Episode 209: Promising Young Woman

This week, Gavia and Morgan take a critical look at Oscar darling Promising Young Woman, the debut film from Emerald Fennell that stars Carey Mulligan and Bo Burnham. Topics include the film's dubious approach to rape revenge narratives, its generally lackluster screenplay, its hollow aesthetic, and more. (TW for discussions of rape and sexual violence)

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Episode 208: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011)

This week, Gavia and Morgan revisit one of their favorite films, Tomas Alfredson's 2011 adaptation of John le Carré's classic novel, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. Topics include the masterful adaptation of the book by screenwriters Peter Straughan and Bridget O'Connor; superb performances from a cast including Gary Oldman, Mark Strong, and Colin Firth; stupendous production design and costuming; and much more.

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Episode 207: In the Mood for Love

This week, Gavia and Morgan dive into Wong Kar-wai's masterpiece In the Mood for Love, starring Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung as star-crossed lovers in 1960s Hong Kong whose spouses are having an affair. Topics include the film's rich visual language, its influence on current cinema, stunning performances from Leung and Cheung, and much more.

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Episode 205: Men in Black

This week, Gavia and Morgan dive into the nineties classic Men in Black, directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones as special agents tasked with supervising Earth's alien population. They discuss the film's political subtext, the star personas and winning performances of its lead actors, Sonnenfeld's visual panache as a director, and more.

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Episode 202: Sweet Country

This week, Gavia and Morgan discuss Warwick Thornton's film Sweet Country, an Australian neo-Western examining colonialism and starring actors including Hamilton Morris, Sam Neill, and Bryan Brown. Topics include the film's engagement with the Western genre, its unflinching and intelligent depiction of racism, the role of women in the film, and more.

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Episode 201: Eternal Beauty

This week, Gavia and Morgan discuss Craig Roberts' indie dramedy Eternal Beauty, starring Sally Hawkins as a woman with paranoid schizophrenia. Topics include the film's stylistic influences, its frustrating treatment of mental illness, performances by Hawkins, Billie Piper, and David Thewlis, and much more.

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Episode 200: Titanic

For their 200th (!) episode, Gavia and Morgan take a trip to James Cameron's celebrated epic Titanic. They discuss the trope-laden but irresistible romance between Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio, Cameron's dictatorial directing style, the phenomenon surrounding the film and its stars after its release, and much more.

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Episode 199: Batman: Mask of the Phantasm

This week, Gavia and Morgan discuss the 1993 animated film Batman: Mask of the Phantasm, an extension of Batman: The Animated Series. Topics include the film's relationship to the TV series, its homages to classic American and German cinema, its approach to the familiar cast of Batman characters, and much more.

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Episode 198: A Patch of Blue

This week, Gavia and Morgan discuss Sidney Poitier's highest-grossing film, A Patch of Blue (1965), in which Poitier stars as a man who befriends a young, blind white woman played by Elizabeth Hartman. They discuss Poitier's storied career, the film's complex treatment of race and disability, Hollywood in the 1960s, and much more.

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Episode 197: Much Ado About Nothing (1993)

This week, Gavia and Morgan revisit Kenneth Branagh's classic 1993 adaptation of William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, starring a glitzy ensemble of actors including Branagh himself, Emma Thompson, Denzel Washington, and many more. Topics include Branagh and Thompson's peculiar careers, Shakespeare on film, the influence of Shakespeare's comedies, and more.

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Episode 196: Our Top 10 Films of 2020!

This week, Gavia and Morgan share their picks for the top 10 films of 2020, highlighting a range of films that have sadly not gotten their due this year as a result of the pandemic shutting down theaters. They discuss their choices, which include indie features in a range of genres, documentaries, foreign language films, an animated movie for children, and more.

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Episode 195: Tenet

This week, Gavia and Morgan finally watch Christopher Nolan's much-delayed blockbuster Tenet, starring John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki, and Kenneth Branagh. They, alas, bemoan its incoherent plotting, lousy treatment of women, muddy sound design, and more.

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Episode 194: The Philadelphia Story

This week, Morgan and Gavia revisit the beloved romantic comedy The Philadelphia Story, starring Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, and Jimmy Stewart. They place the film in the context of other romantic comedies from the 1930s and 1940s, consider the stars' public personas in conjunction with their roles in this film, discuss the movie's treatment of class and gender, and much more.

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Episode 193: Margaret

This week, Morgan and Gavia discuss Kenneth Lonergan's undersung epic Margaret (2011), starring an expansive cast including Anna Paquin, J. Smith Cameron, Mark Ruffalo, and Matt Damon. Topics include the film's fraught post-production history, its stellar ensemble cast, Lonergan's mastery of character and dialogue, and much more.

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Episode 192: Mank

This week, Morgan and Gavia dissect David Fincher's new film Mank, a biopic of Herman Mankiewicz, the screenwriter of Citizen Kane. They critique the film's approach to pastiching 1940s movies, question the decision to cast Gary Oldman in the lead role, dive into the film's discrepancies with the life of the real Mankiewicz, and much more.

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Episode 191: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

This week, Gavia and Morgan conclude their deep-dive into Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings trilogy with an episode on The Return of the King, the triumphant final film of the series. They discuss the film's lasting legacy in Hollywood; its successes (and weaknesses) as an adaptation; all those endings; fine performances from Billy Boyd, Sean Astin, and others; its sweep of the Academy Awards; and more.

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