3: Josephine Decker’s Shirley, the controversial tropes of Patrick Vollrath's 7500, and the importance of Eliza Hittman's Never Rarely Sometimes Always (feat. Taylor Baker)
In this episode, our team of global writers are joined by Taylor Baker (host and creator of Drink in the Movies) as we discuss whether Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s comeback film 7500 successfully overcomes the tired racist tropes seen in hijacking films, the intriguing creation of Martin Scorsese and Josephine Decker’s new indie film Shirley (starting Elizabeth Moss), and the feminist relevance of Eliza Hitmans’ Never Rarely Sometimes Always from the 2020 Berlin Film Festival
|| 00:40 - 7500 and the controversial problem of enforcing racist genre tropes |
29:49 - Scorsese & Decker’s Shirley and a deconstruction of it’s mysterious atmosphere |
50:03 - Never Rarely Sometimes Always and the importance of feminist films |
76:30 - CLAPPER’s weekly film recommendations. ||
Produced by Diego Andaluz.
Associated Producers Jak-Luke Sharp, Jakub Flasz and Rory Marsh.
Hosted by Jak-Luke Sharp, Featuring Hillary White, George Lewis, Alina Faulds, & Taylor Baker
Artwork by Sunshine Tucker. Edited by Jak-Luke Sharp.
| Intro + Outro: Midnight Street Walk by chillin_wolf bit.ly/3cYCgFP, music promoted by bit.ly/30xvt3p Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) bit.ly/3fheQ05 || Find us at www.clapperltd.co.uk. Support us at https://anchor.fm/clappercastltd/support ||
A Clapper Ltd & Andaluz Media Production, Developed by Diego Andaluz.
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free