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VIDEO: Subtitles ON #1: Adaptation with Hayes Davenport

Welcome to Subtitles ON! Each episode, Sean talks to writers about movies about writers. For the first episode, Sean chats with Hayes about the film Adaptation (2002). They discuss Charlie Kaufman’s depiction of the highs and lows of the writing process and share personal stories inspired by the movie.

Next week’s episode will be covering The TV Set (2006).

YouTube version

Every episode will be on the Patreon with selected episode available for free here.

Comments

Brilliant! I love comedy Sean, and I love smart drop-the-act Sean too.

Michael Cutting

Excellent

Art Matt

Adaptation's been on my watch-list for ages and this finally got me to watch it. Excited to see what else this pod gets me to watch!

Travis Clark

This rocked

Zac

Loved this! Such a great surprise in the feed

Mike Clyne

Thinking about Sean's question of why it's a *twin* brother, about the way plants adapt in the first place, and of course about the phrase "push, push, in the bush"... Rewatching today i noticed Charlie laments Donald as having the same DNA as him ("Is there anything more lonely than that?") Earlier, Laroche explained how certain orchids look exactly like certain insects which are drawn to them, resulting in the species level adaptation via pollination (increasing genetic diversity and ultimately fruit production). Now, does Donald's influence count as self-pollination, and can that really help Charlie adapt even though he and Charlie have no genetic diversity? Idk I'm not a f#cking botanist, but I'll take a stab that D is at least metaphorically pollinating C, due to mixing in his other personality differences (and latching onto the thing that looks just like him), which ultimately helps C adapt both professionally and personally (he stops worrying about what others think and finally kisses the girl). Charlie's agent, on the other hand, provides no such pollination benefit, because if we know anything about him at all, it's that his interests do NOT lie in the life-sustaining, gene-splicing, evolution-enabling act of bush pushing. Rather his particular passion dwells somewhere tantalizingly closeby, though definitionally incapable of being anywhere near as fruitful (i.e. 'up the ass').

Sean

Please keep making these :)

Larry

This is a very good podcast episode, I liked it a lot.

Björn Unnar

i loved this and im in love with it

tenby

Thanks to your comment, I just realized that THIS is the true hollywood handbook. This podcast, which is called something else entirely (too high up to scroll to from here..Noises Off?). This turnabout from the boys is delicious, devious, and .... Kaufmanesque 😳😳😳😳🤯

Sean

Cool Beans, Funny as Fuck!

Scott Hatch

Very interesting and enjoyable episode. Nice to get this Hollywood insider content. There aren't many places to get it!

Jordan

absolutely loved this can’t wait to hear more. thanks for putting it out

Jack Philbin

Hell yeah. 500 of these LFG

Joe Duran

We all fell in love with the characters that Sean and Hayes portray and it’s really endearing to see them talk so candidly and openly as themselves. I’m all about this.

Steven Shaw (AKA Shubben Steen)

All for more ‘act dropping’ … truly insightful and engaging conversation from two writers I respect about a filmmaker I now realize I need to re-evaluate

Tyler Barton

i do believe the ghosts of when went boo, and I would like to respect their right to boo

I Heard This Smells Eloquent

No boos were booed. It was great, so crazy specific and accurate.

dan

Love this! Can't wait to hear more.

Sam

Hello, Dan. I understand whst you are going through. A lot of referential dots Im sorry you had your memories boo-booed. They booboo my memories too. I am the bad guy who doesnt want to be the bad guy but is the bad guy. It doesnt enrage me. Bleak is the way it goes.

I Heard This Smells Eloquent

Always interesting when the act is dropped. I'm a professional writer in a non-entertainment capacity and had every DVD you mentioned in that stretch of essential DVDs for indie film/writer nerds of a certain age.

dan

I dunno, Sean ... You gotta be FUNNY to do those shows. I mean, like ... FUNNY funny.

Benjamin Apple

This was awesome. I'm sure it helps that I love the movie but I cant wait to see what you do with the rest of this series!

Matthew

This was great! Sean I really loved your observation about how the movie adapts in order to survive the film industry, and that's the only reason we're even seeing it

Cam

This rules.

Jimmy Sisto

I really like the injection of real stories and the exploration of writers writing writers. As an artist, It’s nice to hear about the emotional and logistical sides of someone’s creative process and career.

Jerkob

Very good and fun!

jonathan-larsson

New favorite show. This rules!

Nate

This is my Flagrant Ones tbh.

Chris

Welcome to my monster clamps

David Wells

Move over Blank Check, move over Scott Hasn't Seen. We got a new big dog movie podcast on the scene and this. thing. bangs.

Jacob Lewandowski

Grandaddy (the intro song)!

Pure Guava

a hearty CONGRATULATIONS to one mr. Sean Clements on inventing the first-ever Podcast About Movies that is also Funny and Smart! in all seriousness, love the pod, love the flick. a foundational text in my personal philosophy of believing I am both smarter and stupider than everyone else on the planet

Michael Esparza

This is a delightful listen

Ross Courtright

Hell yes

Alex f_c

Great debut for an exciting new show, thanks for this, so much interesting insight and perspective

Eliot Whitworth

Dang, my favorite podcast hosts discussing one of my favorite movies. I feel like I'M in the unlimited sips club - sips of JOY that is. Anygoo, if anyone's interested you can find the script to Frank or Francis (as well as some unaired pilots) here: https://www.beingcharliekaufman.com/index.php/scripts-writing/scripts-writing

Sean

Really excited to see how this new medium of movie podcasts evolves from now on. I would also love to see Bullets Over Broadway being discussed, that's one of my favorite movies about writing (the Woody Allen of it all notwithstanding).

Arthur Valladares


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