kyle's pick

Episode 47 – 'Nothing Lasts Forever' & 'SNL' Cinema

Filmmaker Kyle Smith is back, along with first-time guest co-host and old friend of the show (and me), writer and performer Dustin Levell, to pick and talk one of Saturday Night Live’s founding filmmakers, Tom Schiller, his lone feature film, and its bizarre underground relegation. On this episode, we also discuss:

  • Schiller’s self-description as a “foreign” director,

  • how out of place this style is from SNL’s current formatted format,

  • why SNL films are less about format than characters,

  • and how truly amazing it is that a movie with these stars and filmmakers was shelved at the height of the comedy boom that SNL helped create.

Also:

  • If this is or isn’t Lorne Michaels first produced narrative feature,

  • is or isn’t the first “SNL movie,”

  • what its failure to even secure a release might have done to Michaels other produced films,

  • the relationship between him and Schiller,

  • the filmmakers from Adam McKay to Christopher Guest that have sprung from SNL ranks,

  • and outsiders who’ve made short films for the show such as Robert Altman, Paul Thomas Anderson, Martin Breast, and Jim Jarmusch.

Kyle Smith is writer/director of the films Blue Highway and Turkey Bowl, which debuted at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival. Currently in development on his third feature, you can find Kyle and his film thoughts on Letterboxd.

Dustin Levell is a Chicago-based comedy writer, performer, and stage director.

Nothing Lasts Forever made its television premiere on Turner Classic Movies, which means it will hopefully air again in the future. Bootlegs are also available for purchase.

Episode 40 – Mike Leigh & 'Topsy-Turvy'

Filmmaker Kyle Smith joins this week to discuss Mike Leigh, the playwright-turned-Palme d’Or-winning writer/director, his 1999 film about Gilbert, Sullivan, and the first production of The Mikado. On this episode we discuss the movie Roger Ebert called “One of the best films ever made about life in the theater,” Leigh’s lengthy rehearsal and improvisation process to write the films, how that gives the light effortless feel of “life happening,” and that influence on Smith’s filmmaking. Also: How a plotless near-three-hour movie can be so rewatchable, Leigh’s early work of filmed plays for the BBC, and how this film in conjunction with Anne Washburn’s play Mr. Burns gives a macro view of Gilbert & Sullivan’s legacy in human storytelling.

Kyle Smith is writer/director of the films Blue Highway and Turkey Bowl, which debuted at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival. Currently in development on his third feature, you can find Kyle and his film thoughts on Letterboxd.

Topsy-Turvy is available in physical media from the Criterion Collection and also to digitally borrow on Hoopla.