
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 Tea with a somewhat more intense work, Disc, that premiered at TIFF last year and is currently at Clermont-Ferrand. If you enjoy watching Jim Cummings panic — and truly, who doesn’t? — you’ll want to keep an eye out for this one.
Blake picked Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet, the Shakespearean drama that’s been pulling all the Oscar buzz basically since it was announced — and that’s not surprising, because Zhao has pulled out all the stops to make her adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s novel as immediate and emotional as possible. And it mostly works, if you can ignore the machinery.
So give it a listen! 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 as you wander the fields waiting for someone to understand the exquisite beauty and singular nature of your suffering.
And then go catch up on Shiny Things, where you’ll find me catching up to Roofman, Wicked: For Good, Afterburn, Fackham Hall, Shelby Oaks and A24’s edition of The Smashing Machine, which has one of the niftiest extras I’ve seen in a while.
I also wrote a little about Catherine O’Hara’s incredible career in the wake of her untimely death. That sounds like something you’d want to read, right? Well, if you were a subscriber you’d have read it already … so go subscribe! Jeez!

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.
It’s a new year, but I’m reaching back to 2015 for this week’s Someone Else’s Movie in honor of Alan Zweig‘s new podcast
It’s the final Someone Else’s Movie of 2025, and my impromptu celebration of Rob Reiner’s cinema concludes with Allana Harkin‘s delightful hour on When Harry Met Sally … which is actually a New Year’s Eve movie, so there.
We are in desperate need of some seasonal cheer around these parts, so I’m dedicating the Christmas-to-New Year’s run of Someone Else’s Movie to celebrating Rob Reiner’s most-loved films — partly because they’re both great episodes, and partly because I needed to do something, anything, to address that horrible loss. I don’t have a lot left, you guys. This has to help.
Aimee Carrero has been in a lot of stuff. Like, a lot of stuff. 
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.
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.