Episodios

  • S27 - Ep 1 - Pretty Lethal - Directing
    Apr 12 2026

    What happens when you build an action movie from the discipline, pain tolerance, and physical language of ballet? For Director Vicky Jewson, the answer became Pretty Lethal — a film where movement isn’t just style, it’s story.

    This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Vicky Jewson and co-host Katie Carroll to go behind the camera on Pretty Lethal, the action thriller now streaming on Prime Video.

    From the outset, Vicky approached the project with a clear mandate: ballet wouldn’t be window dressing — it would drive everything. That meant immersing herself in the world of professional dance, collaborating with prima ballerinas, and building an entirely new movement language that blends choreography and combat into what the team ultimately dubbed “Ballet-Fu.”

    The conversation explores how that idea shaped every stage of production:

    • Why the film was designed “ballet first, fight second,” and how that philosophy led to the creation of a new stunt vocabulary
    • Building a hybrid team of dancers and stunt performers — and how seven weeks of prep transformed ballerinas into action-ready doubles
    • The logistics behind intensive rehearsal, previs, and on-location blocking — including shooting complex sequences with an editor assembling scenes in real time
    • Designing action set pieces as evolving story beats, allowing the audience to discover Ballet-Fu alongside the characters
    • The decision to embrace the visual symbolism of tutus — not as spectacle, but as a statement about strength, femininity, and perception
    • Creating a collaborative, high-trust environment on set, where tone, culture, and preparation all contribute to performance

    Along the way, Vicky discusses the realities of getting a film like this made — from years of development and packaging to finding the right partners and building a team that could execute at scale. She also reflects on working with Uma Thurman, whose performance balances heightened, almost mythic energy with emotional grounding.

    What emerges is a conversation about preparation, collaboration, and intention — and how a clear creative idea, carried all the way through production, can define the identity of a film.

    🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and go Below the Line on Pretty Lethal. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    35 m
  • S26 - Ep 12 - 98th Oscars - Original Song
    Mar 11 2026

    Oscar night is almost here, and Below the Line closes out its 2026 Oscar series with a look at the Academy Award for Best Original Song.

    This week, Skid is joined by returning guests Chris Molanphy, Louis Weeks, and Tom Peyton to break down the five nominees — a lineup that ranges from chart-topping K-pop to blues-infused cinematic spectacle, intimate indie folk, and even a rare operatic outlier.

    As the ceremony approaches on March 15, the panel weighs not only which song will win, but how each nominee functions inside its film — and what that says about the evolving relationship between movies and popular music.

    Among the highlights:

    • Diane Warren’s Dear Me — her 17th nomination — and a candid conversation about formula, legacy nominations, and the Academy’s enduring embrace of one of its most persistent contenders
    • Why Golden from K-Pop Demon Hunters has become the category’s undeniable frontrunner — and how its structure, performance demands, and cultural impact set it apart
    • The scope and ambition of I Lied to You from Sinners, and how its blend of blues tradition and cinematic storytelling makes it more than just a “song”
    • An operatic curveball in Sweet Dreams of Joy from Viva Verdi! — and what happens when a classical aria sits beside pop craftsmanship
    • Nick Cave and Bryce Dessner’s Train Dreams, a meditative, image-driven piece that bridges songwriter performance and filmic atmosphere

    The conversation moves easily between technical craft and big-picture questions: What makes a song “original” in today’s industry? Should Best Original Song reward chart success, narrative function, or musical innovation? And in an era of streaming metrics and algorithmic pop, what still feels distinctly human?

    🎧 Press play and go Below the Line on Best Original Song — and get ready for Oscar night. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    1 h y 28 m
  • S26 - Ep 11 - 98th Oscars - Original Score
    Mar 7 2026

    As Oscar night draws near, Below the Line turns to one of the most emotionally powerful — and hotly debated — categories of the year: the Academy Award for Best Original Score.

    In Episode 11 of our 2026 Oscar series, Skid is joined by returning panelists Chris Molanphy, Louis Weeks, and Jennie Armon to break down the five nominees recognized at the 98th Academy Awards: Bagonia, Frankenstein, Hamnet, One Battle After Another, and Sinners.

    With just over a week until the ceremony on March 15, the conversation balances prediction, perspective, and deep craft analysis — examining not only who might win, but what each score is attempting to accomplish.

    The discussion covers:

    • Jerskin Fendrix’s anarchic, genre-bending approach to Bagonia — and whether creative “broken communication” can be a feature rather than a flaw
    • Alexandre Desplat’s lush, violin-forward score for Frankenstein and what makes it feel both classical and quietly subversive
    • Max Richter’s restrained work on Hamnet, including the complicated legacy of “On the Nature of Daylight” and how previously composed music intersects with Oscar eligibility
    • Johnny Greenwood’s immersive, pulse-driven soundscape for One Battle After Another — and why some scores only reveal their full power in context with picture
    • Ludwig Göransson’s sweeping, thesis-driven score for Sinners, a front-runner that uses music not just to support story, but to make an argument of its own

    Along the way, the panel debates what the Academy tends to reward in this category: traditional orchestral craftsmanship, avant-garde experimentation, cultural resonance, or sheer emotional impact. They also spotlight overlooked scores from the year and reflect on how film music continues to evolve — especially as composers move fluidly between pop, concert, and cinematic worlds.

    As the 98th Academy Awards approach, this episode offers both a critical deep dive and a celebration of how music shapes the movies we love.

    🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line as our 2026 Oscar series heads into its final stretch. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    1 h y 20 m
  • S26 - Ep 10 - 98th Oscars - Costume Design
    Mar 3 2026

    Costume design defines character before a word is spoken — through silhouette, texture, and the quiet language of fabric.

    For Episode 10 of Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series, Skid is joined by Liz Vastola, Austin Wittick, and Allison Choi Braun to examine the nominees for the Academy Award for Best Costume Design at the 98th Academy Awards. Drawing on their experience across period drama, contemporary storytelling, and large-scale production, the panel evaluates this year’s field with a focus on research, construction, collaboration, and narrative clarity.

    As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube.

    Our discussion explores:

    • The physical craftsmanship behind Avatar: Fire and Ash, and how tangible garments support performance even in a digitally expansive world
    • In Frankenstein, how heightened color and silhouette push beyond strict period realism to create something emotionally immediate
    • How Hamnet uses restraint — muted palettes and softened textures — to support its interior storytelling
    • The meticulous 1950s tailoring in Marty Supreme, and what period specificity reveals about character and class
    • Blending Americana, music culture, and horror in Sinners, where aging, multiples, and continuity become storytelling tools
    • The collaborative relationship between costume designers and directors, and how early visual conversations shape the entire production

    Throughout the episode, the panel reflects on how costume design operates at every scale — from the smallest accessory to the broadest color arc — and how these choices work in concert with lighting, production design, performance, and theme.

    🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for Episode 10 of our 2026 Oscar series as we head into the final stretch. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    1 h y 18 m
  • S26 - Ep 9 - 98th Oscars - Cinematography
    Feb 27 2026

    Cinematography is where intention meets execution — in the choice of lens, the placement of light, and the movement of the camera.

    For Episode 9 of Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series, we turn to the nominees for the Academy Award for Best Cinematography at the 98th Academy Awards. Skid is joined by cinematographers Patrick Cady and David Tuttman, who return to examine this year’s field from the inside — balancing technical precision, aesthetic philosophy, and the lived reality of production.

    As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube.

    In this episode, the conversation explores:

    • The “military operation of joy” behind Frankenstein — and how large-format photography, depth of field, and camera movement supported a unified creative vision • The disciplined exposure control and 1970s-influenced grit of Marty Supreme, shot largely on film with exacting precision • The ambitious VistaVision approach of One Battle After Another, and why certain sequences demand to be seen on the biggest screen possible • The bold format shifts and musical visual language of Sinners, including the challenge of blending IMAX, 70mm, and intimate close-ups • The natural-light philosophy of Train Dreams, and why “lighting with fire” is anything but simple • Patrick’s case for five additional films he believes deserved recognition — and what that reveals about how deep this year’s cinematography field really is

    Along the way, Patrick and David reflect on film versus digital workflows, lens design, aspect ratios, shutter angle choices, and the subtle collaboration between cinematography, production design, and performance. The discussion moves easily between the granular (film stocks, lenses, exposure latitude) and the philosophical (joy in the process, trust between departments, and how cinematography shapes story without announcing itself).

    🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for Episode 9 of our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    57 m
  • S26 - Ep 8 - 98th Oscars - Directing
    Feb 23 2026

    Best Director may not be the top prize — but it’s the category that sparks the loudest arguments.

    In Episode 8 of Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series, Skid is joined by Katie Carroll, Bill Hardy, and Shaun O’Banionto break down the nominees for the Academy Award for Best Director at the 98th Academy Awards. With years of shared on-set experience and a long-running panel dynamic, the conversation is sharp, occasionally irreverent, and grounded in what it actually takes to steer a production at this level.

    As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube.

    Our discussion ranges across:

    • Chloé Zhao’s restraint in Hamnet, and how stillness and intimacy compete against larger canvases in this category
    • The spirited (and sometimes hilarious) divide over Marty Supreme — its length, its chaos, and the argument over what discipline looks like on screen
    • Paul Thomas Anderson’s command of tone in One Battle After Another, and the logistical confidence required to orchestrate narrative sprawl
    • Joachim Trier’s delicate handling of memory and performance in Sentimental Value, and the quiet authority behind that control
    • Ryan Coogler’s genre-blending ambition in Sinners, and the risks that come with expanding the boundaries of a franchise
    • The case for Frankenstein as a nomination that could have reshaped the race — and why its absence sparked genuine debate at the table

    The episode carries the easy banter of collaborators who’ve spent years dissecting this category together — complete with side bets, mock outrage, and the occasional good-natured jab — but underneath the laughs is a serious respect for the director’s role: holding the vision, protecting performance, and keeping a sprawling production aligned from prep through post.

    🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for Episode 8 of our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    58 m
  • S26 - Ep 7 - 98th Oscars - Sound
    Feb 19 2026

    Sound is where performance, environment, and emotion converge — shaped first on set and refined in the mix.

    In Episode 7 of Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series, Skid is joined by Steve Morrow (Production Sound Mixer) and Don Sylvester (Sound Editor) to examine the nominees for Achievement in Sound at the 98th Academy Awards. Together, they explore how production and post-production intersect to support performance, pacing, and dramatic tension.

    As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube.

    Our discussion explores:

    • The immersive racing soundscape of F1, and how layered engine recording, ambisonics, and dynamic mixing place audiences inside the cockpit
    • The evolving vocal treatment and tonal balancing in Frankenstein, where horror, romance, and creature design must coexist within a unified sonic world
    • How One Battle After Another uses vehicles, space, and environmental texture to reinforce character perspective
    • Capturing live musical performance and choreographed chaos in Sinners, where production sound and post must move in lockstep
    • The blurred boundary between music and environment in Sirāt, and how subtle soundscapes shape perception as much as spectacle
    • Why production sound and sound editing are inseparable disciplines when it comes to protecting performance
    • A brief look at shortlist contender Warfare, and what makes immersive combat sound both technically complex and emotionally overwhelming

    Throughout the conversation, Steve and Don reflect on the practical realities of their craft — from mic placement and set noise to mix decisions and audience psychology — offering a detailed look at how sound both grounds and elevates cinematic storytelling.

    🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for Episode 7 of our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    44 m
  • S26 - Ep 6 - 98th Oscars - Production Design
    Feb 15 2026

    Judging production design means considering not just what we see, but how an entire world was constructed to function on screen.

    This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Bob Shaw (Production Designer), Regina Graves (Set Decorator), and Kerry Weeks (Leadman) to examine the nominees for Achievement in Production Design at the 98th Academy Awards. Representing three distinct roles within the art department, they offer a grounded, practical look at how these films constructed their environments — from large-scale builds to the smallest graphic detail.

    As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube.

    Our discussion ranges across:

    • The operatic scale and extensive builds of Frankenstein, from castle interiors to laboratory design — and whether grandeur ultimately serves or overwhelms the story
    • The period authenticity of Hamnet, including the recreation of Shakespeare’s Globe and the delicate balance between research and creative interpretation
    • The layered Lower East Side streets of Marty Supreme, where signage, storefront graphics, and textural detail quietly anchor a frenetic narrative
    • The cohesive, character-driven environments of One Battle After Another, where homes, dojos, and lived-in interiors feel organic rather than theatrical
    • The tonal shift in Sinners, and the ongoing challenge of aging sets just enough — especially when audience expectations of “period” don’t always align with historical reality
    • How decisions about wear, grit, and cleanliness can subtly shape credibility without drawing attention to themselves
    • Why contemporary or less “showy” films like Black Bag are often overlooked despite meticulous design work
    • Additional standouts from the year, including Train Dreams and Song Sung Blue, which demonstrate how tonal precision and environmental detail can carry as much weight as larger-scale builds

    Across the conversation, the three perspectives reveal how production design succeeds not only through bold visual statements, but through coordination — between design, dressing, graphics, lighting, and performance — so that nothing feels isolated from the world of the film.

    🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for another chapter in our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

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    40 m