• The Legacy of 'Scream' on the Big Screen
    2025/10/31

    This week, we're wrapping up a month of Halloween program with a very special conversation about the legacy of one of most resilient horror franchises of all time, Scream. When Wes Craven's movie was released in 1996, the horror genre was in a bit of a dormant phase. That changed rather quickly with this comedic riff on the horror movie formula, a meta take on the genre about a ghost-faced killer stalking teenagers in a small town. We showed the movie at the Playhouse a few days before Halloween. After the movie, we had some wonderful guests onstage to help contextualize the movie's legacy. Cary Woods, the producer of Scream, local filmmaker Sam Pezzullo, and Ashley Cullins, a journalist for the Ankler whose new book Your Favorite Scary Movie chronicles the history of the franchise.

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    25 分
  • A Real-Life Ghostbuster on What the Movies Get Right (and Wrong)
    2025/10/23

    This week, we've got a Halloween season double bill: First, a conversation with NPR journalist Larry Maslan, whose new book Hitchcocktails pairs films from the master of suspense with first-rate drink recipes. Then, we'll hear from a real-life ghost hunter: Michael Cardinuto, co-founder of the Long Island Paranormal Investigators.

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    29 分
  • 'Black Phone 2' Editor Louise Ford on Horror Movies & More
    2025/10/15

    This week, we're keeping the spirit of Halloween season alive. First we looked at vampires, then zombies, and now it's ghosts...thanks to this conversation with Black Phone 2 editor Louise Ford, best known for her collaborations with director Robert Eggers (The Witch, The Lighthouse, Nosferatu). Tune in to learn more what it takes to cut a good horror movie!

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    41 分
  • Jesse Eisenberg on the Life of an Actor, Before and After 'Zombieland'
    2025/10/10

    This week, we're keeping the spirit of Halloween season alive, following on recent episode, which focused on the vampire monstrosities of I Am Legend. Now we're moving on to zombies...and, specifically, Zombieland, the 2009 horror-comedy starring Jesse Eisenberg. In addition to looking back on this major turning point in his career, Eisenberg spoke about his unique challenges as an actor and filmmaker over the course of his career.

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    26 分
  • Akiva Goldsman on the Strange Legacy of 'I Am Legend'
    2025/10/04

    This week, we're joined by Akiva Goldsman, the Oscar-winning screenwriter of A Beautiful Mind. Goldsman is a truly eclectic writer with a number of major Hollywood achievements under his belt beyond that major crowdpleaser, from Batman and Robin to The Da Vinci Code. In late August, he joined artistic director Eric Kohn at the Playhouse to discuss one of the more fascinating chapters of his career: His 2007 adaptation of the Richard Matheson novel I Am Legend. The original post-apocalyptic book finds the sole survival of a world overrun by vampires gradually coming to terms with the end of the world.

    It's a tense and at times quite frightening horror movie, but the version that came out in theaters two decades ago wasn't as bold as Goldsman originally intended it. At the Playhouse, we screened the "alternate cut" of the movie, the writer's preferred version. In a post-COVID world, I Am Legend resonates on a whole new level that deepens the material and makes it well worth a revisit -- especially this month, as Halloween season takes hold. Goldsman spoke about the unique backstory of the project, his feelings about Will Smith, and the rather unique way they originally intended to release the movie.

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    23 分
  • David Nugent Previews the 2025 Hamptons International Film Festival
    2025/09/25

    This week, we're joined by David Nugent, the chief creative officer of the Hamptons International Film Festival, which begins October 3 with screenings at the Playhouse taking place October 9 - 12. If you're lucky enough to have access to a festival of this caliber, it means that you can take the temperature on the state of world cinema from many angles at once. This year's lineup does that with highlights from other festivals. Our conversation covers a lot of those, as well as Nugent's history with the festival and his thoughts on the curatorial process as a whole.

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    47 分
  • Christine Vachon and Pamela Koffler on 30 Years of Killer Films
    2025/09/13

    This week, we're joined by two of the greatest independent film producers of the modern era -- Christine Vachon and Pamela Koffler, co-founders of Killer Films. The pair came to the Playhouse over the summer to celebrate the 30 year anniversary of their bold production company, which is best known for supporting fierce, original voices working on the margins of American cinema, including renowned queer filmmakers such as Todd Haynes, Kimberly Pierce, and John Cameron Mitchell on celebrating films including Boys Don't Cry, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, and Carol.

    Killer has enjoyed an especially long-lasting relationship with Haynes, whose work has evolved from the boundary-pushing early work of Poison and Safe to the postmodern melodramas Far From Heaven and Carol. Vachon also teaches filmmaking at Stony Brook University, and some of her recent students joined us in the audience for our discussion. The conversation preceded a screening of Velvet Goldmine, Haynes' daring glam rock musical from 1998. It's one of many ways that these two women have supported adventurous work that pushes art of cinema and storytelling into uncharted territory. Shortly after this conversation, Killer Films' new romcom Materialists opened theatrically to great success. Two months later, the company premiered a new film, Late Fame, at the Venice Film Festival. As they continue the important work of producing original movies, they show no signs of letting up.

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    31 分
  • Training Austin Butler for 'Caught Stealing' / Resurrecting the Romcom with 'Splitsville'
    2025/09/05

    This week, we have two very different segments tied to two very different -- but equally fun -- new releases. First up, the new dark comedy Caught Stealing from Darren Aronofsky stars Austin Butler as a former baseball player who gets stuck in a web of gangsters and murderers searching for a missing bag of money. Set in the 90s New York City, the movie is an accurate depiction of that grittier era. But at certain key moments in the plot, it's also an accurate depiction of baseball. Jordan Baltimore, CEO of Empire Baseball, and trainer Julian Malenda, came into the picture. The pair were drafted to help Butler -- who had never played baseball before -- transform into someone with a lot of batting talent. Baltimore and Maleda joined us before opening night of Caught Stealing at the Playhouse to discuss how they got involved in the project.

    Plus: If you enjoy raunchy romantic comedies, you'll love the latest effort from director Michael Covino. The filmmaker stars alongside his writing partner Kyle Marvin, Dakota Johnson, and Adria Arjona as two couples whose boundaries are tested by open relationships. Covino and producer Emily Korteweg explain how they managed to make an original comedy and why we don't see more of them these days.

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    37 分