172 episodes

Junk Filter: a podcast about strange and overlooked artifacts from the worlds of film, music and popular culture with a generous side order of jokes and politics. Hosted by Jesse Hawken with guests from the worlds of Politics Twitter and Film Twitter. Original music for the program by Marker Starling. Follow us now on Twitter: @junkfilterpod

Junk Filter Jesse Hawken

    • Comedy

Junk Filter: a podcast about strange and overlooked artifacts from the worlds of film, music and popular culture with a generous side order of jokes and politics. Hosted by Jesse Hawken with guests from the worlds of Politics Twitter and Film Twitter. Original music for the program by Marker Starling. Follow us now on Twitter: @junkfilterpod

    TEASER - 169: Cannon’s Prestige Pictures (with Jessica Ritchey)

    TEASER - 169: Cannon’s Prestige Pictures (with Jessica Ritchey)

    Access this entire 105 minute episode (and additional monthly bonus shows) by becoming a Junk Filter patron for only $5.00 (US) a month! Over 30% of episodes are exclusively available to patrons of the show. ⁠https://www.patreon.com/posts/169-cannons-with-105061266

    The film writer Jessica Ritchey returns for a show about Cannon Films, and the aggressive attempt by “The Go-Go Boys” Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus to bring legitimacy to their schlock studio by financing projects designed to win them awards and prestige.

    Despite the critical success of some of these offerings, and some high-profile wins and nominations, none of these films were financially successful thanks to Cannon’s hapless marketing strategies and their bad reputation within the film industry (including staggering money losses, a shareholder revolt and an SEC investigation into their accounting practices). Cannon would file for bankruptcy by the end of the eighties.

    We discuss 5 of these prestige projects: the dark journalism thriller Street Smart (which Cannon financed for Christopher Reeve in exchange for starring in Superman IV and the film that put Morgan Freeman on the map), Andrei Konchalovsky’s masterful Runaway Train (the best film the studio ever made) and his followup, the American gothic drama Shy People (an award winner at Cannes which vanished without a trace), Nicolas Roeg’s Castaway (the film Oliver Reed was promoting the night he almost beat up David Letterman), and Barbet Schroeder’s black comedy about alcoholism Barfly with Mickey Rourke and Faye Dunaway.

    Street Smart, Runaway Train and Shy People are currently available to stream on Tubi.

    Follow Jessica Ritchey on Bluesky, and support her work on Patreon.

    Trailers

    Street Smart (Jerry Schatzberg, 1987)

    Runaway Train (Andrei Konchalovsky, 1985)

    Shy People (Andrei Konchalovsky, 1987)

    Castaway (Nicolas Roeg, 1986)

    Barfly (Barbet Schroeder, 1987)

    • 6 min
    168: Second Wave Ska (with Elana Levin)

    168: Second Wave Ska (with Elana Levin)

    Elana Levin from Graphic Policy Radio returns to the show for a deep dive into the second wave of Ska music, a brief but influential era when black and white UK musicians fused Jamaican dance music of the sixties into punk and new wave music of the seventies to create a sound that would further revolutionize American popular music in the nineties.

    The modern ska genre gets made fun of a lot (mozzarella sticks, anyone?) but Elana will have you know that ska music is not a joke. In an 18-month period, 2 Tone Records, an indie label founded by the keyboardist from The Specials, Jerry Dammers, took over the UK pop charts with major distribution support from Chrysalis Records. In the wake of the election of Margaret Thatcher and the rise of white nationalists taking advantage of national economic malaise, a musical rebuke of these trends came from bands in the town of Coventry, offering alternative visions of racial harmony and anti-fascist songs you could dance to. The 1981 concert documentary Dance Craze, recently restored, captures the 2 Tone bands performing in their prime.

    We discuss the evolution of ska, pay tribute to some of the top groups of the Second Wave Ska era including The Selecter, Madness, Bad Manners and The Specials and bid farewell to their lead singer the late great Terry Hall, whose passing last year inspired this episode.

    Become a patron of the podcast to access to exclusive episodes every month. Over 30% of Junk Filter episodes are exclusively available to patrons. To support this show directly for only $5.00 a month (U.S.) please subscribe at  ⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/junkfilter

    Follow Elana Levin on Twitter and check out their podcasts Graphic Policy Radio and Deep Space Dive!

    Elana’s “2nd Wave Ska” Spotify playlist 

    BBC Arena segment from 1980 on 2 Tone Records and the new ska scene coming out of Coventry.

    Madness-inspired Colgate advert from the UK, 1982

    Re-release trailer for Dance Craze (Joe Massot, 1981)

    The Selecter - On My Radio, from BBC’s Top of the Pops, 1979

    The Beat - Stand Down Margaret, from ITV’s O.T.T., 1982

    The Specials music videos

    Gangsters (1979)

    Ghost Town (1981)

    Free Nelson Mandela (1984)

    • 1 hr 35 min
    TEASER - 167: Civil War (with Ursula Lawrence)

    TEASER - 167: Civil War (with Ursula Lawrence)

    Access this entire 87 minute episode (and additional monthly bonus shows every month) by becoming a Junk Filter patron! Over 30% of episodes are exclusively available to patrons of the show. https://www.patreon.com/posts/167-civil-war-102981212

    The comedy writer Ursula Lawrence (Drunk History, Adam Ruins Everything) returns to the show from Madison, Wisconsin to discuss A24’s first foray into blockbuster filmmaking, Alex Garland’s Civil War, set in a near-future America torn into factions, as seen from the perspective of an intrepid team of reporters travelling to Washington D.C. to get an interview with the totalitarian President on the verge of being violently deposed by the “Western Forces” of Texas and California.

    Garland has described the work as an anti-war film where the particulars of the conflict are mere backdrop to a general story of combat journalists, but Ursula and I discuss Civil War’s politics anyway, what the film is and what it isn't, and kick the tires on its stated tone of ‘impartiality’ which seems more like faux-neutrality (with a Trumpian president and references to ‘the Portland Maoists’ that cater to the audiences’ already-existing biases).

    Plus: an on-the-ground report from Ursula about seeing Civil War in a theatre in Madison that serves food and drinks!

    Follow Ursula Lawrence on Twitter.

    Trailer #1 for Civil War (Alex Garland, 2024)

    • 5 min
    166: Road House (with Sean T. Collins)

    166: Road House (with Sean T. Collins)

    The writer Sean T. Collins joins the pod from Long Island for a deep dive into the original 1989 Road House and the 2024 remake now streaming on Amazon Prime.

    Sean’s book Pain Don’t Hurt offered daily meditations on specific elements of Road House for an entire year, and we discuss the many virtues of this eighties classic about Dalton, the second-greatest bouncer in the world (Patrick Swayze) who is hired by the owner of a violent honkytonk bar in Jasper, Missouri to clean up the place, raising the ire of the local crimelord Brad Wesley (Ben Gazzara) who rules Jasper with an iron fist and an amazing crew of henchmen. Sean has given this movie a great deal of thought over the years and we discuss the ludicrous plot, spectacular performances and classic one-liners.

    And we also compare the OG Road House to the new remake with a pumped-up Jake Gyllenhaal as Dalton and UFC fighter Conor McGregor in his screen acting debut as the main henchman, with the action transposed to the Florida Keys. The remake wisely does not try to recreate the original so much as to modernize it, resulting in a film that’s honestly not as bad as fans of the original feared it would be.

    Become a patron of the podcast to access to exclusive episodes every month. Over 30% of Junk Filter episodes are exclusively available to patrons. To support this show directly for only $5.00 a month (U.S.) please subscribe at ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/junkfilter

    Sean’s writing can be found at seantcollins.com and you can also support his work on Patreon.

    Sean’s book Pain Don’t Hurt: Meditations on Road House is available from Mutual Skies publishing.

    All Fucked Up: Erotic Tales from the Road House Expanded Universe - the fanfic zine by Julia Gfrörer, Sean T. Collins and Gretchen Felker-Martin, available on Julia’s Etsy store.

    Trailer for Road House (Rowdy Harrington, 1989)

    Trailer for Road House (Doug Liman, 2024)

    • 1 hr 43 min
    165: Deep in the Heart (with Jonathan Hertzberg of Fun City Editions)

    165: Deep in the Heart (with Jonathan Hertzberg of Fun City Editions)

    CW: This episode discusses cinematic sexual violence.

    The founder of Fun City Editions, Jonathan Hertzberg, joins the podcast from New York City to discuss the boutique video label and their latest blu-ray release, 1983’s Deep in the Heart, aka Handgun, directed by Ken Loach’s longtime English producer Tony Garnett.

    Deep in the Heart, a brutal portrayal of American gun culture as seen from an outsider’s perspective, stars the undersung actress Karen Young in her screen debut as a Boston schoolteacher working in Dallas who is groomed and then sexually assaulted by a well-liked local attorney and antique gun collector. She gets nowhere trying to get the police and the church to support her quest for justice, but gets all the help she needs from the local gun club, and transformed by the culture and her experience, plans her revenge. The film was bought by Warner Bros. not to release the film properly, but to keep it from interfering with the commercial prospects of their upcoming Clint Eastwood release with a similar theme, Sudden Impact.

    Deep in the Heart is the kind of film this label specializes in: films that have for various reasons been forgotten in the modern age but deserve to be restored, reissued and rediscovered. Jonathan gives us insight into the process and the challenges of locating and reviving these catalogue titles, and how Deep in the Heart still speaks to contemporary American concerns over 40 years later.

    Become a patron of the podcast to access to exclusive episodes every month. Over 30% of Junk Filter episodes are exclusively available to patrons. To support this show directly for only $5.00 a month (U.S.) please subscribe at ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/junkfilter

    Follow Fun City Editions on Twitter.

    You can order Fun City Editions’ new release of Deep in the Heart through their website.

    Trailer for Deep in the Heart aka Handgun (Tony Garnett, 1983)

    Fun City Editions trailer for Seeing Red: 3 French Vigilante Thrillers

    Trailer for Strangers Kiss (Matthew Chapman, 1983), restored version coming soon from FCE

    • 1 hr 23 min
    TEASER - 164: Ghostbusters V (with Adam Jackson)

    TEASER - 164: Ghostbusters V (with Adam Jackson)

    Access this entire 89 minute episode (and additional monthly bonus shows every month) by becoming a Junk Filter patron! Over 30% of episodes are exclusively available to patrons of the show. https://www.patreon.com/posts/164-ghostbusters-101387544

    The writer and friend of the pod Adam Jackson returns for a show about the Ghostbusters series, which celebrates its 40th anniversary this year with the latest installment, Ghostbusters V.

    We discuss the entire saga; from Ivan Reitman’s classic original, the Real Ghostbusters cartoon that refined the series as entertainment for kids, the disappointing 1989 sequel, the 2016 all-female reboot that became a flashpoint for culture warriors online, and the recent legacy sequels guided by Jason Reitman, which have recast this saga as some form of modern American myth about a family legacy instead of just being high-concept comedies about New York schlubs who become entrepreneurs (aka the winning formula for success)

    We praise the Bobby Brown theme for Ghostbusters II, commend Dan Aykroyd for his fully-committed performance in the latest film (a stark contrast to Bill Murray’s clear disinterest in his continuing involvement), and dig into how these new films meant for “the true fans” of the series continually get wrong what the actual legacy of these films is, as Columbia Pictures continues to struggle to make a real cinematic universe out of this IP, forever hoping lightning will strike twice.

    Plus: why isn’t Muncher in the new one?

    Follow Adam Jackson on Twitter.

    Ghostbusters promotional film shown at the ShoWest convention for the cinema exhibition industry, 1984

    Clip from the 1985 Academy Awards - nominee for Best Original Song, Ray Parker Jr.’s ‘Ghostbusters’

    Music video for Bobby Brown’s ‘On Our Own’ from the Ghostbusters II soundtrack, 1989

    • 5 min

Top Podcasts In Comedy

ShxtsNGigs
shxtsngigs
The Uncut Podcast
The Uncut Podcast
The Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan
Bombing with Eric Andre
Big Money Players Network and iHeartPodcasts
Sergio Talks Podcast
Sergio Talks
Gold Minds with Kevin Hart
SiriusXM

You Might Also Like

The Important Cinema Club
Justin Decloux and Will Sloan
Michael and Us
Luke Savage and Will Sloan, Jacobin
Guys: With Bryan Quinby
Bryan
Chapo Trap House
Chapo Trap House
Unclear and Present Danger
Jamelle Bouie and John Ganz
American Prestige
Daniel Bessner & Derek Davison