Elise decides Alan Moore is the problem with Zack Snyder's WATCHMEN, defends BATMAN V SUPERMAN as "Romantic art." Dave shouts about Kant, explains how both Snyder and Moore get superheroes wrong, while inveighing against some guy named Alex Ross. And much, much more in this epic discussion of a couple of movies they didn't really like, that don't have much to do with time travel, for your mental delectation.
Episode-related Links:
Some of Dave's previous (written) ramblings about Watchmen (the comic) can be found here.
Article on Terry Gilliam's more time travel heavy ideas re: a Watchmen movie
Time (Travel) Table:
0:01:37 \xa0 \xa0 \xa0Watchmen\xa0(2009)
3:41:30 \xa0 \xa0 \xa0Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice\xa0(2016)
4:34:30 \xa0 \xa0 \xa0Mailbag + closing the book on\xa011.22.63
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We've got a time-Tumblr! Please do check it out and interact with us there!
Don't forget, you can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our\xa0Facebook Page\xa0or\xa0Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms).\xa0
We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including\xa0iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel,\xa0Hypocritic Days\xa0(published by\xa0Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. Please do let us know if you check it out.
Intro Credits:
The Dream Syndicate "That's What You Always Say"
Jennifer Jones and Joseph Cotten (along with Debussy's music) in William Dieterle's Portrait of Jennie (1948)
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Outro Credits:
Bette Davis + lounge singer in Edmund Goulding's Dark Victory (1939)
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Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure