
Happy Canada Day, everybody! Today’s Someone Else’s Movie is all about celebrating our own, with writer-director Nik Sexton — whose Newfoundland culture-clash drama Skeet was one of my picks for last year’s TIFF Industry Selects lineup — tackling Incendies, the picture that set Montreal’s own Denis Villeneuve on the path to the superstar career he’s enjoying now.
If you haven’t seen it, Incendies is Denis’ very cinematic 2010 adaptation of Wajdi Mouawad’s stage play, which follows a brother and sister whose investigation of their late mother’s past ends up drawing a map of their own history. It was acclaimed on the festival circuit and parlayed that success into an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign-Language Film, bringing Denis to Hollywood’s attention and now he’s directing the next Bond picture. Wild, right? But totally deserved, and it’s nice to be able to celebrate it a decade and a half later.
So giddy up, eh? Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, YouTube Podcasts or your podcatcher of choice, or download the episode directly from the web and listen to it on the flight over to the country of your mother’s birth, wondering what you’ll find.
And then you can get caught up on your Shiny Things reading, not that there was that much of it last week; between one thing and another, I was only able to review Criterion’s new 4K editions of William Friedkin’s Sorcerer and Francois Girard’s Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould — two long-neglected masterworks that are brought back to vivid life in these new releases. Subscribe so you don’t miss the next edition! It’s good for you, probably!

The thing about programming is, it’s a lot of clicking and waiting. You start the next thing on the submissions pile, and then you wait for it to grab you. Sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn’t. And every now and then — maybe half a dozen times, in my experience so far — you get to make a discovery.
The great thing about doing a film podcast is that you never run out of classics. Case in point: This week, Someone Else’s Movie finally tackles Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation, the picture I believe might be Coppola’s single best work — and remember, he made The Godfather and The Godfather, Part II on either side of it.
Want to feel old? On this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, I welcome Rob Michaels, whose charming new comedy Please, After You is now available on digital and on demand in Canada, to discuss his favorite comedy: Forgetting Sarah Marshall, the charming Judd Apatow production that vaulted Jason Segel out of second-banana status and launched Nicholas Stoller’s directorial career.
Also also! SEMcast is on Blu-ray! The cheery elves at Canadian International Pictures reached out to ask if they could include 
This week on Someone Else’s Movie, I finally welcome Chloé Robichaud to the show. I’ve been a fan of Chloé’s work ever since Sarah Prefers to Run arrived in 2013; a decade later, I got to introduce the world to Days of Happiness at TIFF, which was something of a highlight.
Paid subscribers to my Shiny Things newsletter might recognize the guest on this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, since I reviewed Kourtney Roy‘s Kryptic a couple of weeks ago.
Lubitsch, man. Over more than a decade of Someone Else’s Movie, this is the first time someone has brought one of the master farceur’s pictures to the show — and I’m so happy that 
This week on Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by Keeya King, an actor you’ve probably seen more often than you realize, especially if you’re a genre fan. She’s had key roles in Van Helsing and Yellowjackets, popped up in Jigsaw and The Handmaid’s Tale and Batwoman, and just joined the cast of Gen V, Amazon’s spinoff of The Boys. And she stars in a new thriller, Guess Who, that’s now streaming on Tubi in the US and Hollywood Suite in Canada.
On this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, I welcome writer-director Jason Buxton, who broke out at TIFF in 2012 with his simmering drama Blackbird — starring friend of the show Connor Jessup — and returned to the festival last September with 
There must be something spooky about April. Last week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie tackled Nicolas Roeg’s landmark horror story