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Content provided by Telegraph Road Productions, Genevieve Koski, Keith Phipps, Tasha Robinson, and Scott Tobias. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Telegraph Road Productions, Genevieve Koski, Keith Phipps, Tasha Robinson, and Scott Tobias or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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#499: Impaired Visions, Pt. 2 — Radu Jude's Dracula

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Manage episode 518834279 series 1000183
Content provided by Telegraph Road Productions, Genevieve Koski, Keith Phipps, Tasha Robinson, and Scott Tobias. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Telegraph Road Productions, Genevieve Koski, Keith Phipps, Tasha Robinson, and Scott Tobias or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

From its nearly three-hour runtime to its deployment of some of the most deranged CGI you’ve ever seen committed to screen, Radu Jude’s DRACULA often feels like an extended act of trolling, but is it art? The answer to that question is inextricable from the film’s presentation of AI-derived art as grotesque, inhuman, and unsatisfying, and it makes DRACULA arguably more entertaining to discuss than it is to watch. So after attempting to pull some meaning out of what the critic in 8 1/2 might describe as DRACULA’s “series of gratuitous episodes,” we move into Connections for a study in contrasts between Fellini’s portrait of an artist struggling to make a personal work, and Jude’s evisceration of a charlatan trying to outsource artistry to a machine. Then in Your Next Picture Show, we discuss another film we considered as a DRACULA pairing that may not be quite as celebrated as 8 1/2, but we nonetheless recommend as another depiction of a filmmaker in creative crisis: Christopher Guest’s debut feature, THE BIG PICTURE.

Please share your thoughts about 8 1/2, DRACULA, or anything else in the world of film, by sending an email or voice memo to [email protected], or leaving a short voicemail at (773) 234-9730.

Next episode: A celebration of Peter Bogdanovich’s THE LAST PICTURE SHOW, and 500 episodes of a niche film podcast named after it.

Intro: 00:00:00-00:01:57

Dracula discussion: 00:01:57 - 00:27:20

Dracula/8 1/2 Connections: 00:27:20 - 00: 48:11

Your Next Picture Show and goodbyes: 00:48:11-end

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  continue reading

508 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 518834279 series 1000183
Content provided by Telegraph Road Productions, Genevieve Koski, Keith Phipps, Tasha Robinson, and Scott Tobias. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Telegraph Road Productions, Genevieve Koski, Keith Phipps, Tasha Robinson, and Scott Tobias or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

From its nearly three-hour runtime to its deployment of some of the most deranged CGI you’ve ever seen committed to screen, Radu Jude’s DRACULA often feels like an extended act of trolling, but is it art? The answer to that question is inextricable from the film’s presentation of AI-derived art as grotesque, inhuman, and unsatisfying, and it makes DRACULA arguably more entertaining to discuss than it is to watch. So after attempting to pull some meaning out of what the critic in 8 1/2 might describe as DRACULA’s “series of gratuitous episodes,” we move into Connections for a study in contrasts between Fellini’s portrait of an artist struggling to make a personal work, and Jude’s evisceration of a charlatan trying to outsource artistry to a machine. Then in Your Next Picture Show, we discuss another film we considered as a DRACULA pairing that may not be quite as celebrated as 8 1/2, but we nonetheless recommend as another depiction of a filmmaker in creative crisis: Christopher Guest’s debut feature, THE BIG PICTURE.

Please share your thoughts about 8 1/2, DRACULA, or anything else in the world of film, by sending an email or voice memo to [email protected], or leaving a short voicemail at (773) 234-9730.

Next episode: A celebration of Peter Bogdanovich’s THE LAST PICTURE SHOW, and 500 episodes of a niche film podcast named after it.

Intro: 00:00:00-00:01:57

Dracula discussion: 00:01:57 - 00:27:20

Dracula/8 1/2 Connections: 00:27:20 - 00: 48:11

Your Next Picture Show and goodbyes: 00:48:11-end

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  continue reading

508 episodes

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