Avsnitt
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Cinquisitor Ethan submits a field report about the 1979 film Lucio Fulci's "Zombie," a/k/a "Zombi 2," a/k/a "Zombie Flesh Eaters." This knock-off-slash-sort-of-sequel to George A. Romero's 1978 film, "Dawn of the Dead," isn't widely known, yet it's highly influential and features some grave sources of CINEMANIA.
Listen at your own risk.
Written and performed by Ethan Ireland
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio.
Tracks featured: "The Wraith," "Dark Thriller Theme," "Dark Thriller Loop 1," "From the Deep," and "Boarding Nostromo."
Extract from "Zombi 2 Theme" by Fabio Frizzi (appearing between 11m56s and 12m48s of this program) is presented here as non-profit /educational "Fair Use," for purposes of criticism / comment as provided under U.S.C. Section 107.
LEGAL NOTICE: This is a work of satire / parody and any statements should not be construed as statements or allegations of fact.
Cassette tape stock image by Thegreenj provided courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, and appears here under CC By SA 3.0 "Share Alike" license. This image was modified to remove brand logos and to add text.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Compactcassette.jpg
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The Cinemania Society's 16th Conclave begins with a peek into the deliberations of the Cinemania High Council, who call upon the unthinkable to implement the ultimate sanction...
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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The Cinemania Society's 2024 Halloween Special is a piece of new fiction by frequent contributor and friend of the pod, Patrick Ireland. In this spooky story, a bibliophile finds herself trapped in a bookstore after hours.
Written by Patrick Ireland
Performed by Andrea Palladino
Editing & sound design by Alessa Luz Martinez
Opening / closing title music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Track used: "Black Lotus."
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Professor Andrea presents a report from the field about a source of CINEMANIA she recently encountered, Alfred Hitchcock's 1963 film "The Birds." Not only can this film cause CINEMANIA in the viewers, but upon viewing, it is obvious the filmmakers themselves suffered its debilitating effects during the course of production.
LEGAL NOTICE: This is a work of satire / parody and should not be construed as making statements of fact.
Written and performed by Andrea Palladino, with additional material by Andy Slack and Ethan Ireland.
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Tracks used: "Patrol Bot," "Alliance," and "Tyrell Corporation."
Cassette tape stock image by Thegreenj provided courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, and appears here under CC By SA 3.0 "Share Alike" license. This image was modified to remove brand logos and to add text.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Compactcassette.jpg
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As Halloween approaches, The Society re-runs on one of our favorite profiles: one taking a look at the hardest-working automaton in showbiz, Robbie the emmeffin Robot. British Robocop and Kraftwerk's Vacuum Cleaner ain't got nothin on the OG of cinematic androids. Come have a listen.
More original content next week -- and stay tuned for our 2024 Halloween Special on October 30. Episodes of the Season 2 finale begin in November...
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Andy Slack presents an original story of his. Among human relationships, relations with neighbors are often overlooked in favor of closer, more "emotionally important" people in our lives. But sometimes those individuals whom blind chance has deemed that we must live beside can open our minds to all sorts of new and different possibilities...
Written and performed by Andy Slack
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Tracks used: "Black Lotus" and "Prey"
Incidental music courtesy of Epidemic Sound
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Our own Hope Bravo honors the memory the recently-passed Dame Maggie Smith, a woman who had the rarest of talents, enough that she earned of the "Triple Crown" of acting: a Tony, an Emmy, and an Oscar.
Written by Andy Slack
Performed by Hope Bravo
Editing & Sound Design by Ethan Ireland
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Tracks used: "Millennium" and "Monolith."
Caricature art by Andy Slack Comics
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Verifier Andy brings us the first in our "In Celebram" series of Profiles in Cinemania, wherein we *urp* celebrate an individual for their contributions, instead of excoriating them for being a cause of CINEMANIA. This episode is about cinematic and television standby, the fan favorite Jeffrey Combs.
DISCLAIMER: This is a work of satire and/or parody, and should not be construed as fact.
Written and performed by Andy Slack
Caricature art by Andy Slack Comics
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Tracks used: "The Witness" and "Undercover"
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After ordering numerous failed assassination attempts, the Cinemania High Council holds its penultimate meeting to decide the fates of our protagonists...
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The man with the most distinctive voice of the past century, an actor of supreme skill and talent, James Earl Jones, has left us. Vale.
The peerless Andy Slack provides you, the listener, with the man's requiem.
Written and performed by Andy Slack
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Tracks used: "Dead or Alive" and "Vintage."
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Presented here for your listening convenience is all three parts of Conclave No. 15, wherein the society analyzes the 2010 film "Rubber."
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Cinquisitor Ethan explores the trope of depicting exploding heads on screen. Where the hell did this come from, anyhow? Why did it become such a thing? Well, listen to find out...
Written and performed by Ethan Ireland and Daniel Scribner
Music by Meteor at meteormusic.bandcamp.com
Incidental music by Epidemic Sound
Meteor tracks used: "Manhattan 2019," "The Dark Side of the Sun," "The Streets of Hell," and "Unbreakable."
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In our final episode of this conclave, the Cinemania Society is on the run from a pack of biker assassins, and arrives at a roadhouse to conclude its analysis of Quentin Dupieux's 2010 magical realist / neo-impressionist film about a psychic car tire, "Rubber." Pull up a stool, get a beer in your hand, and listen along...
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Professor Andrea takes us on a foray into the cinematic genre of Magical Realism, into which fall films such as Amélie, Like Water for Chocolate, and Pan's Labyrinth. What is "magical realism," anyhow? Well, Andrea tells us...
Written & Performed by Andrea Palladino
Mixing, Mastering, and Sound Design by Ethan Ireland
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Tracks used: "Atlantis" and "Lavender Haze."
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Having evaded a group of biker-assassins by slipping into a seedy motel, the gang gets back on the road to continue their analysis of a film from 2010 about a (no, really) psychic killer tire: "Rubber."
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From Ferris Bueller to Deadpool, it seems that "breaking the fourth wall" has become all the rage these days. In this week's Profile in Cinemania, Verifier Andy digs into the history, breaks down fourth wall breaks, and examines why this trope might be far older than you'd imagine...
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When their stolen Popemobile breaks down, the gang finds themselves lost somewhere in the American Southwest. Naturally, Cinquistor Ethan declares that this is *the* perfect time to hold a Conclave to analyze Quentin Dupieux's surreal offering "Rubber" from 2010...
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The Cinemania Society Presents a story about an elderly hippie who has an otherworldly experience while making some baked goods. The Society takes no responsibility for how its listeners might use the contents of this podcast.
Written by Patrick Ireland, (C) 2024
Performed by Andy Slack
Music by Karl Casey at White Bat Audio
Incidental music and sound effects courtesy of Epidemic Sound
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In honor of the passing of one of the 20th Century's greatest actresses today, the Cinemania Society is re-running the Profile in Cinemania our own Andrea Palladino produced on Shelley Duvall.
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Presented here for listening convenience is the entirety of our Conclave #14 examining the 1999 film "Dogma" by Kevin Smith. Note for our regular Omnibus episode listeners: there are some bits from the individual shows that end up getting trimmed out so we can get these into a single file. Feel free to go back and see what you've missed.
- Visa fler