Episoder
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Reece and Bjorn wrap up their Paul Schrader season with the second part of their rankings from least to most favourite.
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Reece and Bjorn compare notes on Schrader's films, ranking them from least to most favourite.
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Mangler du episoder?
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Reece and Bjorn are joined with very special guest and fellow former Queen Video clerk Adam Trozzolo for a deep dive into Paul Schrader final entry in his late period "man in a room" trilogy, starring Joel Edgerton as a reformed Neo-Nazi (surprise, surprise) seeking redemption through love.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's 22nd picture, "The Card Counter," the second in the so-called "man in a room" trilogy, starring Oscar Isaac as a gambler with a very dark past.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's comeback picture, starring Ethan Hawke as the most Schrader-esque of protagonists, a priest suffering a crisis of faith. A 180-degree-turn from his last film, "First Reformed" is a provocative and deeply moving meditation on love, guilt, grief, and God (but way more entertaining than that suggests).
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Reece and Bjorn take a deep dive into Paul Schrader’s wildest picture, his second collaboration with Nic Cage (doing his best Bogart) in the bonkers 2016 neo-noir, Dog Eat Dog, featuring a gleefully unhinged supporting turn from Willem Dafoe., and based on (most of) a novel by Edward (Mr.Blue) Bunker.
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Reece and Bjorn are joined by returning special guest and noted Cage-o-holic Mark Hanson to discuss the first of two Schrader / Nic Cage pictures, 2014's CIA spy thriller, Dying of The Light, as well as Schrader's own bootleg cut, "Dark."
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Reece and Bjorn discuss (and disagree on!) Paul Schrader's divisive, self-financed Bret Easton Ellis collaboration, "The Canyons," starring Lindsay Lohan and pornstar James Deen in a story about sex, jealousy, and murder.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader’s 2008 psychological drama starring Jeff Goldblum as a Holocaust survivor struggling to hold onto his sanity after suffering unspeakable loss and humiliation at the hands of Willem Dafoe’s Nazi officer.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's return to his "man in a room" films with this 2007 crime-drama starring Woody Harrelson, as the eponymous "walker," a gay man who escorts the wealthy wives of Washington elites to social events in place of their neglectful husbands - until, as these men in rooms tend to do, he gets caught up in a murder.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's divisive 2005 prequel to William Friedkin's horror classic, starring Stellen Skarsgard in the role made famous by Max Von Sydow in the original. Considering Schrader was fired off the picture, replaced by Renny Harlin (Die Hard 2: Die Harder) and the film was mostly re-cast and reshot, it's a miracle that this version even exists!
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's 2002 Bob Crane biopic about twin obsession: sex and videotape, featuring some career-best performances by Greg Kinnear and Willem Dafoe.
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Reece and Bjorn are joined by very special guest Cameron Pulley, to discuss Paul Schrader's ultra-strange 1999 noir melodrama, Forever Mine, starring Joseph Fiennes, Gretchen Moll, and Ray Liotta.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader’s second feature of 1997, Affliction, an adaptation of Russell Banks’ novel, starring a powerhouse Nick Nolte, and a hard-as-nails James Coburn as his abusive father. Both were nominated for Oscars (Coburn won).
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Reece and Bjorn are joined by returning special guest Noah Taylor to discuss Paul Schrader’s adaptation of Elmore Leonard’s strangest novel, “Touch,” the first of two films Schrader released in 1997.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Scrader’s strange, comic, supernatural noir, Witch Hunt, starring Dennis Hopper, as a ‘50s private dick, surrounded by magic and murder.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's 1992 existential crime drama, Light Sleeper, starring Willem Dafoe as a middle-aged drug dealer ready for anything but change.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's seductive and dangerous 1990 thriller, The Comfort of Strangers, starring Natasha Richardson and Rupert Everett as young lovers searching for passion in Venice, finding instead the not-so-comforting strangers, played by Christopher Walken and Helen Mirren.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's 1988 true crime biopic, Patty Hearst, starring Natasha Richardson as the eponymous heiress who was kidnapped by and then joined (willingly?) the SLA.
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Reece and Bjorn discuss Paul Schrader's 1987 family drama about a working class brother and sister chasing their rock 'n roll dreams in Cleaveland, starring Michael J. Fox, Joan Jett, and Gena Rowlands.
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