エピソード

  • Hardcore (1979)
    2024/08/28

    Oh my god.... that's my podcast. Almost exactly a decade after he left, Paul Schrader returns to Grand Rapids, Michigan for his second ever directed feature film, 1979's Hardcore. Listen to Jarrod and Jordan discuss this deeply personal, stylish, and a bit beguiling film here and follow Intrinsically Profane at the places listed below.

    Twitter/X: @schraderbros
    Instagram: @intrinsicallyprofane
    Letterboxd: SchraderBros
    Email: intrinsicallyprofane@gmail.com

    https://linktr.ee/intrinsicallyprofane

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    2 時間 1 分
  • Blue Collar (1978)
    2024/08/14

    After 40 years in the desert, writing beloved classics such as Taxi Driver, finally--FINALLY--ol' Paul Schrader takes the reins with his directorial debut, 1978's Blue Collar. A troubled production, a great performance from Richard Pryor, cocaine, systemic racism in America, Detroit-- all ingredients for a great directorial debut if you ask us.


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    1 時間 54 分
  • Rolling Thunder (1977)
    2024/07/31

    Stop me if you've heard this one before...Paul Schrader thinks this movie was taken away from him and that it's worse because of it. In the case of the 1977 movie Rolling Thunder directed by John Flynn, maybe he's right, but probably not because both Jarrod and Jordan agree that this movie is great and has Schrader's sensibilities all over it. Listen in on our discussion of the last Paul Schrader script before he becomes a director himself.

    You can follow Intrinsically Profane in the following places

    Twitter/X: @schraderbros
    Instagram: @intrinsicallyprofane
    Letterboxd: SchraderBros
    Email: intrinsicallyprofane@gmail.com

    https://linktr.ee/intrinsicallyprofane

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    1 時間 58 分
  • Obsession (1976)
    2024/07/22

    Jarrod and Jordan discuss the second of Schrader's two scripts released in 1976, the Brian De Palma-directed Obsession. Topics include John Lithgow's wild accent, Hitchcock's Vertigo, and the compatibility of De Palma's stylistic flourishes with Schrader's dour script.

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    1 時間 54 分
  • Taxi Driver (1976)
    2024/07/03

    We maybe waste time getting to the point, but Paul Schrader sure didn't! This week on Intrinsically Profane, Jarrod and Jordan discuss Schrader's second screenwriting credit and first collaboration with director Martin Scorsese, the 1976 masterpiece Taxi Driver. Topics include loneliness, social isolation, the disintegration of personality, and fascism. A heavy film full of heavy topics from our two favorite New Hollywood goofballs.

    You can follow Intrinsically Profane in the following places

    Twitter/X: @schraderbros
    Instagram: @intrinsicallyprofane
    Letterboxd: SchraderBros
    Email: intrinsicallyprofane@gmail.com

    https://linktr.ee/intrinsicallyprofane

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    2 時間 14 分
  • Tokyo Story (1953)
    2024/06/19

    Jarrod and Jordan discuss another of Paul Schrader's foundational film influences, Yasujiro Ozu's 1953 film Tokyo Story, a beautifully melancholy film about a family's generational dissonance in a post-War Japan.

    You can follow Intrinsically Profane in the following places

    Twitter/X: @schraderbros
    Instagram: @intrinsicallyprofane
    Letterboxd: SchraderBros
    Email: intrinsicallyprofane@gmail.com

    https://linktr.ee/intrinsicallyprofane

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    1 時間 46 分
  • The Yakuza (1974)
    2024/06/05

    Jarrod and Jordan begin their watch of Paul Schrader's written and directed works with 1974's The Yakuza, Schrader's first writing credit. They discuss the conflicting visions of director (Sydney Pollack) and writer that form the final version of a movie about two men's path to understanding through the world of Japanese organized crime.

    You can follow Intrinsically Profane in the following places

    Twitter/X: @schraderbros
    Instagram: @intrinsicallyprofane
    Letterboxd: SchraderBros
    Email: intrinsicallyprofane@gmail.com

    https://linktr.ee/intrinsicallyprofane

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    1 時間 40 分
  • Pickpocket (1959)
    2024/05/22

    Before discussing Paul Schrader's films, Jarrod and Jordan discuss Robert Bresson's 1959 film Pickpocket, which is perhaps the greatest cinematic representation of the transcendental style and Paul Schrader's ~whole deal~, aesthetically speaking.

    You can follow Intrinsically Profane in the following places

    Twitter/X: @schraderbros
    Instagram: @intrinsicallyprofane
    Letterboxd: SchraderBros
    Email: intrinsicallyprofane@gmail.com

    https://linktr.ee/intrinsicallyprofane


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    1 時間 33 分