21 April 2014

Episode 34 of The George Sanders Show Now Available!



Sean wouldn't stop jibber-jabbering about how awesome the new film La última película is, so I broke down and watched it for this episode of The George Sanders Show. Mostly just to get Sean to shut up. It didn't work.

The two of us get back from our vision quest in time to blather on about W. C. Fields's one-of-a-kind feature Never Give a Sucker an Even Break. We also select our Cinemassential Movies-About-Movies, talk up the career of Dennis Hopper, and pick apart the recent Time Out list of the 100 Greatest Animated Films of All Time.


Feedback is welcomed at thegeorgesandersshow[at]gmail[dot]com or @GeoSandersShow.

Next time: Under the Skin & Starman!

07 April 2014

Episode 33 of The George Sanders Show Now Available!



Sean and I don on our rose-colored glasses for this episode of The George Sanders Show. Yes, it's a trip down memory lane as we discuss Orson Welles's adaptation of The Magnificent Ambersons and Jia Zhangke's film Platform. Mr. Welles gets his day in the spotlight as our Person of the Week and we select our Cinemassential Nostalgia films.


Feedback is welcome at thegeorgesandersshow[at]gmail[dot]com and @GeoSandersShow.

Next time: La última películá & Never Give a Sucker an Even Break!

24 March 2014

Episode 32 of The George Sanders Show Now Available!



On this week's episode of The George Sanders Show, Sean and I grab a spot in the bleachers for Opening Day of baseball with discussions of The Pride of the Yankees and The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings. We also pick our Cinemassential Baseball films and talk about Akira Kurosawa (again) on the occasion of his birthday.



Play ball!

Feedback can be directed to thegeorgesandersshow[at]gmail[dot]com and @GeoSandersShow!

Next week: The Magnificent Ambersons & Platform!

14 March 2014

Episode 31 of The George Sanders Show Now Available!



Tying in with the release of Pompeii for some godforsaken reason, Sean and I talk about vulgar auteur Paul W. S. Anderson's recent take on The Three Musketeers. We also fight Harryhausen skeletons with a discussion of Don Chaffey's 1963 Jason and the Argonauts. Swashbucklers get the Cinemassential treatment and we dive into discussions on the perceived stagnation of the auteur theory and the hubbub surrounding the recent documentary The Act of Killing. Oh, and more people died.


Feedback is graciously accepted at thegeorgesandersshow[at]gmail[dot]com and @GeoSandersShow.

Next week: Pride of the Yankees & Bingo Long's Traveling All Stars & Motor Kings!

Also, if you're looking for even more of my uninformed opinions and braying voice, the epic Studio Ghibli episode of They Shot Pictures can be found here.

25 February 2014

Episode 30 of The George Sanders Show Now Available!



Welcome to our annual Oscar Complaints episode of The George Sanders Show! This week Sean and I whine about inadequacies in 1936's Best Picture winner, The Great Ziegfeld, and point out every single thing wrong with the Academy's pick for the greatest film of 2002, Rob Marshall's Chicago. We also run down the inadequate films that we think will win at this year's ceremony, and then pick our favorites in each category because we're under the impression that we are better suited for this than people that are actually paid to work in the film industry. 

Listen now:



Feedback is welcome at thegeorgesandersshow[at]gmail[dot]com and @GeoSandersShow.

Next timeJason and the Argonauts & The Three Musketeers (2011)!

17 February 2014

Episode 29 of The George Sanders Show Now Available!



Tying in with the release of George Clooney's The Monuments Men, Sean and I ride the rails with Burt Lancaster in The Train, directed by John Frankenheimer. We then hop a freight through the majestic Pacific Northwest for a front row seat in Robert Aldrich's Emperor of the North, starring Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine. Meanwhile the deaths of Shirley Temple and Philip Seymour Hoffman bring us down, and our Cinemassential Train Films does not include Buster Keaton's The General.

All aboard!

Listen Now:

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iTunes

Feedback is welcome at thegeorgesandersshow[at]gmail[dot]com and @GeoSandersShow.

Next time: Our Oscar spectacular with The Great Ziegfeld and Rob Marshall's Chicago!

07 February 2014

The Witch Rises: On Kiki's Delivery Service


A young witch coming of age arrives in a seaside town to master her abilities. To do so she has left behind her family and her home, with nothing but a broom, a bag, and a cat by her side. The girl is a romantic and a bit of a klutz, longing for the ocean whilst crashing into trees. She is taken in by a kind woman on the verge of motherhood, who gives her a job and a home. An enthusiastic and indefatigable boy falls for her and pesters the young woman to be his friend. The witch makes pancakes. It is wonderful.


Kiki's Delivery Service is certainly one of the most low key films director Hayao Miyazaki has created. While at its center it has a protagonist with magical powers, the film is more often concerned with the minor moments in life that we all face, meeting a new person, getting over an illness, being bored behind a counter. There are no cat buses or cities in the sky. No one turns into a pig, a scarecrow or a giant forest god. More than any other movie, this Miyazaki film is about people. Most of them are strong, independent women of varied experience and expectations. All of them, every single character, even the non-humans, are rich. Think of Jeff the dog, a fleeting character who gets two minutes of screen time at most, much of that unconscious. The care in conceiving and animating the altruistic animal's movements tells us more than we could ever hope to know about a hound.


The animation throughout Kiki's Delivery Service is, in a word, astounding. The Ghibli backgrounds are all framable, a series of lush masterpieces depicting ornate cityscapes, quaint storefronts, and cozy houses. Miyazaki's undying passion for flight is on magnificent display as well. The attention to detail in Kiki's windblown skirt and the physics of making midair adjustments is second to none. Much of the enjoyment comes from the little nods to intricate care that Miyazaki sprinkles throughout. The brief pause as Kiki's dad lifts her up, adjusting for more weight than he expected; Kiki's brief slip as she rounds a corner running to save Tombo; even the mere inclusion of a once motionless train car falling into line as the cars preceding it begin moving is beautiful.


One of the most enjoyable elements of Kiki's Delivery Service is how practical it is despite the existence of magic. Sure, Kiki can fly and talk to cats but she still has to clean her room with a bucket and a brush. There are no Disney creatures popping out of the woodwork with a song and a helping paw. This is work. The assured dedication to one's goals is a common theme throughout the film. Kiki demands to help out around the house of an elderly woman and her caretaker after they pay her for a delivery that is canceled. Tombo boasts of how hard he needs to train in order to get his legs in shape to power his flying contraption. Ursula spends her days in the forest, sketching crows, and dedicating the entirety of her life to art.


Whilst sitting on the beach with Tombo after crashing his bicycle-plane, Kiki confides that although she used to love flying, the passion is gone now that she does it for a living. Upon returning home after this confession, the young witch discovers that her magic is missing. It's tempting to read Kiki's subsequent existential crisis as an allusion to Miyazaki himself, who by this point in his career had painstakingly finished his passion project, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, and released what to this day is still his most beloved film, one whose title character went on to become not only a global phenomenon but the icon for the animation studio that he had founded. Was Miyazaki burned out? Did he think at this relatively early stage in his career that his best ideas were behind him? It is unclear.


What is known is that Miyazaki did not originally plan on directing the film but got so invested in the screenplay process that he jumped in head first immediately upon finishing My Neighbor Totoro. Kiki's Delivery Service was released a mere fifteen months later. When recently discussing his retirement, Miyazaki mentioned that each successive film is taking longer to complete than the last. It is astounding that at one point in an animation director's career, one who in particular, also writes his own screenplays and does much of the drawing himself, managed to knock out two indisputable masterpieces so close to one another. So this is what it was like to live during the same time as Mozart or Shakespeare.