CB Podcast Ep. 103 – Top Ten Films of 2017

It’s finally here! The Cinema Bros present their top ten lists and recap their full top 20s. They also give out awards for best underrated performances and the best new directors of 2017.
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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

“Ingrid Goes West” : A Darkly Funny Horror Story About The Social Media Age

By Josiah Wampfler

“I don’t think adults understand the internet at all… They literally think the internet is hashtags and memes! What are these kids doing with their hashtags and memes? Not knowing that under their nose that the brain chemistry of their children is changing in real time. Like, the way that the children view their own image and soul and relate to their own sense of self is changing.” – Bo Burnham; “You Made it Weird” Podcast

I thought about this quote and about Bo Burnham’s comedy special Make Happy a lot while watching Ingrid Goes West, because in many ways they are directly related. What Burnham does in Make Happy, and what he does throughout much of his comedy, is craft these meta shows that deconstruct what it is to be a comic and what it is to deal with fame. It is something that, on the face of it, should be completely unrelatable. But, as Burnham has discovered, and what Ingrid Goes West explores, social media has made fame possible for so many more people and in the process it has changed how we view ourselves based on our online personas. In many ways, the only difference between Burnham and ourselves, the only difference between Ingrid and Taylor, is the number of followers or likes they have online.

Ingrid Goes West is a dark comedy from director Matt Spicer, which follows Ingrid Thornburn (Aubrey Plaza), an unhinged social media stalker. In fact, she travels all the way to Los Angeles in an attempt to befriend Instagram star Taylor Sloane (Elizabeth Olsen, who gives a knockout performance), who she discovered in a fashion magazine. This comes after the death of her mother and $60,000 Ingrid receives from an insurance check. Once in L.A., Ingrid moves fast, and through a little dog-napping that sets up their meeting, she and Taylor are soon BFFs, though the second F is certainly in question.

What separates Ingrid Goes West from the plethora of other crazy stalker films is the humanity it gives its main character. Through a script that allows us to laugh with Ingrid at all the over-the-top hipster California bullshit to the incredible performance by Aubrey Plaza that gives Ingrid that basic humanity underneath all the crazy, we never feel truly separate from Ingrid. Through this humanity and the empathy we have for the character, Spicer is able to show us an exaggerated version of ourselves and who we have become in this era of social media.

What makes Plaza’s performance so incredible to me is that, despite rarely seeing who Ingrid truly is, she is able to convey a truly complex character that we can empathize with. Most of what we see is the person and the persona she is trying to be. Her online self is completely taking over her real world body in a very disturbing way. We see Ingrid on Taylor’s profile flit from picture to picture liking every one, trying to position herself as her biggest fan. She reads what Taylor reads, she eats where Taylor eats, she buys what Taylor is advertising; All to fit in and be liked by someone. Yet, there are small glimpses of the real Ingrid throughout, like a scene where she eats something Taylor recommended only to spit it out in favor of some fast food. These small moments allow us to laugh with (and eventually cry with) Ingrid, making it easier to empathize with a person that, admittedly, is doing some pretty messed up things.

At the end of Bo Burnham’s Make Happy, he has an incredible song in which he talks about the relationship he has with his audience and how that relationship has affected him mentally. He says, “Part of me loves you/Part of me hates you. Part of me needs you/Part of me fears you.” This struggle that he has, both his need for approval from his audience and his hatred of that need, is a struggle many younger people seem to have who have grown up with social media. It might not be on quite the scale that Burnham deals with, but I think that Ingrid Goes West reveals that the size doesn’t totally matter.

At the end of the day, the only difference between Ingrid and Taylor is the size of their audience. Both of them are being completely consumed by their online personas, both use the men in their lives for their own selfish reasons and both are just faking it to gain the approval of their audiences. By the end of the film, it becomes clear that Ingrid and Taylor are different sides of the same coin. What is truly terrifying however, is despite the film somewhat souring a positive ending for Ingrid by pointing out the inherent downsides to the attention she receives, there doesn’t seem to be any hope for Taylor. With Ingrid, at least we see glimpses of her true self. But with Taylor, all we ever see is the glamorous front she puts up. Her online persona has completely taken over and blinded her to the problems in her life. The positive for Ingrid, in the end, is Dan (Another great and funny O’Shea Jackson Jr. performance). Unlike Taylor’s boyfriend, who will tell Ingrid of his problems but never truly confront his girlfriend, Dan is honest. He is unabashedly a nerdy, lovable and truthful guy and tells Ingrid the truth throughout the entire film. So while Taylor is being fed what she wants to hear by her audience both in real life and online, Ingrid at least has Dan to tell her the truth.

In its own darkly comedic way, Ingrid Goes West is a reminder that, for all the benefits of social media and the internet, we truly do not know the full psychological effects of this technology. The internet is not just hashtags and memes. There are a lot of mental health issues that are both created by it and exacerbated by it. And many people don’t get as positive an ending as Ingrid’s. This is the true power of Ingrid Goes West and a message that has stayed with me since the credits rolled.

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.

Podcastaddict

Link Bank

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

“Slow West” Review

By Josiah Wampfler

Michael Fassbender has played everything from androids to British spies to southern plantation owners, but up until now he had yet to grace the screen of a Western. In Slow West, Fassbender gets to fulfill a long held dream of his to take a turn as an Eastwood-esque, cigar-chomping outlaw of the Old West: Silas.

The film follows the journey of a young Scottish teen, named Jay Cavendish, who comes to the rough frontier of America in search of his love. Along the way, the scrawny Jay finds that he is ill-prepared for the savage West and teams up with the outlaw Silas.

Slow West is the first feature film from director John Maclean and, though the film includes a plethora of wonderful elements, his lack of experience shows. Slow West is kind of a mess: a beautiful, enjoyable mess.

The performances throughout the film are fantastic. From Fassbender’s multidimensional Silas; to the starry-eyed, idealistic Jay presented by Kodi Smit-McPhee; to the off-kilter, bad man Payne played by Ben Mendelsohn, the performances were spot-on; Not showy, or grandiose, but just perfect for the characters.

And these characters presented by the cast of Slow West are one of the things that holds the whole thing together. Even the under-developed Rose, played by Caren Pistorious, manages to shine through, making you want to see more of her even as the credits roll.

But with all of the wonderful elements brought to the film through the actors, the experience they possess is the one thing the director obviously lacks. Slow West is not your typical Western, to it’s credit. It is a bizarre, violent adventure that takes almost every trope found in Western films and flips them upside-down.

This is what makes Slow West so interesting and at the very least original, but the problems arise in its continuous search for a concrete tone. The film at times seems unsure if it wants to be an original Western with new ideas or a comedic parody of the genre. It rapidly switches from somber to comedic, seemingly playing elements for laughs when maybe it shouldn’t have. That’s not to say you can’t have these different tones, but the switches often seem abrupt and out of place. Plus, sometimes the film will change tone at the worst times, completely abandoning a theme or set piece that really worked.

Still, through all of these problems and through all of the mess , Slow West is an absolutely beautiful film. Almost surreal at times, the film takes a New Zealand landscape and perfectly transforms it into the American West. If nothing else, the film is a sight to behold.

And while its sad that the film isn’t as coherent as it should be, there are so many wonderful elements that make up Slow West that you can’t help but love it. Is it a perfect film? By no means. But, does it capture the imagination and bring something different to the table of a genre that has been saturated with the same old tropes for years? Hell yes.

John Maclean may not have delivered a masterpiece on his first at bat, but what you see in this film is the beginnings of some really great filmmaking. And that is pretty exciting.