

#The most unknown film movie#
Various Movie Discussion videos and Behind the Scenes videos as well as Short Films and Random Videos.The Nerd Crew, an exclusive pop culture podcast.re:View, a much more stripped down and straight forward approach to film critique.Best of the Worst in which various RedLetterMedia members and guests watch and review multiple films or videos ranging from B-movies to instructional VHS tapes.Half in the Bag in which Mike and Jay review films in a more traditional format.
#The most unknown film series#
The 70 minute Phantom Menace review part of a series of movie reviews by Harry S.RedLetterMedia is an American film and video production company operated by Mike Stoklasa, Jay Bauman, and Rich Evans.
#The most unknown film tv#

It’s a lesson that sticks with us afterward, out of the theatre and into the world. “Humans get smarter the more things they experience,” Macalady says.

We do, too, and might quietly rage to ourselves if we happen to remember that science has become politically controversial. At two different points, scientists giddily say that they feel like a kid on Christmas morning. Cheney’s goal isn’t so much to inform as to inspire, and it’s vicariously exciting to watch his subjects step out of their own research and into that of their peers. We continue on-to microbe-rich hot springs in the American West mountaintop telescopes at Keck Observatory, in Hawaii deep-sea methane vents in the Pacific a monkey island-observing some of the people seeking to understand the mysteries of the universe. D’Angelo heads to Brussels, to the lab of the cognitive scientist Axel Cleeremans, who has him strap on an EEG cap and make a robotic hand move with his thoughts. Having two scientists discuss the Rumsfeldian realm of known and unknown unknowns makes for a far-out beginning, but as the journey continues the film becomes more grounded in wonders that we can comprehend. We begin in central Italy, on a deep-cave spelunk with the geomicrobiologist Jennifer Macalady-“This is probably the most beautiful slime I’ve ever seen,” she says-who then travels to Milan to talk to the particle physicist Davide D’Angelo about dark matter. The film, which is in theatres and heads to Netflix in August, follows nine scientists, working in realms from physics to neuroscience, who visit one another blind-date style. If Richard Linklater’s “Slacker” followed scientists across the planet, instead of weirdos across Austin, it might feel a bit like “ The Most Unknown,” a gorgeous, amiable documentary directed by Ian Cheney (“King Corn,” “The Search for General Tso”).
