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Content provided by Ranting Media, Geoff Stevens, David Feldman, and Jim Keel. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ranting Media, Geoff Stevens, David Feldman, and Jim Keel 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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Deep Cuts: The Horrors of Love in Takashi Miike’s Audition (1999)

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Manage episode 498754202 series 1931108
Content provided by Ranting Media, Geoff Stevens, David Feldman, and Jim Keel. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ranting Media, Geoff Stevens, David Feldman, and Jim Keel 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.

Welcome to Critics Club: Deep Cuts — a new series where we take a more focused dive into a single film. This time, it’s the haunting, unforgettable Japanese horror classic: Audition (1999), directed by Takashi Miike.

What happens when a grieving widower looks for love... through a fake movie audition? Jim and Geoff walk through the film’s surreal structure, disturbing tonal shift, and ambiguous ending. They tackle questions about trauma, manipulation, and whether the film's most horrifying moments were hallucinations, metaphor, or something even more sinister.

Along the way, they share:

Personal horror stories of poblano pepper accidents

Root canal commentary

Japanese cultural context and misogyny critiques

Film comparisons to Promising Young Woman, I Spit on Your Grave, The Ring, and Evil Dead II

Key Timestamps:

[00:04:59] – Introducing “Critics Club: Deep Cuts”

[00:05:55] – Why Jim thought they were watching Battle Royale

[00:06:05] – A primer on Takashi Miike’s filmography

[00:08:02] – Early 2000s J-horror boom context

[00:12:01] – The ethics of a fake audition plot

[00:21:08] – Asami's trauma and the film’s layered horror

[00:30:00] – The infamous sack scene

[00:35:11] – Paralysis, needles, and piano wire terror

[00:40:01] – Dream vs reality: dissecting the ending

[00:50:48] – Surprise! It was marketed as a romance in Japan

🔗 Links:

Read reviews and listen to more episodes at RantingMedia.com

Follow us on Bluesky: RantingMedia.bsky.social

💬 Whether you’re a longtime horror fan or cautiously curious, this conversation is a must-listen for anyone interested in films that challenge your expectations and leave your stomach in knots.

Friends come and meet once a month at the Critics Club to discuss their favorite movies, tv shows, video games and much more. Some are more right than others, but that’s half the fun. Join Jim, David and Geoff as they duke it out over their latest opinions.

Tune in to our podcasts and read our lovely reviews at https://www.rantingmedia.com/

  continue reading

178 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 498754202 series 1931108
Content provided by Ranting Media, Geoff Stevens, David Feldman, and Jim Keel. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ranting Media, Geoff Stevens, David Feldman, and Jim Keel 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.

Welcome to Critics Club: Deep Cuts — a new series where we take a more focused dive into a single film. This time, it’s the haunting, unforgettable Japanese horror classic: Audition (1999), directed by Takashi Miike.

What happens when a grieving widower looks for love... through a fake movie audition? Jim and Geoff walk through the film’s surreal structure, disturbing tonal shift, and ambiguous ending. They tackle questions about trauma, manipulation, and whether the film's most horrifying moments were hallucinations, metaphor, or something even more sinister.

Along the way, they share:

Personal horror stories of poblano pepper accidents

Root canal commentary

Japanese cultural context and misogyny critiques

Film comparisons to Promising Young Woman, I Spit on Your Grave, The Ring, and Evil Dead II

Key Timestamps:

[00:04:59] – Introducing “Critics Club: Deep Cuts”

[00:05:55] – Why Jim thought they were watching Battle Royale

[00:06:05] – A primer on Takashi Miike’s filmography

[00:08:02] – Early 2000s J-horror boom context

[00:12:01] – The ethics of a fake audition plot

[00:21:08] – Asami's trauma and the film’s layered horror

[00:30:00] – The infamous sack scene

[00:35:11] – Paralysis, needles, and piano wire terror

[00:40:01] – Dream vs reality: dissecting the ending

[00:50:48] – Surprise! It was marketed as a romance in Japan

🔗 Links:

Read reviews and listen to more episodes at RantingMedia.com

Follow us on Bluesky: RantingMedia.bsky.social

💬 Whether you’re a longtime horror fan or cautiously curious, this conversation is a must-listen for anyone interested in films that challenge your expectations and leave your stomach in knots.

Friends come and meet once a month at the Critics Club to discuss their favorite movies, tv shows, video games and much more. Some are more right than others, but that’s half the fun. Join Jim, David and Geoff as they duke it out over their latest opinions.

Tune in to our podcasts and read our lovely reviews at https://www.rantingmedia.com/

  continue reading

178 episodes

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