After the Academy Awards finished last night Moreno, Ammon, and Law found themselves recording a brand new BingeCast and discussing everything that went down at the big show. Why is John Travolta the weirdest dude on the planet? Tanning Chatum was high as balls. Octavia Spencer has the improv skills of a fork. Zoe Saldana is hot as hell. All these topics are covered early and often. Also, how did NPH do? And many babadiicks to spread around.
There’s also a regular show in here somewhere when we get to TV Round-UP and talk The Americans, Banshee, The Walking Dead, Justified, and Better Call Saul.
What did you watch has the word on HOT TUB TIME MACHINE 2, WILD CARD, THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING, TOP FIVE, and HEAT.
I had 4 hours sleep. Go listen to the show and leave me alone until Tuesday, when our new Banshee commentary will be up. Friday brings a new Binge Aftertaste too. Seriously, leave me alone.
As Law checks out a Jim Gaffigan show and gorges himself on bear claws, Moreno, Ammon and MovieFreak (Jack Ffffffalvvvey) hold the fort down with plenty of booze and reviews up the ol wazoo. Nobody says wazoo.
We start things off with some Super Bowl talk, then head into Google Voice where the game is to now point out where Google translates “babadick”. TM clears the air about his voicemail from last week, and PeteMC sends in an Ammon sounder.
Ammon and Moreno review the latest Americans episode, there’s some brief Banshee talk (seriously, the latest episode tho) and Jackie Boy plows through Parks and Recreation, calling it one of the best sitcoms of all time. Ammon decides that he’s sticking with The Walking Dead, while Moreno and Jackie Boy laugh and fart at him.
Before What Did You Watch This Week, we talk aboutTHIS ARTICLE in which Jar Jar Martin’s original outline for A Song of Ice and Fire is detailed.
We wrap up the show by reviewing a shit fuck ton shit of movies including Calvary, Selma, The Imitation Game, Into The Storm, Boyhood, Fury, Tammy, Into the Storm, 2001: Space Odyssey and the documentary 21 Years: Richard Linklater.
There’s lots of stuff to cover this weekend so let’s get down to it.
Ammon and Law start things out by discussing Ammon’s Super Bowl preparations and the fact that somebody such as Carrie Fisher could be the determining factor in season two of the Hottie Fantasy League. We also dip into some Trailer Round-Up with THE FANTASTIC 4, the new TERMINATOR GENYSIS spot, TED 2, and KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE, which features an old friend talking shit.
Ammon brings back Literally Literary with his review of The Martian as Moreno joins us fresh off another secret mission.
TV Round-Up has word on The Americans, Justified, and other random offerings.
The Google Voice Game stops by to deliver drunk code and struggle translating Babadiiick some more.
What Did You Watch is packed with some old – THE GAME, BETTER OFF DEAD, DUEL, INSOMNIA, BILL AND TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE – and some new – THE ONE I LOVE, WILD CARD, A MOST VIOLENT YEAR, THE LITTLE DEATH, and ROSEWATER.
I guess living through the 80s was a drastically different experience as an adult. My concept of the cold war was shaped by `Saturday Night Live` skits, a ROCKY movie, and Nikolai Volkoff dropping mean renditions of the Russian national anthem before his WWF matches. I was a twitchy little Canadian kid with an addiction to Coca Cola and no real concern for world politics or the threat of nuclear devastation. This is what makes The Americans so interesting to me. While the scenery and the soundtrack seem familiar, the subject matter is all very mysterious. It feels like some dark unspoken secret being pulled from my childhood.
There’s every opportunity for The Americans to drown itself in clichés. Espionage clichés. Will they/won’t they relationship clichés. Even clichés of the era (see: THE WEDDING SINGER). Thankfully, all of this takes a backseat to story. Much like its main characters, The Americans focuses on the job at hand. Nothing else matters because it’s all for show. Elizabeth and Phillip Jennings (Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys) are Russian spies living the American dream. At a distance they look like your average blue-collar family – running a respectable Travel Agency and raising two centered children while keeping a tight lawn in the middle of suburbia. Get a little closer and you’ll start to see the cracks. Covers are almost blown, fake marriages start to crumble, children start to hitchhike, and lots of people die.
My “turn-the-channel-forever” moment came early in the season here. The moment we realize the Jennings have moved across the street from FBI agent, and Russian spy stomper, Stan Beeman (the great Noah Emmerich), I was legitimately scared that this show was going to be more Bosom Buddies than Homeland. The conflict is, impressively, taken head-on shortly after it arises. Not that the tension is taken out of the relationship, let’s just say it’s allowed to breathe a little bit as it underscores the rest of the series-long drama.
And drama there is. The Russians have moles in FBI offices, the FBI have moles in Russian diplomat’s offices, everybody’s boss is a dick, most characters cheat with other characters, women get punched in the face (a lot), and there’s a recurring fake mustache that makes everybody feel uncomfortable. The show seems to develop pride in itself and the courage to pull of some big moves as it briskly moves along. Characters are introduced slowly and with care so we can really get to know them before they’re killed off. It’s admirable yet frustrating as a viewer. There are definitely some people let go too soon here.
Keri Russell is solid as the patriotic Elizabeth Jennings. She might have more action scenes than monologues to deal with here but she steps up to the plate wherever needed. Matthew Rhys might be even better. His effortless method of delivering lines adds confidence and an unsettling casualness to some of the wacky situations he gets himself into. Noah Emmerich’s flawed Stan Beeman is truly the highlight of the show for me. He’s a solid guy that keeps making the worst possible decisions. These lead to more bad decisions and eventually bad news for everybody involved (in the world). Add a handful of fantastic supporting roles by Margo Martindale, Richard Thomas, Maximiliano Hernandez, and Derek Luke and you have a pretty great freshman season for FX. Even for a clueless Canadian that thought, for years, that Jodie Foster shot President Reagan.