Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Fiction
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts/v4/d8/a7/a6/d8a7a6b4-98b3-d3e8-51bb-e8b52b4b1ec7/mza_3908011094635605385.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
The Thin Place
Film Geek Radio
46 episodes
4 months ago
Join Ken and Todd every two weeks as they explore films that are about or advance our understanding of issues of faith and spirituality. Some films may do so overtly, through a direct examination of these themes as subjects; others may be more subtle or even opaque in the way they prompt us to think on such things. Still other films may serve primarily as a catalyst for dialogue or discussion. Insights can be gleaned from a part of a larger whole, a scene, a shot, a moment. As the title suggests, such moments can be elusive, fragile, or obscured. George MacDonald wrote about the thinness of the veil that separates the natural from the transcendent. How does art pierce that veil? When does film contain traces of the divine? Tune in to find out.
Show more...
TV & Film
RSS
All content for The Thin Place is the property of Film Geek Radio 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.
Join Ken and Todd every two weeks as they explore films that are about or advance our understanding of issues of faith and spirituality. Some films may do so overtly, through a direct examination of these themes as subjects; others may be more subtle or even opaque in the way they prompt us to think on such things. Still other films may serve primarily as a catalyst for dialogue or discussion. Insights can be gleaned from a part of a larger whole, a scene, a shot, a moment. As the title suggests, such moments can be elusive, fragile, or obscured. George MacDonald wrote about the thinness of the veil that separates the natural from the transcendent. How does art pierce that veil? When does film contain traces of the divine? Tune in to find out.
Show more...
TV & Film
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts/v4/d8/a7/a6/d8a7a6b4-98b3-d3e8-51bb-e8b52b4b1ec7/mza_3908011094635605385.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Episode #39: Umberto D. and the Limits of Empathy
The Thin Place
46 minutes 20 seconds
12 years ago
Episode #39: Umberto D. and the Limits of Empathy
Todd and Ken discuss Vittorio De Sica's poignant saga of an aged pensioner trying to avoid eviction. What are the differences between empathy and pity and which does the film invoke? Is Umberto D. unlikable? SHOW NOTES: 0:00 - Intro and plot summary. 8:40 - Simply not a likable fellow. 18:00 - Umberto D. vs. Karin in Stromboli. 18:50 - A moment of grace? 30:55 - Just step in front of the train and be done with it... 39:00 - We should all just love our dogs and be happy. 42:02 - Walking back some of the criticisms. DON'T FORGET: You can contact us by emailing thethinplace@filmgeekradio.com. Thanks for listening!
The Thin Place
Join Ken and Todd every two weeks as they explore films that are about or advance our understanding of issues of faith and spirituality. Some films may do so overtly, through a direct examination of these themes as subjects; others may be more subtle or even opaque in the way they prompt us to think on such things. Still other films may serve primarily as a catalyst for dialogue or discussion. Insights can be gleaned from a part of a larger whole, a scene, a shot, a moment. As the title suggests, such moments can be elusive, fragile, or obscured. George MacDonald wrote about the thinness of the veil that separates the natural from the transcendent. How does art pierce that veil? When does film contain traces of the divine? Tune in to find out.