Politics of Cinema – Details, episodes & analysis

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Podcast Politics of Cinema

Politics of Cinema

Aaron & Isaac

Tv & Film
Society & Culture

Frequency: 1 episode/18d. Total Eps: 100

Hosting podcast Libsyn
Films are cultural artifacts. There is a political and artistic message in every one and we're here to document. On each episode we pick a film; sometimes current and sometimes from the riches of world cinema’s 100+ year history, and take a deep dive into what the film is really saying about the world. Both overtly and covertly.
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  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    21/04/2026
    #93
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    18/04/2026
    #87
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    17/04/2026
    #74
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    16/04/2026
    #78
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    15/04/2026
    #66
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    14/04/2026
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    13/04/2026
    #42
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    12/04/2026
    #30
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    11/04/2026
    #32
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - filmHistory

    10/04/2026
    #26

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Cinematic Resistance: Z (1969) & the Enduring Threat of Authoritarianism

Season 15 · Episode 7

vendredi 20 décembre 2024Duration 01:04:45

Given the results of the US elections, we thought it would be a good idea to look at a great work of art to help with context and see how filmmakers can play a role in confronting state repression. It's a film we should have discussed at some point over the last four years: Costa-Gavras's political thriller Z (1969)

To state the obvious, this depiction of government conspiracies, assassination attempts, rising authoritarianism, the deep state, and a sprawling cover-up feels quite prescient. However, unlike your favorite YouTube channel, we discuss what the deep state actually is and how the true definition of corporatism is used in this film (and in real life).

Our discussion wouldn't be complete without Yves Montand's magnetic performance in this film and in the recording booth. Montand's illustrious career was at its peak as both actor and singer when he starred in this certified masterpiece of leftist cinema. Bella Ciao!

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Film Noir & Capitalism II: Capitalism is Crime

Season 15 · Episode 6

vendredi 15 novembre 2024Duration 50:29

For the last three years we've observed the month long celebration know as Noirvember, and this year is no exception. In 2021 we recorded an episode called Film Noir & Capitalism. For 2022 we went over to Japan and did two episodes looking at Yakuza Noir via Tokyo Drifter (1966) and A Colt is My Passport (1967). Last year we focused in on Neo-Noir with and episode on Killing them Softly (2012) and the roll of the 2008 economic crisis on modern American crime. 

This year, we're returning to the well of Film Noir & Capitalism by discussing Abraham Polonsky's Force of Evil (1948). Written and directed by an eventual victim of the Hollywood Blacklist, this film perfectly encapulate Polonky's own statement that "all films about crime are about capitalism, because capitalism is about crime". 

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Buñuel's Banquet: Feasting on Satire in The Exterminating Angel (1962)

Season 14 · Episode 10

vendredi 12 janvier 2024Duration 52:06

Luis Buñuel was a master at creating lasting images that stay in the viewers brain long after the film is over. He had a career that spanned multiple decades and working in multiple countries, yet he consistantly took aim at political and social elites. 

In his 1962 masterpiece, The Exterminating Angel, the acclaimed filmmaker crafts an allegorical comedy that confronts the socio-political realities of Franco's Spain. Infused with a surrealistic touch and a substantial dose of satire, the film allows for a multi-layered interpretation.

Plus, it's just plain funny to watch the rich fall apart and destroy themselves. 

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The Palestinian Experience: Documented and Portrayed

Season 14 · Episode 9

vendredi 22 décembre 2023Duration 01:05:41

On this episode, we're looking at two cinematic exampoles of the Palestinian expereince. One documentary and one fictionalized portrayal.

The documentary, Gaza Ghetto: Portrait of a Palestinian Family (1985), captures exactly what the title implies. We get the lived experiences from grandmother down to grandchildren as they recount their experiences ranging from the 1948 exile to the 1967 war to the 1971 “pacification campaign”. 

The fiction film is the very poorly titled, The Dupes (1973). It's an adaptation of Ghassan Kanafani's acclaimed book, Men in the Sun (1963). In this portrayal, three Palestinian men of different generations and and backgounds employ a fourth man to drive them past Iraqi checkpoints in hopes of getting to Kuwait and (hopefully) jobs. It's a fantastic example of realist cinema from Tawfiq Saleh, one of Egypts best filmmakers.

Links to things mentioned on the show:

The Accented Cinema book that Aaron discussed.

Solidarity Cinema

Palestine Film Institute.

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Systemic Risk: Killing Them Softly (2012) & the Precarity of Modern American Crime

Season 14 · Episode 8

vendredi 10 novembre 2023Duration 01:09:06

The fallout 2008 financial crisis has been portrayed on film in a number of ways; from documentary's like Iniside Job (2010) and Capitalism: A Love Story (2009) to ficiton films "inspired" by the events like The Big Short (2015) and Margin Call (2011). 

Andrew Dominik's Killing Them Softly (2012) takes a different approach. It starts with George V. Higgins' 1974 crime novel, itself the third in a series, that centers on a lower level crime syndicate in Boston. Then Dominik places that story in a 2008 New Orleans during the final weeks of the Obama/McCain presidential election. 

We get into the obvious metaphors that occur when organized crime is compared to financial institutions. But, we also end up discussing the various ways that Nationalism can manifest itself in America; from George W. Bush, to Obama, to Trump and Biden. 

We'll be dipping our toes back into this Systemic Risk topic, the intersection of the 2008 crisis and it's portrayal on film. So if you have any particularly intereseting examples to suggest (documentary or fiction), send them to politicsofcinema@gmail.com

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Green Room & Fascist Tendencies in the Pacific Northwest

Season 14 · Episode 7

vendredi 20 octobre 2023Duration 01:22:18

This Halloween season we take a look at a recent film we hope gets to cult status soon, Green Room (2015). Anton Yelchin and his bandmates are forced to battle against Patrick Stewart and his group of Neo-Nazis. 

We get into the pros and cons of non-political punk bands, why the Pacific Northwest is such a haven for white ethnonationalists and when it's okay to swap out character arcs for a pure survival narrative. 

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Resource Frontiers: Commodity Zones and the Vampiric Nature of Capitalism

Season 14 · Episode 6

vendredi 29 septembre 2023Duration 01:35:28

One of the topics that first inspired us to start this podcast, Resource Frontiers. Back in 2016, when Hell or High Water was released, Isaac and I were still working at our beloved art house theatre and our discussion of the film kept coming back to its multi-layered resource frontier setting. Settler colonial zones and the effects on indigenous populations were regular topics of conversations and, of course, Wages of Fear (1953) kept coming up too.

Since it took us so long to finally cover this topic, we have a newer film in the mix. Neptune Frost (2021) rounds out our coverage on this episode. Between these three films we've got a stone cold French classic, a neo-western heist film and a sci-fi Afrofuturism visual feast...in other words, an Isaac triple feature special. 

Here is the paper by Jason W. Moore that Isaac referenced.

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Double Feature: Strike!

Season 14 · Episode 5

vendredi 8 septembre 2023Duration 01:19:51

On this Double Feature episode, we take a look at films about strikes. As the WGA and SAG continue to strike, we thought it would be a good time to examine how Hollywood has protrayed strikes throughout the years.

We discuss; Norma Rae (1979), The Pajama Game (1957), Sorry to Bother You (2018), Harlan County, USA (1976), The Organizer (1963) and Chi-Raq (2015) and then put together a double feature (actually two) recommendation. 

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Rebroadcast - Children of Men: The Psychology of the Long Take, Maoist Urban Guerrillas Getting Lost in the Struggle and the Power of Radical Hope

Season 14 · Episode 5

vendredi 4 août 2023Duration 01:13:45

While Isaac is immersed in his Arabic language summer camp, we're rebraodcasting our very first episode. 

In 2027, after 18 years of global human infertility and depression, the world is on the brink of collapse and humanity faces extinction. The United Kingdom, one of the few nations with a functioning government (Stiff upper lip chap!), is deluged by asylum seekers fleeing radiation and plague. In response, the UK has become a police state as the British Army rounds up and executes immigrants.

In 2006, Alfonso Cuarón gave the world the film Children of Men.  A brilliant adaptation of P.D. James less than brilliant novel of the same name.  

In this episode we get into the psychology of the long take, Maoist Urban Guerrillas, Nationalism, Xenophobia, graffiti as political world building, the role of children in society, power dynamics within activist organizations and Neoliberal verses Fascist governments.  Children of Men has it all!

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July 4th Special: How to Blow Up a Pipeline (2022)

Season 14 · Episode 4

mardi 4 juillet 2023Duration 52:28

This July 4th, celebrate with a true Leftist film that will have you on the edge of you seat with suspense, a pulsing score and politics that will have you debating the need for a diversity of tactics when fighitng the evils of capitalism. We're discussing the film Daniel Goldhaber's How to Blow Up a Pipeline (2022).

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