
This week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie features more of my voice than I usually prefer, but I think I’m okay with it. Over the years, I’ve learned to tell when an interview subject needs to be coaxed out a little, and in this case talking about my own connection to beloved, bygone movie houses was the key that got us rolling.
This is not a knock on Anita Doron, this week’s guest; she’s a pretty open person, really, and she’s spoken at length about her own work in the past — like the films The End of Silence and The Lesser Blessed, and her script for the Oscar-nominated animated feature The Breadwinner. And her new film Maya and Samar just launched its Canadian theatrical run on Friday, which gave me the opportunity to book her for the podcast.
But Anita picked Tsai Ming-Liang’s Goodbye, Dragon Inn, a minimalist and largely dialogue-free drama of the final night of a Taipei movie theater, and talking about a film one loves very much can be a little intimidating. So I offered that I’d basically grown up in a second-run movie theater, and she asked about that, and then there were more questions, and while that got us onto a whole thing about what was lost when digital fully replaced celluloid as the medium on which motion pictures are both shot and distributed, and I guess I have a lot of opinions about that, too. So if you’re sick of my voice, feel free to jump to the second half of the episode … but if you’re sick of my voice, I suspect you’re not even reading these words.
Anyway! I’m probably making it sound worse than it is, so just go listen and see how you like it. Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, YouTube Podcasts or your podcatcher of choice — though surely you did that years ago, right? — or just download the episode directly from the web and listen to it as you wander around an ancient city, looking for inspiration and/or a quick hookup.
And once you’re … done … you can catch up on the newest editions of Shiny Things! Last week I spun up a recent Blu-ray restoration of Diane Keaton’s only documentary, Heaven, and of course there was Friday’s What’s Worth Watching for paid subscribers, where it was all genre all the time as I tackled Project Hail Mary, Ready or Not: Here I Come and Shudder’s new documentary 1000 Women in Horror. You can always check out the 14-day free trial, if you’re curious. It’s good!
And now, because it’s sunny out, I shall ride a bicycle to this afternoon’s meeting. That’ll be good too.

This week marks the eleventh anniversary of Someone Else’s Movie, a preposterous milestone I never imagined I’d reach when I launched the podcast back in 2015. But here we are, and Episode 600 is coming up next month, and honestly? It’s still the thing I most love doing.
Oh, and this isn’t the only episode I’ve released this week — I dropped a bonus episode on Saturday with Alison McAlpine, whose experimental 2024 short perfectly a strangeness was nominated for Best Documentary Short Film at the Oscars on Sunday!
It took almost eleven years and 595 episodes of Someone Else’s Movie for someone to bring Night of the Living Dead to the podcast. None of George A. Romero’s other Dead films has made it onto the show, either, despite plenty of opportunity. Maybe it’s just that the series looms too large in people’s minds, and no one wants to come up short when discussing such a landmark.
As Someone Else’s Movie approaches its eleventh anniversary — with its 600th episode not far behind! — the choices are getting more eclectic, and guests are showing a willigness to bring out the big guns. It’s really fun! People don’t seem to be intimidated by the classics any more; I’ve got some episodes coming up on movies you’ll be shocked to learn hadn’t been covered a decade ago.
If my intro to this week’s Someone Else’s Movie sounds a little rough, that’s because I’m recovering from a wicked head cold — but don’t worry, I’m fine now. Even rode a bike yesterday! Look at me, all healthy!
This week on Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by veteran television director Paris Barclay, who chose what some might see as an especially antiquated title for the episode: Stanley Kramer’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, the 1967 dramedy of manners about white liberal parents struggling with their daughter’s engagement to an upstanding Black doctor.
This week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie feels a little rushed, because I only had half an hour with Joan Chen and we were talking about a movie we both love, throwing ideas and feelings back and forth, each of us really listening to what the other was saying.
On this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by filmmaker Blake Rice Edwards, who’s followed his charming short film 
This week on Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by Emmanuel Kabongo, an actor who’s been a near-constant presence in Toronto productions for a decade and a half, turning up in everything from Ingrid Veninger’s The Animal Project and Joey Klein’s The Other Half to episodes of Frankie Drake Mysteries, Hudson & Rex and Star Trek: Discovery.
Last week’s episode fell apart at the very last second — sorry to leave you all hanging, by the way — but Someone Else’s Movie is up and running today with a really fun conversation.