Discussions of great movies from a Catholic perspective, exploring the Vatican film list and beyond. Hosted by Thomas V. Mirus and actor James T. Majewski, with special guests. Vatican film list episodes are labeled as Season 1. A production of CatholicCulture.org.
…
continue reading
The Sound of Music is rightly beloved by Catholics. James and Thomas discuss the movie's all-around excellence, break down Julie Andrews's virtuosic performance, and explore what the film says about the freedom and openness necessary to discern and pursue one's vocation in life. DONATE to make this show possible! http://catholicculture.org/donate/a…
…
continue reading
1
The Chosen, Season 4: Lectio Divina or Fan Fiction?
2:36:30
2:36:30
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
2:36:30
The Chosen has now passed the halfway point of its seven seasons. Four seasons in, it is possible to take a big-picture look at the show’s trajectory. Season four takes us from the execution of John the Baptist to the raising of Lazarus, ending on the verge of Holy Week with the apostles preparing for Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem. Biblica…
…
continue reading
1
Church Teaching on Cinema: Vatican II and Beyond
1:03:49
1:03:49
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:03:49
Thomas Mirus and Nathan Douglas's mini-series on magisterial documents about cinema comes to a close with an episode covering the Vatican II era - specifically between 1963 and 1995, spanning the pontificates of Pope St. Paul VI and Pope St. John Paul II. This was, frankly, an era of decline in terms of official Church engagement with cinema. Where…
…
continue reading
1
A Brighter Summer Day (1991)
1:22:23
1:22:23
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:22:23
The 1991 film A Brighter Summer Day, directed by Edward Yang, is considered by many one of the best movies ever made. The film is set in Taiwan, shortly after the Chinese Civil War, when the country was under martial law, with a political and cultural pressure felt at every level of society. At the center of this intricately plotted four-hour drama…
…
continue reading
1
Pope Pius XII on The Ideal Film, Pt. 2 (Church Teaching on Cinema)
1:26:21
1:26:21
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:26:21
Thomas Mirus and Nathan Douglas continue their discussion of Pope Pius XII’s apostolic exhortations brought together in the 1955 document “The Ideal Film”, which remains the high water-mark of official Church engagement with the art form. They also touch on his 1957 encyclical Miranda prorsus, on radio, films, and television. In the first audience,…
…
continue reading
1
Pope Pius XII on The Ideal Film, Pt. 1 (Church Teaching on Cinema)
1:09:09
1:09:09
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:09:09
Continuing their survey of magisterial documents on cinema, Thomas Mirus and Nathan Douglas arrive at Pope Ven. Pius XII's two apostolic exhortations gathered under the title "The Ideal Film". Pius shows himself to be a true enthusiast of cinema with his poetic insights. "The Ideal Film" remains the high water-mark of official Church engagement wit…
…
continue reading
1
Church Teaching on Cinema: Pope Pius XI
1:17:51
1:17:51
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:17:51
In 1936, Pope Pius XI published his encyclical on the motion picture, Vigilanti cura. The encyclical deals with the grave moral concerns raised by the cinema, which had by then become a ubiquitous social influence (though it was also a still-evolving medium, as the transition from silent film to talkies had only recently been completed). Pius holds…
…
continue reading
1
Wildcat does justice to Flannery O'Connor's faith (w/ Joshua Hren)
1:25:18
1:25:18
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:25:18
Joshua Hren, editor-in-chief of Wiseblood Books, joins the podcast to review Wildcat, the new Flannery O'Connor biopic directed by Ethan Hawke and starring Maya Hawke and Laura Linney. The film is a respectful and nuanced portrayal of O'Connor and her faith, accomplished by extensive quotation from her prayer journal and letters, as well as several…
…
continue reading
1
Malick’s humble camera: The New World (2005)
1:50:46
1:50:46
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:50:46
The Criteria crew continue their journey through the works of today's most significant Christian filmmaker, Terrence Malick. The New World is an underrated masterpiece about Pocahontas and the founding of Jamestown in 1607. Starring the 14-year-old Q'orianka Kilcher as Pocahontas, Colin Farrell as John Smith, and Christian Bale as John Rolfe, Malic…
…
continue reading
1
A study of pastoral prudence: Léon Morin, Priest (1961)
1:04:35
1:04:35
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:04:35
In occupied France during World War II, a Communist woman named Barny (Emmanuelle Riva) enters a confessional for the first time since her first Communion. She is there not to confess but to troll the priest by saying “Religion is the opiate of the people.” To her surprise, Fr. Léon Morin (Jean-Paul Belmondo) is not thrown off balance, but offers a…
…
continue reading
1
Studies of ambition: All About Eve, The Bad and the Beautiful
1:06:34
1:06:34
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:06:34
Thomas and James discuss two classic Hollywood films dealing with the moral problems of overweening ambition - specifically in the context of show business. All About Eve (1950), which won six Oscars and features razor-sharp dialogue and an unforgettable performance by Bette Davis, is set in the world of the theater, while The Bad and the Beautiful…
…
continue reading
1
Metaphysical Malick: The Thin Red Line (1998)
1:35:39
1:35:39
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:35:39
Continuing our trek through the filmography of Terrence Malick, the world's greatest living Christian filmmaker, we arrive at The Thin Red Line (featuring Jim Caviezel in his breakthrough role). This film came in 1998 after Malick's twenty-year hiatus from directing movies, after which he never took such a long break again. Focused on the experienc…
…
continue reading
1
Kiarostami: blurring the line between documentary and fiction
1:08:31
1:08:31
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:08:31
There are many ways to make a movie. Only a few of those ways fit within the Hollywood mold. We believe that rather than taking pop culture as their sole model, Catholics and Catholic filmmakers should be open to a wide variety of artistic approaches. Thus, in this episode James and Thomas discuss the early career of the great Iranian director Abba…
…
continue reading
1
Godzilla Minus One, a profound appeal for a culture of life
1:06:00
1:06:00
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:06:00
You may be surprised to hear that one of the more morally profound new movies we’ve seen recently is a Godzilla reboot! The original 1954 Godzilla had its own ideas, being a way of processing Japan’s nuclear trauma and the ethical implications of superweapons. But the new Godzilla Minus One goes even deeper, examining not only the trauma of the war…
…
continue reading
1
Generational wounds in Tokyo Story (1953)
1:18:13
1:18:13
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:18:13
Widely considered one of the greatest films ever made, Yasujiro Ozu's Tokyo Story is a quiet, gentle yet tragic family drama about the distance that can grow between elderly parents and their adult children. It's a critique of the transformation of culture and mores in postwar Japan, particularly the loss of filial piety, but it's not just specific…
…
continue reading
1
Popcorn with the Pope: Word on Fire on the Vatican Film List
1:01:03
1:01:03
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:01:03
There must be something in the water – everyone’s talking about the Vatican Film List! Just after the Criteria crew concluded three years going through the list, Word on Fire has published their own book about it, Popcorn with the Pope: A Guide to the Vatican Film List, with essays on all 45 films by David Paul Baird, Fr. Michael Ward, and Andrew P…
…
continue reading
1
Introduction to Terrence Malick: Badlands and Days of Heaven
1:56:46
1:56:46
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:56:46
This is the first episode of a series covering the complete filmography of Terrence Malick, who is arguably both the most important Christian filmmaker working today and the most important filmmaker working today, period. What sets Malick apart from a number of other directors whose work deals with a religious search, is that his films are not just…
…
continue reading
DONATE to make this show possible! http://catholicculture.org/donate/audio SIGN UP for Catholic Culture's newsletter: https://www.catholicculture.org/newslettersThomas V. Mirus, James T. Majewski
…
continue reading
1
Wise Blood (1979): John Huston's film adaptation w/ Katy Carl
1:08:01
1:08:01
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:08:01
Katy Carl, fiction writer and editor-in-chief of Dappled Things, joins the show to discuss the 1979 film adaptation of Flannery O'Connor's novel Wise Blood, directed by John Huston and starring Brad Dourif. Links Katy's short story collection, Fragile Objects https://www.wisebloodbooks.com/store/p136/Fragile_Objects%3A_Short_Stories_by_Katy_Carl.ht…
…
continue reading
1
Catholic India's 'Master of Chaos'
1:22:14
1:22:14
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:22:14
Introducing a director you almost certainly haven't heard of - but who is well worth getting to know. Lijo Jose Pellissery is one of the major artists of a new movement that has developed over the last decade in the Malayalam film industry - that is, the cinema made in Kerala, the region where India's Christians have lived for many centuries. All o…
…
continue reading
1
The Age of Innocence (1993)
1:01:58
1:01:58
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:01:58
The Age of Innocence may come as a surprise to those who associate Martin Scorsese with movies about gangsters. Based on Edith Wharton's novel, it's a sumptuous period romance set in late-19th-century Manhattan high society. Intriguingly, Scorsese described it as his "most violent film", though not so much as a punch is thrown: the violence portray…
…
continue reading
1
When "engaging the culture" means loving mediocrity
1:39:00
1:39:00
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:39:00
Today it's taken for granted that we as Christians are called to "engage the culture" in order to evangelize. Often "engaging the culture" means paying an inordinate amount of attention to popular commercial entertainment in order to show unbelievers how hip we are, straining to find a "Christ-figure" in every comic book movie, and making worship m…
…
continue reading
1
Empires of death: Apocalypto (2006)
1:12:20
1:12:20
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:12:20
Mel Gibson's Apocalypto is one of those works of art whose reputation has suffered from its circumstances. Its release in late 2006, two years after The Passion and six month after Gibson's infamous DUI, more or less coincided with the director's blacklisting from Hollywood. Thus Apocalypto tends to be overlooked by critics, despite having been hai…
…
continue reading
1
Asteroid City: delightful, decadent, or despairing?
1:20:59
1:20:59
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:20:59
0:00 The prosecution 39:15 The defense With the release of his new film Asteroid City and with memes imitating his cinematic style going viral on social media, Wes Anderson is having a real moment in the zeitgeist almost thirty years into his career. In Asteroid City, Anderson drives further into the immediately identifiable and somewhat polarizing…
…
continue reading
Jim Caviezel’s latest project, The Sound of Freedom, is a harrowing but thrilling look at the fight against the global sex trafficking of children. Caviezel's intense but nuanced performance plays well into both the serious subject matter and the film's mainstream appeal. The film's spiritual relevance is increased by the choice to include not only…
…
continue reading
1
We watched the WHOLE Vatican Film List
3:04:31
3:04:31
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
3:04:31
Since we started Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast in May 2020, we've been hosting in-depth discussions of movies from the Vatican's 1995 list of important films. Now, after three years, we've finished discussing all 45 films - and in this episode, together with Catholic filmmaker Nathan Douglas, we're taking a look back at the list as a whole. A…
…
continue reading
The new film Padre Pio, directed by Abel Ferrara and starring Shia LaBeouf, is ruined by a pornographic and sacrilegious scene involving abuse of a sacred image. James Majewski and Thomas Mirus contend that conscientious Catholics must not see this movie. They explain the difference between portraying an act and committing that act, and how that li…
…
continue reading
1
When artists feel lonely in the Church (Livestream)
1:12:04
1:12:04
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:12:04
In this livestream, James Majewski and Thomas Mirus we discussed errors artists can fall into in pushing back against a moralistic approach to art found within the Church. Rather than reacting away from rigidity to excessive openness, the mature Catholic artist has to get over himself and be a servant. Also discussed: The relation between order and…
…
continue reading
1
The last great silent epic: Napoleon (1927)
1:04:12
1:04:12
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:04:12
After three years discussing the Vatican’s 1995 list of 45 important films, Thomas and James have finally reached the final movie! Made in 1927, it’s a five-and-a-half-hour long, epic, technically dazzling silent film about Napoleon. Napoleon trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6504eRh5h6M This podcast is a production of CatholicCulture.org. If…
…
continue reading
We'll be doing YouTube livestreams on the next 3 Monday evenings, as part of CatholicCulture.org's May fundraising campaign. In these freewheeling conversations, you'll have the opportunity to ask questions and prompt discussion in the live chat box! 5/8, 8pm ET - Mike Aquilina (host, Way of the Fathers podcast) 5/15, 8pm ET - Thomas Mirus & James …
…
continue reading
1
The Miracle Maker (1999) w/ Timothy Reckart
1:05:27
1:05:27
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:05:27
The Miracle Maker, a little-known animated Gospel film with Ralph Fiennes as the voice of Jesus, deserves a place in any Christian family's Easter viewing. Its beautifully crafted mix of stop-motion and traditional 2D animation engages the imagination without dominating it in a way that live-action cinema can't. It's also a masterful piece of adapt…
…
continue reading
Filmed in Rome just after its liberation from the Nazis, while the rest of Italy was still at war, Roberto Rossellini's Rome, Open City documents a unique moment in the history of the Eternal City. With its story of working-class Italians secretly resisting Nazi occupiers, Open City did much to dispose Americans more kindly toward a defeated Italy,…
…
continue reading
1
Can a Holocaust film offer hope? Schindler's List (1993)
1:20:51
1:20:51
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:20:51
Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List - which was included on the Vatican's 1995 list of important films - is generally acclaimed as a masterpiece, yet some critics have called it a Hollywood falsification of its subject matter, either because it does not sufficiently show the brutality of the Holocaust, because the story is told from the point of vi…
…
continue reading
1
Catholic review of The Chosen, Season 3
1:34:43
1:34:43
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:34:43
It’s time for another lively discussion of the wildly popular Christian TV series The Chosen, following on the release of its third season, which stretches from the sermon on the mount to the feeding of the five thousand. Since the show is written by Evangelical Protestants, Thomas and James make a point of keeping an eye out for any doctrinal erro…
…
continue reading
1
Ordet (The Word) (1955)
1:14:53
1:14:53
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:14:53
Earlier on this podcast was discussed Carl Theodor Dreyer's silent masterpiece, The Passion of Joan of Arc. Another of Dreyer's films was also included on the Vatican film list, this one from the sound era: Ordet (The Word), based on a play by the Lutheran priest Kaj Munk, who was later martyred by the Gestapo. The film centers on the Borgen family…
…
continue reading
The Leopard was one of the most popular Italian novels of the 20th century. An historical epic about a Sicilian prince who must navigate the social upheaval that came with Italy's unification in the mid-19th century, it was written by a man who was in a position to know about fading aristocracy - Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa was a Sicilian aristocr…
…
continue reading
1
The Sacrifice (1986)
1:26:55
1:26:55
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:26:55
Andrei Tarkovsky’s final film, The Sacrifice, is a deeply personal work, made while the director was dying of cancer. It deals, in Tarkovsky’s words, with "the theme of harmony which is born only of sacrifice, the twofold dependence of love. It's not a question of mutual love: what nobody seems to understand is that love can only be one-sided, that…
…
continue reading
1
Theology of the body shop - Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)
1:21:08
1:21:08
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:21:08
Animation director Timothy Reckart (The Star) joins Criteria to discuss his theory that the greatest action movie of recent years, Mad Max: Fury Road, is best viewed in light of Pope St. John Paul II's theology of the body. Themes of the discussion include: The film's depiction of a society based on use of persons as objects How the story reverses …
…
continue reading
1
Whisper of the generations: The Tree of Wooden Clogs (1978)
1:25:40
1:25:40
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:25:40
The Tree of Wooden Clogs, by Catholic director Ermanno Olmi, depicts a year in the life of four peasant families living on a tenant farmhouse in late 19th century Lombardy. The actors are non-professionals, real local peasants speaking their Bergamasque dialect, recreating their normal life on camera (even if in the trappings of a century earlier).…
…
continue reading
For decades critics said Orson Welles’s Citizen Kane was the greatest film ever made. Unfortunately, that intimidating label sometimes keeps people from sitting down and watching the thing. It needn’t be so. Kane is eminently watchable and entertaining. It also definitely isn’t the greatest film of all time, but it’s one of the most technically imp…
…
continue reading
James and Thomas wrap up their series of episodes on film noir with a discussion of Billy Wilder's acerbic and vastly entertaining critique of Hollywood avarice and vanity, Sunset Boulevard. The movie business from the beginning has created some sad and grotesque figures, and this film focuses on two in particular. One is the sad and deluded has-be…
…
continue reading
1
Stripping St. Francis: Francesco (1989)
1:23:06
1:23:06
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:23:06
There are two movies about St. Francis of Assisi on the Vatican's 1995 list of important films. The first, discussed in the previous episode, is Rossellini's well-known Flowers of St. Francis (1950). The second is quite obscure: Liliana Cavani's Francesco (1989), starring Mickey Rourke as St. Francis and Helena Bonham-Carter as St. Clare. The best …
…
continue reading
1
The Flowers of St. Francis (1950)
1:23:36
1:23:36
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:23:36
The great Italian director Roberto Rossellini made what is generally regarded as the best movie about St. Francis of Assisi. Its original Italian title is Francesco, giullare di Dio ("Francis, God's jester"), but in English it is known as The Flowers of St. Francis - the film being based on a 14th-century Italian novel with the same title. As the I…
…
continue reading
Continuing through the Vatican's 1995 list of important films, in the section of Art we find the universally beloved 1939 musical The Wizard of Oz. The film is undeniably delightful and magical, but suffers from the attempt to provide a moral of dubious coherence. The film is about a band of characters seeking various virtues, but at the end we are…
…
continue reading
1
Why is The Rings of Power Boring?
1:41:47
1:41:47
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:41:47
Thomas Mirus, James Majewski, and Nathan Douglas discuss the new Amazon series, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power. The show thus far is not so much offensive as it is bland in ways similar to much popular film and television today. This discussion attempts to understand why the show generally fails to move, focusing especially on its freque…
…
continue reading
1
Michelangelo movies w/ Elizabeth Lev
1:09:14
1:09:14
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:09:14
Catholic art historian Elizabeth Lev returns to Criteria to discuss two films about Michelangelo. The Agony and The Ecstasy (1965), directed by Carol Reed and starring Charlton Heston as Michelangelo and Rex Harrison as Pope Julius II, is what Italians call an "Americanata" - an unapologetically bombastic, colorful Hollywood transformation of Itali…
…
continue reading
1
Wormtongue in Times Square: Sweet Smell of Success (1957)
1:07:12
1:07:12
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:07:12
In his book on film noir, Arts of Darkness, Catholic philosopher Thomas Hibbs writes: "Subverting the rationality of the pursuit of happiness, noir turns the American dream into a nightmare. Noir also undercuts the Enlightenment vision of the city as the locus of human bliss, wherein human autonomy and rational economics could combine to bring abou…
…
continue reading
Bicycle Thieves, the most beloved classic of Italian neo-realist cinema, would be too easily explained as depicting the crushing pressures of poverty and societal dysfunction in Rome immediately following World War II. But the film transcends any sociological analysis: it has something spiritual to say about how those in poverty can respond to thei…
…
continue reading
1
Righteous among the nations: Au Revoir les Enfants (1987)
1:08:15
1:08:15
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:08:15
On the morning of January 15, 1944, Nazis raided a boarding school for boys in Avon, France. The Carmelite monks who ran the school had been hiding some Jewish boys there under false names. As a number of the children and teachers watched, three of their classmates were led away by the Nazis, along with the headmaster, Pere Jacques, who turned back…
…
continue reading
1
Film noir: Out of the Past (1947)
1:24:29
1:24:29
Відтворити пізніше
Відтворити пізніше
Списки
Подобається
Подобається
1:24:29
James and Thomas introduce one of the most influential genres of Hollywood’s golden age: film noir. Noir’s distinctively moody chiaroscuro look, suspense-laden plotting, and clever, “hard-boiled” dialogue deriving from popular crime fiction make it a most entertaining style. But why did a genre exploring the cynical, seedy and criminal side of Amer…
…
continue reading