The Cinephiliacs
A podcast by Peter Labuza - Tuesdays
Categories:
178 Episodes
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The Cinephiliacs - SF Silent Film Festival 2022
Published: 23/05/2022 -
Framing Media #8 - Jennifer Peterson on Goverment Sponsored Environmental Awareness Films
Published: 19/01/2021 -
Framing Media #7 - Anne Kaun on Prison Media Work
Published: 15/12/2020 -
Framing Media #6 - Christina Lane on Producer Joan Harrison, The Mistress of Suspense
Published: 01/12/2020 -
Framing Media #5 - Chris Yogerst on the 1941 Senate Investigations into Pro-War Hollywood
Published: 03/11/2020 -
Framing Media #4 - Hayley O'Malley on Kathleen Collins
Published: 20/10/2020 -
Framing Media #3 - Eleni Palis on Rethinking Film Quotations Through Race
Published: 06/10/2020 -
Framing Media #2 - Katie Bird on the Art and Labor of Steadicam Operators
Published: 15/09/2020 -
Framing Media #1 - JD Schnepf on Drone Humanitarianism
Published: 01/09/2020 -
TC #124 - Brian L. Frye (The Hart of London)
Published: 01/07/2020 -
TC - Live Sports! A Chat on Recent Non-Fiction
Published: 28/05/2020 -
TC #123 - James Leo Cahill (Pom Poko)
Published: 30/04/2020 -
TC #122 - Marie-Louise Khondji (Birth)
Published: 03/04/2020 -
TC #121 - Jon Dieringer (Made in Hollywood)
Published: 19/03/2020 -
TC #120 - Alison Kozberg (Nowhere)
Published: 15/01/2020 -
TC #119 - Racquel Gates (White Chicks)
Published: 18/10/2019 -
TC #118 - Daniel Steinhart (Bunny Lake Is Missing)
Published: 17/09/2019 -
TC #117 - Justin Chang (Flowers of Shanghai)
Published: 01/08/2019 -
TC #116 - Elena Gorfinkel (The Color of Love)
Published: 15/07/2019 -
TC #115 - Joshua Gleich (Days of Wine and Roses)
Published: 14/06/2019
The Cinephiliacs is a podcast exploring the past and future of cinephelia. Film critic Peter Labuza has interviewed critics, programmers, academics, filmmakers, and more about their relationship to film and film culture. Additionally, each guest will bring in a particular favorite film and discuss it with Labuza. Indiewire declares, "If you want to hear film critics talk at length about their craft, there are few better places on the Internet" and Keyframe Daily has called it "Exhibit A" for the future of film culture