The Essential Cut
In this episode of The Essential Cut, we’re heading into the jungle with two masterpieces of "Desperation Cinema." In one corner: John Huston’s 1948 epic The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, the film that defined the "gold lust" archetype and proved Humphrey Bogart could be a monster. In the other: William Friedkin’s 1977 fever nightmare Sorcerer, a movie so cursed by its own production it became a legend of cinematic obsession. Only one can stay on the Final Watchlist. We’re auditing them for Vitality (Do they still hit like a freight train?), Structural Integrity (what films did they inspire?), and the Letterboxd Consensus. The Stakes: If we lose Sierra Madre, we lose the blueprint for the modern anti-hero. If we lose Sorcerer, we lose the most visceral example of "Director as Madman" ever put to celluloid. Next Week: Show business isn't all dust storms and malaria outbreaks, it can be about decapitations and fraud too: Tropic Thunder (2008) vs. Bowfinger (1999). an Up Left Media Production upleftmedia.com [www.upleftmedia.com] ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
40 episodios
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