The Pink Smoke podcast

The Pink Smoke

A podcast on cinema & literature, from Action Jackson to Zeder.

  1. Ep 166 The Authentic Death of Hendry Jones

    APR 15

    Ep 166 The Authentic Death of Hendry Jones

    After struggling to write a novel about the last days of Billy the Kid, travel writer and Mark Twain scholar Charles Neider found his inspiration by heading to the Monterey coast and creating his own version of the "the greatest gunman alive at the time of his death." Published in 1956, The Authentic Death of Hendry Jones is a fictionalized take on the mythologized outlaw, relocating the mesas of New Mexico to the beaches of Ensenada and Punta del diablo and providing a lyrical and haunting prose which ended up inspiring both Marlon Brando's One-Eyed Jacks and Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid. Despite its almost legendary reputation, Hendry Jones ended up falling into obscurity compared to other lauded 20th century Western novels. If anybody appreciates the influence of an underrated Western book, it's artist/historian David Lambert, who previously talked with us about Richard Brautigan's The Hawkline Monster and Crow Killer by Thorp and Bunker. Lambert returns to the podcast to celebrate the recent republishing of Neider's novel by digging deep into this rich psychological character study and its unique historical and geographical observations, as well as the shockingly faithful screenplay adaptation by Peckinpah and Brando's not-so-faithful screen version. David Lambert on X: x.com/DavidLambertArt David Lambert on bsky: @davidlambertart.bsky.social The Pink Smoke on X: x.com/thepinksmoke John Cribbs on X: x.com/thelastmachine

    2h 53m
  2. Ep 161 I Killed Bette Davis by Larry Cohen

    12/02/2025

    Ep 161 I Killed Bette Davis by Larry Cohen

    If you're a fan of Larry Cohen, the maverick filmmaker behind such mind-bending genre pictures as It's Alive, God Told Me To, Q: The Winged Serpent and The Stuff, you owe it to yourself to check out his newly published memoir: I Killed Bette Davis and Other Confessions of Heinous Crimes Committed in the Name of Moviemaking. The legendary director recounts all the great anecdotes you've already heard - driving a cab on actual NYC sidewalks, firing machine guns from the top of the Chrysler Building with no permit - and about a thousand you haven't. He recounts his fascinating origins as a Borscht Belt comedian and in-demand television writer, includes tribute chapters to Bernard Herrmann and Samuel Fuller, details his ambitious cinematic efforts and the struggle to bring screen legend Bette Davis to the public one last time. We're joined on the episode by James Kenney, who not only edited Cohen's memoir but also discovered and published an unproduced screenplay of Cohen's called Headhunter, the insane tale of a superhero who dresses like a doctor and "cures" criminals of their evil vices. We've also got Andrew Overbye, host of the Authorized Novelization Podcast and recent Cohen enthusiast, to share his feelings on the memoir and the nutty Headhunter. We love Larry Cohen and could have discussed him all day! Find I Killed Bette Davis here: stickingplacebooks.com/i-killed-bette-davis/ Find Headhunter here: stickingplacebooks.com/headhunter/ James Kenney's website: tremblesighwonder.com/ James Kenney on Twitter: x.com/jfkenney The Authorized Novelization Podcast on Bluesky: bsky.app/profile/authorizedpod.bsky.social The Authorized Novelization Podcast on Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/68YhhFLKW5m6ibJJDZ147M

    1h 56m
4.5
out of 5
32 Ratings

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A podcast on cinema & literature, from Action Jackson to Zeder.

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