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    joseph conrad

    Explore " joseph conrad" with insightful episodes like "Francis Ford Coppola and the Fat Girl in Ohio", "2.12: Józef Konrad Korzeniowski (Joseph Conrad)", "Als ein König den Kongo verkaufte: Leopold II. und Zentralafrika", "Flaubert, le mot juste, and Schopenhauer's philosophy of language!" and "Part 11: L'adaptatrice (ft. Rebecca Sheehan)" from podcasts like ""Heart Of It All", "Polish Stories", "WDR Zeitzeichen", "The Wisdom Of" and "The Akerman Year"" and more!

    Episodes (12)

    Francis Ford Coppola and the Fat Girl in Ohio

    Francis Ford Coppola and the Fat Girl in Ohio

    Follow the Heart of It All Podcast on Instagram: @heartofitallpod

    Follow Kate Hagen @thathagengrrl in IG and X

    Read Kate Hagen’s incredible essay, Fat Girls On Film: https://letterboxd.com/journal/fat-girls-on-film

    Follow Melissa Baumgart on X: @fatgirlinohio

    Check out Melissa Baumgart’s piece, You Have to Fail A Little: https://www.brightwalldarkroom.com/2018/06/13/you-have-to-fail-a-little-on-hearts-of-darkness/


    Super nerd alert, to dig even further down the rabbit hole- Check out Tetragrammaton Rick Rubin’s interview with Edward Norton about Marlon Brando (starts at 2:12:00), very interesting insight into Marlon Brando.

    2.12: Józef Konrad Korzeniowski (Joseph Conrad)

    2.12: Józef Konrad Korzeniowski (Joseph Conrad)
    Józef Konrad Korzeniowski znany jest światu jako Joseph Conrad - jeden z największych pisarzy literatury anglojęzycznej. Tak naprawdę jednak pochodził z Polski. W drugim sezonie Polish Stories opowiadam o Polakach, których pewnie znasz, ale może nie wiesz, że byli Polakami. TRANSKRYPT ODCINKA ZNAJDZIESZ TUTAJ: http://tinyurl.com/m6d3zzvf Autorką Polish Stories jestem ja, Gosia Rokicka http://polishstories.net. Muzyka: Olak/Zakrocki. Jeśli lubisz Polish Stories i chcesz mnie wesprzeć, możesz to zrobić tu: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/polishstories. Dziękuję!

    Part 11: L'adaptatrice (ft. Rebecca Sheehan)

    Part 11: L'adaptatrice (ft. Rebecca Sheehan)
    Kate and Simon are joined by author and film academic Rebecca Sheehan (https://communications.fullerton.edu/ctva/faculty/sheehan_rebecca/index.php) to dissect two later Akerman features, including her final scripted feature, bound together in this episode by their respective takes on literary giants. First up is 2000's La Captive, derived from a section of Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time; next is Almayer's Folly, derived from the Joseph Conrad novella/story of the same name. Music by: Rachmaninoff, Mozart. If you like the show or what we do generally, consider throwing us a few bucks to help cover our costs: https://paypal.me/kateandsimonpod Our intro music is performed by Sundar Subramanian. You can stream and buy his work here: https://sundarsubramanian.bandcamp.com/

    Lord Uvalde

    Lord Uvalde
    “The harsh reality of life is that sooner or later, your beliefs will find themselves tested. It’s easy to say, “I believe this…” and maybe even mean it. Because until whatever belief it is has actually been tested it is just a belief.” I wrote those words about ten or so days ago, after receiving some rather disturbing personal news. I was upset about the realization that a belief that had been held for a lifetime suddenly seemed out of play. Now, from a religious viewpoint, that’s devastating enough. But what happens when said belief is your actual life’s purpose? In high school, I read the Book “Lord Jim,” which became one of the most influential books in my life (the movie is good too), particularly in those moments, rare though they are, when my own weaknesses come up against my ideals. It’s a lesson that I keep forefront in my thinking. I don’t know what will be the final accounting in Uvalde. At this point, nobody does. But I do know this…. there are a lot of questions about what people say that they believe versus what they did when the moment came…

    APOCALYPSE NOW

    APOCALYPSE NOW

    "I love the smell of napalm and male friendship in the morning." 

    It's time to unpack one of the biggest boys in all of American cinema, the war film to end all war films, the controversial, the incomparable, the magnificent and profane: APOCALYPSE NOW. Aya loves war movies, Kevin thinks this is a horror movie disguised as a war epic, the takes are as hot as a Vietnamese summer folks, you don't want to miss it.

     

    Aya Lehman: https://twitter.com/ayalhmn

    Kevin Cookman: https://twitter.com/KevinCookman

     

    A Merry-Go-Round Magazine Podcast: https://merrygoroundmagazine.com/

     

    Support Merry-Go-Round Magazine!: https://www.patreon.com/mgrm 

    023 | Apocalypse Now ft. Luke Hogan

    023 | Apocalypse Now ft. Luke Hogan

    Films mentioned in this episode:

    • Apocalypse Now (1979) | Dir. Francis Ford Coppola
    • Chocolat (2000) | Dir. Lasse Hallstrom
    • The Deer Hunter (1978) | Dir. Michael Cimino
    • Dr. Stangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying & Love the Bomb (1964) | Dir. Stanley Kubrick
    • Blue Velvet (1986) | Dir. David Lynch
    • Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse (1991) | Dir. Fax Bahr, George Hickenlooper, Eleanor Coppola
    • The Godfather (1972) | Dir. Francis Ford Coppola
    • On the Waterfront (1954) | Dir. Elia Kazan
    • Blade Runner (1982) | Dir. Ridley Scott
    • Cafe Society (2016) | Dir. Woody Allen
    • Last Tango in Paris (1972) | Dir. Bernardo Bertolucci
    • The Conformist (1970) | Dir. Bernardo Bertolucci
    • Interstellar (2014) | Dir. Christopher Nolan
    • Lawrence of Arabia (1962) | Dir. David Lean
    • The Godfather: Part II (1974) | Dir. Francis Ford Coppola
    • Days of Heaven (1978) | Dir. Terrence Malick
    • The Thin Red Line (1998) | Dir. Terrence Malick
    • Frank (2014) | Dir. Lenny Abrahamson

    Episode 39: Apocalypse now (1979)

    Episode 39: Apocalypse now (1979)

    "I love the smell of napalm in the morning (...) The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like . . . victory".

    Apocalypse Now (1979) instrueret af Francis Ford Coppola baseret på Joseph Conrads roman "Heart of Darkness" (1889). Det er den 39. film på Thomas og Mortens liste over de 100 bedste film.

    I 1969 under Vietnamkrigen bliver Kaptajn Benjamin L. Willard (Martin Sheen) sendt ind i junglen for at likvidere oberst Walter E. Kurtz (Marlon Brando), der har brudt med det amerikanske millitær og nu fører sin egen krig på grænsen til Cambodia. På sin rejse møder Willard flere personer fx menig Tyrone (Laurence Fishburne), surferfanatikeren oberstløjtnant William "Bill" Kilgore (Robert Duvall) og den navnløse fotojournalist og Kurtz-discipel (Dennis Hopper).

    Thomas og Morten tager en snak om antikrigsfilm, rejser ind i mørket og krigens grusomhed.

    Tak, fordi du støtter podcasten på 10eren 🤓 

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