Episodes

  • CODA (dir. Sian Heder)
    Sep 10 2021

    CODA is a film that doesn't take a lot chances, with it's familiar tropes it doesn't stray from the formula. It's a remake of a 2014 French film, it's a coming of age film about a teenage girl breaking away from her family. Audiences get a teen romance or two, an inspiring teacher, and an uplifting ending.

    And yet ... CODA transcends the ordinary with solid performances, storytelling, and importantly, with its inclusion of amazing deaf actors - an opportunity the original French film missed.

    The importance of good storytelling is highlighted here. Listen as we discuss the charming film CODA.

    Featuring host Alex Ago and his guests, Donnajean Ward, Jonathan Schwartz, and Aubrey Hicks

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Moxie (dir. Amy Poehler)
    May 6 2021

    Netflix's film Moxie brings riot grrrl punk feminism to a whole new generation: music, zines, and voices coming together to make the world a bit better.

    Is the world ready for riot grrrls to go mainstream?

     

     

     

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    58 mins
  • Student Perspectives: Judas and the Black Messiah (dir. Shaka King)
    Apr 16 2021

    During our recent episode on Judas and the Black Messiah, Professor Bill Resh spoke about using the film as part of his course on citizenship.

    We thought it would be great to revisit the film and see how well this worked. So, today we're revisiting Judas and the Black Messiah with students from his course! We'll ask about the different theories of citizenship, how they felt the film portrayed the time, and their thoughts on today's BLM movement.

    Host Aubrey Hicks is joined by:

    • Michael Nimer (Masters candidate, he/him)
    • Nivea Krishnan (1st year undergraduate, she/her)
    • Riley McMackin (3rd year undergraduate, she/her)
    • Rene Del Bosque (2nd year undergraduate, he/him)

     

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Judas and the Black Messiah (dir. Shaka King)
    Feb 26 2021

    Under the threat of prison, Bill O'Neal infiltrated the Black Panther Party in Chicago.

    Judas and the Black Messiah looks at the last three years of the Black Panther Party Chairman, Fred Hampton's life. While Hampton was falling in love , taking care of his people, and leading the city revolutionaries ... O'Neal  was forced to navigate the dilemma of the hold the FBI had over him, all while starting to believe in the movement the Black Panthers represented.

    Host Jonathan Schwartz is joined by Alex Ago, Aubrey Hicks, Bill Resh, and Erroll Southers.

    Beware of spoilers.

    Trigger warning: racial violence, gun violence, state violence, murder, death.

     

    For links to some of the things we talk about, see our showpage.

     

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    1 hr and 21 mins
  • Hillbilly Elegy & Between the World and Me
    Feb 4 2021

    Today we’ll be doing something a bit different. We’re looking at two memoirs made into films in 2020:

    Between the World and Me, from HBO, based on the book of the same name written by Ta’Nehasi Coates. The film is directed by Kamilah Forbes, and the screenplay adaptation is by David Teague.

    Hillbilly Elegy is based on a book of the same name by JD Vance, published in 2016. Ron Howard directed the Netflix film, adapted for screen by Vanessa Taylor.

    Host Aubrey Hicks is joined by Ange-Marie Hancock Alfaro, William Resh, and Jonathan Schwartz.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • The Queen's Gambit (Netflix, created by Scott Frank and Allan Scott)
    Dec 18 2020

    Odds are that you know someone raving about the new Netflix coming of age limited series, The Queen's Gambit. Lifted from the novel of the same title, the series is a seven episode tale of a little orphan girl entering the competitive, very masculine, and very adult world of chess.

    From pawn to queen, what makes The Queen's Gambit irresistible?

    Host Jonathan Schwartz is joined by Alex Ago and Aubrey Hicks in today's episode of Reel Review.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • On the Rocks (dir. Sophia Coppola)
    Nov 24 2020

    On the Rocks, the latest film from Sophia Coppola, like many of the director's films, relies on dialogue and character interaction. This time the central relationship is between father and daughter, played by Bill Murray and Rashida Jones.

    How relevant do our panel find this depiction of lives of privilege? Host Jonathan Schwartz is joined by Alex Ago, Ange-Marie Hancock Alfaro, Aubrey Hicks  and William Resh to discuss On The Rocks!

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Lovecraft Country (HBO, Created by Misha Green)
    Oct 30 2020

    Episode one of Lovecraft Country lets viewers know for sure that the question of reality and truth is at the heart of the series. In reality, H. P. Lovecraft was an overt White Supremacist. The series turns this on its head and gives a new generation a ring-side seat to revisiting history from the reality overlooked by textbooks.

    Reality is slippery. Truth can be hidden. What does it take to uncover the truth, share your reality, and make the world better for the next generation?

    "It would seem to me that the proposition before the house is a question hideously loaded, and that one's response to that question, or reaction to that question, has to depend on the effect of where you find yourself in the world, what your sense of reality is," James Baldwin spoke during a 1965 debate with William F. Buckley.

    We're talking about the whole season of Lovecraft Country on this episode of Reel Review. Host Jonathan Schwartz is joined by Alex Ago, Ange-Marie Hancock Alfaro, and Aubrey Hicks to discuss the horror, the scifi, the Easter eggs, the way genre can get at the heart of social issues, and more.

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    1 hr and 15 mins