I had a similar kind of experience, Stanley Kubrick passed away on March the 7th 1999 (which was on a sunday, if I'm right, and I heard the sad news on monday morning on the radio), the next Saturday, BBC2 showed all his short docs, plus ''Killer's Kiss'' and ''The Killing'', and the making of ''The Shining'', made by his daughter, I've recorded everything on vhs, and it was also for me the first time that I saw Stanley Kubrick on film (of course I've seen photos of him, but never for real, or even heard him talk), and I still know the exact moment, the camera follows Jack, while he's walkin' his way through the set, and then at the end of a hallway, you can see him sitting, waiting, to film....and I broke down in tears....Greetings from The Netherlands.
"2001: A Space Odyssey" used to be shown once a year on CBS back in the 70s as a kind of Sunday Night Movie Special or something like that. All those old classic films used to be shown as an annual special movie, like "The Sound of Music" or "The Ten Commandments" or "The Wizard of Oz", etc. So I don't know how but I always used to catch "2001" every year it was shown. And I was mesmerized. From its opening shot with Richard Strauss' "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" crashing, through to the panoramic shots of Africa at the Dawn of Man, and on to those amazing shots of space travel, like the "stewardess" walking upside down in the spaceship with her gravity shoes and Bowman jogging along in the Jupiter mission spaceship's centrifuge. So just like Bill, films like those grabbed me at an early age and made me revere film directors in much the same way.
I can't wait for season 2! This series is fantastic and Bill Hader is always an absolute joy to listen to. I hope we get to hear from incredible horror directors like Ari Aster, Robert Eggers, Fede Alvarez, and Ti West! On the non-horror side, Sean Baker, Julio Torres, and Jane Schoenbrun would also be incredible.
I love Coen Bros too, Barton Fink was probably their movie when I started thinking they are the best film makers in the world and shortly after that they released my favorite movie, The Big Lebowski.
He was "impatient" with Shelley, because he wanted to manipulate her into a great performance. And they both succeeded. He wanted her scared of Jack. But he wanted her more scared of Stanley.
I am not sure what Ben Mankiewicz looks like, but every time I hear him, I think he sounds exactly like David Koechner (Champ in Anchorman). I probably wouldn’t think so if I already had a set idea of what Ben looked like, but the voice similarities are uncanny!
4:53 Walter (later Wendy) Carlos' music was the very first 'moog' synthesizer music ever - he built the monstrosity. Look up Switched On Bach - Walter Carlos!
The roller coaster ending that Bill is talking about that vividly portrayed in one of the 5 vignettes of Night on Earth. The part where the taxi driver is in Finland. #BillHader
My first impression of season 3 and 4 of Barry was pretty disappointing, I loved seasons 1 and 2. May change on second viewing but I just felt the character of Barry disappeared, there were whole episodes where he barely figured at all. And the whole no redemption thing they mentioned here. Sopranos succeeded because it danced on a tightrope between Tony's corruption and redemption. There was no tension like that in the last 2 seasons of Barry, it just waiting for him to die.
HBO PLEASE FILM THESE CONVERSATIONS AND GIVE BEN A RAISE!!!
To me what makes these stand out to me are the visuals🤷🏻♂️
I mean what's the visual going to add..? It's a pretty stoic interview!
The worst thing about this wasn't the visuals (radio interviews are a great lost art) but the useless 3 minute preamble.
Hader is such an underrated talent when it comes to directing. I can’t wait to see what his follow-up is to the masterpiece that is Barry.
Listening to Bill Hader talk about his love of film and filmmaking is infectious.
JamesWhaleBakeSale is about to have a field day
Oh no! Let's go! 😂
lmao
HAD THE EXACT SAME THOUGHT HAHAHA
lmao
his kids will be eating well for years because of this video
What an amazing interview, so glad to see another Bill Hader interview to watch over and over again!!!
Hader is the best. Great interview!
Thank you for the show notes! Helps me keep track to the movies I want to watch because these are great recommendations
I had a similar kind of experience, Stanley Kubrick passed away on March the 7th 1999 (which was on a sunday, if I'm right, and I heard the sad news on monday morning on the radio), the next Saturday, BBC2 showed all his short docs, plus ''Killer's Kiss'' and ''The Killing'', and the making of ''The Shining'', made by his daughter, I've recorded everything on vhs, and it was also for me the first time that I saw Stanley Kubrick on film (of course I've seen photos of him, but never for real, or even heard him talk), and I still know the exact moment, the camera follows Jack, while he's walkin' his way through the set, and then at the end of a hallway, you can see him sitting, waiting, to film....and I broke down in tears....Greetings from The Netherlands.
Kubrick did the moon landing film, too, then he was done away with.
@@Research0digoA huge re-re has entered the chat
"2001: A Space Odyssey" used to be shown once a year on CBS back in the 70s as a kind of Sunday Night Movie Special or something like that. All those old classic films used to be shown as an annual special movie, like "The Sound of Music" or "The Ten Commandments" or "The Wizard of Oz", etc. So I don't know how but I always used to catch "2001" every year it was shown. And I was mesmerized. From its opening shot with Richard Strauss' "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" crashing, through to the panoramic shots of Africa at the Dawn of Man, and on to those amazing shots of space travel, like the "stewardess" walking upside down in the spaceship with her gravity shoes and Bowman jogging along in the Jupiter mission spaceship's centrifuge. So just like Bill, films like those grabbed me at an early age and made me revere film directors in much the same way.
Love Hader. I also admire Kubrick and also thought he was British until I saw a 'making of' doc where he spoke in his Bronx accent :)
I can't wait for season 2! This series is fantastic and Bill Hader is always an absolute joy to listen to. I hope we get to hear from incredible horror directors like Ari Aster, Robert Eggers, Fede Alvarez, and Ti West! On the non-horror side, Sean Baker, Julio Torres, and Jane Schoenbrun would also be incredible.
Whoever did the loop in the background of this vid, it's a great tribute to Saul Bass :)
Wow, thank you SO much for commenting this, this led me to look him up! He made so many iconic movie posters that we all love! I'm floored!
I'd love a movie about Kubrick made by Hader. He was such a fascinating artist.
Excellent discussion. Bill inspires my creativity.
Thank you! This was really great.
I love Coen Bros too, Barton Fink was probably their movie when I started thinking they are the best film makers in the world and shortly after that they released my favorite movie, The Big Lebowski.
Hader is gonna make a helluva feature film director. Just a matter of when.
Missed him having interviews. I hope all the best for Bill
Damn, I saw Clockwork when I was 10, as well. Now I’m a filmmaker
Tell Bill we need Barry on blu ray.
Really need a video component on these podcasts.
Cagney was Orson Welles favorite actor also.
That was amazing. thank you
12:24- walking out of the SATs
He was "impatient" with Shelley, because he wanted to manipulate her into a great performance.
And they both succeeded.
He wanted her scared of Jack. But he wanted her more scared of Stanley.
Excellent conversation.
James Whale Bake Sale is gonna have content for months
True!
There's a great compilation of shorter clips of Bill talking about movies on the James Whale Bake Sale channel. He's hilarious.
You guys should put the name of the guest in the title. Good series
They do address bill playing ben on SNL 34:20
This is absolute genius
love ben! blessings!
I am not sure what Ben Mankiewicz looks like, but every time I hear him, I think he sounds exactly like David Koechner (Champ in Anchorman). I probably wouldn’t think so if I already had a set idea of what Ben looked like, but the voice similarities are uncanny!
Yay Dreams (1990) mentioned!!!
Wendy Carlos shoutout 🙌🏻
such an entertaining interview
4:53 Walter (later Wendy) Carlos' music was the very first 'moog' synthesizer music ever - he built the monstrosity. Look up Switched On Bach - Walter Carlos!
The roller coaster ending that Bill is talking about that vividly portrayed in one of the 5 vignettes of Night on Earth. The part where the taxi driver is in Finland.
#BillHader
Starts at 2:47
The Closed Caption is from a completely different show.
"Calgon take me away"♡
This is awesome
MY GOATTTTTT
'Barry' was revelatory …
Epic
Why wouldn’t you put the name of the interviewee in the title? Lol
I like The Natural.
2:47
My first impression of season 3 and 4 of Barry was pretty disappointing, I loved seasons 1 and 2. May change on second viewing but I just felt the character of Barry disappeared, there were whole episodes where he barely figured at all. And the whole no redemption thing they mentioned here. Sopranos succeeded because it danced on a tightrope between Tony's corruption and redemption. There was no tension like that in the last 2 seasons of Barry, it just waiting for him to die.
And Vivian went to Scientology after Eyes W S....
No video? What year is this?
why is this not a filmed podcast??
Well, the trailer looks good.
Get Louis CK on an episode
lol on HBO? He's cancelled.
no video? really?
WHY is this on RUclips??
is this fake with ai?
I am a hader hater. Bill is a phoney!!
Bill knows nothing about "the Bronx."