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Four Play

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Four Play selects four iconic films from a theme or genre to meticulously analyze and place in their proper historical context. Hosted by veteran esports commentators Richard Lewis, Duncan "Thorin" Shields, and Christopher "MonteCristo" Mykles, Four Play showcases both legendary Hollywood movies as well as hidden gems outside the mainstream. Be sure to watch along with our hosts each week to get the most of each conversation!
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Episodes

GONJIAM HAUNTED ASYLUM: Modern Spin to Found Footage Horror

This week, Four Play watches our first Korean film: Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum directed by Jung Bum-shik in 2018. The film is part of the found footage horror genre, popularized by other movies like the Blair Witch Project, but takes an extremely modern approach using YouTube and livestreaming to make the premise seem fresh and relevant today. While the storyline may be a weak point, Gonjiam delivers and excellent premise and incredible editing that makes the movie feel like a well-wrought haunted ...

Oct 31, 20241 hr 26 minEp. 3

CURE: The Most Influential Horror Film You've Never Heard About

Kiyoshi Kurosawa's breakout film Cure released in 1997 and, over the years, has become both a cult classic and darling of modern directors. Uniquely disturbing and brilliant, Cure begins as a police procedural and then dives into a totally unique atmosphere of dread as the mesmerist Mamiya confounds his rival, the detective Takabe. The film uses visuals and background sound to hypnotize the audience while treating violence as almost incidental or inconsequential, leading to a sickening mismatch ...

Oct 20, 20241 hr 33 minEp. 2

SESSION 9: The Best Psychological Horror that Few Have Seen

Four Play's Scary Deep Cuts arc begins with a brooding, psychological horror film that few have seen: Session 9 by director Brad Anderson. Filmed at the derelict Danvers State Medical Hospital in Massachusetts using props left in the building, the movie tells the story of an asbestos removal team losing their sanity in an apparently haunted building. Anchored by solid performances by Peter Mullan and David Caruso, alongside a host of talented character actors, Session 9 delivers a slow burning p...

Oct 13, 20241 hr 32 minEp. 1

CASABLANCA: Iconic quotes and anti-heroes in WWII Morocco

The timeless classic Casablanca from 1942 closes our Money Shot arc with one of Roger Ebert's top films of all time. Featuring iconic performances from Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, and Claude Rains, the film deftly portrays the confusion and chaos of World War II even in a seemingly far-flung Moroccan city. Thorin, Richard, and Monte discuss the themes of self-sacrifice, lost love, and duty to a higher cause that permeate the movie as well as explaining important historical context. Learn mo...

Oct 07, 20241 hr 33 minEp. 4

GOODFELLAS: Why this Masterpiece flaunts Horrible characters and themes

Our Money Shot Arc continues with Richard's pick of Martin Scorsese's Goodfellas. While this film borrows some ideas from The Godfather, it instead focuses on the lower-level underbelly of organized crime, showing the brutal and unglamorous side of organized crime. We also explore the connections between this film and HBO's The Sopranos, Joe Pesci's terrifically terrifying performance, and the film's controversial ending. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Hoste...

Sep 29, 20241 hr 51 minEp. 3

THE GODFATHER: Why this is the most influential film of all time

The Godfather, an American epic gangster film which debuted in 1972, is Thorin's selection for the Money Shot arc. Hailed as one of the greatest films of all time, director Francis Ford Coppola weaves an engaging story centered around the transformation of Al Pacino's Michael Corleone into a hardened mafia boss. Marlon Brando stands out in his role as the titular "Godfather," but the rest of the ensemble cast deliver strong performances as well. The Godfather remains one of the best films ever c...

Sep 22, 20241 hr 37 minEp. 2

JURASSIC PARK: Most Divisive Movie, Good or Trash?

Our "Money Shot" arc features each of our hosts selecting a film that they believe the rest of the group will enjoy. We begin with MonteCristo's pick: Steven Spielberg's 1993 blockbuster Jurassic Park. Based on the Michael Crichton novel of the same name, this film opened to rave reviews and box office success. It also remains culturally relevant and memeable to this day. However, the film is not without its flaws, especially in the ways that John Hammond's character strays from the source mater...

Sep 15, 20241 hr 44 minEp. 1

(500) Days of Summer: Psychological Poison in Movie Form

We conclude our Four Play Spit Roast arc with a film that Roger Ebert inexplicably gave four stars, director Marc Webb's (500) Days of Summer from 2009. Richard, Thorin, and Monte all loathe this film for its poor writing, acting, and non-existent character arcs. A relic of hipster culture from the late 2000s, the hosts discuss the subculture from which this movie emerged and how it ends up as anti-art. Some consider this film a cult classic, we consider it absolute garbage. Learn more about you...

Aug 26, 20241 hr 56 minEp. 4

THE BEAST MUST DIE: A Werewolf Murder Mystery

A campy werewolf murder mystery cut from the cloth of Agatha Christie's "And Then There Were None," 1972's The Beast Must Die mashes up blaxploitation and horror courtesy of Amicus Productions. Richard selected this movie for our Spit Roast arc and defends its virtues while acknowledging its awkward pacing, unnecessary scenes, and infamous "werewolf break." The casting of classic British actors like Peter Cushing and Michael Gambon strengthen the film, as does the standout performance of Calvin ...

Aug 18, 20241 hr 24 minEp. 3

REVOLVER: 15% on Rotten Tomatoes but is it actually bad?

Guy Ritchie's 2005 film Revolver is Thorin's selection for the Spit Roast arc, a film that tries to meld a British gangster caper with high-minded metaphysical themes. Allegedly caught up in spiritualism by his wife Madonna, Ritchie's creates an overloaded mess of a film that attempts to do everything at once and ends up doing it all quite badly. The criminal subplots overcomplicate a vapid and simplistic attempt at commentary on the importance of the subversion of the ego, often with direct and...

Aug 11, 20241 hr 31 minEp. 2

Spit Roasting The 13th Warrior: Hilariously bad or somewhat decent?

Four Play reviews "The 13th Warrior" Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Aug 05, 20241 hr 40 minEp. 1

PHANTOM THREAD: Understanding PTA's most difficult film

Daniel Day Lewis' seminal final performance came in Paul Thomas Anderson's Phantom Thread from 2017. The film subverts expectations in the best possible way, appearing to be a 1950s period drama about a fashion designer and morphing into a bizarre love story that explores the darker sides of both masculinity and femineity. Phantom Thread is incredibly dense, nuances, and brimming with beautiful costumes and incredible performances. The movie demands multiple viewings and delves into themes of cl...

Jul 20, 20242 hr 1 minEp. 4

THE MASTER: Paul Thomas Anderson's Magnum Opus

The Master, released in 2012, might be Paul Thomas Anderson's best movie. Featuring stellar performances from Joaquin Phoenix, Philip Seymour Hoffman, and Amy Adams, The Master offers an artistically rich portrayal of a cult with parallels to Scientology. Character-driven and difficult, the film presents audiences with enigmatic characters, bizarre relationships, and unique symbolism. While certainly not for everyone, The Master is a remarkable accomplishment from a seasoned writer/director that...

Jul 06, 20242 hr 7 minEp. 3

MAGNOLIA: Touching masterpiece or overly sentimental? | 25 years later

Paul Thomas Anderson's 1999 film Magnolia holds a special place in our hosts' hearts, serving up an ensemble cast playing loosely-connected characters in California's San Fernando Valley. This "slice of life" film is composed of a series of vignettes that reveal themes of regret, intergenerational trauma, confronting one's deep-seated problems, and more. While some may find it overly dramatic or lacking plot, Magnolia has aged well over the past 25 years and still provides an emotionally resonan...

Jun 29, 20241 hr 51 minEp. 2

Hard Eight (Sydney): Paul Thomas Anderson's unknown debut

Hard Eight kicks off our Paul Thomas Anderson arc as we focus on his first feature length film, which very few people have seen. Boasting a stunning cast of many actors before they became famous, including John C. Reilly, Philip Baker Hall, Gwyneth Paltrow, Samuel L. Jackson, and Philip Seymour Hoffman, the film delivers extraordinary performances. The movie was made on a small $3 million budget and therefore focuses on the dialogue and performances in intimate locations instead of extensive act...

Jun 22, 20241 hr 41 minEp. 1

DUNE 1 & 2: Why did Dune fail to adapt from the novels?

Denis Villeneuve's two Dune movies from 2021 and 2024 have created a massive cultural impact and are being considered a new generation's "Star Wars." Thorin, Richard, and Monte pierce the hype of these films after multiple viewings and discuss how they lack a thematic core and end up pedantically issuing a message instead of raising thoughtful questions or being open to interpretation. The films certainly present a shiny, compelling aesthetic, but the vibes are only skin deep and pale in compari...

Jun 09, 20241 hr 27 minEp. 4

SICARIO: How Hollywood portrayed the war on drugs in Mexico

Denis Villeneuve's 2015 film Sicario focuses on the drug trade and the law enforcement war on the Mexican-American border, leading the viewer into a morally ambiguous quagmire where the ends always seem to justify the means. An outstanding cast is led by Emily Blunt, Benicio del Toro, and Josh Brolin offering some of the most iconic performances of their careers and lending weight to a relatively simplistic story. As our hosts explain, Sicario works because of the performances, characters, and w...

Jun 03, 20241 hr 46 minEp. 3

PRISONERS: Villeneuve's BEST film? | Christian and mythic themes

In Four Play's second Denis Villeneuve film, we go back to the 2013 thriller, Prisoners. Starring Hugh Jackman and Jake Gyllenhaal in what may be career-defining performances, Prisoners foreshadows the first season of True Detective by exploring a terrifying mystery undercut by dense symbolism. Thorin, Richard, and Monte dissect the compelling moral quandaries that serve as the foundations of the film and dive into the deeper themes of Christian behavior and ends justifying the means. Prisoners ...

May 26, 20241 hr 58 minEp. 2

ARRIVAL: A hidden sci-fi GEM | Experiencing non-linear time

We start our new Four Play arc with our first focus on a director, Denis Villeneuve. Lately celebrated for his Dune films, we dive into his back catalog and begin with 2016's Arrival. Like Dune, Arrival is an adaptation of a science-fiction text, and takes an intellectual approach to the concept of first contact and the ensuring geo-political consequences. Ultimately, Arrival focuses on personal decisions made in the freedom of non-linear time and calls upon viewers to examine their ethics and t...

May 19, 20241 hr 27 minEp. 1

SNEAKERS: The WORST heist scene ever? | Thieves create a new world order

The Robert Redford-led Sneakers from 1992 serves as an interesting time capsule to the late Cold War era and the dawn of computer hacking. However, the movie mostly fails in delivering a consistent tone and can't figure out whether it would rather be a high-stakes thriller or a comedic caper that relies on the quirkiness and synergy of its characters. Thorin, Richard, and Monte laugh at the hilarious plot holes and ridiculous final heist scene, but also point out the serious themes of remaking t...

Apr 13, 20241 hr 40 minEp. 4

DOG DAY AFTERNOON: Robbery gone wrong | Pacino's legendary performance

Sidney Lumet's 1975 film Dog Day Afternoon focuses on an intimate cast of characters during a tense hostage negotiation after a robbery gone wrong. Touching on American social issues and adapted from a true story, the film provides a vehicle for a sympathetic powerhouse performance from a young Al Pacino. The movie deals with modern themes, such as the distorting power of the media and the implications of going to prison as the central crime spirals out of control. Monte, Richard, and Thorin dis...

Mar 11, 20241 hr 24 minEp. 3

THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR: A kernel of intelligence in dumb male fantasy

The 1999 remake of The Thomas Crown Affair presents Pierce Brosnan as the slick, titular character indulging in a heist dripping in male fantasy. John McTiernan directs a film, in the downswing of his career, that could have been much more if it focused principally on the cat and mouse game between Brosnan and Renee Russo. The film is beautifully shot and revels in the splendid aesthetics of New York, the art world, and even Brosnan's buttocks. Watching this movie left our hosts questioning what...

Mar 03, 20241 hr 36 minEp. 2

HEAT: Mann's masterpiece of tone and tension | Shakespearian in scope

Michael Mann's 1995 film Heat finally arrives on Four Play, an inevitable addition to the show since it's one of all of our hosts' favorite films. Not only an excellent heist movie, Heat is unbelievably well-crafted with characters and a scope that smacks of Shakespearian or Greek tragedies. Richard, Thorin, and Monte discuss the themes of criminality, compulsion to vocation, and the satisfying conclusion to every character's arc. They celebrate the incredible cast, particularly the iconic perfo...

Feb 25, 20241 hr 53 minEp. 1

TOKYO GODFATHERS: An anime Christmas film packed with miracles

Satoshi Kon's seminal 2003 film Tokyo Godfathers explores the touching stories of three homeless people who have created a found family on the streets of Japan. While not as fantastical or surreal as Kon's other work, the film still indulges in the fantastical with a series of charming miracles and coincidences that befall the main characters. Tokyo Godfathers tackles a variety of taboo subjects in both Japan and the wider world: homelessness, sex work, organized crime, queer identities, alcohol...

Jan 26, 20241 hr 23 minEp. 4

IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE: A pure, feel-good Christmas classic

Four Play revisits an all-time Christmas classic, Frank Capra's 1946 film It's a Wonderful Life. Notable for its saccharine ending and celebration of human kindness, the film provides a warm holiday glow in spite of overtly dark themes that permeate the majority of the story. Thorin, Richard, and Monte discuss the movie's many merits, its exploration of socialism vs capitalism, and provide historical context of post-war America. On the way, our hosts have a few laughs at some of the more ridicul...

Jan 03, 20241 hr 11 minEp. 3

SCROOGED: TV executives, 80's excess, and A Christmas Carol

Bill Murray led film Scrooged as a 1988 re-telling of the classic Charles Dickens story A Christmas Carol, directed by Richard Donner. Four Play examines the success of this modern framing, which sees Murray as television station executive Frank Cross, who undergoes encounters with the ghosts of Christmas past, present, and future. The film serves up some brilliant satire and witty dialogue, but stumbles at the finish line with a wordy ending and a failure to live up to the meta-narrative the fi...

Dec 24, 20231 hr 7 minEp. 2

BATMAN RETURNS: WORSE than we remembered, cursed by nostalgia

We thought Batman Returns was good. As it turns out, Tim Burton's 1992 movie lived in Richard, Thorin, and Monte's minds in rosy nostalgia that simply didn't hold up 30 years later. The terrible writing, plot, and dialogue drags down a film with a large budget, extraordinary visuals, and a good cast. Filled with a strange mélange of campiness and blatant sexuality, the tone completely misses the mark. Furthermore, why would anyone ever make a Batman film with hardly any Batman in the movie? Lear...

Dec 16, 20231 hr 32 minEp. 1

CON AIR: Murderous maniacs, an epic ensemble cast, & plain dumb fun

Con Air takes flight this week's Four Play, featuring a cast brimming with top stars and character actors from 1997. The film serves up some amazing action sequences, stunt work, and excellent over-the-top performances, which should leave viewers satisfied if they "buy in" to the absurd premise. Even the movie's obvious flaws, such as the overly fast pacing, terrible writing, and massive plot holes are also hilarious to discuss given the over-the-top tone. While certainly not a subtle or artisti...

Dec 10, 20231 hr 30 minEp. 4

TOTAL RECALL: Memory implants, the American fantasy & sci-fi satire

Total Recall stands apart from our other 90's action films in this Four Play cycle through its cutting satire, intriguing themes on the nature of reality, and genuine intelligence. Paul Verhoeven's 1990 science-fiction banger was frequently misinterpreted upon its release but has aged beautifully in spite of the gratuitous violence and cheesy acting by Arnold Schwarzenegger. The film toys with its main character's reality through his memory implants and leaves interpretation to the audience as t...

Dec 04, 20231 hr 29 minEp. 3

MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE: The most iconic hacking scene and a mole hunt

The first Tom Cruise Mission: Impossible film debuted in 1996 and created a multi-decade film franchise that continues to this day. Director Brian De Palma created a surprisingly complex storyline, at least for a Hollywood popcorn flick, that focuses around an espionage mole hunt with a surprising twist. The movie delivers the single most iconic scene of computer hacking in film history as well as other highly memorable sequences that have held up well as the decades passed. While not entirely c...

Nov 21, 20231 hr 18 minEp. 2
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