Pink Floyd's The Wall: Being a Victim of Success and The Threat of Fascism
The Cinedicate: Film & TV Podcast
English - May 11, 2021 05:00 - 36 minutes - 42.1 MB - ★★★★★ - 1 ratingFilm Interviews TV & Film Film History recommendation cinema discussion film recommend review television Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
On this episode of Cinedicate, we become another brick in the wall. Diego, Chicago graphic designer, returns to talk about the rock album turned live-action film, The Wall.
Pink Floyd's album, The Wall, was adapted into a film three years after its initial release. Pink Floyd combined the experimental visuals of animation and live-action to create a unique story that mirrored what their record stood for thematically.
Pink (Bob Geldof), a successful musician, while strung-out on drugs reflects back to his childhood in his hotel room. There he reminisces about the loss of his father in WWII and how his mother coped by becoming overbearing. Pink's trauma, both past and present, manifests in the creation of a wall around himself. Ultimately turning him into the very thing that killed his father.