
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.
Case in point: This week I spent an hour talking to Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, one of the foremost scholars of genre cinema, about Abel Ferrara’s Ms. .45, a film on which she literally wrote the book — and recorded the audio commentary, too! The episode is tied to the release of a documentary based on her book 1000 Women in Horror, which drops on Shudder this Friday after spending months gathering acclaim on the festival circuit. (It’s directed by Donna Davies, but Alexandra is front and center in the doc, supported by half a dozen other voices in a dive into representation over more than a century of genre cinema.)
And while Ms. .45 may not be everyone’s idea of a horror movie, Alexandra argues for the rape-revenge subgenre as an entirely valid subgenre, and not that far removed from the slasher films that were exploding in the wake of Halloween and Friday the 13th. It’s just that Zoe Tamerlis’ merciless Thana is both the killer and the final girl of the story … up to a point, anyway.
It’s a great episode, and you don’t want to miss it. Go grab it on Apple, Spotify, YouTube Podcasts or your podcatcher of choice, or just download the episode directly from the web and listen to it while you’re touching up your eyeliner for a night on the prowl. Be the change you want to see in the world, and all that.

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 didn’t win, but the idea that this odd little charmer about the intersection of nature and scientific research — which is now streaming on the Criterion Channel — getting a global showcase this way is something to celebrate all the same. And it gave me the opportunity to talk to Alison about Maren Ade’s marvelous Toni Erdmann, and unpack as many of its themes as we could in a 45-minute episode. That’s good too. You should check it out.
And then go catch up on Shiny Things! Last week I wrote about the new 4K restorations of Dan Gilroy’s Nightcrawler and Guy Hamilton’s Battle of Britain, from Shout! Studios and Imprint Films, respectively. Both exceptional presentations of two very different films, but you gotta go with what the calendar gives you. And of course there was Friday’s What’s Worth Watching for paid subscribers; if you’re on the fence about upgrading to that tier, maybe consider the 14-day free trial? I’m pretty happy with the work I’m doing over there, too.
Finally, if you’re going to be attending Toronto Comicon this weekend, carve out some time Friday afternoon to catch me returning to Aaron Reynolds’ Bootleg Safari, where this year we’ll be facing off about the worst Jaws knockoff. You will never guess which one I picked.
It’s in Room 202CD at 5:15pm, which I am led to understand is an entirely different room from the one where we did it last year. Come for the convention, stay for the silliness! It’s all we know!

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.
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