larger versions of the images, simply click/tap them.**


Super Dark Times

Director of Photography: Eli Born

By Jacob

This shot from Super Dark Times is every kid’s dream. Slicing things cleanly in half with very sharp objects should probably be a national pastime, right next to blowing stuff up on the 4th of July. It starts as harmless fun for these friends with a katana, but as the title might suggest things get super dark, super fast. Eli Born’s camerawork in this film is some of the most interesting stuff I saw from any film in 2017, and I’m actually somewhat terrified to see what he could do with a bigger budget. Super Dark Times is hauntingly beautiful to look at, and this katana slow-mo shot is only the beginning…trust me.


Atomic Blonde

Director of Photography: Jonathan Sela

By Josiah

Yahoo! Movies named this scene the best American fight scene of all time. I don’t know if I’d go that far, but it definitely is toward the top. Coming from a crew that worked on John Wick, it makes sense that we’d get a scene like this. Like the rest of the action in Atomic Blonde, this scene is brutal as hell. For nearly ten minutes and pretty much one shot (Though it was definitely multiple shots stitched together through the magic of CGI), Charlize Theron gets the ever-living shit beat out of her and kicks some serious ass of her own. The camera work isn’t overly impressive, but it does exactly what it needs to do which is let the performers bring the brutality. The audacity to attempt this is crazy. To actually pull it off is deserving of recognition.

Watch the full shot here


Lady Macbeth

Director of Photography: Ari Wegner

By Jacob

I don’t know how many total shots comprise Lady Macbeth, but the number is likely far lower than I could even guess. There is a sickening and horrific stillness to the film that I’ve not seen before. This shot encapsulates this unflinching eye perfectly. Lady Katherine does a lot of sitting. And while she sits, she thinks. These moments seem harmless, but they give way to scenes that make you beg for them to end. When you want the camera to cut away, when you desperately want the scenery to change, it’s as if the cinematographer says “no.” Lady Macbeth is a slow-burn thriller dressed up as a period-piece drama. You’ve been warned, so proceed with caution.


IT

Director of Photography: Chung-hoon Chung

 By Sam

This may be one of the most surprising and unsettling shots in all of It. It is a perfect jump scare as we suddenly see terrifying visage of Pennywise, larger than we’ve seen him before, burst from the projector screen. What makes it extremely effective is the use of the projector clicks to darken the screen periodically and give us a sense of dread of what might pop up next. What does pop up is entirely unexpected. How could anyone have expected a giant clown head. It is ridiculous and almost comedic upon further viewings. But the balance between comedy and horror is what makes It an incredibly entertaining film.


The Bad Batch

Director of Photography: Lyle Vincent

By Josiah

There are two reasons Blake Shelton should never have been named Sexiest Man Alive last year: The shot of Jason Momoa as Aquaman rising out of the water in Justice League and the entirety of The Bad Batch, though this shot in particular. There are so many incredible shots from The Bad Batch because director Ana Lily Amirpour and cinematographer Lyle Vincent have incredible eyes for visual storytelling. I could have gone with many others, but this one just seemed right. It is our first introduction to The Miami Man and it is also one of the first moments in the film that Amirpour signals that it is ok to laugh a little. The shot comes in the middle of showing the bro culture of the cannibal camp with a bunch of jacked people working out. The Miami Man stands apart though, looking off into the distance with his sweet ass shades and drinking a refreshing can of Jizzy Fizz. It says so much about the character and it is just a great, funny shot.


John Wick: Chapter 2

Director of Photography: Dan Laustsen

By Jacob

John Wick: Chapter 2 is my most beloved film of 2017. It might be one of my most beloved films of the last decade, maybe even of all time. It is so ridiculous, so asinine, so off-the-wall insane that it works absolutely and completely to perfection. From Keanu Reeves’ performance to the cartoonish villains to the filmmakers saying “Sure, let’s film an action sequence in a room full of mirrors!” this film has it all and then some. I picked this mirror trick shot because, well, there are 57 other shots I could have picked and this was the one I saw the most. John Wick, Baba Yaga, walks through some sliding glass mirror doors to off his umpteenth baddie of the film. Watch out, he might be coming for you next.  


Logan

Director of Photography: John Mathieson

By Sam

Up until this point in Logan we had not seen Laura’s true potential or her gruesome abilities. This is her last innocent moment before she slaughters the men on the TV screen she is looking at. It is a somewhat morbidly funny scene once you have seen the full context. The scene originally seems like a child eating cereal and watching TV, almost like a Saturday morning cartoon binge from back in the day. In no way would the normal viewer expect her to then murder a group of men with hand claws.  Dafne Keen is great in this scene as she is in the rest of this phenomenal film.


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CB Podcast Ep. 85 – “Logan Lucky” Review // “Game of Thrones” Season 7

This week, the bros bring you a review of Steven Soderbergh’s return to the big screen, “Logan Lucky”, as well as wrap up the discussion of “Game of Thrones” season 7.
Right Click and select “Save as…” to download.

Or choose your preferred listening app below.

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Credits:
  • Hosts: Josiah Wampfler, Sam Wampfler & Jake Wampfler
  • Produced by Josiah Wampfler
  • A Cinema Bros Network Podcast
  • Theme Music by Josiah Wampfler. Film clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders
  • Music clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders.
  • Visit our website for show notes as well as articles covering film, television, video games, music & more!
  • Email us at cinemabrospod@gmail.com

“Game of Thrones” Season Seven Finale: A Defense of Tyrion’s Plan

By Josiah Wampfler

SPOILERS AHEAD. BEWARE


Season Seven of Game of Thrones came to an end this Sunday with the season finale of the penultimate season: “The Dragon and the Wolf.” It ended a season that has been divisive, worrying, but nevertheless thrilling. So much has happened this season as the show moved from plot point to plot point at a break-neck speed uncharacteristic of the show up until this point. It is this that has caused many to question the writers’ decisions and to worry about their ability to give fans a fitting and satisfying ending next season. And though I was in that camp, worried about the future of the series, this season finale restored my hope for the final season. “The Dragon and the Wolf” managed to not only be one of the best season finales of the entire series, but it actually ended up fixing some of the problems I had with the last couple episodes by burrowing down into what Game of Thrones is all about: Characters.

If you paid any attention to the online chatter surrounding the show, the biggest problem fans had with episodes five and six was Tyrion’s plan. In short, Tyrion suggested that Jon Snow and his merry band of misfits should travel north beyond The Wall to capture a wight. They would then request a meeting with Cersei to show her that the threat of the White Walkers is real and the hope was that Cersei would then agree that they needed to call a truce and join together to defeat the Army of the Dead.

The issue with the plan I will not debate and thought from the beginning was a major issue for the show was the execution of the plan. The show went for fan service and drama over believable character motivation and logic. A plot point they obviously needed to hit was the death of Viserion and his resurrection as a Wight Dragon. But they went about it in the most convoluted and silly way. The show broke credulity with the timeline (there is no way Deaenerys could recieve a raven and fly hundreds of miles north in the amount of time she did), it put characters in needless danger yet almost all got out far too easily, and they made several characters (*cough* Jon *cough*) make horribly stupid decisions just to increase the drama of the episode. It was manufactured and it was Game of Thrones at its worst, this I will not debate.

What I will debate is those contending that Tyrion’s plan was poor writing on the part of the show runners and the way it played out was unbelievable.

The criticism is that the plan is far too dumb to come from Tyrion. Over these last seven seasons, we have come to know Tyrion as a very smart man and a skilled tactician. We’ve seen him brilliantly defend King’s Landing in the Battle of the Blackwater and become Hand of the King to Daenerys due to his wits. Some are saying that it is ludicrous that Tyrion would believe that his sister would agree to a truce and help them fight the White Walkers. He knows that she is a backstabbing, duplicitous woman who will do anything to advance her and her family’s status and power at the expense of any others. He should then know that any kind of truce with her is not to be trusted and she likely wouldn’t even agree to one because she is far too stubborn.

Tyrion does know all of this. He even tells Daenerys in episode six that she is likely thinking of a trap she can lay for them. Yet, he proposes the plan anyway. Why?

The finale confirmed that our instincts about Cersei were correct. Though she initially seems to agree to a truce and pledges her forces to help fight the White Walkers, we later learn she was never planning on following through. She is planning to betray her word, just as we had thought she would do. So that means that the plan was doomed to begin with and, on face value, it seems like poor writing. Isn’t Tyrion far too smart to completely overlook this obvious possibility?

I don’t believe it is poor writing at all. I think that we as an audience have simply been reading it wrong this entire time.

Over the last two episodes, Tyrion has done a pretty good job in explaining the reasoning behind the plan. He knew that, if the war went on, Daenerys was more likely to succumb to her worst impulses and thousands of people would likely die in the process, including his brother and sister. Tyrion, at his core, really does want to make the world a better place. He truly wants peace and has always been striving toward that goal, even while waging war. And despite what his family has done to him, we see that he has a soft spot for them. Even Cersei. It is not a flaw in the show that Tyrion came up with a doomed plan. It is a flaw in Tyrion. This is one of those instances where we as an audience can only watch as a character makes a bad decision. The plan was always foolish to some degree, but it reveals a huge deal about Tyrion’s character, and that is the point.

Tyrion doesn’t fully account for the possibility that Cersei will betray him because he doesn’t truly believe she will. He refuses to believe that even she is truly evil. He refuses to believe that there is no good left in her. And he refuses to let her be killed because of her ego and stupidity. For all of his negativity throughout the show, Tyrion, at his core, is an optimist. And that can be a major flaw for him at times and it can make him vulnerable.

So, even though I was initially one of the haters saying that Tyrion’s plan was another example of the poor writing this season, I have since changed my tune. I reject the notion that the plan does not make sense with Tyrion’s character because I think, like Tyrion, we are not accounting for something. We have at times overestimated Tyrion. We have put him on a pedestal I don’t know if any character can truly live up to. He is smart, but he has flaws. His complex emotions surrounding his family are one of those flaws making him vulnerable. Rather than this being a stumbling block for the show this season, I think this has actually brought us back to what Game of Thrones does best: narrative flowing from character and revealing character in the process. If the show continues to follow that recipe into next season, we will have one hell of a final chapter.

CB Special Podcast – The State of the Thrones

This week, the bros switch it up with a special podcast covering the last two episodes of Game of Thrones (Season 7 Episodes 5 & 6). What did they show do well? More importantly, what is wrong with the show right now? And will it get better? The Cinema Bros are here to discuss the state of one of the biggest shows ever produced. SPOILERS AHEAD.
Right Click and select “Save as…” to download.

Or choose your preferred listening app below.

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Credits:
  • Hosts: Josiah Wampfler, Sam Wampfler & Jake Wampfler
  • Produced by Josiah Wampfler
  • A Cinema Bros Network Podcast
  • Theme Music by Josiah Wampfler. Film clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders
  • Music clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders.
  • Visit our website for show notes as well as articles covering film, television, video games, music & more!
  • Email us at cinemabrospod@gmail.com

“The Bad Batch” : It’s A Man Eat Man World… Literally

By Josiah Wampfler

“What does it all mean?” is one of the most commonly asked questions in film discussion.

We are always searching for the answer, probably for the same reasons we are constantly searching for the meaning of life. We want to ascribe meaning of some kind to every action, word or moment. And many times there is meaning. Many times there is a message or theme. But sometimes, it is not so easily reached or maybe not the point of it at all.

The Bad Batch, directed by Ana Lily Amirpour, is the newest example of this. When Amirpour came on the scene with A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night, she turned heads in a major way. She had a visual style that was strikingly unique, her characters were unlike any others and she had essentially created her very own genre. With The Bad Batch, Amirpour has shown us that she doesn’t even fit within the unique box that people had created for her after her first film. Neither the plot of the film, nor an overall theme or message can be easily summed up in a couple of sentences. Instead, the film opts for several messages and themes that run throughout the film, some of them almost contradictory and few of them obvious. Like its setting, The Bad Batch is a chaotic amalgam of different ideas and there are no easy answers. As one of the film’s characters says at one point, “No one is going to tell you. You have to find out for yourself.”

Right from the start of the film, that sentiment is quite clear. Our main character, Arlen (Suki Waterhouse), is being processed as “Bad Batch” (Outlaw/Undesirable) by what seems to be this reality’s immigration enforcement. She is given a tattoo with a number and dropped south of the Texas border fence. Displaced from her home for reasons unknown, she must try to survive the punishing desert with nothing but a crop top, watermelon shorts and a backpack. This begins an almost 19 minute sequence with basically no dialogue in which the acting prowess of Waterhouse is put to full use and the film confidently and unequivocally tells us that we need to pay attention because the answers will not come easily.

As Arlen wanders the desert, she quickly discovers an even greater threat to her survival than the harsh desert: cannibals. After being captured by two people in a golf cart and knocked unconscious she wakes up to find herself chained to the ground in an encampment made from plane wreckage. Then, in a scene reminiscent of Reservoir Dogs, a woman brutally chops off Arlen’s arm and leg to the sound of Ace of Base. Arlen manages to escape with her life and find the town of Comfort, but now she must learn how to survive with this new handicap.

The Bad Batch is a film that won’t work for a lot of people (and it currently isn’t). It moves along at a snail’s pace for much of the film, there is little dialogue, its subject matter is disturbing, most of its characters do morally reprehensible things and it is just fucking weird as shit. Yet, it is one of the most visually stunning films I have seen, the performances are wonderful, the incredible sound design fills the gaps of no dialogue beautifully, it has a wholly unique and bizarrely perfect soundtrack and it is eminently re-watchable as there is so much to pick apart. Days after watching it, I can’t stop thinking about it.

In the barren wasteland of The Bad Batch, morality is as foreign a concept as rain. Even when people aren’t literally eating each other, they are cannibalizing each other in other ways. While Arlen is able to find temporary relief in the town of Comfort, she soon finds that the town’s benevolent leader, The Dream (Keanu Reaves being his best Keanu Reaves), is more Jim Jones than Ghandi. While he has protected his townspeople from the violence of the cannibals, he is inflicting violence on them in other ways by keeping them in poverty and strung out on drugs while he basks in riches.

The world of The Bad Batch is exactly as its title implies. Violence, brutality and selfishness are not vices in this world, but survival skills. Even Arlen is not the morally upright protagonist we may expect. Overcome by her hatred of the cannibals, she becomes as monstrous as them at one crucial turning point in the film. Her actions are savage and they threaten to turn us against her, but Amirpour does the impossible and manages to keep us behind her, even while acknowledging her wrongdoings.

Amirpour also shows this skill of bringing out small moments of light amidst the darkness in the relationship between Arlen and Miami Man (Jason Momoa), a burly cannibal searching for his daughter. The stoic, artistic Miami Man is a bit hard to read at times – which is nothing against Momoa because he is incredible in the part – yet despite this, and despite the underlying tension of why they even meet in the first place, Amirpour manages to show us fleeting moments of romantic tension between the two. We don’t know if they will actually end up together or if there is any genuine feelings there, but there is an animal magnetism between them that is beautiful. It is one of the few spots of true beauty among all the violence and chaos.

I think that is what I found so impressive about The Bad Batch: The further it descends into the darkness and brutality of this world, the more we can feel the beauty and love that is still there. If there is one simple theme that can be encapsulated in one sentence, it may be something Amirpour said during a Q&A for the film. Speaking about America, she said that something you love doesn’t always have to be perfect.

The world that these characters inhabit is far from ideal. The characters themselves are far from perfect. There is so much pain and darkness in this film. Yet, in the end, the film and these characters manage to find love and beauty in it all. It is an incredibly powerful sentiment and it is one of the reasons I loved The Bad Batch so much.

CB Podcast Ep. 76 – “It Comes At Night” Review

This week, the bros bring you some film news, discuss some recently released trailers and review up-and-coming director Trey Edward Shults’ new film, “It Comes At Night”.
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Credits:
  • Hosts: Josiah Wampfler, Sam Wampfler & Jake Wampfler
  • Produced by Josiah Wampfler
  • A Cinema Bros Network Podcast
  • Theme Music by Josiah Wampfler. Film clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders
  • Music clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders.
  • Visit our website for show notes as well as articles covering film, television, video games, music & more!
  • Email us at cinemabrospod@gmail.com

CB Podcast Ep. 63 – Recommendations & Oscar Predictions

“Zach is in for Jake this week as the bros bring you some recommendations, including some the Oscar-nominated short films. Plus, they catch you up with the latest film news and make their final Oscar predictions.”

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Credits:
  • Hosts: Josiah Wampfler, Sam Wampfler & Jake Wampfler w/ special guest Zach Fisher
  • Produced by Josiah Wampfler
  • A Cinema Bros Network Podcast
  • Theme Music by Josiah Wampfler. Film clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders
  • Music clips used under fair use. All rights belong to their respective copyright holders.
  • Visit our website for show notes as well as articles covering film, television, video games, music & more!
  • Email us at cinemabrospod@gmail.com

CB Podcast Ep. 45 – “Sully” Review / Trailerpalooza

“This week, the bros go to Trailerpalooza as they discuss the many trailers for films premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival right now. Plus, they bring you their take on the latest Clint Eastwood film, ‘Sully.'”

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