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Cinemallennials
Dave Lewis
36 episodes
1 week ago
Hosted by Dave Lewis, Cinemallennials is a podcast where he and another millennial watch a classic film that they haven’t seen before ranging from the early 1900s to the late 1960s and discuss its significance and relevance in our world today.
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TV & Film
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All content for Cinemallennials is the property of Dave Lewis and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Hosted by Dave Lewis, Cinemallennials is a podcast where he and another millennial watch a classic film that they haven’t seen before ranging from the early 1900s to the late 1960s and discuss its significance and relevance in our world today.
Show more...
TV & Film
Episodes (20/36)
Cinemallennials
A Night to Remember (1958)

On this episode of Cinemallennials,  I talked with Harry Marks, writer for Cabinet of Curiosities  and host of Let’s All Go to The Lobby on Tiktok about 1958’s A Night to Remember, hailed by many as the most accurate depiction of the tragic sinking of the Titanic on the silver screen.

 

While not the most well-known film in the United States, A Night to Remember has left an indelible mark on not only audience members, but generations of directors, and the disaster genre as a whole.

 

A Night to Remember follows the story of the sinking of the Titanic, from its beginning to its terrible end, from its lower class passengers trying to make a new life for themselves to its stiff upper lip of the upper echelon.. So sit back try to relax, and most importantly, look out for icebergs


Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. 


Website:

https://cinemallennials.com/ 


Social Media:


Instagram: @cinemallennials

Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/

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1 year ago
41 minutes 20 seconds

Cinemallennials
March of the Wooden Soldiers (1934)

Hello my name is David Lewis and I am the host of Cinemallennials, a podcast where myself and another millennial watch a classic film ranging from the 1890s to 1969 and discuss its significance and relevance in our world today.


On this episode of Cinemallennials,  I talked with educator and Tiktoker, Tristan Ettleman, about one of my favorite films of all time, Laurel and Hardy’s 1934 Christmas classic Babes in Toyland, also known as March of the Wooden Soldiers.


Babes In Toyland does not only have personal significance for me as I go on to tell the story in this episode but is significant in his place as a historic children’s film but as well as a holiday film as thousands of people every Thanksgiving and Christmas in America tune into this wonderful, whimsical, triumphant and yet frighteningly realistic classic .

 

Starring the original comedy duo, Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, Babes in Toyland follows the story Stannie Dee and Ollie Dum, two craftsmen who promise Old Mother Hubbard to pay off her mortgage as her evil landlord Silas Barnaby threatens to put her family out and to marry her daughter Bo Peep against her will.

When the boys can’t cover the mortgage after mistakenly making 100 soldiers at 6 foot high instead of making 600 soliders at one foot high for Santa Claus they have to turn to hysterical ways to help Old Mother Hubbard and Bo Peep. Once doing so, Barnaby swears his revenge by recruiting monsters called the Boogeymen to take over Toyland but the 100 soldiers the Boys made might have something to say about that!  

So sit back , relax and enjoy the movie while you want for Santy to deliver your presents.


Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. 


Website:

https://dlewmoviereview.com/ 


Social Media:


Instagram: @cinemallennials

Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/

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1 year ago
58 minutes 29 seconds

Cinemallennials
The Caine Mutiny (1954)

On this episode of Cinemallennials I spoke with author James Krouse his book, A Bird in the Deep: The True Story of the USS Partridge.” And how it relates to 1956’s The Caine Mutiny starring former Navyman himself, Humphrey Bogart.


The Caine Mutiny is not like a lot of the films that we have covered on the show before, while it’s a hidden gem for millennials like myself and the younger generations, to James and those of his generation who grew up with the film it’s one of the most influential depictions of military life and court life on screen and one of the most influential films for directors like William Friedkin and Vince Gilligan

 

The Caine Mutiny follows the story of ensign Willie Keith, a bright bushy tailed sailor that is soon thrown into an impossible situation for the American Navy,  a mutiny. Played by the legendary Humphrey Bogart, Keith captain, Queeg causes mayhem accusing the men of hiding keys, trying to cover up his own mistakes and lashing out harsh punishments for minor infractions. Will the captain get his just desserts or is he just a symptom of a larger illness? You’ll have to be the judge of that. So sit back, relax, and try not to fidget too much. 

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1 year ago
50 minutes 56 seconds

Cinemallennials
King Kong (1933)

Hello my name is David Lewis and I am the host of Cinemallennials, a podcast where myself and another millennial watch a classic film ranging from the 1890s to 1969 and discuss its significance and relevance in our world today.


On today’s episode of Cinemallennials, I talked with Matt Duffy from ReelGoldRundown on Instagram and TikTok and we talked about a film that transformed visual effects and the media of animation forever, 1933’s King Kong.


Spielberg, Jackson, Del Toro, and Shigeru Miyamoto all would admit to the fact that their careers would have never reached the heights they have gained if they had never been exposed to the enticing and soul-searching phenomenon, that is King Kong. Whether its revolutionary stop-motion animation, its introduction of the original scream queen, or its ascent to the top of the Empire State Building King Kong is arguably one of the most influential pieces of media of all time


King Kong follows the story of adventurer/filmmaker, Carl Denham who stumbles upon a down on her luck actress Ann Darrow and brings her on the trip and terror of a lifetime. After inappropriately interacting with the indigenous peoples on their destination Ann is kidnapped and then sacrificed to the horrific beast that is Kong.


For the past 90 years King Kong has capturing audience both old and young as it poses so many questions. So, sit back, relax and try to answer the question: Was it truly beauty that killed the beast?


Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. 


Website:

https://dlewmoviereview.com/ 


Social Media:


Instagram: @cinemallennials

Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/

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1 year ago
38 minutes 31 seconds

Cinemallennials
Alexander Nevsky (1938)

Before we get into the show today, this episode was recorded on December 2nd, 2021, 54 days before the Russian invasion of Ukraine. When the invasion occurred Rachael and I made sure that we wanted to make this and the following points clear. We stand with Ukraine and that we made this with the intention of discussing the film’s historical and cultural significance and to contextualize it for our time.

On today’s episode of Cinemallennials I talked to Rachael Crawley, making it 3 out of three K Cut hosts and we talked about Sergei Eisenstein’s medieval epic, Alexander Nevsky. Mostly known for his Soviet supported and majorly influential films like Battleship Potempkin, and October: Ten Days that Shook the World, Sergei Eisenstein is not only considered one of the first film theorists, but is often considered as one of the greatest artists the screen has ever known.

While Nevsky isn’t the first propaganda film, it’s visionary director, paved the way we see historical epics and how they are created. From his use of undercranking the camera, shot composition, and use of powerful score, Eisenstein began a seemingly never ending thread of how moving images can influence an audience into believing that they too can emulate the characters and situations on screen.

Alexander Nevsky follows the story of The Battle on the Ice, a pivotal conflict in Russian history in which Russian Prince Alexander Nevksy, fought The Germanic Teutonic Order fought to save Russian Orthodoxy. After the knights of the Teutonic Order sack the city of Pskov Alexander rallies his the peasantry to form a small army in order to repel the almighty power of the papally backed Teutonic Knights. Alexander Nevsky and its impact today exhibits just how powerfully long lasting the silver screen can be. SO sit back relax and let there be no more war.


Click here to support Ukrainian Refugees

You can check out Alexander Nevsky on The Criterion Channel


Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today.

Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/

Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/

Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview

Instagram: @cinemallennials

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3 years ago
29 minutes 14 seconds

Cinemallennials
The Phantom of the Opera (1925)

On today’s episode of Cinemallennials, I talked with Will Pender, host of Now that’s What I Call A Podcast about the silent horror classic, The Phantom of the Opera starring the Man of a Thousand Faces, Lon Chaney, and the original scream queen, Mary Philbin. Lon Chaney paved the way for all of our favorite grotesque but deeply human onscreen characters. Costumed and made up creatures like Dracula, Frankenstein, the Wolfman, the Creature from the Black Lagoon, the Apes from The Planet of the Apes, The Elephant Man, Jar Jar Binks, The Amphibian Man from The Shape of Water and one of my all-time favorites, Gollum/Sméagol could have never been realized if Lon Chaney and his makeup never appeared on screen. 

Based on Gaston Leroux’s 1910 novel, The Phantom of the Opera follows the story of Christine Daae, a young singer who for years has been tutored by a kindly masked figure, known to her as Spirit of Music but known to everyone else as The Phantom of the Opera, a shadowy spirit that causes chaos when his musical sensibilities are disturbed by the Opera’s owners.  Defied once more and thought to have been betrayed by his muse, our, sometimes recognized as an empathetic figure, the Phantom goes on a rampage claiming if he can’t have Christine, no one can. So sit back, relax, and befriend the outcast.


You can purchase The Phantom of the Opera here.


 Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. 




Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ 


Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/


 Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview 


Instagram: @cinemallennials

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3 years ago
1 hour 4 minutes 3 seconds

Cinemallennials
8 1/2 (1963)

On today’s episode of Cinemallennials, I talk with another K Cut podcast host, James Bunn about Frederico Fellini’s master work on the process of filmmaking, 8 ½. Frederico Fellini’s legacy is that of his films, grounded fantasy, a cavalcade of nostalgia, fever dreams, lust, and desire. From Tim Burton to David Lynch, Fellini is revered as one of the masters of surrealist cinema. 


Considered as one of the greatest films and filmmakers of all time, from both a technical perspective boasting praise amongst other cinematic legends like Martin Scorsese, Ferderico Fellini’s 8 ½ is a tour into the soul of an artist. Someone that both believes in their own hype and yet doesn’t one that tries to express the truths of life and the condition of humanity but perpetuates lies. 


8 ½ follows the story of Guido Anselmi, a famous Italian director that is stuck between reminiscing on his past, and developing his next great project. Caught between his writers block, nagging producers, his affair with his wife and the pressure of being an artist, Guido’s life both professionally and personally is crumbling. Will this next project be his magnum opus? Or will it fade away in the bustle of this circus we call life? So sit back, relax, and don’t climb out of your car in bumper to bumper traffic. You can purchase 8 1/2 here. 


Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today.


 Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials

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3 years ago
35 minutes 52 seconds

Cinemallennials
It Happened One Night (1934)
On today’s episode of Cinemallennials, I’ll be talking to film scholar and host of the Audiovisual Cultures podcast, Dr. Paula Blair about Frank Capra’s 1934 screwball comedy It Happened One Night. Although it might not look like all that much on the outside when googling or seeing the most famous clips from It Happened One Night,  the film could easily be considered as one of the most influential, and well received comedies of all time. You could name any screwball or romantic comedy whether it be films like His Girl Friday, The Philadelphia Story, Bringing Up Baby, When Harry Met Sally to the comedies that we grew up on like Clueless, 10 Things I Hate About You, The Proposal or even Star Wars and Spaceballs as I found out in the episode you’ll find a direct thread from It Happened One Night, It Happened One Night follows the story of Ellen Andrews, a young heiress that daringly escapes from the clutches of her father in Miami, Florida in order to reunite with her soon to be husband King Westley in New York City. On her travels, Ellie soon encounters Peter Warne, a rough and tumble news reporter who just got fired. Peter recognizes Ellie and tells his boss he has the story of the year. Initially at odds with each other as their upbringings and personalities clash, the combination of their common desire to see the escape through, and the rapport they build on their journey slowly grows into something unexpected for the both of them. So sit back, relax, and whatever you do, be careful when you’re singing and driving. You can purchase It Happened One Night here Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the  birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @dlew88
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3 years ago
58 minutes 59 seconds

Cinemallennials
Casablanca (1942)
On today’s episode of Cinemallennials, I’ll be talking with my girlfriend Alex about one of the most influential, romantic, and anti-fascist films of all time, the unconquerable Casablanca. Films like Star Wars, Indiana Jones, and Space Jam 2 as well as Disney World’s former greatest ride, The Great Movie Ride have all referenced or have directly used scenes from Casablanca. Whether you’ve watched Casablanca or not, it’s writing, costumes, themes, music, and iconic imagery most likely occupies the part of your brain that holds your stock of references and lines from popular culture. From its cast of both main and side characters, its brilliant writing with its layers of both timeless and contemporary wit and themes to its score and use of the art of moving pictures Casablanca has been consistently called “the perfect film.” Casablanca follows the story of Richard Blaine, a hard-hearted isolationist that owns Rick’s Café American, a popular club that nightly houses hundreds of refugees who are stuck in Morocco’s second largest city due to the Nazi regime. Rumors fill the city after two Nazi couriers were murdered carrying transit papers that allow their owners to freely leave the city and be on the path to freedom. Rick is soon secretly given those papers to hang on to but their owner is arrested right in front of his very eyes and that’s not even half his troubles. The night is still young until Rick’s former lover Ilsa Lund walks into his gin joint with her resistance leader husband Victor Laszlo who has just escaped a concentration camp and wants to expose the world to the true horrors of the Nazi regime. Ilsa knows just how influential her old flame is in this limbo and seeks his help but having been hurt by her in the past Rick isn’t so sure he should help them and that is where our story begins so sit back relax and Here’s looking at you kid. You can purchase Casablanca here. Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the  birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
1 hour 2 minutes 44 seconds

Cinemallennials
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
On today’s episode of Cinemallennials, I’ll be talking with Lars Henriks, a director, actor, and host of the Lars Henriks Podcast International who picked a film that really needs no introduction, The Wizard of Oz (1939). From its storied production history to its long list of changes in its illustrious who’s who of writing and directing departments, featuring names like, Victor Fleming, George Cukor, King Vidor, and Herman J. Mankiewicz, The Wizard of Oz has long been considered one of the greatest films of all time. The Wizard of Oz’s legacy is probably one of the most, if not the most widely recognizable not only was its writing and directing nearly perfect, but its casting, musical composition, set design and costuming all have  influenced the world of filmmaking ever since the film was released in 1939. The Wizard of Oz follows the story of a girl from Kansas, Dorothy and her little dog Toto. After feeling underappreciated on her aunt and uncle’s farm, Dorothy decides to run away. She then bumps into a traveling magician who convinces her to return home due to an impending tornado. After getting home, she is soon  knocked out by a flying window pane. When she wakes up, Dorothy steps into a new world. A world full of magic and whimsy where she is regarded as a both a hero and a villain for killing the Wicked Witch of the East. The witch’s sister, The Wicked Witch of the West swears revenge on Dorothy and vows to prevent her from returning home. Now stranded and being hunted in this strange land, Dorothy takes the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City in order to seek the advice from Oz, the great and powerful, an all knowing Wizard. While on her way, she encounters a scarecrow, a tin man and a cowardly lion who are also looking for the Wizard. Teaming together, the fellowship travel to the Emerald City, but the road won’t be easy as the Wicked Witch of the West, her flying monkeys and other cronies are hot on their trail.  So sit back, relax, and we're off to see the wizard! You can purchase The Wizard of Oz here. Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the  birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
1 hour 14 minutes 55 seconds

Cinemallennials
Planet of the Apes (1968)

On today's episode of Cinemallennials I talked with my cousin Devon about the 1968 science fiction classic, Planet of the Apes, directed by Franklin J. Schaffner and starring Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowall, and Kim Hunter.

Planet of the Apes follows the story of a crew of astronauts that crash land on a planet 300 million light years into the future where their perception of both man and ape are reversed, the simians are intelligent and are the conquerors of the world where man is primitive and enslaved. Confronted with this discovery after being hunted by the apes, one of the astronauts Taylor becomes enslaved and has caught the eye of both an animal psychologist, Dr. Zira and her archeologist fiancée Cornelius who claims that apes evolved from man. Upon the discovery of this hypothesized missing link, the chief scientist and defender of the ape faith, Dr. Zaius does all that he can to exterminate Taylor in order to protect the dark knowledge only he knows.

From featuring themes like racial supremacy to the balance of faith and science, Planet of the Apes is truly not only a hard Science-Fiction classic, but it is still extremely relevant for our world today.


You can purchase Planet of the Apes here.


Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are  introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the  birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to  the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their  films still influence our world today.

Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/

Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/

Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview

Instagram: @dlew88

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4 years ago
58 minutes 40 seconds

Cinemallennials
The Great Escape (1963)
On today's episode of Cinemallennials I talked with James Wilson about the 1963 World War II film, The Great Escape directed by John Sturges and starring both British and Hollywood legends Steve McQueen, Richard Attenborough, James Garner, Charles Bronson, and Donald Pleasance. The Great Escape follows the story of a group of allied prisoners during World War II who are hell-bent on escaping from Stalag Luft III, a maximum-security prisoner of war camp. After previous attempts unfortunately failed, two master escapees, Captain Virgil Hilts and Squadron Leader Roger Bartlett enter into the camp and devise a most dangerous and daring escape plan, dig tunnels underneath the very ground the camp stands on in order to plunge the Nazi regime into a period of chaos distracting them from their evil campaign of hateful death and destruction. So, sit back, relax, and always make sure to stay in character when you’re trying to escape from a Nazi prisoner of war camp. You can purchase The Great Escape here Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers, their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
36 minutes 28 seconds

Cinemallennials
The Seventh Seal (1957)
On this episode of Cinemallennials, I talked with Oisín Ó Ruacháinn about Ingmar Bergman’s 1957 allegorical masterpiece, The Seventh Seal, a personal favorite of mine and is often considered to be one of the all-time greatest films ever made. The Seventh Seal launched Bergman’s reputation as a world-class director, ushered in a new era of the American movie-going experience allowing art house and international film to become more widely exposed, it launched the career of Max Von Sydow who you know from The Exorcist, Minority Report, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Game of Thrones, and Skyrim. Finally, The Seventh Seal proved that film could be a wildly successful and popular vessel for philosophical themes like what is the meaning of life across a wide audience. The Seventh Seal follows the story of Antonius Block, a knight that has just returned to his native Sweden after 10 years on Crusade. As he aims to leave the rocky beach he and his squire land on, he is welcomed home by Death although initially, Block says he isn’t afraid, as death’s black cloak comes closer he admits his fear and challenges Death to a game of chess in order to stay alive and perform one last meaningful deed before the end. So sit back, relax, and don’t challenge death to a board game. You can buy The Seventh Seal here Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
1 hour 54 seconds

Cinemallennials
Shane (1953)
Hello, my name is Dave Lewis and I am the host of Cinemallennials, a podcast where myself and another millennial watch a classic film that we haven’t seen before ranging from the early 1900s to the late 1960s and discuss its significance and relevance in our world today. On today’s episode, I talked with Andreas Babiolakis, creator of FilmsFatale.com about the 1953 western Shane starring Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin, and Brandon De Wilde directed by the great George Stevens who directed Giant, A Place in the Sun, The Diary of Anne Frank, and The Greatest Story Ever Told. Shane follows the story of a mysterious man named Shane who rides into the lives of humble homesteaders Joe, Marion, and their son Joey on the vast plains of Wyoming. Joey is immediately fascinated with the man and his ornamented gun belt thinking he must be this great hero that is until his mother tells him not to get too attached. Shane thinks he has a found a paradise until he is thrust into an ongoing war between the homesteaders and the local cattle baron, Ryker, and his gang. Shane feels he must act in order to protect the family he has fallen in love with and to redeem himself. So sit back, relax and “Come Back Shane!” You can purchase Shane here Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their  films still influence our world today. Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
50 minutes 37 seconds

Cinemallennials
The Great Dictator (1940)
On today’s episode, I am joined by Logan and Brayden from the Absolutely Gobsmacked Podcast who picked Charlie Chaplin’s 1940 satiric triumph, The Great Dictator. Charlie Chaplin is one of the most recognizable, and most important comedians of all time. By the late 1930s however, he had still not made the transition to sound causing critics to doubt the comedian’s future. As Nationalism and Fascism were out for all to see with the rise of Italy’s Benito Mussolini and with the similarly mustachioed Adolf Hitler and his Nazi thugs Chaplin chose to be a voice for the voiceless by wielding his comedy and humanist ideals against the world’s evil and intolerant. From his depiction of Hitler’s ridiculous mannerisms and hypocrisy to the now-viral sensation that is often called The Greatest Speech Ever, The Great Dictator was the first and is now the last laugh in face of Adolf Hitler and his current wannabees. The Great Dictator follows the story of a Jewish barber who develops amnesia after a plane crash during the last days of WWI. Over the next twenty years, while the barber is sheltered in a mental hospital, his countrymen turn their eye to evil as they give their beloved country of Tomainia over to the anti-Semitic fascist dictator Adenoid Hynkel who looks exactly like the Jewish barber. After being persecuted by Hynkel and his cronies, our barber soon has his memory restored, begins to rebel, and maybe the only one in the world that can stop Hynkel’s agenda of hate. So sit back, relax, and become a little more absent-minded. You can purchase The Great Dictator here Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
49 minutes 46 seconds

Cinemallennials
Some Like It Hot (1959)
Hello, my name is Dave Lewis and I am the host of Cinemallennials, a podcast where myself and another millennial watch a classic film that we haven’t seen before ranging from the early 1900s to the late 1960s and discuss its significance and relevance in our world today. On today’s episode, I talked with Mary Jo Hernandez about the 1959 comedy, Some Like it Hot, directed by Hollywood legend Billy Wilder who wrote and directed films like Double Indemnity, Sunset Boulevard, Sabrina, and The Apartment. Some Like it Hot starring Marylin Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon follows the story of Joe and Jerry, who just witnessed the famous St. Valentine Day’s Massacre and are on the run from gangster Spats Columbo. The lads have a brilliant idea in order to escape the windy city, the lads disguise themselves as women in order to join an all-girls band that’s on its way to Florida. Once they are accepted into the band, both Joe and Jerry go gaga over the band’s singer, Sugar Kane. Like the lads, Sugar also changes her identity to get what she wants when she meets the heir to the Shell Oil empire. From themes like faking it until you make it to the acceptance of new identities, Some Like it Hot is a hilarious but meaningful romp. So, sit back relax, and don’t be like most of the guys trying to pick up women in this movie. You can purchase Some Like it Hot here. Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
26 minutes 29 seconds

Cinemallennials
Godzilla (1954)
On today’s episode, I talked with Izzy from Be Kind Rewind, her YouTube channel where she explores Hollywood history, women in film, and general film studies. Izzy picked the original 1954 Godzilla just in time for the newest chapter in the longest-running franchise in film history, Godzilla vs. Kong that comes out today internationally and on March 31st here in the United States. Godzilla follows the story of a massive jurassic beast called Godzilla that has been reawakened by recent nuclear H-bomb testing. Enraged by its rude awakening, Godzilla wreaks havoc on Japan. As another nuclear threat faces Japan nine years after the carnage dealt at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, both politicians and scientists bicker on how to approach the monster with its nuclear fallout breath. Do they study its resistance to the bombs or do they neutralize the threat outright, but the most complex of all these questions remains if it absorbed the colossal power of nuclear weapons how can it be killed? In order to find out, sit back, relax, and don’t get breathed on! You can purchase Godzilla here. Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: https://dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
46 minutes 56 seconds

Cinemallennials
Paths of Glory (1957)

On today’s episode, I talked with Nick Reed about the 1957 anti-war film, Paths of Glory, directed by the great Stanley Kubrick. Based on real-life events, Paths of Glory stars Kirk Douglas as Colonel Dax, who is ordered by his pompous, and overambitious commanding officer, played by George Macready to lead a suicide mission. 


After the attack fails, Colonel Dax is then forced to defend his men against accusations of cowardice and betrayal which could ultimately lead to their deaths. 


From the dehumanization of soldiers to the absurdity of the upper-class immunity of war consequences and its romanticizations of battle, Paths of Glory explores the effects war has on everyone involved, from overeager blood-stained general to innocent barmaids. So sit back, relax, and confront the reality of humanity’s greatest failures.  You can purchase Paths of Glory here. 


Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. 


Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. 


Website: dlewmoviereview.com/ 

Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials

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4 years ago
37 minutes 43 seconds

Cinemallennials
The Hidden Fortress (1958)

On today’s episode, I talked with Nolan Ryan, yes you heard that right and no its not that Nolan Ryan, but we talked about legendary Japanese director, Akria Kurosawa’s 1958 epic, The Hidden Fortress. 


If you’re in any way interested in film, you’ve heard of those kinds of films that did alright in the era in which they were born but would go on to inspire major blockbusters that were released much later, The Hidden Fortress is one of these films as depending on who you ask, has either inspired one of the biggest blockbusters in history, or the film’s director directly lifted from it and that film is Star Wars. 


The Hidden Fortress follows the accidental adventure of two peasants, Tahei and Matashichi who stumble onto a large cache of gold that was hidden by the recently defeated Akisuki clan. They decide to split the gold until a mysterious man begins to follow them, uncovers their plot, all while hiding a secret of his own, a fiery princess who longs to restore her clan and reunite with her people, if only there was a way to pass through enemy lines undetected and thus begins our adventure. So sit back, relax, and throw everything into the fire. 


You can purchase The Hidden Fortress here


 Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. 


Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. 


Website: dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials

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4 years ago
53 minutes 32 seconds

Cinemallennials
Seven Samurai (1954)
On today’s episode, I am joined by my cousin Sean Clark who picked Akria Kurosawa’s 1954 epic Seven Samurai. It’s considered from both a technical and ­­ cultural level, whether it be from its editing, camera techniques, symbolism, and its dialogue, as the most influential, remade, reworked, and referenced films of all time as well perhaps the greatest film ever made. Akira Kurosawa had created many films besides Seven Samurai that were remade and emulated by the most well-respected directors over the nearly 60 years he worked in the film industry. Rashomon, Yojimbo, Throne of Blood, The Hidden Fortress, Kagemusha, and Ran have all been personally cited as inspirations for the upper echelons of the directing world. The directors that Kurosawa’s films were muses for were; Ingmar Bergman, Frederico Fellini, Bernardo Bertolucci, Andrei Tarkovsky, Werner Herzog, Stanley Kubrick, and probably most famously, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas as you’ll see in the next episode of Cinemallennials.  Seven Samurai follows a village of poor farmers and their families under threat of yet another harvest raiding party made by a group of brutal bandits in one of Japan’s deadliest periods. After consulting with the local wise man, the farmers are set on their quest to find hungry samurai who are willing to defend the village from its impending doom. The farmers achieve their goal of finding and feeding their hungry samurai, but even both the villagers and the samurai might not be who they exactly claim to be. So, sit back relax, and don’t try to recruit samurai by attempting to knock them out.  You can purchase Seven Samurai here  Cinemallennials is a podcast where myself and another millennial are introduced to a classic film for the very first time ranging from the birth of cinema to the 1960s. Myself and my guest will open your eyes to the vast landscape of classic film as we discuss the films' performers,  their performances, those behind the camera, and how they and their films still influence our world today. Website: dlewmoviereview.com/ Social Media: Facebook: facebook.com/dlewmoviereviews/ Twitter: twitter.com/dlewmoviereview Instagram: @cinemallennials
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4 years ago
51 minutes 37 seconds

Cinemallennials
Hosted by Dave Lewis, Cinemallennials is a podcast where he and another millennial watch a classic film that they haven’t seen before ranging from the early 1900s to the late 1960s and discuss its significance and relevance in our world today.