Seventh Row Podcast – Details, episodes & analysis
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Seventh Row Podcast
Seventh Row
Frequency: 1 episode/16d. Total Eps: 152

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See all- https://seventh-row.com/
95 shares
- http://seventh-row.com/join
39 shares
- https://twitter.com/seventhrow
92 shares
- http://twitter.com/bwestcineaste
26 shares
- http://twitter.com/SeventhRow
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See allScore global : 63%
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TIFF 24 #2: Palestinian films: No Other Land, To a Land Unknown, Happy Holidays, and From Ground Zero
Season 4 · Episode 2
vendredi 6 septembre 2024 • Duration 18:55
In this episode of the TIFF 2024 season, Alex discusses the four Palestinian films at this year's festival.
These films are:
- No Other Land (Yuval Abraham, Basel Adra, Hamdan Ballal, Rachel Szor) - Norway/Palestine
- To a Land Unknown (Mehdi Fleifel) - Germany, France, United Kingdom, Greece, Netherlands, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia
- Happy Holidays (Scandar Copti) - Germany, France, Italy, Palestine, Qatar
- From Ground Zero (22 directors), France, Jordan, Palestine, Qatar
About the TIFF 2024 season:
In the TIFF 2024 season, Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney will discuss some of the best under-the-radar gems at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival through themed episodes.
This is for you if:
- You're attending TIFF and look for recommendations;
- You're looking ahead to your local film festival for must-see titles; and/or
- You're interested in how filmmakers from around the world are exploring similar topics/genres, even if you're not sure if you'll ever see the films.
The season will be spoiler-free and designed to be listened to even if you haven't seen the films (or are worried you won't ever be able to).
Check out all of our TIFF 2024 coverage here: https://seventh-row.com/tiff24
----
Interested in attending a film festival?
Get my five essential tips for the film adventurer seeking a fantastic festival experience.
These tips are tailored to TIFF but will work for any other film festival.
Sign up here: http://email.seventh-row.com/tiff24
TIFF24 1: Why this season is for you, even if you aren't attending the festival
Season 4 · Episode 1
mercredi 4 septembre 2024 • Duration 11:14
The 2024 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) kicks off on Thursday, September 5, and Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney will cover it with a series of podcast episodes.
In this episode, Alex introduces the podcast season and explains why this season is for you and whether or not you're attending TIFF this year.
I'll explain what to expect from this podcast season and why TIFF and our coverage are relevant to you if you're interested in exploring world cinema.
About the TIFF 2024 season:
In the TIFF 2024 season, Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney will discuss some of the best under-the-radar gems at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival through themed episodes.
This is for you if:
- You're attending TIFF and look for recommendations;
- You're looking ahead to your local film festival for must-see titles; and/or
- You're interested in how filmmakers from around the world are exploring similar topics/genres, even if you're not sure if you'll ever see the films.
The season will be spoiler-free and designed to be listened to even if you haven't seen the films (or are worried you won't ever be able to).
Click here for a link to all of our TIFF 2024 coverage.
----
Interested in attending a film festival?
Get my five essential tips for the film adventurer seeking a fantastic festival experience.
These tips are tailored to TIFF but will work for any other film festival.
Promising Young Woman + The Assistant: Rape culture on film in 2020 (Redux)
Episode 135
mercredi 22 novembre 2023 • Duration 01:44:52
Emerald Fennell's new film, Saltburn, comes out today, so we're re-releasing our 2021 episode about two very different depictions of rape culture from 2020: Fennell's revenge thriller Promising Young Woman and Kitty Green's The Assistant, a portrait of a young woman working in a misogynistic office environment. This is a landmark episode of the podcast, which kickstarted a series of episodes on rape culture on film.
This episode features Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney, Executive Editor Orla Smith, and special guest Lindsay Pugh.
Want to support the podcast? Become a member today, and access our entire archive of 150+ episodes. It helps us pay our expenses to keep the podcast going and continue to improve the podcast.
For detailed show notes, visit: https://seventh-row.com/2021/01/06/ep-73-explorations-of-rape-culture-in-promising-young-woman-and-the-assistant/
Follow Seventh Row on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook, and read our articles at seventh-row.com.
Related episodes:
- Ep. 86 (Members Only): Una & Slalom: Depictions of childhood sexual assault
- Ep. 92 (Members Only): Sugar Daddy and An Easy Girl: Commidfying women
- Ep. 132 (Free): Sarah Polley's Women Talking
Coming Soon: Abortion on Film Season
In this six-episode season, we discuss how socially progressive depictions of abortion on film have changed and developed since the 1950s. We’re putting the finishing touches on the season now, and hoping to have it out in about a month’s time.
Members get early access to the Abortion on Film season! Once the season starts, we’ll be releasing new episodes every two weeks, but members will get the first three episodes immediately, and early access to the remaining episodes. Become a member.
Creative Nonfiction #5: Penny Lane on Confessions of a Good Samaritan and making a self-portrait
Season 3 · Episode 5
mercredi 12 juillet 2023 • Duration 01:01:00
In the fifth and final episode of our Creative Nonfiction Film podcast season, Alex Heeney talks to Penny Lane about her experimentations with documentary form in Confessions of a Good Samaritan. The film is a trip inside Penny’s brain as she goes through the stressful process of anonymously donating her kidney and investigates why kidney donations are necessary. Lane weaves almost all of the techniques from her previous films (and a few more!) into Confessions of a Good Samaritan, offering a thoughtful, educational, and funny look at the complicated feelings that come with doing good in the world at some personal expense.
Click here to read the episode show notes.
You will also find an AI-generated transcript in the show notes.
Useful links- Visit the Creative Nonfiction Podcast homepage
- Discover all of our resources on the films of Joachim Trier
- Pre-order Existential detours: Joachim Trier's cinema of indecisions and revisions
Download a FREE excerpt from Subjective Realities here.
Get your copy of the ebook Subjective Realities: The art of creative nonfiction film here.
Get your copy of the ebook In their own words: Documentary Masters vol. 1
Listen to the podcast on the ebook Subjective realities: The art of creative nonfiction film
Become a MemberMembers receive early access to all new episodes of our season.
Members can also access the entire podcast archive of 150+ episodes. Our recent episodes from our seasons and regular episodes from the last six months are free to all for a limited time.
To get full access to the podcast, including episodes from past Sundance Film Festivals and past Sundance films, become a member.
As a member, you will also be supporting what we do, and helping us cover the (expensive) costs of hosting, running a website, podcast equipment, and more. This helps to ensure we can continue producing the podcast.
Related EpisodesMembers Only Episodes
- Ep. 12: Penny Lane on Hail Satan? (Members' Exclusive): Penny Lane discusses her 2019 film Hail Satan
- Ep. 40: Dead Mothers (Members' Exclusive): We discuss Joachim Trier's Louder Than Bombs, a film that expertly gets inside the head of its thoughtful characters. We also compare it to Mouthpiece and Stories We Tell.
- Ep. 122: Joachim Trier's The Worst Person in the World (Free): Joachim Trier's breakout hit is also a film that is very good at getting us inside the protagonist's mind amidst an existential crisis.
Free Episodes
- Ep. 105: Subjective Realities: The art of creative nonfiction film: We discuss the making of the ebook Subjective Realities and what you can expect from the book
- Ep. 99: Creative Nonfiction with Penny Lane and Carol Nguyen
- Ep. 123: Sundance 2022: Creative Nonfiction
Host Alex Heeney is the Editor-in-Chief of Seventh Row. Find her on Twitter @bwestcineaste.
Email us at contact seventh row com.
This episode was edited, produced, and recorded by Alex Heeney.
Creative Nonfiction #4: Sam Green on 32 Sounds and live documentary
Season 3 · Episode 4
jeudi 15 juin 2023 • Duration 01:21:02
In the fourth episode of our Creative Nonfiction Film podcast season,
Alex Heeney talks to Sam Green about 32 Sounds and his work exploring the possibilities of his work that he describes as "live documentaries". These are part locked footage, part live performance, usually including a live band on stage performing the film's music.
On this episode, we give some background on Sam Green's work in live documentary, talk about how A Thousand Thoughts (2018), co-directed with Joe Bini, felt like a turning point for his work in the form, and discuss what makes 32 Sounds such a wonderful and innovative film. Finally, Alex talks to Sam Green about making 32 Sounds, and more broadly about how he thinks about live documentary and why this is a space he likes working in.
The episode features a conversation between Alex Heeney and Orla Smith about 32 Sounds and live documentary, recorded in January 2022 right after the world premiere of 32 Sounds. The interview with Sam Green was conducted via Zoom in January 2022 the day after 32 Sounds had its world (virtual) premiere at Sundance. This is an edited version of the complete conversation; the complete conversation is available on our website here.
Click here to read the episode show notes.
You will also find an AI-generated transcript in the show notes.
Useful links- Read Alex Heeney's full interview with Sam Green on 32 Sounds
- Find screenings of Sam Green's live documentaries
- Find screenings of 32 Sounds
- Read Sam Green's introduction to live documentary and Utopia in Four Movements
Download a FREE excerpt from Subjective Realities here.
Get your copy of the ebook Subjective Realities: The art of creative nonfiction film here.
Get your copy of the ebook In their own words: Documentary Masters vol. 1
Listen to the podcast on the ebook Subjective realities: The art of creative nonfiction film
Become a MemberAll of our episodes that are over 6 months old are available to members only.
We also regularly record members only episodes.
To get full access to the podcast, including episodes from past Sundance Film Festivals and past Sundance films, become a member.
As a member, you will also be supporting what we do, and helping us cover the (expensive) costs of hosting, running a website, podcast equipment, and more. This helps to ensure we can continue producing the podcast.
Related EpisodesMembers Only Episodes
- Ep. 67: Frederick Wiseman’s Ex Libris and City Hall
- Ep. 95: No Ordinary Man and John Ware Reclaimed: Reclaiming history in documentary (Members only)
Free Episodes
- Ep. 99: Creative Nonfiction with Penny Lane and Carol Nguyen
- Ep. 123: Sundance 2022: Creative Nonfiction
Host Alex Heeney is the Editor-in-Chief of Seventh Row. Find her on Twitter @bwestcineaste.
Email us at contact seventh row com.
This episode was edited, produced, and recorded by Alex Heeney.
Creative Nonfiction #3: Philippe Falardeau on Lac-Mégantic: This Is Not An Accident and rethinking the true crime doc
Season 3 · Episode 3
mercredi 7 juin 2023 • Duration 01:00:03
In the third episode of our Creative Nonfiction Film podcast season, Philippe Falardeau discusses Lac-Mégantic: This is Not An Accident is a four-part documentary series about the catastrophic 2013 trainwreck in Lac-Mégantic, its inevitability, the aftermath, and the government failure to change safety requirements to avoid another "accident" in future. Lac-Mégantic had its world premiere at the HotDocs Film Festival where all four episodes were screened back-to-back.
The Lac-Mégantic rail disaster was the fourth-deadliest rail accident in Canadian history (47 people died) and the deadliest involving a non-passenger train. The documentary Lac-Mégantic not only chronicles the disaster and its devastating effects on the town Lac-Mégantic, but also how blame was handled and how similar disasters continue to happen.
The series reclaims the history of the Lac-Mégantic rail disaster by showing how systemic problems lead to a disaster that has been blamed on individuals. The series also reveals how appropriate safety measures have not been taken in the intervening years to prevent a similar disaster from happening (and other, smaller disasters have indeed continued to happen).
At the beginning of the episode, Alex Heeney introduces the series Lac-Mégantic, and why she thinks it's worthy of discussion. Next, we play your Alex's interview with Falardeau about the film. Finally, we wrap up with how the film fits into the framework for creative nonfiction that we at Seventh Row created in our ebook Subjective realities, and offer some suggestions for what to watch and listen to next.
Click here to read the episode show notes.
You will also find an AI-generated transcript in the show notes.
Useful links- Watch our masterclass with Philippe Falardeau and Mina Shum
- Read our interview with Philippe Falardeau on My Internship in Canada
Download a FREE excerpt from Subjective Realities here.
Get your copy of the ebook Subjective Realities: The art of creative nonfiction film here.
Get your copy of the ebook In their own words: Documentary Masters vol. 1
Become a MemberAll of our episodes that are over 6 months old are available to members only.
We also regularly record members only episodes.
To get full access to the podcast, including episodes from past Sundance Film Festivals and past Sundance films, become a member.
As a member, you will also be supporting what we do, and helping us cover the (expensive) costs of hosting, running a website, podcast equipment, and more. This helps to ensure we can continue producing the podcast.
Related EpisodesMembers Only Episodes
- Bonus Episode 25: This is Going to Hurt and physician mental health
- Ep. 41: In the Loop and My Internship in Canada: Political satires
- Ep. 67: Frederick Wiseman’s Ex Libris and City Hall
- Ep. 95: No Ordinary Man and John Ware Reclaimed: Reclaiming history in documentary (Members only)
Free Episodes
- Ep. 99: Creative Nonfiction with Penny Lane and Carol Nguyen
- Ep. 123: Sundance 2022: Creative Nonfiction
Host Alex Heeney is the Editor-in-Chief of Seventh Row. Find her on Twitter @bwestcineaste.
Email us at contact seventh row com.
This episode was edited, produced, and recorded by Alex Heeney.
Creative Nonfiction #2: Sophie Fiennes on Four Quartets and documenting live theatre
Season 3 · Episode 2
mercredi 31 mai 2023 • Duration 01:24:30
In the second episode of our Creative Nonfiction Film podcast season, Sophie Fiennes discusses The Four Quartets and how she approaches documenting live performance on screen. In The Four Quartets, she captures the stage play of the same name, directed by and starring her brother, actor Ralph Fiennes. For the production, Ralph Fiennes adapted the T.S. Eliot poem for the stage — which was never originally intended to be performed that way — and then toured this production around the UK in 2021.
Sophie Fiennes’s film of The Four Quartets is neither live capture nor a full adaptation of the play. Instead, Fiennes remarkably documents the theatre production on screen, maintaining all the original lighting and blocking. Her choices of framing and camera movement really puts us in the black box theatre with Ralph Fiennes. Unlike most recorded theatre, where there is a constant sense of information loss, Sophie Fiennes gives us a sense of the theatrical space so we get a better sense of what we’re missing when we’re missing it. It’s built into Sophie Fiennes’s direction.
Sophie Fiennes discusses Ralph Fiennes’s production, the challenges of documenting the play on screen, and how working with Declan Donnellan of Cheek by Jowl just before she shot The Four Quartets changed how she thinks about acting and theatre.
Click here to read the episode show notes.
The show notes also include excerpts from Sophie Fiennes's director's script.
You will also find an AI-generated transcript in the show notes.
Useful links- Read T.S. Eliot’s The Four Quartets
- Listen to Cheek by Jowl’s Not True But Useful podcast episode on thresholds and space
- Read our interview with Sophie Fiennes on Grace Jones: Bloodlight and Bami
Download a FREE excerpt from Subjective Realities here.
Get your copy of the ebook Subjective Realities: The art of creative nonfiction film here.
Get your copy of the ebook In their own words: Documentary Masters vol. 1
Become a MemberAll of our episodes that are over 6 months old are available to members only.
We also regularly record members only episodes.
To get full access to the podcast, including episodes from past Sundance Film Festivals and past Sundance films, become a member.
As a member, you will also be supporting what we do, and helping us cover the (expensive) costs of hosting, running a website, podcast equipment, and more. This helps to ensure we can continue producing the podcast.
Related Episodes on creative nonfiction- Ep. 99: Creative Nonfiction with Penny Lane and Carol Nguyen
- Sundance 2023 Ep. 7: Best of the fest + documentaries Fantastic Machine, Is There Anybody Out There, and more
- Ep. 123: Sundance 2022: Creative Nonfiction
Members Only Episodes
- Ep. 67: Frederick Wiseman’s Ex Libris and City Hall (Members only)
- Ep. 95: No Ordinary Man and John Ware Reclaimed: Reclaiming history in documentary (Members only)
Host Alex Heeney is the Editor-in-Chief of Seventh Row. Find her on Twitter @bwestcineaste.
Email us at contact seventh row com.
This episode was edited, produced, and recorded by Alex Heeney.
Creative Nonfiction #1: An introduction
Season 3 · Episode 1
lundi 29 mai 2023 • Duration 22:13
In the first episode of our Creative Nonfiction Film podcast season, Alex Heeney previews what to expect in this five-episode season and discusses what is creative nonfiction film.
Click here to read the episode show notes.
You will also find an AI-generated transcript in the show notes.
Get the tote bag with the Céline Sciamma quote "Cinema is the only art form ever where you share somebody else's lonelines"
More on creative nonfictionDownload a FREE excerpt from Subjective Realities here.
Get your copy of the ebook Subjective Realities: The art of creative nonfiction film here.
Get your copy of the ebook In their own words: Documentary Masters vol. 1
Become a MemberAll of our episodes that are over 6 months old are available to members only.
We also regularly record members only episodes.
To get full access to the podcast, including episodes from past Sundance Film Festivals and past Sundance films, become a member.
As a member, you will also be supporting what we do, and helping us cover the (expensive) costs of hosting, running a website, podcast equipment, and more. This helps to ensure we can continue producing the podcast.
Related Episodes on creative nonfiction- Ep. 99: Creative Nonfiction with Penny Lane and Carol Nguyen
- Sundance 2023 Ep. 7: Best of the fest + documentaries Fantastic Machine, Is There Anybody Out There, and more
- Ep. 123: Sundance 2022: Creative Nonfiction
Members Only Episodes
- Ep. 67: Frederick Wiseman’s Ex Libris and City Hall (Members only)
- Ep. 95: No Ordinary Man and John Ware Reclaimed: Reclaiming history in documentary (Members only)
Host Alex Heeney is the Editor-in-Chief of Seventh Row. Find her on Twitter @bwestcineaste.
Email us at contact seventh row com.
This episode was edited, produced, and recorded by Alex Heeney.
134: Justine Triet's Women on the Verge: In Bed With Victoria and Sibyl
Episode 134
samedi 27 mai 2023 • Duration 01:42:52
In honour of Justine Triet's historic Palme d'Or win, we are republishing our in-depth discussion of her two most recent films for free.
This episode was originally released on September 8, 2020 as episode 56.
This week on the podcast we look at two of Justine Triet's feature films, In Bed With Victoria (2016) and Sibyl (2019). Both films are non-judgemental character studies of career women in their thirties who are falling apart in various ways. We discuss how Triet's blending of multiple genres emphasizes the multiple facets of a character's life, and more.
In Bed With Victoria (2016) had its world premiere in the Critics' Week section at Cannes. Sibyl (2019) had its world premiere in the Official Competition at the Cannes Film Festival. Justine Triet is now the third woman director to receive the Palme d'Or, and the second woman director to not share the prize with a man.
This episode features Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney, Executive Editor Orla Smith, Editor at Large Mary Angela Rowe, and special guest Lindsay Pugh.
For detailed show notes, visit: https://seventh-row.com/2020/09/08/ep-56-justine-triets-women-on-the-verge-in-bed-with-victoria-and-sibyl/
Follow Seventh Row on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook, and read our articles at seventh-row.com.
133: Berlinale 2023: Here, Delegation, The Teachers' Lounge, Le Paradis, and more
Episode 133
mercredi 1 mars 2023 • Duration 42:06
On this episode, Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney talks about several highlights of the 2023 Berlinale from the festival's sidebars.
- 0:00 Intro to the Berlinale & the episode
- 4:12 Here (Belgium, dir. Bas Devos)
- 12:20 The Teacher’s Lounge (Germany, dir. İlker Çatak)
- 16:59 The Quiet Migration / Stille Liv (Denmark, dir. Malene Choi)
- 23:17 Intro to the Generation sidebar
- 25:30 Delegation (Israel/Poland/Germany, dir. Asaf Savan)
- 30:15 Le Paradis / The Lost Boys (Belgium/France, dir. Zeno Gratan)
- 37:20 Wrap up
First, Alex discusses the best film of the festival she saw, Here (dir. Bas Devos), which screened in the Encounters section where it won the top prize. Next, Alex discusses two films from the Panorama sidebar (the not quite prestigious enough for competition sidebar): award winner The Teachers' Lounge and the low key Danish film The Quiet Migration. Finally, Alex discusses two films from the Generation sidebar, a sidebar of Young Adult films for Young Adults: Delegation and Le Paradis. Finally,
Become a MemberAll of our episodes that are over 6 months old are available to members only.
We also regularly record members only episodes.
To get full access to the podcast, including episodes from past Sundance Film Festivals and past Sundance films, become a member.
As a member, you will also be supporting what we do, and helping us cover the (expensive) costs of hosting, running a website, podcast equipment, and more. This helps to ensure we can continue producing the podcast.
Show Notes- Read our interview with the director and star of Ninjababy, a Berlinale 2021 Generation program highlight
- Listen to our podcast on Ninjababy
- Read our interview with the director of Brother's Keeper, a Berlinale 2021 Panorama film which, like The Teachers' Lounge, is also about systemic injustices in the educational system.
- Read our review of Magnus von Horn's The Here After, which would make a great double feature with the 2023 film Le Paradis (The Lost Boys).
- Listen to our podcast on My Small Land, which screened in the Generation sidebar at Berlinale 2022. Like this year's The Quiet Migration, My Small Land also tackled the story of a young immigrant in a country where they grew up not looking like the majority of the population.
- Read and listen to all of our Berlinale coverage from this year and past years.
- Ep. 83: Berlinale 2021 Part 1: The sidebars
- Ep. 84: Berlinale 2021 Part 2: The Competition
- Ep. 125: Berlinale 2022
- Ep. 101 Magnus von Horn’s films: The Here After and Sweat
Click here to become a member, and access our entire podcast archive, as well as new Members Only episodes.
When you purchase your membership, you wil be given a personal podcast feed link, which you can then open in your favourite podcatcher. After that, the Premium Seventh Row Podcast (MEMBERS ONLY), will update in your podcatcher with new episodes just like every free podcast you listen to.
All of our podcasts that are more than six months old are only available to members. We also regularly release members only bonus episodes. Many of the episodes listed here are now only available to members (Members Only).
Speakers on the episodeThis episode features Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney
You can find Alex on Twitter @bwestcineaste, Instagram @bwestcineaste, and Letterboxd @bwestcineaste.