Paddington (2014)
Weekly Challenge #4 - "A Film Starring Animals"
The final movie challenge of January involves a Peruvian bear who travels to London in what is pretty widely considered one of the most wholesome movies of all time.
Explore " sally hawkins" with insightful episodes like "Paddington (2014)", "Episode 126: The Shape of Fish Cake", "Wonka", "Wonka" and "Potential Pick - Wonka" from podcasts like ""The Fifth Row Podcast", "The Night Club", "Disney Deviants", "Mashley at the Movies" and "The Potential Podcast!"" and more!
Weekly Challenge #4 - "A Film Starring Animals"
The final movie challenge of January involves a Peruvian bear who travels to London in what is pretty widely considered one of the most wholesome movies of all time.
Come with me and you'll be in a world of Pure Imagination!
Or at least a world of Timothee Chalamet and a host of other stars! Join us as we walk the streets of *insert generic city* in .....Europe and discuss Wonka and all its whimsy...or perhaps lack there of?
A young Willy Wonka wants to open his own chocolate shop, but the local chocolatiers aren't happy about it. Much singing and dancing and danger ensues in Wonka, the new family film starring Timothee Chalamet, and directed by Paul King (Paddington).
Chris and Taylor review the musical fantasy film, Wonka, directed by Paul King, who co-wrote the screenplay with Simon Farnaby, based on a story by King. It tells the origin story of Willy Wonka, a character in the 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, featuring his early days as a chocolatier. The film stars Timothée Chalamet in the title role and an ensemble cast including Calah Lane, Keegan-Michael Key, Paterson Joseph, Matt Lucas, Mathew Baynton, Sally Hawkins, Rowan Atkinson, Jim Carter, Natasha Rothwell, Tom Davis, Olivia Colman, and Hugh Grant.
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★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★It’s a Hart Chicks classic as we dive into Jaleh’s fave, the truly underrated Persuasion. We’ve got trope talk, romance recs, great and terrible faces, and a reference to literally every other pod season we’ve done. It’s what you know & love. Run the Bath marathon with us, dear hearts.
Music: @sigismundtryapkin
Artwork: @jstnmbrwn
Bibliography:
Austenprose. “Jane Austen’s Persuasion (2007) – A Movie Review,” January 14, 2008. https://austenprose.com/2008/01/14/persuasion-review-almost-too-good-for-me/.
Ballinger, Gill. “Adapting Austen ‘for the New Generation’: ITV’s 2007 Trilogy Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion.” In After Austen: Reinventions, Rewritings, Revisitings, edited by Lisa Hopkins, 145–75. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-95894-1_8.
Bennett,AP, Ray, Ray Bennett, and AP. “Persuasion.” The Hollywood Reporter (blog), March 29, 2007. https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-reviews/persuasion-158052/.
Gottlieb, Sidney. “‘Persuasion’ and Cinematic Approaches to Jane Austen.” Literature/Film Quarterly 30, no. 2 (2002): 104–10.
Grady, Constance. “‘I Am Half Agony, Half Hope’: Jane Austen’s Most Romantic Love Scene.” Vox, February 14, 2017. https://www.vox.com/culture/2017/2/14/14598536/persuasion-jane-austen-most-romantic-love-scene-letter-valentines-day.
Ethan Hawke & Sally Hawkins tell the story of an arthritic Nova Scotia woman who, while working as a housekeeper, develops a talent for painting and slowly becomes a beloved community figure - all the while dealing with an acerbic relationship with her husband and a contemptuous brother and aunt.
Then we show you how to do shrimp stir fry followed by this week's Blacklist - the historical retelling of the Dancing Plague of 1518 from the script 'VITUS'.
#ethanhawke #sallyhawkins #maudie #novascotia #shrimpstirfry #painter
Welcome to Reference Max, where we have a lot to say on new releases so fitting it all into a multi-splooshy, spoiler-free review episode!
Dig through the archives of growing pains, investigative journalism and historical fanfare with Armageddon Time, She Said & The Lost King this week.
0:00 Intro
0:43 Start
1:55 Armageddon time
14:38 She Said
24:07 The Lost King
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Welcome to Season 2 of Snubs & Dubs! This season we are covering the 87th Academy Awards, featuring the films of 2014.
For Episode 15, we are talking about Paul King's adaptation of Paddington.After a deadly earthquake destroys his home in Peruvian rainforest, a young bear (Ben Whishaw) makes his way to England in search of a new home. The bear, dubbed "Paddington" for the london train station, finds shelter with the family of Henry (Hugh Bonneville) and Mary Brown (Sally Hawkins). Although Paddington's amazement at urban living soon endears him to the Browns, someone else has her eye on him: Taxidermist Millicent Clyde (Nicole Kidman) has designs on the rare bear and his hide.
TIMECODES:
00:25 - Intro
01:10 - Other watching: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (Round 2), Paddington 2
02:32- Paddington Intro
07:53 - The Plot
11:05 - Discussion
20:45 - Reviews, Box Office, Rankings + Awards
34:25 - Interesting Facts
39:58 - Final Thoughts + Ep. 16 Preview
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It's time for a delightfully delicious double feature of both Paddington movies. Grab a marmalade sandwich and let's chat about two perfect movies!
You can shoot us an email at whatisamoviepod@gmail.com
Tipping the Velvet is a 2002 BBC television drama serial based on the best-selling 1998 debut novel of the same name by Sarah Waters. It originally screened in three episodes on BBC Two and was produced for the BBC by the independent production company Sally Head Productions. It stars Rachael Stirling, Keeley Hawes, and Jodhi May.
OAF 57 is here and has been a mission to put together. Tom is in the wonderful city of Liverpool and is joined by his good friend Chris to talk about the latest new music and new films. Music can be found in the Spotify playlists.
Spotify playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6BOVLLad2duA31cP98rcQy?si=46477f2cd77f4d6f
Trailers:
The Phantom Of The Open: https://youtu.be/0FOQMuV0bQU
X: https://youtu.be/Awg3cWuHfoc
Paris 13th District: https://youtu.be/AXqN--6mbYA
Deep Water: https://youtu.be/qWNxIZQ594s
Fresh: https://youtu.be/wKk5VAK1GZQ
The Nan Movie: https://youtu.be/F4ephzAakrs
Thanks for listening, as always. Please like, subscribe, rate, review and say nice things about and to us.
Jason Furie loathes movies that feature half-assed CGI bipedal animals interacting in a live-action environment. Adam Roth is surprisingly ok with it. We dared our listeners to have us watch and review 2014's Paddington by using the hashtag #paddington4lyfe and we lost. In more ways than one according to Jason. Well, we watched it, and now we're reviewing it.
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This week we are joined by IndieWire’s TV editor Kristen Lopez to discuss the “millennial classic,” ‘My Girl.’ Specifically, she’s here to talk about the Anna Chlumsky character of Vada Sultenfuss and the effect that she had on Kristen’s life. Kristen also talks about growing up disabled and how that influenced how she related to characters in film. Plus, at the end of the program, Jordan talks about how ‘Spencer’ beautifully portrays a type of love not often committed to film.
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If you haven’t seen My Girl – get ready to cry
With Jordan Crucchiola and Kristen Lopez.
Now playing in theaters, Spencer is a dark drama covering a fictionalized, 1991 version of Princess Diana played by Kristen Stewart. The film was directed by Pablo Larrain with Steven Knight as screenwriter, and it costars Sally Hawkins, Sean Harris, and Timothy Spall.
This review is an excerpt from Episode #245 of the Cinemaholics Podcast. Our intro music for this week is “Fly Me” by Crazyjazz.
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In the 3rd and final part of the Blue Jasmine miniseries, we discuss Jasmine and her sisters. Annie Hall, Helen St Clair in Bullets Over Broadway, Maria Elena in Vicky Cristina Barcelona and Cecilia in The Purple Rose of Cairo, among others. Hosted by Murtada Elfadl with returning guest journalist and theater critic Jose Solís, of Token Theater Friends podcast.
Support the showIn part 2 of the Blue Jasmine miniseries, we discuss the similarities with Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire, the character of Blanche Dubois, clearly is the blueprint for Jasmine. The many actresses who played Blanche or were inspired by her from the women in Pedro Almodovar’s movies to Gena Rowlands in A Woman Under the Influence to most recently Carey Mulligan in Wildlife. Hosted by Murtada Elfadl with guest TV and Film Journalist Candice Frederick.
Support the showIn the first of three episodes about Blue Jasmine, we discuss Cate Blanchett as the real auteur of Blue Jasmine, and the many ways her performance makes her the author of the film. Hosted by Murtada Elfadl with guest writer and critic Matthew Eng.
Support the showMOVIE REVIEW:
Michael Dougherty has said Godzilla: King of the Monsters is to Godzilla (2014) as Aliens is to Alien, and while I can understand the logic, I don't know if the comparison works entirely. At the very least, both films feature inventive motion capture, if you can call 3 actors playing the individual Ghidorah heads inventive.
Trivia aside, how does Godzilla: King of the Monsters handle in comparison to not only Godzilla (2014), but even the much appreciated 1954 original? Come join me as I contemplate what it means for a franchise to change so much over the years, and whether or not King of the Monsters is a worthy addition to a much-loved franchise.
Godzilla: King of the Monsters is Rated PG-13 for sequences of monster action violence and destruction, and for some language. It features Vera Farmiga, Ken Watanabe, Sally Hawkins, Millie Bobby Brown, and Bradley Whitford. Directed by Michael Dougherty.
Tune in Wednesday nights for new episodes of Cinematic Doctrine!
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Intro / Outro song - Kevin Macleod's 'Happy Alley'
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