Afleveringen

  • We love I Love Boosters! Charlene and Jackie celebrate all things Boots and Boosters, including but not limited to: jaunty accordion music by a woman from Connecticut, silly jokes, hardcore leftist politics, fun outfits, dunking on Demi Moore, soul sucking demons, and more!

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    Time Stamped Show Notes:

    2:03 There are in fact no lizard people in Sorry to Bother You, just horse people.

    5:30 Demi Moore made news when she got paid $12.5 Million for Striptease in 1996.

    6:51 Y’all Davos: With Many Changes, Did SXSW 2026 Flourish or Flop?

    9:02 Boots Riley on Cannes: “They Just Don’t Like My Stuff”

    11:00 Boots Riley is in the replies

    12:46 Emily Nussbaum’s New Yorker profile of Boots Riley

    14:27 HI HEY HO - The Tune Yards Theme for I Love Boosters

    16:48 I Love Boosters Reviewed in The New Yorker, which opens comparing the film to DWP2.

    25:09 Fustilarian: An obsolete victorian insult meaning ‘a low fellow, a stinkard, a scoundrel’

    27:00 Boots Riley discussing the relationship between his film and Dialectical Materialism

    33:28 The building that inspired Demi Moore’s tilted floor is inspired by the Millennium Tower which is not in Oakland but nearby San Francisco

    38:55 How Costume Designer Shirley Kurata built a surreal fashion playground for I Love Boosters

    42:30 “Arts and Crafts designers sought to improve standards of decorative design, believed to have been debased by mechanization, and to create environments in which beautiful and fine workmanship governed”

    49:30 Marc Jacobs' incendiary Grunge Collection

    51:30 “Kurata made a point to work with up-and-coming brands, BIPOC designers like Sergio Hudson, Anna Sui, and Leeann Huang, as well as SCAD fashion students for the movie’s finale runway show”

    58:22 Verity looks fucking nuts

    59:35 Am I Ok? And Not Okay: The same movie?

    1:02:12 Shooting a monster while riding a horse through the woods: Hope (2026)

    1:06:43 Just in case you too want to brush up on Dialectical Materialism

    1:11:40 🎼 Shoplifters of the world 🎼 Unite and take over 🎼

    1:12:01 Is Shoplifting Ethical? Hassan Piker & Jia Tolentino weigh in

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Two Women? In Gold? In this economy???

    Jackie and Charlene are back to discuss Joint Venture’s newest release, the Sundance 2025 film Two Women, directed by Chloe Robichaud. They dive into the snowy landscape of Quebec to discuss sexy movies and feminist reimaginings of iconic films, and the films they’ve enjoyed this spring.

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    TIME STAMPED SHOW NOTES:

    1:00 Joint Venture

    1:26 Two Women In Gold (1970)

    2:00 The Sex Comedy: A dead genre

    10:10 The song sung in the bar is ‘Provocante’ by Marjo

    19:00 Women begin having their own bank accounts in Canada in 1964.

    19:50 Audre Lorde: The Masters Tools Will Never Dismantle the Masters House :)

    20:37 The Feminine Mystique was published in 1963

    21:40 The Female Gaze in Two Women

    23:15 Fujoshi in the E. Alex Jung Article

    28:13 Janet Planet: middle aged coming of age film

    30:45 Director Chloe Robichaud on why she wanted to remake Two Women

    38:14 HIRE MORE WOMEN GUARDS

    40:12 Original Two Women In Gold one of the most commercially successful films in Quebec's cinematic history

    47:09 Croissant making scene in It’s Complicated

    51:22 Kristen Stewart on making The Chronology of Water

    53:16 1980s remakes of French New Wave Films, streaming now

    54:04 Jonathan Glazer directed this!

    56:18 The soundtrack of Marc by Sofia rocks

    1:01 DVD store scene from This Means War

    1:06:46 Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma: In Theaters August 2026!

    1:08:57 The film that won the Golden Bear that Charlene is describing is Yellow Letters.

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

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  • Take a jet to Brazil with Charlene and Jackie as they go undercover to talk about The Secret Agent, Kleber Mendonca Filho’s Cannes crushing, Oscar nominations reaping, 1970’s vibe emitting neo noir.

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    TIME STAMPED NOTES:

    1:22 The Secret Agent won both the Best Director and Best Actor at Cannes 2025

    3:00 The iconic Udo Kier

    7:00 The SDSA, of which Charlene is a member

    10:00 Kokuho: massive Japanese box office returns

    14:42 Pausing on images of dictators: How The Secret Agent Appeals to the Brazilian Collective Memory

    15:35 The Year in Movies About Resistance by Alison Willmore

    24:15 Kleber Mendonça Filho and Wagner Moura On Brazil’s Urban Legend Of The Hairy Leg

    30:21 The official diagnosis for the Two Faced Cat is ‘diprosopus’

    33:04 What is a normal amount of dead people for Carnival?

    35:00 The cinema turned blood bank was something Filho pulled from real life.

    45:00 Wagner Moura on interrogating history

    50:00 It Was Just An Accident winner of 2025 Cannes Palme D’Or

    58:50 2026 the first year with an Oscar for Casting

    59:00 The 78th Oscars where Brokeback Mountain famously lost to CRASH

    59:30 Marty Supreme use of non-actors

    1:01:45 The english song in question is ‘If You Leave Me Now’ by Chicago

    1:02:00 Two Women and By Design - two movies we’d like to see

    1:06:10 One of the many ‘Jaws on the Water’ screenings

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Charlene and Jackie kick off 2026 with No Other Choice, perennial festival darling Park Chan-wook’s latest meditation on capitalism, violence, paper, and snakes.

    Listen in for crazy theater mice stories, best movies about getting fired, what it means to be on an actor’s ‘team’, and more!

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    Time Stamped Show Notes:

    5:55 Incredible Stoker hair to grass transition

    7:05 The Alamo transitioning into QR Code ordering

    12:00 The Landfill History of The Battery

    17:00 “No Other Choice” and Bong Joon Ho’s “Parasite” comparisons

    21:00 Alison Stewart interviews Park Chan-wook

    23:23 Mark Fisher’s Capitalist Realism

    25:53 How to Make a Killing

    26:17 Best Offer Wins

    27:10 Jenny Odell on what No Other Choice reveals about the humiliation of work

    38:49 China’s Dark Factories: So Automated, They Don’t Need Lights

    39:15 The house and greenhouse in No Other Choice

    42:22 Ryan Coogler on why the vampires in Sinners are Irish

    44:18 The Ax by Donald Westlake: written in 1997!

    49:18 EFT Tapping Affirmations

    52:48 No Other Choice: Snakes, Shoes, Wood details

    55:30 Elizabethtown’s Opening Scene

    1:03:38 They Will Kill You trailer

    1:05:35 Ronald Bronstein’s ‘Cinema of Anxiety’

    1:09:07 The Soundtrack of Aftersun

    1:10:54 Vine of girl dancing with a live chicken to Two of Hearts’

    1:14:05 The Tilda Swinton genie movie: Three Thousand Years of Longing

    1:16:45 The cardboard chaise for Wuthering Heights promos

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • It’s a very festive holiday episode of Tickets Secured!

    To celebrate this time of year we've got:

    Games! (FMK - 2025 movie edition)Holiday movie watching recommendations (best movies to watch during holiday plane travel and best new releases to take your teenage cousins to, to name a few) Lots of fun reflections on Charlene & Jackie's inaugural year of cinema podcasting.

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    TIME STAMPED NOTES:

    14:40 “Art by committee is a really bad idea” - Kelly Reichardt on why no one is allowed in the edit room with her

    19:51 “Baby, baby, baby, baby baby” - Reese Witherspoon goes OFF in Walk The Line

    21:55 The scene from The Shining (in Spanish!) that Jackie mentions seeing on Telemundo as a child

    27:56 Vogue: Greta Lee Makes 6 Movie Inspired Cocktails

    39:50 Christmas Will Break Your Heart (which is actually by LCD Soundsystem)

    41:18 The Connecticut Movie Hall of Fame

    45:43 George Blanchine’s The Nutcracker featuring Macaulay Culkin, which was released theatrically!

    47:01 The Making of Eyes Wide Shut - Lisa Leone discusses taking hundreds of photos and conducting research for Kubricks Ext NYC Set

    49:52 The Plaza’s Home Alone Special Offer, which includes limo ride, cheese pizza, and a ‘decadent sundae’

    1:00:13 Aunt Cinema and Bad Dad Cinema if you have additions, email us!

    1:01:33 Crabs with Top Hats: One of Emerald Fennell’s many crimes

    Thank you everyone for listening and for a first great year together!

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Charlene and Jackie discuss Sentimental Value, the Cannes Grand Prix winning film from Therapized Norwegian King Joachim Trier.

    Is it as good as The Worst Person in the World? What does it take to repair inherited generational trauma? And have you seen SKÅM??? All this and more in this week's episode of Tickets Secured.

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    Time Stamped Show Notes:

    2:06 Richard Brody agrees with Jackie about The Worst Person in The World.

    3:10 “Those people dancing on the freeway”

    6:54 Paul Mescal’s Iconic Rugby Shorts

    8:36 Bad Dads - Justin Chang reviews Sentimental Value

    8:36 Bad Dads an art exhibition inspired by Wes Anderson's work

    10:50 The Trauma Plot strikes again

    13:20 Joaquim Trier profile in the New Yorker

    17:45 Station Eleven’s Hamlet Scene

    19:50 The production of Hamlet that we did not get to see

    31:00 “I’m an old guy now” monologue from The Worst Person in the World

    34:10 The House in ‘Sentimental Value’

    36:10 The SKÅM GOOGLE DRIVE!

    38:50 The Taipei Film House was former US Ambassador residence

    39:03 The “horror film” THELMA

    42:35 Documentary about marathon running pediatric neurologist

    46:16 Catherine Martin on her creative partnership with Baz

    57:40 In The Hall of The Mountain King: Certified Norwegian Banger

    1:01:41 Ira Glass expounding on ‘The Gap’

    1:04:38 Character transitions in Clouds of Sils Maria

    1:15:00 BAM’s remake of We Come to This Place for Magic

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • A very special episode in which Charlene & Jackie fully commit to incorporating the themes of impermanence and incompetence in Kelly Reichardt’s The Mastermind, which premiered at Cannes, into their own podcast practice.

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    In lieu of proper time stamped notes, please enjoy the sources of some ruminations on The Heist Genre and Kelly Reichardt that we arrived at in our (non recorded) conversation:

    The Quiet Menace of Kelly Reichardt’s Feminist Westerns - touches on KR’s ability to maintain an outsiders point of view and ‘normal persons sense of money’.A piece on Showing Up that discusses the common thread of precarity among Reichardt's protagonists and also mentions her iconic early work on America’s Next Top ModelJosh O’Connor and Kelly Reichardt discuss making The MastermindAustralian perspective on Kelly Reichardt’s movies and interview regarding The MastermindPhotographers that Kelly Reichardt mentioned inspired her and which informed the gorgeous production design and set decoration: William Eggelston and Steven Shore’s parking lots The worst heist movie: The Goldfinch - Strictly for The BirdsThe best heist movie: The Great Muppet Caper - ‘they really toss em around like wet rags in this one’The Mastermind included sounds (and images) from the radio, TV, and outside the windows of the historical political context of the time setting even though the main character JB did not engage directly with the social movements unfolding around him. This reminded Charlene a lot about the main characters studied personal absorption tuning out the historical political context around them despite a very clever use of sound to intrude in the main character’s story like in The Zone of Interest. The art featured in the film is by Arthur Dove, and his work, in turn both jazz influenced and influential to much of the art featured on 60’s jazz album covers, neatly dovetails (pun intended) into the films jazz score Kelly Reichardt discusses the pleasure she takes in documenting processes and the small details that are often left out of films

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Autumn has fallen in New York and Charlene and Jackie celebrate by tumbling down the stairs of the Angelika straight into Oliver Hermanus’s Palme D’Or nominated The History of Sound.

    A WWI (?), gay, heart wrenching movie starring mischievous scamp Josh O’Connor and former Phantom of the Opera Paul Mescal. Listen in as they discuss period filmmaking on a budget, the possible litigious wrath of Hanya Yanagihara, and what all this had to do with the Stomp Clap Hey music of Barack Obama’s first term.

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    Time Stamped Notes:

    0:47 Autumn in New York ….rated the #1 creepiest age gap film

    3:00 Oliver Hermanus has had multiple films at Cannes

    6:22 The jacket scene in Brokeback Mountain

    12:52 The History Of Sound: a short story by Ben Shattuck

    18:22 Fat City: Both a film and a production company with a great logo

    20:00 The cover of the collection of stories is the same as the poster is the same as the cover of A Little Life

    23:53 Paul Mescal and Josh O'Connor Rationed Jolly Ranchers

    26:00 Paul Mescal can sing!!!

    36:54 Malaga island conflict in movie actually happened in 1912

    38:35 "Bury Your Gays" literary trope

    43:02 The film began pre production in 2020

    44:36 Indiewires Top 100 Movies of the 2020s So Far

    48:22 The Tragedy of Stomp Clap Hey

    48:45 Every song in The History of Sound sounds like this

    49:50 Trader Joe’s newsletter and Victorian art

    52:30 Chris Cooper on playing the older version of Paul Mescal

    58:22 One of the many tv shows starring Julianne Moore

    1:01 Daniel Day-Lewis ends 7-year retirement

    1:05:12 The Baby Carriage in the Battleship Potemkin

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Charlene and Jackie see The Sparrow in The Chimney at BAM and there’s a lot to talk about: so many animals, so many kids, so many scenes where we had to cover our eyes.

    Plus: Experiences with wild west Q&A Culture, why the English Patient actually rocks, and a harsh referendum on the New Yorker’s fall movie preview.

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    TIME STAMPED NOTES:

    3:30 We love BAM

    3:45 “I saw both George Michael and Maebe…”

    4:20 New Directors/New Films

    5:00 Ramon Zurcher and His Identical Twin Brother Silvan Zurcher

    6:00 There’s Drama By The Pool

    10:30 Mark Wahlberg’s red headed sisters in The Fighter

    15:56 “It’s a film about destruction and rebirth”

    19:43 Like a Nicholas Winding Refn film or Run Lola Run

    23:40 Kaput

    26:22 The rat in The Departed

    34:30 Metaphoric settings in The Glass Menagerie and The House of Yes

    38:00 The famous words of Leo Tolstoy

    349:34 Amy Adam’s is Night Bitch

    44:09 The Duplass brothers talk peacetime vs wartime

    47:00 Michelle Williams on child acting

    49:00 A Typical Morning as the Horse Assistant Director on The Gilded Age

    51:27 Sophie Fiennes and the film she directed in 2002

    52:34 Marc Maron and Lynn Shelton on improv in Sword of Trust

    56:43 Elaine Hates the English Patient

    59:30 Walter Murch won a best Editing Oscar for The English Patient

    1:02:28 The New Yorkers Fall Culture Preview

    1:05:20 Bruce Springsteen and Phish play Glory Days

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Charlene and Jackie go in and go off on Sorry, Baby, Eva Victor’s Cannes playing, Sundance Award winning debut.

    This episode has everything: wild speculation about A24’s business decision making process, Emerald Fennell haterade, thoughtful reflections on the use of time and trauma in storytelling, and of course, strong opinions about the Alamo Drafthouse’s popcorn.

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    Time Stamped Notes:

    1:07 Sundance: A24 Takes ‘Sorry, Baby’ For $8M

    2:22 Obvious Child, a comedy about abortion

    3:45 Me and Earl and The Dying Girl: Fox Searchlight bought it for $12 million

    5:20 Eva Victor discusses ‘film grad school’ and Barry Jenkins producing

    6:30 Jane Schoenbrun on making a film about how something felt, not how it happened

    12:04 Temporal discontinuities and nonlinear structure in the work of Toni Morrison – Charlene meant Beloved, not The Bluest Eye.

    13:54 End of the End of the Line: Temporality in Infinite Jest Is a Broken Circle

    15:38 Tennis Balls, Heads, Annular Defloration Cycles in Infinite Jest

    25:00 Promising Young Woman: The College Dean Scene

    27:00 Authenticity is Dangerous and Expensive

    27:30 John Proctor is the Villain

    34:50 Jeopardy! Bar League at BOTH Alamo’s in NYC

    37:57 1/3 of New Bedfords Population Claims Portuguese Ancestry

    40:01 Mike Leigh discusses his improvisational process

    47:48 The Case Against the Trauma Plot by Parul Sehgal

    51:06 IT IS THE TITULAR ROLE

    53:03 Paradoxes of American Individualism

    55:55 “I Don’t Watch Ted Lasso”

    1:03:20 Splitsville: Dakota Johnson in a fancy house

    1:04:00 Oh, Hi!: A gender flipped Gerald’s Game?

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Charlene and Jackie dive into the JACU (Jane Austen Cinematic Universe) to discuss Laura Piani’s debut feature Jane Austen Wrecked My Life, which premiered at TIFF last fall.

    Topics covered include writers writing about writing, the cinematic equivalent of click bait, best book stores in NYC, and what happens when a rom com lacks com.

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    1:15 The fine Italian cashmere merchant Loro Piana

    1:20 The Jacob Burns Film Center

    6:10 The Jane Austen Cinematic Universe

    7:40 The Lake Scene, if you need to watch it at this moment

    9:45 Shakespeare and Company Shouting Out Jane Austen Wrecked My Life

    13:00 The Ginger Man–it’s a real book!

    15:50 As You Do A Gavotte

    18:20 Prime Example of a Jonesian fall

    20:00 Materialists: Kind of a Rom, not really a Com

    22:43 “It’s not girl gets boy, girl gets book”–Greta Gerwig on Little Women

    30:30 The Personal is Political by Carol Hanisch

    37:00 “If I have one wish, is that people go out from the film and they feel a bit happy and they want to read more poetry.”

    40:00 The Dish and the Spoon: Greta Gerwig Raging in Pajamas

    44:27 “Breadcrumbing”

    49:15 Set with great wallpaper and matching lampshade and matching bedding and wallpaper

    55:16 Two of our favorite NYC book stores: Kitchen Arts and Letters and Unnameable Books

    58:53 A history of Book Row, NYC’s historic haven for bibliophiles. The store Jackie references is Alabaster Bookshop.

    1:01:28 ‘The Chronology of Water’ Review: Kristen Stewart’s Directorial Debut.

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Charlene and Jackie discuss Andrew Ahn’s The Wedding Banquet, a 2025 update of Ang Lee’s celebrated 1993 film starring Lily Gladstone and Bowen Yang.

    Topics discussed include our favorite book to movie adaptations, how to retell a 1990s gay love story in 2025, Ang Lee being a repressed king, fake movie jobs, and how well placed plants can make a film more believable.

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    Time Stamped Notes:

    1:30 Ang Lee’s The Wedding Banquet (1993)

    2:30 “I have a lot of repression. So repression is what I make movies about” - Ang Lee, maestro of unrequited desire

    5:45 Brokeback Mountain by Annie Proulx, published in the New Yorker in 1997

    10:00 James Schamus, co writer of both versions of The Wedding Banquet

    12:00 Lily Gladstone in Kelly Reichardt’s Certain Women

    19:00 Andrew Ahn’s authentic, intimate directing style and redefining the romcom

    25:40 The twists and turns of Park Chan-Wook’s The Handmaiden

    27:15 Chaebol: a large industrial South Korean conglomerate run and controlled by an individual or family

    36:06 Robin Williams teaches Nathan Lane to ‘Act Like a Man’ in The Birdcage

    38:33 The obligatory Romantic Comedy Grand Gesture

    43:17 Emma Thompson losing it in Sense and Sensibility

    50:34 Materialists Trailer featuring Pedro Pascals 12 Million Dollar Apartment

    51:25 Do I Look Like I Belong Here? Working Girl and the Secrets of Class Politics

    53:17 Jane Austen Wrecked My Life, Non Fiction, french people getting in the literary zone

    54:05 Romeo and Juliet, or Juliet and Romeo????

    54:54 You Can’t Out Baz Baz

    58:29 The Historical Realism of Ryan Coogler’s Sinners

    1:00:23 Tony McNamara on The Great - ‘‘Historians have to know we’re making mistakes on purpose’

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • Charlene and Jackie debrief on Opus, the A24 pop star multi murder thriller/comedy (?) starring Ayo Adebiri and John Malkovich, a movie that shot straight from Sundance 2025 to the common multiplex in a mere two months.

    Topics discussed include tracing the trope of cults in 21st century indie film, unhinged behavior at Williamsburg Cinemas, celebrity profiles where the journalist gets lost in the sauce, would Lady Gaga ever commit serial murder?, and how a film can suffer from use of the wrong dining chairs.

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    Time Stamped Show Notes:

    2:01 Community and Family: The Cult Indoctrination Techniques of ‘Midsommar’

    4:53 “She will never stop huffing paint” scene from Bottoms

    5:38 The Hustlers At Scores: the article Hustlers was based off of

    12:00 BFI: 10 Great Films About Cults

    12:14 Oneida: The Peculiar Truth About The Sex Cult that Made Silverware

    25:00 The Unconvincing Music of Vox Lux

    34:00 Chris Evans: American Marvel

    38:00 A Brief History of Rihanna’s Party Plane

    40:45 Ayo Edebiri in Theater Camp as a counselor that lied on her resume

    42:40 Would you expect to find these chairs in a New Mexican cult compound?

    47:40 Sick of Myself: When Main Character Syndrome Runs Amok

    54:22 Sound of My Voice: A Movie About Cults and Journalists That Is Good

    59:50 Lady Gaga at Coachella: She Would Never Act In This Way

    1:02:12 The Celebrity Profiles of Taffy Brodesser-Akner

    1:02:57 Molly Lambert and her interview with/profile of Charli XCX

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • We discuss On Becoming a Guinea Fowl by Rungano Nyoni, a film that premiered at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival.

    Time Stamped Notes:

    1:22 I Am Not A Witch (Rungano Nyoni’s first film, premiered at Cannes 2017)

    3:24 AMC Class Action Lawsuit of which Charlene was a benefitee

    5:30 Eileen (2023, dir. by William Oldroyd)

    5:40 Mean Girls The Musical (2024, dir. by Samantha Jayne & Arturo Perez Jr.)

    9:57 Joy Ride (2023, dir. by Adele Lim)

    10:06 Brigsby Bear (2017, dir. by Dave McCary)

    15:02 Shula dressed as Missy Elliot

    19:10 Jason Bateman's expressions of disbelief in Arrested Development

    19:53 Sandra Oh and Awkwafina’s dynamic in Quiz Lady

    44:05 Zadie Smith: “​​ Can’t go home, can’t leave home: a subject close to my heart”

    52:50 The Farewell (2019, dir. by Lulu Wang)

    53:00 Minari (2020, dir. by Lee Isaac Chung)

    54:35 The Joy Luck Club (1993, dir. by Wayne Wang)

    58:48 A Discussion About Black Welsh Film

    1:06:20 The Bechdel Test

    1:07:24 Glengarry Glen Ross (1992, dir. by James Foley)

    1:08:28 She Said and the Canon of #MeToo films

    1:13:13 Bob Trevino Likes It

    1:13:22 Sister Midnight

    1:13:48 All We Imagine as Light (2024, dir. by Payal Kapadia)

    1:14:12 Superhero movie where Florence Pugh (?) has a russian accent (??)

    1:14:38 We Come to This Place for Magic

    1:15:44 La Chimera (2023, directed by Alice Rohrwacher)

    1:16:00 The Florida Project (2017, directed by Sean Baker)

    1:16:53 Girls Will Be Girls (2024, directed by Shuchi Talati)

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com

  • The pod's maiden voyage discussing Universal Language by Matthew Rankin, Ila Firouzabadi, and Pirouz Nemati.

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    Time Stamped Notes:

    3:22 - The Twentieth Century

    5:13 - High Maintenance

    7:00 - The Grand Budapest Hotel

    8:00 - Asteroid City, The Royal Tenenbaums and the precocious children and signage of Wes Anderson

    10:23 - Brechtian Theater and drawing attention to artifice

    13:30 - Agnes Varda, Sean Baker and ‘Film at the Margins’

    24:00 - Winnipeg's Iranian Community

    26:00 - Taste of Cherry

    27:00 - Iranian coming of age films that influenced Universal Language

    28:40 - The 180 Degree Rule that Matthew Rankin intentionally breaks

    30:43 - The connections of all the characters in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia

    31:25 - Macguffin

    38:34 - Tim Horton’s Donut Shop

    44:53 - Iranian tradition of directors appearing in their own films and blurring the lines between fiction and reality

    47:08 - (Some Of) Matthew Rankins Short Films (1) (2)

    50:50 - Public Sector Office

    52:39 - David Cronenberg’s The Shrouds and Crimes of The Future

    53:06 - Rungano Nyoni’s On Becoming a Guinea Fowl

    1:09:05 Don’t Worry He Won’t Get Far on Foot (2018) Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again (Also 2018)

    Matthew Rankin Interviews: Q With Tom Power & Next Best Picture Podcast

    For complete episode notes and more: ticketssecuredpodcast.com