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Down Underground

Down Underground

By: Down Underground
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Down Underground delves into the dynamic world of Aussie film culture, featuring eclectic voices from the local film scene. Hosted by Cristian Speranza and Kevin Ding.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Down Underground
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Episodes
  • A Film About NO-thing - 'King Lear' (1987) | Part 1
    Jan 19 2026

    Jean-Luc Godard’s biographer Richard Brody calls 1987’s King Lear “the best film of all time”. After its Cannes premiere, the film screened for two weeks in the US, and then disappeared into obscurity for 15 years. A young Quentin Tarantino lied that he acted in the movie, believing that nobody would have watched it to know otherwise.


    In the first of our final two episodes of our Godard series, Kevin & Cristian attempt to find meaning within this maddening, fragmented anti-adaptation of Shakespeare. The project began when Godard signed a US$1 million contract on a napkin with Israeli film producer Menahem Golan, whose Cannon Group was known for the Death Wish series, Chuck Norris flicks, and Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo.


    Out of this unlikely partnership, King Lear is born: “A FILM ABOUT NO THING”, which on paper, follows William Shakespeare Jr. the Fifth as he searches for his ancestor’s work in a post-Chernobyl cultural wasteland. Is this all one big troll by Godard? Is it an act of artistic self-immolation?


    Featuring Norman Mailer, Peter Sellars, Molly Ringwald, Leos Carax, and even Woody Allen, 1987’s King Lear is certainly one of the strangest films ever made.


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    Make sure you're following the instragram to stay as up to date as possible on this and all other Down Underground projects, and feel free to rate the show in your listening app of choice!


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    46 mins
  • One Big Joke - Keep Your Right Up! (1987)
    Jan 12 2026

    Keep Your Right Up! (1987) is perhaps one of Godard's strangest features, and the subject of this week's episode of Down Underground. The second-last feature in Godard's 80s catalogue, Keep Your Right Up! sees Godard attempt a 'comedy' in the style of Keaton, Tati or Lewis, acting as it's star (sort of) alongside his usual role in the director's chair. As idiotic as it is idiosyncratic (and featuring a cameo from Jane Birkin) Keep Your Right Up! gave Kevin and Cristian plenty to talk about.


    ...


    Make sure you're following the instragram to stay as up to date as possible on this and all other Down Underground projects, and feel free to rate the show in your listening app of choice!


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    49 mins
  • Back to Basics (?) - 'Detective' 1985
    Jan 5 2026

    On this week's episode of Down Underground, Kevin and Cristian discuss the other film Godard released in 1985, 'Detective'. Made as a means of financing 'Hail Mary', 'Detective' was comissioned by producer Alain Sarde, who had already secured both the script and the film's star, Nathalie Baye, and was likely seeking to cash in on Godard's history with film-noir by offering Godard a simple tale of intrigue and deception. However, Godard, forever dedicated to deconstructing genre and language (or just plain trolling) created a disorienting meta-commentary, no doubt enhanced by the return of familiar faces such as New-Wave darling Jean-Pierre Leaud as well as Claude Brasseur, both of whom had starred in Godard's 60s works.

    ...

    Make sure you're following the instragram to stay as up to date as possible on this and all other Down Underground projects, and feel free to rate the show in your listening app of choice!

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
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