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    alanarkin

    Explore "alanarkin" with insightful episodes like "Jabbering Hominids", "Episode 83: THE ROCKETEER (1991)", "The Other Fellas", "Episode 942: Wait Until Dark (1967)" and "That One Scene From...Glengarry Glen Ross" from podcasts like ""Movie Meltdown", "NostalgiaCast", "Cult Connections", "Thor's Hour of Thunder" and "Deep Dive Film School"" and more!

    Episodes (17)

    Jabbering Hominids

    Jabbering Hominids

    Movie Meltdown - Episode 609

    Sam Drog is back! And of course, almost immediately he and our host turn into a couple of hominids jabbering about movies. 

    And while we figure out the exact science of teleportation with or without side effects, we also address… Paperbacks from Hell, Matt Damon’s real identity, the death of movies, I must be immersed in the experience, Alan Arkin, being swallowed up by the subway system, V all the time, Paul Reubens, joining a cult, building full-size Enterprise, Daylight, Tim Burton's Ed trilogy, watching a reaction video vs. watching the actual thing, Night of the Juggler, figuring out what a movie is, listening to CDs, Queen of Blood, blatant-text, assigned movie seating, a rowing team underdog story, you’re totally diluting my brand, will John Williams just back off a little bit, taking space to enjoy these commercial products, pretty Brad Pitt, finding people that agree with your thoughts, Edward Scissorhands, having physical media, couples with matching jogging suits, Short Walk to Daylight, the hope of tomorrow and - wait… that’s just a model!

    “That triggered this repressed memory of the movie in my head that I hadn’t thought about.”

    Episode 83: THE ROCKETEER (1991)

    Episode 83: THE ROCKETEER (1991)

    Strap your rocket pack to your back as NostalgiaCast '90s Palooza takes to the skies with THE ROCKETEER, Joe Johnston's serial cliffhanger comic book throwback from 1991. Billy Campbell, Jennifer Connelly, and a scenery-gnawing Timothy Dalton star in this Indiana Jones-ish adventure that crashed and burned at the box office, and critic / Disney-phile Marianne Paluso brings her patented good humor and cinema savvy to our discussion about how the movie soared to the top of the superhero ranks. 

    The Other Fellas

    The Other Fellas
    Three films were the lead actor is replaced for one film only to return in the next installment! Ian is joined by Patrick O'Riley to discuss The Other Fellas

    On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969). Directed by Peter R Hunt. Screenplay by Richard Maibaum. Starring George Lazenby, Diana Rigg and Telly Savalas.

    Beneath The Planet of the Apes (1970). Directed by Ted Post. Written by Paul Dehn. Starring David Watson, James Franciscus and Kim Hunter

    Inspector Clouseau (1968). directed by Bud Yorkin. Written by Frank and Tom Waldman. Starring Alan Arkin, Frank finlay and Beryl Reid

    That One Scene From...Glengarry Glen Ross

    That One Scene From...Glengarry Glen Ross

    This week we dive into the absolute classic "Always Be Closing" scene from the David Mamet masterpiece Glengarry Glen Ross. This film has some master class performances from some all-time greats, including the one and only Alec Baldwin in this scene as he berates and sizes up the lower level employees and proves that abuse is real in some business cultures.

    Make sure to play along with each festival and leave comments so we can interact with you and remember to subscribe to the channel if you like what you see.

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    Join our growing community for new videos every week!

    Faithspotting "Little Miss Sunshine"

    Faithspotting "Little Miss Sunshine"

    Kenny and Mike continue a series looking at Christ Figures in Film with the 2006 Film Little Miss Sunshine. The film won 2 Oscars, Alan Arkin for supporting actor and Michael Arndt for Screenplay. Ten-year-old Abigail Breslin also received a Supporting Actress nomination for her portrayal of Olive. 

    Faith Spotted:

    The ten-year-old daughter in a very dysfunctional family, Olive (Peace Bringer) serves as the Christ figure as she is the source of reconciliation for the family members.  While in great conflict with one another and angry at life and the hurdles life presents, the pure, and innocent love Olive has for life and others inspires the family members to work together for her behalf. 

     

    KYD 096 - The Last Unicorn

    KYD 096 - The Last Unicorn

    Well, darlings, this one has been a long time comin'! Our beloved substitute co-host, Kate Holland, has been asking Chrysten to be a guest for this movie since this podcast was in short pants!  And now, after all these years, the time has come!  Get ready, darlings, for...The Last Unicorn!

    When a beautiful, young unicorn (Mia Farrow) learns that the rest of her kind have been driven into the ocean by a frightening Red Bull belonging to a cruel king in a faraway land, she leaves the safety of her forest to try and find them.  Helped along the way by a bumbling magician named Schmendrick (Alan Arkin) and a gruff matron named Molly Grue (Tammy Grimes), the trio make their way to the castle of King Haggard (Christopher Lee).  But when they encounter the Red Bull on the road, Schmendrick transforms the unicorn into a human woman to hide her from the bull.  But as she spends more time in her womanly form, the unicorn starts to lose sight of her quest and her true self!

    This movie was a fave of both Kate and Chrysten as youngsters...but will they, like the unicorn, lose sight of their true feelings?  Join us and find out!  And don't forget to RATE, REVIEW & SUBSCRIBE!

    #13 YouClip Movies: Miss Little Sunshine (2006) di Jonathan Dayton e Valerie Faris. A cura di Elisa Billi - Attrice.

    #13 YouClip Movies: Miss Little Sunshine (2006) di Jonathan Dayton e Valerie Faris. A cura di Elisa Billi - Attrice.
    Little Miss Sunshine (2006) regia di Jonathan Dayton e Valerie Faris, con Greg Kinnear, Steve Carell, Alan Arkin. Genere Commedia - USA, 2006.
    Una famiglia decide di portare la figlia alle finali di un concorso di bellezza, dovrà, però, attraversare il paese a bordo di un vecchio pulmino.
    Il film ha vinto 2 Premi Oscar, 4 Critics Choice Award, un premio ai SAG Awards e AFI Awards.

    Alpaca-Poly Blend: Dad Jeans 120

    Alpaca-Poly Blend: Dad Jeans 120

    Tonight we're talking about White House super spreaders! Jeff's take on The Mezzanine! How Brendan listens to music! Cat Seat Headrest! Das Boot! Matching Halloween outfits! 

    Notes:

    The Mezzanine - Nicholson Baker

    Car Seat Headrest — Teens of Denial

    Simon starring Alan Arkin

    Blands article: https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-09-07/welcome-to-your-bland-new-world-of-consumer-capitalism

    S4E9P - Preview Episode (The Last Unicorn)

    S4E9P - Preview Episode (The Last Unicorn)

    Episode: S4E9P* (Episode Page)

    (preview for forthcoming episode)

    “The Last Unicorn (1968)” by Peter S. Beagle (book)

    “The Last Unicorn (1982)” by Arthur Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass (Mia Farrow) (animated film)

     

    Hosted by:

    Ryan Sean O'Reilly

    Guests:

    Kaelin O'Reilly (book reviewer)

     

    Website: www.nodeodorant.com

     

    * DISCLAIMER: Please be advised that the views and opinions of the hosts and guests of NDIOS are completely their own and do not necessarily reflect the views and beliefs of the other hosts and guests or that of NDIOS.

    Episode 78 - Argo

    Episode 78 - Argo

    Argo [BLEEP] this movie! The only thing funny about Ben Affleck's muddled film "Argo" about the Iran hostage crisis is that it's obviously a thinly disguised C.I.A. propaganda piece. Perhaps the Academy chose it as the 2012 Best Picture winner in the interests of national security.

    The story focuses on Tony Mendez, a C.I.A. "exfiltration expert," who's tasked with secretly and safely extracting six Americans who evaded capture during the seizure of the U.S. embassy in Tehran. In what is now known as the "Canadian Caper," Mendez helped pull off a covert rescue mission where those six American embassy staffers posed as a Canadian film crew on a location-scouting trip. Canada was integral to this operation, but Ben Affleck would have you believe it was solely the result of good ol'-fashioned American ingenuity. 

    The very-non-Mexican Ben Affleck plays Mendez. He barely registers as a human, so you almost don't notice him. That's Affleck's acting we're referring to. His character also seems to have some sappy backstory where he's estranged from his wife and son, and this is supposed to be triumphant at the end, even though it's unexplored, untrue, and ultimately comically unearned.

    Bryan Cranston plays Mendez' C.I.A. superior whose entire character is to give the audience expositional information and to scramble around frantically behind the scenes to make stuff more suspenseful.

    Alan Arkin plays famed movie producer Lester Siegel (a wholly invented character for no reason), and Arkin somehow got a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for playing the 'old man says dirty stuff and it's funny, ain't it?" stock character that’s in a lot of movies. Didn't he already win an Oscar for barely showing up in a movie playing the same character?

    John Goodman plays the real-life legendary Hollywood makeup artist John Chambers, who helps Ben Affleck's character whip up this "fake movie" scheme. In real life, his involvement with the plan was much deeper, but in this movie, he seems to only serve the function of "guy who answers the phone later just in case." What a waste of the always underrated Goodman's talents. 

    Eventually, everything culminates in a pot-boiler third act that is so laboriously labyrinthine, it instead feels like a watched pot that never boils. 

    Join us as we break down all the facts this movie changed for its own benefit, groan at how this movie is yet again Hollywood writing a love letter to itself, and wonder if the Canadian ambassador who helped these Americans was secretly only interested in having an orgy with them.

    Tell us what you think by chatting with us (@filmsnuff) on TwitterFacebook and Instagram, or by shooting us an email over at mailbag@filmsnuff.com.

    This episode is sponsored by Stuffed Farms.

    Visit our website at https://www.filmsnuff.com.

    Episode 61 - Edward Scissorhands

    Episode 61 - Edward Scissorhands

    The 1990 fairytale "Edward Scissorhands" about an artificial man named Edward—an unfinished creation who has scissor blades instead of hands—is in and of itself a movie that's an artificial and unfinished creation. Tim Burton lathers the film with his usual coating of visual flair, but adds no substance beneath it.

    The picture leans hard on Danny Elfman's fantastic original score to try to convince the audience that there's some meaning behind all the pastel houses and forced romance. There isn't.

    Johnny Depp plays the title character, a Frankenstein's monster who seems to have been created after his inventor (played by Vincent Price, in his final movie role) saw a heart-shaped cookie and held it up to a robot. Ya know, as you do.

    Winona Ryder plays Kim Boggs, the object of Edward's affection throughout the film, and that's pretty much it.

    Dianne Wiest plays Kim's mom, the local Avon lady for this seemingly completely isolated suburb who adopts Edward and makes him a part of her family—one that includes her vacant husband (played by Alan Arkin) and her flippant son (played by the nerd kid from "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids.")

    Also, Anthony Michael Hall is in this movie, trying his hardest to curb being typecast by now playing a bully. But, just like this movie, it doesn't work.

    Join us as we discuss the waterbed's rise and fall in popularity in the 1980s; Keating’s love of Internet abbreviations (much to Jim’s chagrin); and why Edward’s inventor cruelly decided to give him a penis before hands.

    Tell us what you think by chatting with us (@filmsnuff) on TwitterFacebook and Instagram, or by shooting us an email over at mailbag@filmsnuff.com.

    This episode is sponsored by Black and Blue Tactical Riot Gear.

    Visit our website at https://www.filmsnuff.com.

    Episode 6 - Little Miss Sunshine

    Episode 6 - Little Miss Sunshine

    How this paper-thin road trip movie was nominated for Best Picture is beyond us. And how on earth did it *win* Best Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor (for Alan Arkin)? We don’t know, but we’re quite mad about it. 

    That’s right, this week we are taking down one of the all-time most overrated quirky comedies, “Little Miss Sunshine.” We discuss why beauty pageants aren’t illegal, who would ever care about the difference between the No. 1 and No. 2 Proust scholars in the world, our take on JonBenét Ramsey, and whether this is just a sequel to “National Lampoon's Vacation” or a prequel to “Breaking Bad.”

    Tell us what you think by chatting with us (@filmsnuff) on TwitterFacebook and Instagram, or by shooting us an email over at mailbag@filmsnuff.com.

    This episode is sponsored by Dirty Apron.

    Visit our website at https://www.filmsnuff.com.

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