
If you were paying any attention to the Toronto Film Critics Association’s awards on Sunday, you might have seen Eephus appear as a runner-up for our Best First Feature award, alongside Eva Victor’s Sorry, Baby. Sophy Romvari’s Blue Heron was the winner, but honestly all three are excellent debuts, and Eephus has been turning up in that conversation all over the place this month.
That’s because with Eephus, director and co-writer Carson Lund creates a beautiful little pocket universe of melancholy, following a group of men in 1990s Massacheussets who’ve assembled to play their last ballgame at a local stadium that’s about to be demolished. They don’t want to talk about it, exactly, but it’s very clearly on their minds, and Lund lets us share the impending sense of loss that settles over the field as the innings roll by. It’s a small but potent ensemble drama, and if you missed it during its very modest theatrical run you could certainly do worse than pull it up on Mubi or VOD tonight.
And for his episode of Someone Else’s Movie, Carson wanted to dive into the existential grindhouse vibe of Monte Hellman’s Two-Lane Blacktop, the one where James Taylor and Dennis Wilson challenge Warren Oates to a race across America, for reasons none of them fully understands. Hell of a picture, as they say, even if Roger Corman didn’t see the appeal.
Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, YouTube Podcasts or your podcatcher of choice, or just download the episode directly from the web and listen to it on your 8-track player while you roll on endlessly down the highway.
And then get yourself caught up on Shiny Things! Last week I spun up the new 4K releases of I Know Where I’m Going! and Howards End — one a Criterion release, the other a former Criterion release now available from the Cohen Entertainment Group — and found them both entirely beguiling.
Go check that out, and maybe think about upgrading to the paid tier so you can get the weekly What’s Worth Watching edition; this Friday, I’ll be writing about Bryan Fuller’s delirious Dust Bunny among others. You don’t want to miss that, do you?

A couple of weeks back, I had Globe & Mail film critic Barry Hertz on Someone Else’s Movie to talk about his book on the Fast & Furious movies; for this week’s episode, I welcome another Toronto film friend with a movie project of his own.
This week on Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by writer and director Tasha Hubbard, who shifts from documentaries to dramatic features with her new film Meadowlarks, opening across Canada this Friday.
On this week’s Someone Else’s Movie I welcome a colleague and pal, film critic Barry Hertz of The Globe and Mail. And here’s here for a book launch!
This week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie offers a conversation I never thought I’d have: My guests, Australian filmmakers Emma Hough Hobbs and Leela Varghese, wanted to talk about a kids’ movie. Or rather, a kids’ movie that they saw when they were kids and continue to love as adults beyond all reason. That film is Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed.
Someone Else’s Movie gets meta this week, as I’m joined by French actor Guillaume Marbeck, who plays French director Jean-Luc Godard in Richard Linklater’s delightful new movie Nouvelle Vague, to talk about Godard’s revolutionary debut Breathless … the film we see Marbeck’s Godard making in Linklater’s film.
It’s Halloween on Friday, and I have the perfect episode of Someone Else’s Movie for the occasion.
I’ve been trying to land Bryan Fuller for an episode of Someone Else’s Movie ever since I started the podcast; in addition to being a creator of endlessly fascinating television, he’s a genre fiend whose love of the strange and unusual rivals that of Guillermo Del Toro’s, and I knew he’d bring a wealth of insight to any movie he brought to the show.
The Pirates of the Caribbean franchise has gone dormat of late, and not without reason; it’s kind of a master class in the law of diminishing returns. But the first one, The Curse of the Black Pearl, was an unexpected pleasure, and that’s why writer-director Elliott Hasler chose it for his episode of Someone Else’s Movie.
This week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie risks creating a little bit of a paradox, as I’m joined by Daniel Bernhardt — who stars in Steven Kostanski’s endearing Deathstalker reboot, opening everywhere on Friday — to discuss a film that’s near and dear to his heart: The Matrix.