Sinopsis
Thoughtful Conversations about Film
Episodios
-
The Battle of Honey Springs is deadCenter’s Historical War Movie – dCFF22
05/06/2022 Duración: 16minIn this exclusive deadCenter 2022 interview, we sit down with writer/director Bryan Beasley to discuss his new film and the festival’s war movie this year, The Battle of Honey Springs. Beasley talks about how the battle had direct impacts on the US Civil War and helped shape Oklahoma history before sharing his experience bringing this epic skirmish to life at the location of the actual battle for the Honey Springs Battlefield Visitor Center. If you’re a fan of innovative documentary or historical reenactments, this reimagined recounting is one to add to your schedule for deadCenter 2022 on Saturday, June 11th at 11 AM CST. To ensure you get a seat, get your festival pass or individual ticket now! Special Guest Bryan Beasley Writer/director of The Battle for Honey Springs According to the deadCenter program, The Battle for Honey Springs can be described as: North or South, whichever side controlled Indian Territory, controlled the fate of slavery west of the Mississippi. In the end, the battle at Honey Spring
-
The Official 2022 deadCenter Film Festival Sneak Peek
01/06/2022 Duración: 22minToday kicks off our exclusive coverage of the 2022 deadCenter Film Festival! To help listeners prepare for what to expect, The Cinematic Schematic is joined by the deadCenter director of operations+festival, Miranda Patton, and the deadCenter director of programming, Sara Thompson, to discuss this year’s return to fully in-person activities before taking a look at all of the fantastic movies playing at this year’s festival. We also talk about all of the exciting parties and other festivities you won’t want to miss! What will the return to a fully in-person festival look like? What are the most essential short film blocks to check out? In today’s 2022 deadCenter sneak peek, you’ll get all of the tips and information you need to start building out your schedule ahead of the festival’s June 9th opening night film, Mama Bears, playing at Harkins Bricktown at 6 PM CST. Don’t miss a beat in all of this year’s deadCenter 2022 festivities by subscribing to The Cinematic Schematic via your preferred podcast app. Passe
-
The Northman – The Cinematic Schematic Review
20/04/2022 Duración: 01h06minFollowing his one-two punch in elevated psychological horror with The Witch(2016) and The Lighthouse(2019), up-and-coming indie auteur Robert Eggers is back with a new Norse epic unlike any we’ve seen on the big screen in recent years, The Northman. In the newest episode of The Cinematic Schematic, host Caleb Masters is joined by a roundtable including The Cinematropolis‘s own Daniel Bokemper, Geek Girl Features‘ Chelsea Ratterman, and first-time joiner, Craig Sanger, the critic-at-large for WWLS-FM, KYIS-FM, and KATT-FM, to pick up the sword and put on the sandals for an in-depth review of the film followed by a spoiler-filled discussion. Whether it’s the History Channel’s breakout hit Vikings starting in 2013, or the more recent exploration of Norse mythology in the video game Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, Vikings have continued to be at the height of their popularity in pop culture, possibly second only to the era of Conan the Barbarian when it kickstarted a similar craze in 1982. It’s been a while since we’v
-
Everything Everywhere All At Once – The Cinematic Schematic Review
14/04/2022 Duración: 01h05minIn today’s episode of The Cinematic Schematic, we dive deep into The Daniels (that’s Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert) wildly ambitious multiverse(move over Dr. Strange) to explore themes of love, balance, regret, and so much more through some of the most bizarre filmmaking you’ve ever seen with Everything Everywhere All At Once. Drunken master fight scenes out of a Jackie Chan movie? Check. Shocking revelations around every corner? Check. A versatile and emotionally grounded Michelle Yeoh performance? Check. The film has all of this and so much more, but is it comprehensible? Joining us to answer that question in our review of Everything Everywhere All At Once are award-winning Oklahoma filmmaker, Laron Chapman, and Harold Storey, the host of the TunesToons podcast and A24 film fan. We break the ice with a discussion over films that are probably better in an alternative multiverse before diving into our spoiler-free review and alternate media recommendations and then wrapping up the conversation with a spoiler-
-
Oscar Predictions 2022 for The 94th Academy Awards – The Cinematic Schematic
23/03/2022 Duración: 01h36minIn the newest episode of The Cinematic Schematic, hosts Caleb Masters and Laron Chapman return to continue the annual Oscar predictions episode for our fourth year. Let’s admit it. The Academy has struggled to stay relevant in the mainstream for at least the last decade which has led to frequent programming shakeups for better and (mostly) worse and the 94th Academy Awards is no exception. Firstly, the decision was made recently that not all categories would be airing live during the telecast ceremony for the 94th Academy Awards. Eight awards including Best Documentary (Short Subject), Best Film Editing, Best Makeup and Hairstyling, Best Original Score, Best Production Design, Best Short Film (Animated), Best Short Film (Live Action), and Best Sound, will instead be presented an hour before the telecast ceremony and then edited into the live broadcast. Secondly, a hotly discussed show item is always “will there be a host and if so, who should it be?” Amy Schumer, Wanda Sykes, and Regina Hall were announced to
-
The Batman – The Cinematic Schematic Review
10/03/2022 Duración: 02h16min“This isn’t the podcast you deserve, but it is the one you need right now.” – Alfred Pennyworth in some modern iteration of Batman, probably. The Cinematic Schematic returns in our March edition to take a dive deep into Gotham’s criminal underbelly to answer the most important question regarding The Batman: Does the big screen need another new take on Batman, especially so soon, and if so, is writer/director Matt Reeves up for the challenge? Rejoining host Caleb Masters to explore the answers to those questions is the podcast’s quintessential and reliably talented Lucius Fox-like recurring host, Laron Chapman, the self-proclaimed “Calendar Man” of podcast guests, Daniel Bokemper, and the George Clooney Batman of guest hosts, Brock Lay. Since the character first made his way to the big screen in Batman: The Movie (1966), the caped crusader has been the star of eleven theatrically released films(not including 2017’s Justice League) featuring six different actors in live-action and two different voice actors (ne
-
Scream(2022) – The Cinematic Schematic Review
02/02/2022 Duración: 01h18minHello Sidney…we’re home. In this episode of The Cinematic Schematic, we’re rejoined by recurring guests Laron Chapman, Zachary Burns, and Brock Lay to follow our Scream retrospective discussion up with a review of the newest entry in the series, Scream (2022), AKA Scream 5 AKA 5cream(the correct title). This conversation starts with the ice-breaker question, “who is your favorite horror movie villain or antagonist?” We then jump into a spoiler-free review of Scream(2022) where we provide our verdict on the film before concluding the conversation with an in-depth spoiler discussion. It’s been eleven years since Scream 4, the most recent entry, hit theaters in 2011. Though the film was generally well-received by critics (it currently sits at 61% on Rotten Tomatoes), it did not perform well enough at the box office to justify more sequels, at least according to the now-defunct Weinstein Company. That all changed when the Spyglass Media Group purchased the rights to the old Ghostface franchise in 2019. After anot
-
Scream Series (1-4) Retrospective – The Cinematic Schematic
25/01/2022 Duración: 01h57minWhat’s your favorite scary movie podcast? The Cinematic Schematic is back for our first episode of the year to look back at Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson’s franchise dedicated to riffing on the most popular horror and slasher movie tropes of the day, the Scream series. As a prelude to our upcoming Scream(2022) review, we’re joined by returning guests Laron Chapman, Zachary Burns, and Brock Lay to reassess each of the first four entries to determine whether or not the Scream series lives up to its reputation and warrants continuing. Whether they are telling a clever whodunnit or providing commentary on violence in the media, Scream is a franchise that’s never been short on ideas or things to say about the horror and pop culture of its day. Do Wes Craven’s love letters to the genre he helped build in the 80s still remain relevant in today’s horror movie scene? Tune in to the full conversation for our verdicts and stay subscribed to hear our full Scream (2022) review the second it goes live. Discussion Time St
-
The Matrix Resurrections – The Cinematic Schematic Review
24/12/2021 Duración: 01h41minThe Cinematic Schematic is back to follow the white rabbit and see how close to the line between fiction and reality we can go in our review of The Matrix Resurrections. Award-winning Oklahoma filmmaker and returning guest, Laron Chapman, joins the cast of GoodTrash Media‘s Dalton Stuart and The Cinematropolis contributor Daniel Bokemper from our recent Matrix Trilogy retrospective to discuss the latest entry in the franchise that taught millenials about kung fu and propelled Neo(Keanu Reeves), Trinity(Carrie-Anne Moss) and writer/director Lana Wachowski into pop culture fandoms everywhere. Following the conclusion of The Matrix Trilogy in 2003, the writing/directing duo of Lana and Lilly Wachowski decided to move on from the franchise despite the appetite for more stories from both Matrix fans an WB studio executives. After the duo decided to split ways between seasons 1 and 2 of Netflix’s Sense8, Lana Wachowski has finally returned to the franchise, citing her inspiration as the need to return to comfort an
-
Spider-Man: No Way Home – The Cinematic Schematic Review
21/12/2021 Duración: 01h23minLook out wallcrawler fans! Today, The Cinematic Schematic will web-sling through the multiverse and into a review conversation covering this year’s biggest film to date, Spider-Man: No Way Home, with special guests Chelsea Ratterman from Geek Girl Features and GoodTrash Media’s Arthur Gordon. Tom Holland returns as Spider-Man/Peter Parker for the sixth time in his third standalone film appearance in No Way Home. His latest outing picks up right where 2019’s Spider-Man: Far From Home left off. Mysterio (Jake Gyllenhaal) has revealed Parker’s identity to the world via J. Jonah Jameson’s(J.K. Simmons) The Daily Bugle. Peter and his best friend Ned(Jacob Batalon) and girlfriend MJ(Zendaya) quickly learn that being associated with Spider-Man has consequences that may endanger their chances to get into their dream university, MIT. To try and make things right, Parker reaches out to Dr. Strange(Benedict Cumberbatch) and requests he cast a spell so that everyone forgets his secret identity. When the spell goes awry,
-
Nightmare Alley – The Cinematic Schematic Review
16/12/2021 Duración: 01h01minStep right up to The Cinematic Schematic! Is it more cinema or unruly beast? In this week’s episode, we’re rejoined by The Cinematropolis contributor, Daniel Bokemper, to do a spoiler-free review of Guillermo Del Toro’s newest film, Nightmare Alley, before diving into an in-depth spoiler discussion. In his first film as a director since winning the Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director with The Shape of Water, Guillermo del Toro returns to a familiar and more comfortable genre, noir. The trailers for Del Toro’s newest film, Nightmare Alley, may rely heavily on the backdrop of a traveling carnival, but don’t be deceived, this film goes far beyond the boundaries of the Clement “Clem” Hoately (Willem Dafoe) show. Check out our full review essay of The Shape of Water Based on the 1946 novel of the same name, Nightmare Alley follows Stanton “Stan” Carlisle (Bradley Cooper) who begins the film on the run from a dark and mysterious past. After joining a traveling carnival and learning the trade of mentalism from
-
The Matrix Trilogy Retrospective – The Cinematic Schematic
15/12/2021 Duración: 02h10minEighteen years after the release of the last film in The Matrix franchise, we are just a week away from the unexpected series return with the fourth entry, The Matrix Resurrections. In this special supersized edition of The Cinematic Schematic, we take a look back at the original 1999 film along with its sequels, Reloaded(2003) and Revolutions(2003). We review each film individually before discussing whether or not they work together successfully as a trilogy. We close out the conversation by talking about our hopes and dreams for the upcoming film ahead of its release next week. Host Caleb Masters can’t make the trip down the rabbit hole alone. Joining him with red pills are returning guest hosts, Daniel Bokemper from The Cinematropolis, and GoodTrash Media‘s Dalton Stuart. More than twenty years later, does the original film still hold true as a classic? Do the widely panned sequels deserve a second chance? Why is now a compelling time to start the next chapter for Neo (Keanu Reeves), Trinity (Carrie-Anne M
-
November 2021 Movie Review Round-Up – The Cinematic Schematic
02/12/2021 Duración: 01h07minBefore beginning the final stretch into the holiday season, The Cinematic Schematic is taking a moment to be thankful for all of the movies that came out this past November with a special November 2021 movie review round-up. In this special episode, we’re rejoined by the longtime friend of the show and award-winning filmmaker, Laron Chapman, to do a series of mini-reviews of November 2021’s most prominent films including Marvel’s Eternals, Netflix’s tick, tick…BOOM!, Spencer, and Ridley Scott’s newest movie starring Lady Gaga, House of Gucci. Tune in for the full November 2021 rundown! Special Guest Laron Chapman Award-winning Oklahoma filmmaker Follow Laron on Instagram @blackmoviemagic Movie #1 – Eternals According to IMDB, Eternals can be described as: The saga of the Eternals, a race of immortal beings who lived on Earth and shaped its history and civilizations. Now playing in theaters. Movie #2 – tick, tick…BOOM! According to IMDB, tick, tick…BOOM! can be described as: On the cusp of his 30th birthday, a
-
Introducing HELL HATH NO FURY, a Dark Comedy about a Murderous Relationship
09/11/2021 Duración: 18minPlanet Thunder Productions is at it again! On today’s special edition of The Cinematic Schematic, Jacob and Zachary Burns rejoin the show to discuss the Indie Go-Go fundraising opportunity for their new film, Hell Hath No Fury. Fury resurrects one of Jacob Burns’ earlier scripts about a married couple who separately and unknowingly plan to murder each other on the same fateful night. Fury marks a shift in gears for Planet Thunder Productions. Much like the dark comedies such as Fargo or The Lady Killers from The Coen Brothers, the film will provide a lighter touch than their previous headier outings, Electric Nostalgia and Shifter. The team is also shaking up roles in the production. After serving as producer on several of the team’s recent feature-film productions, Zachary Burns is stepping into the director’s chair on Hell Hath No Fury for his directorial debut. The film is still in the fundraising phase of pre-production with an expected filming start date before the end of the year. The film blew past its
-
The French Dispatch – The Cinematic Schematic Review
04/11/2021 Duración: 01h13minIt’s time to step back into the old Wes Andersonian time machine to explore a fondly remembered era for journalists and print magazines. In today’s episode of The Cinematic Schematic, we’re joined by I Can’t Unsee That Movie‘s Jeff Huston to review Wes Anderson’s new movie, The French Dispatch. It’s been twenty-five years since Wes Anderson made it big with his feature film directorial debut, Bottle Rocket. In the years since, his films have dabbled in stop motion animation with The Fantastic Mr. Fox and Isle of Dogs, taken a trip under the sea in The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, and traveled to the past and back again in The Grand Budapest Hotel. His exotic adventures in filmmaking have garnered him a reputation as he’s developed a very distinct style and often divisive voice for some filmgoers. Despite consistently working with some of the biggest movie stars in the business like Bill Murray, Tilda Swinton, Edward Norton, Anjelica Huston, Willem Dafoe, and many others, he’s reached a point where he’s unl
-
Dune – The Cinematic Schematic Review
28/10/2021 Duración: 01h39minThe Cinematic Schematic returns after a short hiatus to wrangle the Shai-Hulud sandworms in our review of Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part 1. The podcast can’t discuss the feud between rival houses Atrieus and Harkonnen without the proper guests. Joining the show today are No Film School‘s Jo Light, the GoodTrash Genrecast‘s Dalton Stuart and The Cinematropolis‘s own Daniel Bokemper. Frank Herbert’s 1965 novel has historically been tough to crack. Chilean director Alejandro Jodorowsky famously failed to get his version off the ground in the 1970s before the acclaimed Twin Peaks writer/director David Lynch released a critically panned adaptation in 1984. Eventually, The Sci-Fi Channel would take another stab at the material with a three-part Dune mini-series that would receive enough acclaim to get a follow-up series, Children of Dune. After the rights for another big-screen adaptation completed a shuffle and landed at Legendary Entertainment, Dennis Villeneuve was announced as the director in 2017. Though you wo
-
The Suicide Squad – The Cinematic Schematic Review
12/08/2021 Duración: 02h03minIn this week’s episode of The Cinematic Schematic, we take another trip into the DC Extended Universe(DCEU) to provide our spoiler-free review of THE Suicide Squad before jumping into a spoiler-filled analysis discussion of the film. In August 2016 Suicide Squad became a massive box office success, grossing over $746 million worldwide. Despite being seen by so many people, the movie received hugely negative reviews (it’s currently sitting at 26% on Rotten Tomatoes) and has largely been remembered as a disaster by audiences. Following his temporary firing from Disney, Warner Bros. tapped writer/director James Gunn to make a movie in the DCEU. With the promise he’d have near-total creative freedom from WB executives, Gunn chose to make an R-rated Suicide Squad film with a budget of $185 million. The film is stacked with a star-studded cast including returning stars Margot Robbie, Joel Kinnaman, Viola Davis, and Jai Courtney alongside newcomers Idris Elba, John Cena, Daniela Melchior, Sylvester Stallone, Pete Da
-
The Green Knight – The Cinematic Schematic Review
06/08/2021 Duración: 01h12minRest your bones, listeners. Today, The Cinematic Schematic accepts a quest from a powerful and mysterious presence (also known as A24), to review and discuss David Lowery’s long-awaited film, The Green Knight. Without the proper company, the quest would be long, uncertain, and gloomy. Rejoining this episode are The Cinematropolis co-founders from Planet Thunder Productions, Jacob and Zachary Burns, alongside recurring guest co-host, Laron Chapman. The film adapts the Arthurian legend of Sir Gawain the Green Knight. Like many recent films, The Green Knight‘s journey to the big screen pre-dates the pandemic. It was originally scheduled to be released over a year and a half ago at SXSW 2020. Unlike many films, writer/director David Lowery decided to use his downtime to re-edited the entire film during the quarantine. Did the extra time in the edit make it even more worth the wait, or is The Ghost Story director out of his depth in the fantasy genre? Tune into the full spoiler-free review followed by a spoiler-i
-
F9: The Fast Saga – The Cinematic Schematic Review
25/06/2021 Duración: 01h48minThe Cinematic Schematic is back to our normally scheduled programming with a review of “the first film in the trilogy that will conclude the Fast and Furious Saga.” That’s right ladies and gentlemen, today we are taking on F9: The Fast Saga. Like all great heists, reviewing something of this scale requires a crew. After years of off-mic movie conversations, all roads have been leading to a review of a proper Fast and Furious movie with award-winning filmmaker, Laron Chapman, first time guest from KJYO-FM, Jason Black, and returning guest Brock Lay who Tokyo drifts right back to the show after his recent debut in our review of Mortal Kombat. Twenty years after the release of The Fast and the Furious, the ninth entry continues to take the saga to even more outrageous heights. When the characters aren’t Spider-man thwipping their cars from cliff to cliff or catching their fallen squad mates on the hoods of their vehicles, they are usually acting out the most expensive soap opera ever made. After all of these yea
-
Between Waves Tells a Personal Story Through Interdimensional Travel – dCFF21
20/06/2021 Duración: 19minIt’s the final day of deadCenter 2021 and we couldn’t close out the festival without a talk about a film in one of our favorite genres, sci-fi. Longtime listeners know that we are fans of larger-than-life ideas with a personal perspective, and few films playing at this year’s festival encompassed those words more than Between Waves, a sharp science fiction film with an emotional story at its core. The film touches on a number of topics including mental health, alternate dimensions, and grief. To learn more about what inspired the film’s ambitious, personal, and character-driven premise, we’re joined by Between Waves director, co-writer and co-producer, Virginia Abramovich. Listen to today’s conversation and check out Between Waves at the deadCenter virtual cinema before the festival concludes tonight. Special Guest Virginia Abramovich, Between Waves writer/director/producer The official deadCenter 2021 synopsis describes Between Waves as: After his disappearance, Jamie pursues her missing lover through parall