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Lass is More with Josh Lasser

Focusing on the media, "Lass is More" sits down with the individuals who make the movies and shows that people are, or will be, talking about. The things we watch are not created in a vacuum, but rather as responses to far larger thoughts and issues. From why someone took a role to what it means to them to where they’re going next, we put the pieces of the puzzle together. The "Lass is More" podcast gets to the core of the issue, offering perspective on both the people involved in a project, and the project itself.
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Lass is More with Josh Lasser
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Now displaying: Category: media
Feb 19, 2016

Earlier this week, "Lass is More" released the first half of our interview with two of the folks involved in a movie looking at Colorado's legalization of marijuana, "Rolling Papers."  That discussion concludes today with Ricardo Baca, an editor at The Denver Post and the man in charge of the marijuana coverage at the paper and affiliated website, The Cannabist (http://www.thecannabist.co).

Feb 16, 2016

Today we have the first part of our interview with two of the individuals who took part in the documentary, "Rolling Papers."  The film focuses on the first year marijuana was legal in Colorado.  As for us, we speak to Mitch Dickman, the director of the movie, and Ricardo Baca, who helms The Denver Post's coverage of marijuana and a central figure in the movie.

A long conversation, we at "Lass is More" have opted to split it into two parts, with the second part coming in a couple of days.

Feb 9, 2016

The movie "Grandmother" offers us all a look at a very serious issue which Josh does not tackle here as well as the notions of love and family, which he does.  

What does it mean to have someone in our lives like Lily Tomlin's Elle Reid?  She is a woman whom her family can go to when they need help.  She is fiercely protective and while she may be a little exuberant or uncouth, she has her loved ones' best interests at heart.

Feb 2, 2016

For years--decades, really--Josh has pined for a larger television, something to help immerse him in whatever sort of nonsense he chooses to watch at home.  A bigger TV, in his mind, would mean less to pull away away from a movie.

This week, Josh explains that desire in depth and wonders whether it would have helped his enjoyment of Guillermo del Toro's latest film, "Crimson Peak."

Jan 26, 2016

Soliloquies are lovely, but how many can you really have in a single movie?  People talk to each other, people have conversations, people interact with one another. It's the way it works in real life and it's the way it works in the movies.


So, because February is approaching and because relationships are important, today "Lass is More" looks at the relationships seen in three different movies, "Chi-Raq," "Meet the Patels," and "Burnt."

Jan 19, 2016

Have you ever watched a movie and thought "that could never happen to me?"  Sure, we all have.  Why do movies have such trouble identifying those moments?  What makes them so hard to see?  

The otherwise brilliant "Straight Outta Compton" has a big one.  We discuss on today's episode.

Jan 5, 2016

Welcome to the new year.  It is a time of change, a time of upheaval.  A time of approaching things different.  


We regularly hear about revolutionary change at this time of year, but that's not how Josh works.  He prefers incremental change; incremental improvements.  Take the movie "Sicario."  It is a fantastic cops vs. drug traffickers story, the exact same kind you've seen before.  But it's also better than the ones you've seen before.  

Why?  Incremental improvements to a proven formula.

Dec 29, 2015

When asked for his opinion on movies, the question regularly comes up whether or not a movie Josh is recommending to someone is "worth" seeing on the big screen.  The question, as he sees it, is one of spectacle.  So, to answer it, he has taken another look at "The Walk," which definitely wowed him on the big screen.

Dec 15, 2015

The "Mission: Impossible" movie franchise is almost 20 years old.  Who would have guessed that it would still be achieving creative success at this point... and without recasting its lead actor.  And what about Marvel's "Ant-Man," which is really about a guy who can push a button that is attached to a magic suit someone else gave him?  Another relatively improbably success.

Josh praises both these achievements in this minisode.

Dec 8, 2015

Different actors approach roles differently.  That should be no surprise.  What is surprising, and endlessly fascinating, is just how some actors go about this preparation.  On this episode, actor Gene Jones tells his method, let's us in on his secrets.  This all stems from a discussion of his latest film, "Dementia," which offers a look at one elderly man's struggles in the present due to his past.

Dec 1, 2015

The holidays are a time for family.  They are also a time for film going. But, a trip to "The Good Dinosaur" this weekend with his family left Josh disheartened.  It was not all that he hoped it would be.  There was but one opportunity left to him when he returned home -- watch "Minions."

Nov 24, 2015

One of the things Josh truly dislikes is the term "guilty pleasure."  If you like something, stand up and shout it as loud as you possibly can.  It doesn't matter if it's the worst sort of reality show or the dumbest sort of movie.  It's not wrong.

Take "Bad Boys" and "Bad Boys II" as an example.  Josh doesn't call them a guilty pleasure, instead he basks in his love of Mike Lowrey and Marcus Burnett.

Nov 17, 2015

It isn't wrong to want to sit down and watch a movie that is going to do nothing but provide a sort of comforting escapism, especially after a weekend full of awful news reports.  We don't advocate permanently burying your head in the sand and avoiding the world at large, but taking a break isn't the worst thing you could do.

For Josh, "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" provided just that sort of escape this past weekend.

Nov 10, 2015

Do forgive Josh if he sounds a little like he's suffering from a cold with this minisode, it's only because he's suffering from a cold.  

The important thing to note is not the cold, but rather the character behind it.  Yes, we're still on character this week as we look at "Before we go" and "The End of the Tour."  The films are strikingly similar in the fact that they are mostly just two people talking to each other, but who those people are and how they interact is what makes one of the movies enjoyable and one of them not.

Nov 6, 2015

On today's minisode we look at two different Luc Besson movies, "The Professional" and "The Fifth Element."  Even if they both feature Gary Oldman, these are completely different movies.  The important thing to note though is that even if they are different, they both work for the same reason -- a focus on creating interesting characters.  

Nov 3, 2015

Daniel Junge has an Oscar win and another nomination.  Today, he stops by "Lass is More" to discuss his latest documentary, "A Lego Brickumentary."  We also talk "Inside Out" and "Aladdin."  

The key here with all these things is that while they may be primarily intended for kids, they're all great for adults as well.  You'll find that the same is true for all the best kids' stuff.

Oct 30, 2015

Josh has said many a time that he does not like horror, but is he lying?  On today's minisode, Josh revisits the topic and offers three new-to-Blu-ray offerings which he highly recommends for your Halloween festivities.  They're fun, they're amusing, and they're pretty much guaranteed to not keep most folks awake all night in sheer terror, and it's really this last one that Josh would say is most important.

 

Oct 27, 2015

Did one of these movies postulate its own failure and the other's success?  As they both arrive on Blu-ray and DVD, "Lass is More" looks at the films, their messages, their ability to predict the future, and just what it is that we can learn from them.

Oct 20, 2015

"Dope" and "Pixels" are both now out on blu-ray and I have problems with both movies. Josh thinks one is great for nearly the entire run and the other goes very far off the rails very early on.  The question for both is whether there is a single identifiable moment where the error occurs, something people can point to and say, "see, it's right here.  This is what is going to leave you with a bad taste in your mouth after the credits run."  Josh is betting there is and is here to tell you all about it.

Oct 13, 2015

Lass is More hit New York Comic-Con this past weekend and got the opportunity to sit down with the voices of Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, and Wile E. Coyote.  Hear what they, along with producer Gary Hartle, had to tell us about the new show, "Wabbit - A Looney Tunes Production" which is airing on Boomerang and Cartoon Network.

Oct 7, 2015

Josh will be the first person to tell you that he's not down with movies where things go bump in the night.  They scare him, and he's not of the opinion that losing a night's sleep thinking you're going to be murdered by some deranged machete-wielding maniac is fun.  

What Josh does like are monster movies.  Here are three selections for this October, one good, one really at best mediocre but part of a good franchise, and one not good but with a wonderful monster.  Today, we discuss "Escobar: Paradise Lost," "Tremors 5: Bloodlines," and "Bram Stoker's Dracula."

Oct 5, 2015

Tracey Birdsall has had a long career in Hollywood, and she stops by Lass is More to tell us all about it.  What kinds of movies does she like?  Why does she produce?  What attracts her to a part?  Will she ever direct?  She answers all these questions and more.

Sep 22, 2015

For years, Josh has tried to explain what makes him like movies as much as he does.  He has done this more successfully and less successfully, but it's never been quite right.  Maybe though the new Blu-ray releases of "Zathura," "Jumanji," and "The Indian in the Cupboard" can help him make it happen.

Sep 15, 2015

One shouldn't, necessarily, attempt to apply logic to a "Fast & Furious" movie, but why would we ever let that stop us?  If they can still be furious after all these years, we can look for logic flaws, and that's just what we do over the course of these five minutes.  

 

Guess what? We find them, but maybe not where you think (okay, there too).

Sep 8, 2015

Khalil Sullins has written and directed a "hard" sci-fi movie about telepathy and the efforts of two young men working in a garage to read human thoughts.  Just how far-fetched is it?  Just how close may we be to knowing the innermost ruminations of another person?  Sullins is here to discuss.

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