An Ear for Film: Like Spaghetti Through a Tennis Racquet
The three best movie-related podcast episodes of the week.

Each week, Dom plumbs the depths of podcast nation to bring you the best in cinema-related chats and programs. If writing about music is like dancing about architecture, then writing about movie podcasts is like listening to someone describe someone dancing about architecture.
Have a suggestion for good movie podcast? Slide into Dom’s DMs on Twitter.
Here’s a tip for podcasts who spent the week after the Oscars either admitting that they recorded the episode before the Oscars and so give already obsolete predictions, or tallying up their correct predictions: No one cares. No one. Don’t do that anymore. Let’s move on with our lives. Let’s spend the following 12 months steeling ourselves for yet another bout of disappointment come next year, relishing the consolation that Iñárritu at least (probably?) won’t be releasing another movie in 2016.
On The New Hollywood Podcast, Brian Flaherty did right by his listeners and the rest of humanity, interviewing director Robert Eggers about his feature debut The Witch and the exigencies of bringing such an obsessively ambitious film to life on a scant $3.5 million budget. Like Norm Wilner’s conversation with (unfortunate Oscar loser) Adam Benzine on last week’s Primer episode of Someone Else’s Movie, Flaherty’s talk with Eggers reveals that a clarity of vision and a stubborn wealth of patience can push even the most difficult ideas into fruition.
The genial bros and only members of The Important Cinema Club invited official(-ish) Jim Carrey historian Emily Milling to their ’cast to peruse the career and question the lasting appeal of the Canadian comedy superstar. Honing in on Ace Ventura and The Cable Guy, the episode is probably best enjoyed by listeners who grew up in the midst of Carrey’s ascension, because much of the joy to be pulled from their conversation is in coming to terms with one’s own nostalgia, noting that Ace Ventura especially, but many of Carrey’s films generally, have trouble holding up decades later. Dumb and Dumber may be a classic, but Dumb and Dumber To is an abomination—so what went wrong in between?
And finally, John August and Craig Mazin devote their Scriptnotes Podcast to the severely dubious subject of “good writing,” which they ostensibly decry as fundamentally subjective, but then spend an hour dictating with about as much clarity as Flint’s water supply. It’s an interesting episode in that they see no difference between “writing” and “storytelling,” which is as much about the attitude of film industry screenwriters as it is about the overall zeitgeist when it comes to “story.” Apparently everything is a “story” nowadays, from what a vacuum cleaner salesman pitches to what a film stock company sells—and just because human beings are natural storytellers doesn’t mean everyone should get paid to be one. Though I do dig how mercilessly August and Mazin chastise certain screenwriters for poor punctuation and proofreading.
So make sure you know the difference between “your” and “you’re,” because if you don’t then read a fucking book before you go posting your diarrhea-thoughts on Facebook—and then check out my picks for the three best movie-related podcasts of the week: