The Important Cinema Club podcast discuss the career of Writer/Director John Milius by diving into his films RED DAWN and CONAN THE BARBARIAN.
ICC #213 – Nic Cage To The Max
The Important Cinema Club podcast discuss the varied, and wild, career of Nicolas Cage by watching VAMPIRE’S KISS and LEAVING LAST VEGAS.
ICC #212 – A Beginner’s Guide to Brazilian Cinema by Beginners
The Important Cinema Club podcast introduce themselves to the cinema of Brazil by tackling a trio of movies that span it’s entire history.
ICC #211 – Herman Yau: The Ultimate Hong Kong Filmmaker?
The Important Cinema Club podcast discusses the career of Hong Kong cinema king Herman Yau and his career in the gutters of CAT III and beyond.
ICC #210 – Nick Broomfield’s Subjective Truth
We discuss the career of renegade documentary maker Nick Broomfield and his films Chicken Ranch, Heidi Fleiss: Hollywood Madam, Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer, and Tales of the Grim Sleeper.
ICC #209 – The Tender Side of Samuel Fuller
We discuss the two-fisted cinema of Writer/Director Samuel Fuller and focus on PARK ROW and SHOCK CORRIDOR.
ICC #208 – Agnes Varda’s House of Cinema
We discuss the career of writer/director Agnes Varda and focus on her films Cleo from 5 to 7, One Sings the Other Doesn’t and The Beaches of Agnes.
#207 – Robert Pattinson: Sexy Vampire or Arthouse Messiah?
We tackle the career of Robert Pattinson and discuss TWILIGHT, GOOD TIMES and COSMOPOLIS as we dissect the career who was believed by snobs to be a one-note joke but has turned into a performer who takes fascinating chances.
ICC #206 – Tex Avery’s Airtight Logic
https://soundcloud.com/the-important-cinema-club/206-the-airtight-logic-of-tex-avery We discuss the father of hundreds of cartoon tropes: Tex Avery. The master of the eye pop, the leader in animated violence and a legend of the field. We discuss his career, a number...
ICC #205 – Jamaa Fanaka Won’t Go Down Without a Fight
We discuss the career of independent Writer/Director Jamaa Fanaka, his lifelong struggle making films, and his role in the L.A Rebellion. His features under discussion include Welcome Home, Brother Charles, Emma Mae, and the Penitentiary trilogy.