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rashomon
Explore "rashomon" with insightful episodes like "Cannes 2023 Monster Is a Masterpiece", "Brian's Birthday Movies", "Rashomon [1950]", "Filmtagebuch mit DON'T WORRY DARLING und Kurosawa" and "Ep 353: The Last Duel" from podcasts like ""Critic Reviews for Addicted", "BS Movies", "Scene and Heard", "The CRITIC, the FAN, and the MOVIE" and "The ONLY Podcast about Movies"" and more!
Episodes (20)
Brian's Birthday Movies
Brian has Shelly watch three movies for his birthday including The Snake Girl And The Silver Haired Witch, Rashomon and Hard Ticket to Hawaii
Rashomon [1950]
Jackie and Greg arrive at the next Kurosawa on the list, the insanely influential RASHOMON from 1950. Topics of discussion include the film's groundbreaking narrative style, a debate over which of the versions of the story is most accurate, why the baby at the end ties things up a little too neatly, and how it's a pluviophile's dream come true.
#24 on Sight & Sound's 2012 "The 100 Greatest Films of All Time" list.
bfi.org.uk/sight-and-sound/polls/greatest-films-all-time-2012
#41 on Sight & Sound's 2022 "The 100 Greatest Films of All Time" list. bfi.org.uk/sight-and-sound/greatest-films-all-time
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Photography: Matt Araquistain
Music: Andrew Cox
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Filmtagebuch mit DON'T WORRY DARLING und Kurosawa
Zum zweiten Mal in Folge sprechen wir über unsere letzten Sichtungen (wir haben in letzter Zeit einiges geschaut): Filme, aber auch Serien
Ihr findet uns bei...
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Ep 353: The Last Duel
Batman, Bourne, Kylo Ren and Villanelle in a new movie by Ridley Scott? Sign us up for The Last Duel!
Matt and Shahir take a trip to Medieval Times France where English is freely spoken as squires, knights and ladies all round up different perspectives Rashomon style. Will we find a deeper truth or skim the surface of lies?
You can offer up your perspective by emailing us at onlymoviepodcast@gmail.com or tell us a tale on Twitter and Instagram
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2004 A Film Club | Rashomon, Ikiru
This Podcast Will Change Your Life, Episode Two Hundred and Sixty-Nine - You Want To Be The Master Of Your Own Story.
This episode stars Robert Tomaino (New Madrid). It was recorded over the Zoom between the This Podcast Will Change Your Life home studio in Chicago, IL and Tomaino's home, which is not out west, but east (east of the This Podcast Will Change Your Life home studio anyway) in Connecticut in October 2021.
Episodio 5 - Kurosawa e la bomba H: Rapsodia in Agosto
42- Rashomon (1950s)
In this episode Paul, Kieran and I have a conversation about the Akira Kurosawa film, 'Rashomon', having watched this Japanese classic for the first time.
At Least the Baby's Honest
It's time for another film not in the English language, so we watch the Japanese classic "Rashomon" and have a nice discussion on perspective and outright lying. Spoilers, only the baby is honest.
Episode 180: Chekhov's Schrödinger's Dagger (Kurosawa's "Rashomon")
Eleventh Century Japan. A samurai and his wife are walking through the forest and come across a bandit. The bandit attacks the samurai and has sex with/rapes his wife. A woodcutter finds the samurai, stabbed to death. Who killed the samurai and with what? What role did his wife play in his death? Kurosawa gives us four perspectives, told in flashbacks within flashbacks. Who’s telling the truth? Is anyone? Can we ever know what really happened? A simple story on the surface becomes a meditation on epistemological despair.
Plus, your lizard brain is out to get you and you only have 90 seconds to stop it!
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Links:
- When Your Lizard Brain Burns You Out And Short-Circuits Your Career
- Triune brain - Wikipedia
- Cesario, J., Johnson, D. J., & Eisthen, H. (2019). Your Brain Is Not an Onion with a Tiny Reptile Inside.
- David talks Watchmen on the Pretty Much Pop Podcast
- Tamler Sommers Talks Honor on Stoa Podcast
- Rashomon - Wikipedia
- Rashomon (1950) | The Criterion Collection
- Rashomon | The Current | The Criterion Collection
- Rashomon Analysis - Rashomon's Problem with Truth | Topic
- Every Frame A Painting: The Bad Sleep Well (1960) - The Geometry of a Scene - YouTube
- Akira Kurosawa - Composing Movement
Episode 99 - Rashomon
This week, we watch the film that broke Japanese cinema onto the worlds stage. Revolutionary for its time, its non-linear story telling has influenced not only film, but criminal psychology as well, as lawyers and academics alike have referenced the theories presented here for the past 70 years. Rashomon (1950), directed by Akira Kurosawa.
64: Would I Lie To You?
The Rashomon Effect in Star Trek and Beyond.
Two podcasters meet on the internet. They watch a classic film that one has seen and the other hasn’t. They compare it to an episode of Star Trek—or maybe two, or even three or four. They consider the broader cultural implications of the film’s central themes of uncertainty, subjectivity, and the unknowability of truth. Or perhaps they don’t. Listening at home, you wonder: Did any of these things really happen? Can you trust your ears? Are you sure you can really remember what you’ve heard?
In this episode of Primitive Culture, host Duncan Barrett is joined by Tony Black to look at famed Japanese director Akira Kurosawa’s seminal 1950 film Rashomon and its influences on Star Trek—in particular on “A Matter of Perspective” from The Next Generation and “Rules of Engagement” from Deep Space Nine.
The so-called Rashomon Effect—a cultural trope in which multiple unreliable narrators produce different accounts of the same event—has become so popular that it has eclipsed the fame of the story that inspired it. Comparing the black-and-white Japanese film, about the frustrated attempt to understand an act of extreme violence that takes place in a secluded bamboo grove, with the episodes of Star Trek and The X-Files that borrowed from it—along with the 1998 play Copenhagen—we ask whether the film’s fascination with the impossibility of reconstructing an objective history of events may be peculiarly relevant in the current “post-truth” world.
Chapters
Rashomon and What We Left Behind (00:03:55)
A Matter of Perspective (00:13:51)
Rules of Engagement (00:23:47)
The X-Files (00:27:30)
“Living Witness” and “Author, Author” (00:36:28)
Alternative Facts (00:41:00)
Copenhagen (00:53:15)
Final Thoughts (01:07:15)
Host
Duncan Barrett
Guest
Tony Black
Production
Tony Black (Editor) Duncan Barrett (Producer) C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp (Executive Producer) Tony Black (Associate Producer) Clara Cook (Associate Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) Amy Nelson (Associate Producer) Richard Marquez (Production Manager)
Film Foil 6: Rashomon
In our 6th episode Brandon & Tyler discuss the 1950 Film Rashomon, directed by Akira Kurosawa.
Stream The Movie From:
Amazon
Google Play Movies
Follow us on on Twitter, @FilmFoilPodcast, and Facebook
Brandon’s Twitter: @BrandoV2
Tyler’s Twitter: @TylerJRinne
Music - "Golden Sunrise" by Josh Woodward. Free download: http://joshwoodward.com/
FYC Podcast Episode 51: Rashomon (1950)
It's all about different perspectives on this week's episode of FYC as hosts Dustin and Mike tell their versions of how they reacted to Akira Kurosawa's 1950 classic whodunnit, Rashomon. Check out the conversation to find out whether the film will be deemed a masterpiece or a museum piece.
The Rambo Effect | Heroes Part II
First Blood, the first installment in the iconic Rambo franchise, was released 35 years ago this fall. In this episode, I take a look at how the franchise has both reflected and influenced American culture--and question both the ethical and epistemic implications of the films' success.
This is the second part of a double feature on action movies and American culture (and one piece of a half-season mini-arc concerning the ethics of adaptation).
It's also the third episode in a row to mention Ronald Reagan!
Drinking and Thinking: Episode 20 - Don Calame
Author Don Calame (Swim The Fly Trilogy) joins the guys to discuss his latest novel Dan Vs. Nature over a few El Presidentes and a new drink – The Trembler. The guys discuss rum, honey, the difficulties of watching movies while under sedation, the disappointing realities of nude beaches, and the disillusionment involved in screenplay development meetings.
Rashomon & The Greatest Year In Movie History
Yesterday, December 15th 2014, marked the 75th anniversary of the release of the Selznick adaptation of GONE WITH THE WIND; a film that is often cited as the crowning achievement of a year that's brimming with classics. For those who are mathematically challenged (No judgement here. This is movie podcast, not an algebra podcast) that year is 1939, the supposed "Greatest Year in Cinema History." And why, you ask, should anyone give a damn? Well, in this episode Lady P is once again joined by two of her favorite classic-film-aficionados, Anne Marie Kelly and Carrie Specht, to ask that very question, and to reflect on whether or not this historic 365 day period lives up to its reputation. Plus, everyone offers up their own personal favorite 1939 movie selections.
But before they get into all that, there's the small matter of the next Sight and Sound entry to tackle. This time the panelist offer their analyses of the 24th Greatest Film of All Time, Akira Kurosawa's RASHOMON. Will our group of ladies find Toshiro Mifune's devilish bandit as charming as he thinks he is, or will they take the side of the humorless bandit? Listen up to find out.
Episode 61 - Akutagawa Ryunosuke
This week, a special guest reader will be coming on to read a script on Akutagawa Ryunosuke, one of modern Japan's foremost authors. As the script is still mine, any errors are my own; join us for a distinctly non-expert look at one of the great minds of Japanese literature!
Episode 48: Pests, Sex And Otherwise
Episode 48 in a Series of 1000 Podchats from your friends Ben Pobjie and Cam Smith
Warning, may contain contents of:
- Teletubbies
- Internet Comments
- Cranberry Country
- Bio-Engineering
- Sex Pests
- Dick Smith
- Katherine Heigl
Stay metal and stay bogan.