And boy howdy what a stink.(00:45:15) - Break!(00:45:34) - And we're back, and talking about the long stretches of tension and terror.(00:52:14) - Brad talks sound design.(00:56:34) - Is the captain good? (At his job, we mean.)(01:01:05) - One of Alex's favorite scenes, the scene on the German supply ship.(01:08:17) - The Gibraltar suicide mission, and some of the movie's model work.(01:15:17) - We're going down, down, DOWN!(01:22:42) - Wow! They made it! Everything's gonna be alright now, right? Right?!?(01:31:45) - Final impressions.(01:39:35) - Our sub mission has come to a close.(01:44:13) - Outro. Thanks for listening.(00:00:13) - Intro.(00:00:44) - Our film for this week: DAS BOOT (pronounced boat).(00:05:22) - But just what IS Das Boot all about?(00:11:29) - Talking cinematic depictions of Nazis in German cinema and German censorship laws.(00:16:17) - Some history on the film's production and the book it's based on.(00:24:47) - When you watch a movie in a foreign language, do you remember it in that language? Or in yours with an accent?(00:25:38) - We, as a society, were not ready for submarines.(00:27:08) - How anti-war is Das Boot?(00:28:40) - The captain's respect for his adversaries, and open disrespect for German command.(00:38:37) - Food, food, glorious rotting food. Das Boot ('The Boat' German pronunciation: das bot) is a 1981 feature film directed by Wolfgang Petersen, adapted from a novel of the same name by Lothar-Gnther Buchheim. Subject to countless hours of claustrophobic. Please use caution if skipping around to avoid spoilers. The Boat is the story of the crew of one of the thousands of U-boats deployed by the Germans in World War II. (00:00:00) - NOTE: Some timecodes may be inaccurate in versions other than the ad-free Patreon version due to dynamic ad insertions. We're joined one more time by special guest Drew Scanlon to close out sub month with the mother of all submarine movies in the director's cut of Wolfgang Petersen's Das Boot!CHAPTERS:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |