Why Noah Baumbach’s “Kicking & Screaming” might be the best movie ever




Deviate with Rolf Potts show

Summary: "Kicking and Screaming is a more arch and far more intelligent version of the TV show Friends. If you want to experience that feeling of being young and not really knowing yet what you're doing in life, watch this movie instead." --Michael Weinreb In this episode of Deviate, Rolf and Michael discuss the plot of Noah Baumbach's debut movie Kicking & Screaming, and how it explores life-transition and the loss of status that accompanies college graduation (3:15); Generation X movie marketing, and how Michael and Rolf came to find the movie in video stores (9:00); other movies with a similar youth theme, such as Glory Daze, and how even slacker movies could be aspirational for people who watched them (18:00); the way Kicking & Screaming played with notions of nostalgia (27:00); plot aspects that do double comedic/dramatic-duty (33:00); ties to other Noah Baumbach characters, and the philosophical texture of indecision (43:00); the way the movie explores the small problems of being young and upper-middle class in a time of relative peace (48:00); how sense of place affects the characters the story, and how the movie has a writerly sensibility (51:00); and the case for why one should watch the movie (1:01:00). Michael Weinreb (@MichaelWeinreb) is the author of three sports books, including Game of Kings, about a Brooklyn high-school chess team; Bigger Than the Game, about the rise of celebrity sports culture in the 1980s; and a cultural and personal history of college football, Season of Saturdays. He has been a contributing writer for ESPN, The New York Times, Grantland, Rolling Stone, The Athletic, and The Ringer. For more about Michael, check out https://michaelweinreb.com/. 1980s and 1990s youth-culture links: TIME’s 1990 “Twentysomething” article (which first defined Generation X) Sophfronia Scott on defining a generation (Deviate podcast episode) Remembering Noah Baumbach’s fan-site Q&As (essay) Wayback Machine (digital archive) "Age of Consent" (New Order song) Friends (1990s TV show) Details (1990s youth-culture magazine) Roger Ebert (movie critic) Blockbuster (video rental store) Tetris (video game) Books and creators mentioned: All the Pretty Horses, by Cormac McCarthy (novel) A Separate Peace, John Knowles (novel) The Catcher in the Rye, by JD Salinger (novel) Lena Dunham (writer and actor) Bill Simmons (writer and podcaster) Chuck Klosterman (author and commentator) Noel Coward (playwright) Nick Drake (singer-songwriter) Gordon Gano (Violent Femmes singer) Jose Ortega y Gasset (Spanish philosopher) Noah Baumbach projects and collaborators: Mr. Jealousy (1997 movie) Highball (1997 movie) The Squid and The Whale (2005 movie) Greenberg (2010 movie) Frances Ha (2012 movie) Marriage Story (2019 movie) Chris Eigeman (actor) Carlos Jacott (actor) Ben Stiller (actor/director) Jason Blum (producer) Vassar College (Baumbach's alma mater)  1980s and 1990s movies mentioned: The Big Lebowski Reality Bites Singles Empire Records Glory Daze Dazed and Confused Ferris Bueller's Day Off Dead Poets Society Slacker Swingers Reservoir Dogs Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo This episode is also brought to you by AirTreks, an industry leader in multi-stop international travel. If you’ve ever planned a trip with multiple stops, you know that finding the right flights can be difficult. Between balancing travel logistics and cost, it often becomes impossible to build an itinerary that matches your travel goals.  AirTreks is a distributed travel company with employees working from all corners of the world to help with your flight planning, specializing in complex routes with up to 25 stops. The AirTreks website offers suggested pre-planned travel itineraries to help you get started, but can customize to fit your journey. The Deviate theme music comes from the title track of Cedar