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175: Shane (with Chris Cassingham)

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Content provided by Jesse Hawken. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jesse Hawken or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The Milwaukee-based film critic and programmer Chris Cassingham joins the show this week to discuss the great director George Stevens and his 1953 masterpiece Shane, starring Alan Ladd and Jack Palance, about a mysterious gunfighter who finds work with a homestead family in the open ranges of lawless Wyoming and is drawn into the community’s conflict against a gang of violent ranchers who are trying to take over the territory.

George Stevens’ life was transformed by his service in World War II as part of the military’s Special Motion Picture Coverage Unit, bearing witness to D-Day and the liberation of the Nazi death camps, and he returned to Hollywood to become one of the great American dramatic filmmakers with his unofficial trilogy of A Place in the Sun, Giant, and this immortal western that serves both as a classic example of the genre and as a revisionist “psychological western” that questioned heroism, masculinity, the family unit and most importantly, the horror and the toll of gun violence on American life, a work that pushed cinema in the fifties forward towards the modern age, and is cited by some of today’s great directors as a key influence.

Plus: on the eve of the release of Deadpool & Wolverine, a discussion of what was once billed as Hugh Jackman’s final performance as the character in 2017’s Logan, a film that pays explicit (and in our opinion unearned) tribute to Shane.

Over 30% of all Junk Filter episodes are only available to patrons of the podcast. To support this show directly and to receive access to the entire back catalogue, consider becoming a patron for only $5.00 a month (U.S.) at ⁠⁠patreon.com/junkfilter

Follow Chris Cassingham on Twitter and catch up to Chris' film writing here.

Re-release trailer for Shane (George Stevens, 1953)

  continue reading

178 episodes

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175: Shane (with Chris Cassingham)

Junk Filter

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Manage episode 430277212 series 2832298
Content provided by Jesse Hawken. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jesse Hawken or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The Milwaukee-based film critic and programmer Chris Cassingham joins the show this week to discuss the great director George Stevens and his 1953 masterpiece Shane, starring Alan Ladd and Jack Palance, about a mysterious gunfighter who finds work with a homestead family in the open ranges of lawless Wyoming and is drawn into the community’s conflict against a gang of violent ranchers who are trying to take over the territory.

George Stevens’ life was transformed by his service in World War II as part of the military’s Special Motion Picture Coverage Unit, bearing witness to D-Day and the liberation of the Nazi death camps, and he returned to Hollywood to become one of the great American dramatic filmmakers with his unofficial trilogy of A Place in the Sun, Giant, and this immortal western that serves both as a classic example of the genre and as a revisionist “psychological western” that questioned heroism, masculinity, the family unit and most importantly, the horror and the toll of gun violence on American life, a work that pushed cinema in the fifties forward towards the modern age, and is cited by some of today’s great directors as a key influence.

Plus: on the eve of the release of Deadpool & Wolverine, a discussion of what was once billed as Hugh Jackman’s final performance as the character in 2017’s Logan, a film that pays explicit (and in our opinion unearned) tribute to Shane.

Over 30% of all Junk Filter episodes are only available to patrons of the podcast. To support this show directly and to receive access to the entire back catalogue, consider becoming a patron for only $5.00 a month (U.S.) at ⁠⁠patreon.com/junkfilter

Follow Chris Cassingham on Twitter and catch up to Chris' film writing here.

Re-release trailer for Shane (George Stevens, 1953)

  continue reading

178 episodes

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