Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

Enemy (2013) - 10 Years Later

Enemy (2013) - 10 Years Later

FromCinema Spectator


Enemy (2013) - 10 Years Later

FromCinema Spectator

ratings:
Length:
88 minutes
Released:
Mar 6, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

This month episodes (requested by Tim Smith), Cameron takes Isaac back 10 years to remember 2013. This retrospective starts with Denis Villeneuve, covering a lesser known 2013 release staring Jake Gyllenhaal, Sarah Gadon, and more. Follow a haunting story of a surrounding a mundane history professor who just discovered an actor look-alike while watching a movie. Can this eerie, metaphorical journey be enough for a casual viewer to connect, or will Villeneuve lean into obscurity beyond a normal audiences grasp. 
Cinema Spectator is a movie podcast hosted by Isaac Ransom and Cameron Tuttle. The show is executive produced by Darrin O’Neill; recorded & produced in the San Francisco Bay Area, CA. You can support the show at patreon.com/ecfsproductions. Follow us on Youtube, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter under ECFS Productions (@ecfsproductions). Isaac and Cameron started recording podcast with their first project Everything Comes from Something (2018), now focusing on new weekly content for Cinema Spectator. Cameron Tuttle is a full-time professional cinematographer, majoring from SFSU Film school to collaborate with corporate, private, and creative productions. Cameron is the expert. Isaac Ransom is a professional creative, digital marketer, and product manager working full-time. Isaac is the student. The podcast is a passion project between two longtime friends, we hope you can enjoy our project with the limited time we have! Thank you for your time, your generosity, and support. 
Released:
Mar 6, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (99)

An ECFS Productions Original Podcast: Cinema Spectator is a film history podcast that takes away the pretense that usually comes along with learning about film. Each week, we tackle a "classic" of film history but do these films actually hold up for a modern audience? Can they entertain someone who grew up on Spider-Man reboots and Jim Carrey movies, or will they forever be relics of a bygone era?