One Heat Minute Productions show

One Heat Minute Productions

Summary: ONE HEAT MINUTE PRODUCTIONS began with film journalist Blake Howard examining Michael Mann's 1995 crime opus HEATchronologically, in 60-second increments, in the aptly titled "One HEAT Minute." After more than 170 episodes the finale featured the legendary mastermind director, screenwriter and producer behind the film Michael Mann. Now, the feed is occupied by similarly obsessed examinations like: THE LAST (12 minutes) OF THE MOHICANS is a twelve-episode limited podcast series focusing on the climax of the Michael Mann's 1992 epic The Last of the Mohicans. (Completed) INCREMENT VICE is the podcast that explores Paul Thomas Anderson's INHERENT VICE one scene at a time, with host Travis Woods (Weekly on Fridays) ALL THE PRESIDENT's MINUTES is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. (Three times a week) #ConTENgen: In a world changed by COVID-19, every day, this podcast will be reaching out to talk movies and maintain connections; in less ten minutes or less. (Daily). JOSIE AND THE PODCATS is a limited podcast series diving into the history, the production, the music, the legacy, and the fandom surrounding the 2001 cult classic Josie and the Pussycats. From the stars and creators to the obsessive fans, DuJour means this show is a must-listen for all Josie diehards, hosted by Maria Lewis.

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 All The President's Minutes - Minute 9 with Stu Coote | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2785

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute nine host, Blake Howard joins dear friend of One Heat Minute Productions, top film mind, Blake Howard. Blake and Stu discuss how every era since All The President's Men thinks their age is in direct conversation with this film, predicting the dissatisfaction of the Donald Trump Impeachment proceedings and how this movie is an antidote to contemporary society's apathy for truth. About Stu Coote Stu is the self-appointed lead leg of THE SINNER FILES PODCAST Tripod. Stu is also the primary film geek for Australian geek site GEEK OF OZ. TWITTER: @STU_WATCHES

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 8 with Garth Franklin | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2378

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute eight host, Blake Howard joins editor, writer, designer, webmaster and creator of Dark Horizons, Garth Franklin. Blake and Garth discuss 20+ years of editing - none of which took place in a newsroom, the first attempted viewing being interrupted by lasciviousness and this remarkable film. About Garth Franklin Editor, Writer, Designer, Webmaster, Creator - Dark Horizons One of the very first online entertainment journalists, Sydney-based Garth Franklin has clocked up more hours, stories and experience in this field than the entire staff of various other sites combined. Respected and well-regarded amongst his peers, Franklin created and designed the very first Dark Horizons® incarnation on geocities.com back in April 1996 and has steered it through at least four major re-designs, two recessions, hundreds of interviews, thousands of screenings, and tens of thousands of articles.

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 7 with Lee Zachariah | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2824

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute seven host, Blake Howard joins writer, T.V producer, journalist and author Lee Zachariah. Lee and Blake discuss that All The President's Men is the ultimate "just the facts Maam" of films, information as "thriller" and the necessary shock of these cops dressed as hippies taking down the guys in suits. Directed by Alan J. Pakula, written by two-time Oscar-winning screenwriter William Goldman from the novel by reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman; All The President's Men is a perfect film about an imperfect time. About Lee Zachariah Lee Zachariah is a writer who has worked across film, television and journalism since 2003. He has written on politics and the arts for Vice, Junkee, the Age, the Guardian and Big Issue. He co-hosted the ABC2 film comedy series The Bazura Project, and has written for The Chaser on The Hamster Wheel, The Checkout and The Hamster Decides, and on news satire show, Shaun Micallef's Mad As Hell. He tweets at @leezachariah

 INCREMENT VICE - EPISODE #13: "...he's real intelligent about this kinda shit..." with Jacob Knight | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 5751

"Was it possible that at every gathering, concert, peace rally, love-in, be-in and freak-in, here, up North, back East, wherever, some dark crews had been busy all along, reclaiming the music, the resistance to power, the sexual desire, from epic to everyday, all they could sweep up, for the ancient forces of greed and fear?" That's a question Doc's mind-with-the-munchies chews on in Inherent Vice, both the book and the film. "Gee," ultimately thinks. "I don't know." Well, today's guest certainly thinks so, as he walks us through the lattice of beastly beneficiaries to the betrayal of a generation, a movement, a decade, a country-COINTELPRO informants, conspiranoid CIA ops, mismanaged and malevolent FBI agents, rogue LAPD officers, and that strange sick fuck Charlie Manson himself-and just how easily they can swing you to their side, with a simple conversation in a room a lot like the one Doc finds himself in today... About the Guest - JACOB KNIGHT Jacob has written for Rebeller, Fangoria, Birth.Movies.Death., and Dark Moon Digest.

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 6 Mark Humphries | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2862

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute six host, Blake Howard joins one of Australia's very best satirists, Mark Humphries. Mark and Blake discuss the burden of looking like Eric Trump, shitting yourself because you're in the position of the burglars, keeping a separate Twitter purely to talk musicals and how hard it is to stop watching this film. ABOUT MARK HUMPHRIES Fortnightly sketches for the ABC's 730 Report (@abc730). Was the standing up one on Pointless on Channel 10 (@PointlessAU) and the satirical one on The Feed SBS (@thefeedsbs) Twitter: @markhumphries Musical Twitter: @marksmusicals

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 5 with Travis Johnson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3466

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute five host, Blake Howard joins film critic, journalist and occasional political commentator, Travis Johnson. Travis and Blake discuss that in 2020 Nixon's behaviour barely registers a 'who gives a shit,' blind ideological tribalism, and praise the work of Anthony Mannio, an actor who connects Highlander, Weekend at Bernies and All the President's Men. ABOUT TRAVIS JOHNSON Film critic, mostly. Words everywhere, voice on ABC radio, face occasionally on TV. Website. Twitter: @CelluloidWhisky

 INCREMENT VICE - EPISODE #12: "...Shasta's missing, Wolfmann's gone, uh, Glen Charlock's dead..." with Jim Hemphill | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 8557

Connections abound in the paranoiac and conspiracy-laden world of Thomas Pynchon, connections vast and connections minute, connections real and perceived and imagined and hoped for and dreaded and undiscovered. The same could be said of the city, the megalopolis, Los Angeles, with its never ending cascade of connections falling upon its concrete sprawl and tangling up its dazed denizens like fish in the net of a certain schooner sailing the seven seas. Connections that bind this person to that movie, or that movie to that song, or that song to that memory, or that missing person to that booby hatch, or that ex-old to that supposedly dead junkie sax player, and so on and so on and so on, world without end, hallelujah. And if connections are part of the marrow-deep makeup of Pynchon's work (and maybe even a little movie based on one of those books), then boy oh boy, today's guest was pretty much born to talk about them, as he and our host surf upon a series of seemingly endless wave of connections from SoCal noirs to comic book panel art to the hidden extraterrestrial messages buried within PTA's Punch-Drunk Love. No, really. About the Guest JIM HEMPHILL Jim Hemphill is the award-winning screenwriter and director of the critically-acclaimed THE TROUBLE WITH THE TRUTH and BAD REPUTATION, as well as a respected film historian whose essays have appeared in the CHICAGO READER, FILM COMMENT, FILM QUARTERLY, MOVIEMAKER, et al. He is a researcher/interviewer for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Visual History Project, and has contributed historical audio commentaries to home releases of many films including INHERIT THE WIND, GARDENS OF STONE, and HANG 'EM HIGH. Jim also hosts a podcast for AMERICAN CINEMATOGRAPHER, where he interviews the industry's top directors of photography, and is the author of Focal Point, a regular column on directing for FILMMAKER MAGAZINE. He is a programming consultant at the Egyptian and Aero theaters in Los Angeles, where he has moderated discussions with Martin Scorsese, Charlize Theron, Nicolas Cage, David Mamet, Jim Jarmusch, Paul Schrader, Viggo Mortensen, Shirley MacLaine, and many others.

 BONUS One HEAT Minute: "One Ralph Minute" with Xander Berkeley | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3739

ONE HEAT MINUTE is the podcast examining Michael Mann's 1995 L.A crime opus HEAT minute by minute. In this very special bonus episode, the only man (besides Michael Mann) to connect HEAT and L.A Takedown joins host Blake Howard to talk about his small and unforgettable role as Ralph, Xander Berkely. Blake and Xander discuss being in the orbit of Michael Mann and casting director Bonnie Timmerman since a guest-starring role on Miami Vice, illuminating Blake on the evolution of pilot "Hannah" into "L.A Takedown," modelling his Waingro's physicality on the infamous Hillside Strangler and even throws in a Pacino "SIDDOWN." GUEST BIO Xander Berkeley Xander's father was a painter and his mother a school teacher who sewed, providing him with costumes (his preference over toys). School plays and Community Theater were next. An experimental theater troupe in the area (which was an offshoot from Joseph Chaikin's Open Theater in New York) took Xander under their wing when he was 16. He credits this group for shaping him as both a person and an actor, committed to taking risks and remaining open to the unknown. Xander went to Hampshire College, the progressive brainchild of Smith, Mt. Holyoke, Amherst, and the University of Massachusetts. He would continue in the theater at Hampshire, studying and doing plays at each of the other schools, all of which were there in the area. A move to New York after college brought him access to private teachers from the Royal Academy of the Arts, the Moscow Arts Theater and HB Studios. Later in Los Angeles, Xander would spend time with Lee Strasberg at The Actor's Studio during the last years of his life. Xander worked in Regional and Repertory Theaters in addition to off-Broadway while living in New York but, despite a classically trained theater background, he was increasingly drawn to the subtleties of film acting. A play, written by the great southern novelist Reynolds Price, called "Early Dark" had such a cinematic feel to it, that an agent saw the film acting potential in Xander and encouraged him to make the move out west. Soon Mommie Dearest (1981) provided Xander with his film debut in the role of "Christopher Crawford", and simultaneously gave his career a slightly cultish twist. Alex Cox with Sid and Nancy (1986), James Cameron with Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), Bernard Rose with Candyman (1992), Todd Haynes with Safe (1995), Mike Figgis with Leaving Las Vegas (1995), Andrew Niccol with Gattaca (1997) all helped to further associate Xander as an actor in his own rather unusual category. Xander's choices were often determined by the opportunity to learn from directors he admired, certainly all those listed above fell into that category. Clint Eastwood with The Rookie (1990), Ron Howard with Apollo 13 (1995), Rob Reiner with A Few Good Men (1992), Michael Mann with Heat (1995), Wolfgang Petersen with Air Force One (1997), Steven Spielberg with Amistad (1997) are obvious examples of others Xander actively sought to work with and learn from. From obscure independent movies where Xander could play lead roles to the big budget studio movies where he might often play smaller character-driven parts, an education was taking place. Just as working with older directors like Michael Cacoyannis on The Cherry Orchard (1999) and Robert M. Young on Human Error (2004) (aka "Human Error") brought insights to ways of working that are being lost in pop cultures tendency to slide toward slickness. Not to mention bringing him to places like Bulgaria and China along the way. Perhaps because a life in the foreign services, or espionage was seen as a road not taken, living on location in foreign countries, working as an actor, has somewhat fulfilled the impulse. As early as 1987, a film took Xander to Nicaragua while the Contra War was taking place. It was during this three month shoot on the film Walker (1987)...

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 4 with Melissa Matheson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3691

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute four host, Blake Howard joins editor of youth website GOAT and veteran journalist working in Australia's largest news publications Melissa Matheson. Melissa and Blake discuss learning and using shorthand to take damned quick notes as a cadet, nostalgic for typewriters and note-books, and the kinship of the All the President's Men newsroom and the newsroom from The Wire Season Five. ABOUT MELISSA MATHESON Via Mumbrella Nova Entertainment has appointed former mX Sydney editor Melissa Matheson as the editor of youth website Goat. Matheson has spent a significant chunk of her career at News Corp, working across The Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph in addition to mX Sydney. She also spent a brief period at SBS as a senior editor. Twitter: @Mel_Matheson

 INCREMENT VICE - EPISODE #11: "...not so much English rose as English daffodil..." with Courtney Howard | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 6289

"It was a reverse floor plan, with bedrooms on the entrance level and then upstairs the kitchen, maybe more than one, and various entertainment areas. The house should have been full of law enforcement. Instead, the boys from Protect and Serve had set up a command post at the pool cabana, somewhere out in back. Like getting in some last-minute free catering before their federal overlords showed up. Sounds of distant splashing, rock n roll radio, eating between means. Some kidnapping. "...In the time it took [Sloane] to lead him through a dim sunken interior full of taupe carpeting, suede upholstery, and teak, which seemed to extend indefinitely in the direction of Pasadena, Doc learned that she had a degree from the London School of economics, had recently begun studying tantric yoga, and had met Mickey Wolfmann originally in Las Vegas." There's a reason why our buddy Thomas Pynchon describes the House of Wolfmann as a descent into Hell-for Doc, it kinda is. Having just met a salt-of-the-earth gal like Hope Harlingen (heroin and heaving and hardons aside), who with a quiet and modest dignity refuses to accept the death of her husband despite no support from the cops or the banks, it must be a shock to the system for our knockabout dick to find a woman outright celebrating the non-death of her missing husband with the cops and the banks and everyone else on the wrong side of karma in 1970. And that's this scene in a nut, isn't it? It's a dichotomous portrait of lives on either side of the Golden Fang-the good lives the fangs chew to pieces...and the gaudy lives those fangs feed... About the Guest COURTNEY HOWARD With bylines in VARIETY and FRESH FICTION TV, film critic Courtney Howard is a member of the LA Film Critics Association, the Critics Choice Association, the Online Film Critics Society, and the Alliance of Women Film Journalists. Additionally, she's been stanning INHERENT VICE from day one, and at some point plans on having Roger Deakins do the lighting in the her house, Sloane Wolfmann-style.

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 3 with Maria Lewis | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3097

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute three host, Blake Howard joins critic, journalist and author, Maria Lewis. Maria drags Blake for giving her 70% of a black screen for her minute before diving into how deeply this movie speaks to her beginnings as a prodigious 16-year-old journalist on the Gold Coast of Australia. ABOUT MARIA LEWIS Maria Lewis is an author, journalist and screenwriter based in Sydney, Australia. Getting her start as a police reporter, her writing on pop culture has appeared in publications such as the New York Post, Guardian, Penthouse, The Daily Mail, Empire Magazine, Gizmodo, Huffington Post, The Daily and Sunday Telegraph, i09, Junkee and many more. Previously seen as a presenter on SBS Viceland's nightly news program The Feed and as the host of Cleverfan on ABC, she has been a journalist for over 15 years. Her best-selling debut novel Who's Afraid? was published in 2016, followed by its sequel Who's Afraid Too? in 2017, which was nominated for Best Horror Novel at the Aurealis Awards in 2018. Who's Afraid? is being developed for television by the Emmy and BAFTA award-winning Hoodlum Entertainment. Her Young Adult debut, It Came From The Deep, was released globally on October 31, Halloween, 2017 and is a twist on The Little Mermaid meets Creature From The Black Lagoon. Her fourth book, The Witch Who Courted Death, was released on Halloween, 2018 and won Best Fantasy Novel at the Aurealis Awards in 2019. Her fifth novel set within the shared supernatural universe - The Wailing Woman - was released in November, 2019. Twitter: @moviemazz

 INCREMENT VICE - EPISODE #10: "...along comes little Amethyst..." with Lindsey Romain | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 4971

"Some ex-old lady had hit town, and they'd run away together. The emergency room had mixed them up with somebody else, the way maternity wards switched babies around, and they were still on some intensive care ward under another name. It was a particular kind of disconnected denial, and Doc figured he'd seen enough by now to recognize it." In the novel Inherent Vice, that's how Thomas Pynchon described the post-1960s generation coming of age in the year 1970, bleary-eyed and hungover from the last decade and the damage done, and afflicted with the cruelest kind of misery-absolutely devastated by the grief of loss, yet operating in complete denial of the existence that grief, telling themselves stories, as Joan Didion would say, in order to live, stories that explain away the deaths of loved ones as strange and grand mysteries, rather than cruel and banal fates. Further, in Paul Thomas Anderson's film adaptation, Sortilege intones that the post-Manson era in which Doc and company found themselves in was perilous, "astrologically speaking, for dopers...especially those of high school age. Who'd been born, most of them, under a 90-degree aspect...the unluckiest angle possible...between Neptune, the doper's planet...and Uranus, the planet of rude surprises. Doc had known it to happen...that those left behind would refuse to believe that people they loved...or even took the same classes with, were really dead. They came up with all kinds of alternate stories so it wouldn't have to be true." The Harlingens are a family in need of such a story, one that will allow them to live in the Mansonoid post-60s drop-out drag of the Age of Nixon. If only someone could tell them that story, could put together the pieces so we could all see it a little more clearly... About the Guest LINDSEY ROMAIN Lindsey Romain is a film critic and culture writer whose work has appeared in NERDIST (where she is a contributing editor), BRIGHT WALL/DARK ROOM, THRILLIST, /FILM, VULTURE, TEEN VOGUE, MARIE CLAIRE, and THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE. In addition to crafting insightful cinematic and cultural commentary, and inflamming the Dumb Dude Wing of Twitter by embracing the thirsty excellence of THE LAST JEDI, Lindsey has written extensively about the pop phenomenon of Charles Manson, the death of the 1960s, and the collapse of that decade's counter-culture.

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 2 with J.R Hennessy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3677

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute two host, Blake Howard joins the political editor of Business Insider Australia and journalist, J.R Hennessy. J.R and Blake discuss the prophetic nature of President's Men by focusing on the trade of journalism and the pursuit of truth. J.R and Blake also take an essential digression to contrast another "primary source" film David Fincher and Aaron Sorkin's The Social Network and the quaint conclusions compared to the more substantial political ramifications a decade later. Directed by Alan J. Pakula, written by two-time Oscar-winning screenwriter William Goldman from the novel by reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman; All The President's Men is a perfect film about an imperfect time. ABOUT J.R. HENNESSY J.R. is a writer and editor at Business Insider. He has written at The Guardian, Pedestrian. T.V. and blogs media politics here. Twitter: @jrhennessy

 All The President's Minutes - Minute 1 with Bilge Ebiri | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3115

All The President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute one host Blake Howard is joined by Editor for Vulture and New York Magazine and one of the world's best film critics, Bilge Ebiri. Bilge and Blake discuss director Alan J. Pakula's avant-garde choices, paranoia, audiences watching at the time knowing that all this "shit" only happening two years ago and the inference an impenetrable machine surrounding Nixon from the first minute of the movie. Directed by Alan J. Pakula, written by two-time Oscar-winning screenwriter William Goldman from the novel by reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman; All The President's Men is a perfect film about an imperfect time. Guest Bio: Bilge Ebiri is a film critic/writer/editor at New York Magazine. He has contributed to publications such as L.A. Weekly, The New York Times and the Village Voice (rip). Bilge is also a writer and director, known for New Guy (2003), Purse Snatcher (2006) and The Barber of Siberia (1998). TWITTER: @BILGEEBIRI THE VILLAGE VOICE ARCHIVE ROTTEN TOMATOES

 INCREMENT VICE - EPISODE #9: "...she's gone, man..." with Alicia Malone (Author, TCM Host) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 5476

Near the end of Douglas Sirk's 1954 Technicolor melodrama, Magnificent Obsession, Otto Kruger makes a pretty heavy declaration: "Once you find the way, you'll be bound. It will obsess you. But believe me, it will be a magnificent obsession." We agree that's a sentiment that our pal Doc Sportello would be in a nodding, bleary-eyed acquaintance with, drawn inevitably as he is to the flame of beloved ex-old Shasta Fay Hepworth; it's also something Bigfoot Bjornsen, Hope Harlingen, and the rest of Pynchon's alliteratively named rogue's gallery of drop-outs and dopers and heroes and hopefuls understand: "once you find the way, you'll be bound." They're bound all right, though magnificent isn't a word they'd probably use, what with their hopes and dreams all being squashed beneath the boot of time and time's mercenary, The Golden Fang. But obsessions can be magnificent. Whether focused on a person or a time or maybe just a screen flicker at 24 frames per second, to passionately dedicate yourself to something you love can unlock doors you never even knew where there, sending you tumbling into worlds you never knew existed. That's something our host would know a thing or three about; our guest Alicia Malone does, too. From sitting in the cave-dark of a theater for the first time to jockeying a video store to fanatically freaking about favorite films, Travis and Alicia understand obsession. How it can be magnificent. How it can be inherent. "Once you find the way, you'll be bound." Boy, don't we know it, Otto. About the Guest - ALICIA MALONE A film reporter, broadcaster, historian, author, podcaster, and "self-confessed movie geek," Alicia Malone has talked about film on the Today show, NPR, MSNBC, ABC's Academy Awards Red Carpet Preshow, CNN's THE MOVIES docuseries, and her own show Indie Movie Guide for Fandango. She was the host of the late, the great, the never to be forgotten FilmStruck (as well as the host and producer of the The FilmStruck podcast); she is now a host on Turner Classic Movies and TCM Imports, and (seriously, the lady never sleeps) the podcast Magnificent Obsession, in which she talks to people with below-the-line jobs in the film industry about how they got their start and how movies shaped their lives. Additionally, she's written two amazing books that are an incredible resource for film fanatics, BACKWARDS AND IN HEELS: THE PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE OF WOMEN WORKING IN FILM and THE FEMALE GAZE: ESSENTIAL MOVIES MADE BY WOMEN. You can buy both books here.

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