POPULARITY
Biotech Bytes: Conversations with Biotechnology / Pharmaceutical IT Leaders
Discover essential cybersecurity strategies from expert David Fiore, who brings over 20 years of IT experience. Learn how to safeguard sensitive data in the healthcare and pharmaceutical industries. Please visit our website to get more information: https://swangroup.net/Specifically, this episode highlights the following themes:The need for a risk-based approach in managing data and cybersecurityReal-world benefits of multi-factor authentication for sensitive dataStrategies for cost-effective information security in startup pharmaceutical companiesLinks from this episode:Get to know more about David Fiore:https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidfiorecisacisspLearn more about AtlantiCare: https://www.atlanticare.orgGet to know more about Steven Swan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/swangroup
Welcome to our brand-new movie podcast! In this episode, Elise Moore and David Fiore ramble on about their respective lives cinematic and present impressionistic lists of their characteristic enthusiasms. Last, but not least, we sketch out the shape of ‘casts to come. Among the topics covered here: our not being a David Lynch podcast, RCA Videodiscs, Canadians watching New England PBS stations, Xanadu, The Lady in the Lake, reading about movies you fear you’ll never see, The Strawberry Blonde, The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex, Bette Davis in general, Stanley Cavell, Ray Carney, Jonathan Rosenbaum, and the great Jerry Lewis. Time Codes: 0h 1m 00s: Dave and Elise’s Nitrate Nativities 1h 16m 33s: 4 Impressionistic lists 1h 57m 35s: Coming attractions *Read Elise’s Writing at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cléo, and Bright Lights.* Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com Theme Music: “What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?” – Le Tigre
This week my guest is David Fiore, and we discuss Night Gallery Season 3 Episode 4 - "Spectre in Tap-Shoes".
***SPOILER ALERT*** Elise Moore and David Fiore plow right ahead into parts 3 and 4 of the story - and they're awfully glad they did! We contemplate the dismal final day in the life of an LMD (Lodge Model Decoy), marvel at the generous jackpot compensation plan offered to Black Lodge parolees, and forget to discuss Dr. Jacoby and his gleaming shovels. Two (Good Dale) thumbs up! Time Code: Intro Sound Collage: 0:00 to 2:03 Discussion: 2:03 to end You can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel, Hypocritic Days (published by Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. Please do let us know if you check it out. Lynch Links: The Lodgers, with Kate Rennebohm, Simon Howell, and friends Diane, with Rosie & the Gang Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure
Here we are for Parts I and II - in which Elise Moore and David Fiore discover just how difficult it is to discuss a David Lynch project while it is still in progress. (We also receive dire intimations of what might have happened to Charlie Brown's little X-mas tree if it hadn't gotten a little love.) Time Code: Intro Sound Collage: 0:00 to 2:03 Discussion: 2:03 to end You can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel, Hypocritic Days (published by Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. Please do let us know if you check it out. Lynch Links: The Lodgers, with Kate Rennebohm, Simon Howell, and friends Diane, with Rosie & the Gang Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure
THE FILM & WATER PODCAST Episode 95: THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES Rob welcomes back film blogger and podcaster DAVID FIORE to discuss William Wyler's Oscar-winning 1946 post-war drama THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES, starring Fredric March, Myrna Loy, Teresa Wright, Dana Andrews, and Virginia Mayo. Have a question or comment? Looking for more great content? DAVID FIORE - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/another-kind-distance-time-travel-film-comics-nostalgia/id905859246?mt=2 E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow THE FILM & WATER PODCAST on Twitter: @FilmAndWaterPod Subscribe via iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-film-and-water-podcast/id1077572484 This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts Thanks for listening! That's A Wrap!
Join Elise Moore and David Fiore as they gear up for David Lynch's imminent return to the Pacific Northwest with an extended discussion of Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me. We'll be covering every episode of the show's much-anticipated third season, and we're more excited than ever after our most recent viewing of the director's divisive prequel/coda. Powered by Sheryl Lee's galvanizing performance, Lynch's first "Woman In Trouble" masterpiece emerged from the ashes of the TV show's rather confused (to put it charitably) second season. This Passion of Laura Palmer is a centrifuge which separates all of the most potently Manichean elements out of the folksy flannel Brigadoon Lynch and Frost had created for the network - generating some of the most soaring and soul-shatteringly debilitating moments ever filmed. We worry that Season 3 may walk back FWWM's extraordinary final shots of Laura, Coop and the Angel; talk a lot about Victor Fleming's hyper-Freudian 1941 version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde; and bear witness to the liberatory power of a sex-negative worldview (at least in some artistic contexts - don't try it in real life!) Time (Travel) Table: 0:01:37 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me You can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel, Hypocritic Days (published by Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. Please do let us know if you check it out. Lynch Links: The Lodgers, with Kate Rennebohm, Simon Howell, and friends Diane, with Rosie & the Gang Intro Credits: The Dream Syndicate "That's What You Always Say" Jennifer Jones and Joseph Cotten (along with Debussy's music) in William Dieterle's Portrait of Jennie (1948) Outro Credits: Bette Davis + lounge singer in Edmund Goulding's Dark Victory (1939) Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure
THE FILM & WATER PODCAST Episode 66: THE SEVENTH VICTIM Rob welcomes film blogger and podcaster DAVID FIORE to discuss one of their favorite horror films, Val Lewton's THE SEVENTH VICTIM! Have a question or comment? Looking for more great content? DAVID FIORE - http://culturalconversation.libsyn.com/podcast E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow THE FILM & WATER PODCAST on Twitter: @FilmAndWaterPod Subscribe via iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-film-and-water-podcast/id1077572484 This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts Thanks for listening! That's A Wrap!
Elise Moore and David Fiore settle in for their final kick at the 11.22.63 can, with a discussion of the climactic episode 8 - "The Day in Question". The series finale is a mixed bag of praiseworthy camera work, interesting acting choices, and a fair number of self-defeating writing decisions (some of which have their roots in the novel, others of which can be blamed squarely on the people who are responsible for the strange ballad of Jake and Bill Turcotte). For the first time in forever, the duo get a chance to sink their teeth into the oft-soft pedalled time travel elements of the story - will they enjoy the meal? Dave fumes over political developments which are nearly as ludicrous as the 2016 Primaries; Elise promotes Elder Love; and together they begin to sketch out their ideas for a second podcast feed that will tackle pop culture in all of its non-time travel manifestations. Excelsior! And now that it's all over, please do check in and let us know how Hulu's adaptation of Stephen King's novel fared in your estimation. Fellow (Time) Travelers: 11.22.63 Event Podcast with Christopher DeFilippis & Skipper Martin The Time Travel Nexus time2timetravel Time Travel Trio Time (Travel) Table 1min 30 secs "The Day in Question" We've got a time-Tumblr! Please do check it out and interact with us there! Don't forget, you can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel, Hypocritic Days (published by Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. And the book is now available for Kindle! Please do let us know if you check it out. Intro Credits: Maurice Williams & The Zodiacs, "Stay" Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure
Elise Moore and David Fiore turn an important corner this week in their coverage of Hulu's adaptation of Stephen King's 11.22.63. Episode Six features a lot of interesting moments with their favourite character of the series - the birthday boy himself, Lee Harvey Oswald. Along the way, Elise draws a startling comparison between Jake/Bill and Walt (White)/Jesse (Pinkman). The hosts disagree re: when Sadie ought to have begun thinking that her boyfriend is crazy, but they both agree she really should be convinced by now... They also take strong issue with the description of show-Sadie as a "New Woman". New compared to what? All in all, though, the show's strange choices are keeping them reasonably entertained. How about you? Mentioned on the show this week: Parker Posey as "Jackie-O" in The House of Yes Fellow (Time) Travelers: 11.22.63 Event Podcast with Christopher DeFilippis & Skipper Martin The Time Travel Nexus time2timetravel Time Travel Trio Time (Travel) Table 1min 30 secs "Happy Birthday, Lee Harvey Oswald" We've got a time-Tumblr! Please do check it out and interact with us there! Don't forget, you can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel, Hypocritic Days (published by Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. And the book is now available for Kindle! Please do let us know if you check it out. Intro Credits: Maurice Williams & The Zodiacs, "Stay" Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure
Elise Moore and David Fiore tackle episode 5 of Hulu's adaptation of Stephen King's time travel epic, 11.22.63 - entitled "The Truth". Tune in as your hosts speculate on the current whereabouts of that notorious clothespin, contest the definition of "fan service", and praise the wise observations of Bill Turcotte. Elise claims to be encouraged by developments in this episode, while Dave merely hopes that this truth hurt him more than it hurt you. Fellow (Time) Travelers: 11.22.63 Event Podcast with Christopher DeFilippis & Skipper Martin The Time Travel Nexus time2timetravel Time Travel Trio Time (Travel) Table 1min 30 secs "The Eyes of Texas" We've got a time-Tumblr! Please do check it out and interact with us there! Don't forget, you can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel, Hypocritic Days (published by Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. And the book is now available for Kindle! Please do let us know if you check it out. Intro Credits: Maurice Williams & The Zodiacs, "Stay" Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure
Elise Moore and David Fiore continue their examination of Hulu's 8-part adaptation of Stephen King's 11.22.63, which reaches its midpoint with episode 4, "The Eyes of Texas". This one's a bit of a puzzler, as far as your hosts are concerned. Are we seeing the beginnings of an Edith Keeler dilemma for Bill (Turcotte, not Shatner)? Are we supposed to believe that Lee Harvey Oswald knows what he's doing? Are we supposed to believe that Jake knows what he's doing? Are we convinced the showrunners know what they are doing? One thing's for sure, no one on this planet, and certainly not Elise, will ever forget where they were when they heard about that creepy clothespin. Fellow (Time) Travelers: 11.22.63 Event Podcast with Christopher DeFilippis & Skipper Martin The Time Travel Nexus time2timetravel Time Travel Trio Time (Travel) Table 1min 30 secs "The Eyes of Texas" We've got a time-Tumblr! Please do check it out and interact with us there! Don't forget, you can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! Finally, as suggested by listener Jay, here's an Amazon link to Dave's time travel novel, Hypocritic Days (published by Insomniac Press), which is set in the pulp magazine and film worlds of the early 1930s. And the book is now available for Kindle! Please do let us know if you check it out. Intro Credits: Maurice Williams & The Zodiacs, "Stay" Original Another Kind of Distance artwork by Lee McClure
It's sequel time on Another Kind of Distance as Elise Moore and David Fiore tackle Alan Taylor's Terminator Genisys (2015). We attempt to peel away its Primer-like layers of plot complexity and find ourselves wondering if the writers even realize that those layers are there. Is it possible that they forgot to cast the "prime" mover of the alternate universe that takes shape in this film? Also: David finds a flimsy pretext for working in a reference to old Marvel comics. Don't forget, you can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
The two movies Elise Moore and David Fiore discuss in this episode epitomize the maxim, “If at first you don't succeed...”. In Groundhog Day, Bill Murray, at the splendid height of his original sarcastic comedic persona, is given apparently limitless chances to accept limitation and adjust his attitude, which is the amount he needs; while the curious Edge of Tomorrow examines the ways in which the structure of Groundhog Day (although nothing else about it) resembles a video game, and slaps a weirdly generic, Sirkean title on the results. Don't forget, you can always write us at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, or contact us through our Facebook Page or Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms). We're on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
"Come with us if you want to listen!" Elise Moore and David Fiore examine James Cameron's (and James Mostow's) Terminator mythos, which offers several different perspectives on the time travel story. Is this a loop narrative? An alternate universe tale? Depends which entry in the series you happen to be watching. Join us for another lengthy podcasting triathlon! Along the way, Elise will delight in her discovery of Arnold Schwarzeneggar's Garboesque qualities and you will no doubt share in our confusion as we wonder how John Connor managed to become a preteen Edward Furlong by 1991 despite the fact that he was born in 1984. You might have noticed that Terminator:Salvation is not here. That's because it sucks (and David can't remember any time travel in it). Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
In their first podcast of 2015, Elise Moore and David Fiore examine a pair of wistfully off-kilter comedies that are lightly haunted by the suggestion of temporal alterity. First up, we've got Brad Anderson's Happy Accidents (2000), which is about the closest thing to a Capra time travel comedy-drama that you are ever likely to see, complete with a Mr. Deed (Vincent D'Onofrio) and with Marisa Tomei playing the Jean Arthur role in a slightly more likely to hit you with something key. Then it's onward to Safety Not Guaranteed (2012), directed by Colin Treverow and featuring a nice lineup of personable folk line Aubry Plaza, Jake Johnson, Mark Duplass, Karan Soni, Jenica Bergere, and Mary Lynn Rajskub. This one plays like the very best combination of Ghost World and First Blood you can imagine - with a little flux. Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
Season's Greetings from Another Kind of Distance! We've got an extra special (or, at any rate, an extra long) episode for you this time out. Our chronogically confused Christmas begins with the great Alastair Sim version of Dickens' Christmas Carol, which hit British screens as Scrooge in 1951. Then we try our hands at giving out wings by wringing all of the meaning we can out of one of the finest Hollywood films ever made: Frank Capra's It's Wonderful Life (1946). We 'd write more, but you've got a lot of listening to do here, so we don't want to detain you. External Reference Section (Sublime to Ridiculous Edition): 1. Elise Moore alluded to George Toles's book of film essays, A House Made of Light, which features one of her favourite essays on Capra's film 2. Meanwhile, David Fiore mentioned this not-really-a-gem from Saturday Night Live. Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can! And remember, through the years, we all will be together.
In an AKOD first, Elise Moore and David Fiore cover a film that is playing at your local cinema right now (unless you're listening to this in the future - and, if so, I hope you like corn). It's Christopher Nolan's Interstellar! Starring Matthew McConnaghy, Anne Hathaway, Michael Caine, Jessica Chastain, some robots, and a whole bunch of other people who wanted to hang out with the Nolan brothers for some reason. As befits a current-release discussion, we get more intertextual than usual, tossing out references to fellow podcasters on Sound on Sight and /FilmCast. Join us as we struggle to justify our decision to pay $40 to see this thing in a theatre - and utterly fail to discern what room that bookshelf is in. Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
Hello everyone! This evening, Elise Moore and David Fiore accompany a pair of distraught time troopers through the Foucauldian looking glass, wondering the whole time whether any of this stuff is really happening. Our first film is Terry Gilliam's justly-celebrated 12 Monkeys (1995), starring Bruce Willis, Madeleine Stowe, and Brad Pitt. Yes, it's based on Chris Marker's La jetée, but we'll get to that one some other time, okay? The second item on our double-consciousness double billing was suggested by friend of the show Siskoid. We were quite impressed with The Jacket (2005), which had somehow flown under our time sensors. It was directed by John Maybury and it stars Adrien Brody, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Keira Knightly, Kris Kristofferson, Kelly Lynch, Brad Renfro, and Daniel Craig. Also, it was filmed in Ormstown, Québec, a place David knows well. For those listening at home, the final tune wasn't sung by Bryan Ferry (as we suppose on the cast), it's actually Iggy Pop! Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
Rev your volume up to 88 and get set for our marathon discussion of all three Back to the Future films! Spoiler alert - these films have some pretty serious problems - perhaps best exemplified by Elisabeth Shue's TWO MOVIE-long nap! Back to the Future II makes About Time seem like a major advance in gender representation. But for better or worse, David Fiore and Elise Moore grew up in the 1980s, and we can't go back there and make ourselves not care about these movies! Moreover, there are a lot of time travel conundrums to ponder here. Download this before some dumb time traveler makes you disappear. Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
This is the one you've been waiting for! Elise Moore and David Fiore tackle two of the preeminent weisentimer puzzle films in the chrono canon (note: one of these puzzles comes complete with missing pieces). First up is Nacho Vigolando's Timecrimes (2007), featuring Karra Elejalde, Barbara Goenaga (tellingly cast-listed as "La Chica en el Bosque" - although we were just calling her The Cyclist), and the director himself. Then, we do our best to enter the Primer (2004) fray - battling the film, each other, and the whole internet in an effort to come up with something useful to say about director/star Shane Carruth's work of engineer outsider art. And if you're keeping score at home, please help yourselves to these fine aids to reflection upon the movie: 1. THE chart 2. Jason Gendler's "Primer: The Perils and Paradoxes of Restricted Time Travel Narration." Enjoy! (And keep your eyes peeled for a more in-depth Elise essay on the FB page). Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
This episode, Elise Moore and David Fiore try to stop time and pause to reflect upon what has come before. We explore a few scientific theories regarding the possibility of time travel (from a lay perspective, of course), and then wade into the narratological uses of time in the movies we've watched with you. We hope former fellow Torontonian Northrup Frye would be proud of our efforts to anatomize anachronicity. Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, TuneIn radio and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
It's Rom-Chron time on Another Kind of Distance! Elise Moore and David Fiore confront the ecstasies and the banalities of quixotic, tick-tockic love amongst the comfortable classes. On the menu this week: a glimpse of the ways in which the amnesia narrative and the time travel narrative proper become virtually indistinguishable; some discussion of the relationship between subjectivity and timelines; Schrödinger's Braces; and a lot of trash talk directed at Alain De Botton and Chuck Woolery. Our films? We start with Gary Winick's 13 Going on 30 (2004), starring Jennifer Garner, Mark Ruffalo, Judy Greer, and Andy Serkis. Then we fall into the callow chasm that is Richard Curtis' About Time (2013). This one has Domhnall Gleeson, time travel vet Rachel McAdams, Bill Nighy, and Lydia Wilson. We were going to do some listener feedback, but we decided that we ought to push that to the next episode, since this one is already well over 2.5 hours. We would, however, like to take this opportunity to thank Siskoid for his encouragement and bloggish support! In the meantime, please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes, Stitcher, and TuneIn Radio so please rate/review us there, if you can!
This time out, Elise Moore and David Fiore explore the heartbreak of chrono displacement syndrome. Perhaps because their parents watched too many time travel movies during the gestation period, each of our wayfarers are genetically predisposed to kick against the ticks of the clock - although they do so in spectacularly different ways. First up, we've got Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber's grim The Butterfly Effect (2004), starring Ashton Kutcher (that's not easy to say), Amy Smart, Melora Walters, and Eric Stoltz as no one's candidate for father of the year. Our second film is Robert Schwentke's The Time Traveler's Wife (2009), based on Audrey Niffenegger's much-loved novel. This one stars Eric Bana, Rachel McAdams, Ron Livingston, and Stephen Tobolowsky. The pairing gave us a great chance to talk about the differences between "time loop" films and the "timeline" entries in this vast genre. So get set for 2.5 hours of time talk, spiced with our inevitable musings about masochism and male panic as our heroes fall upon the thorns of time, they bleed! Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images).
In this week's episode, Elise Moore and David Fiore journey back to genre basics with a pair of O.G. time machine movies - both of which feature the orginal time machine itself. We're speaking, of course, of H.G. Wells' eponymous chrono contraption from the great science fictioneer's 1895 novel. We begin with George Pal's 1960 adaptation of The Time Machine, starring Rod Taylor, Alan ("Uncle Scrooge") Young, Tom ("Gavin Elster") Helmore, and Yvette Mimieux. From there, we jostle around through the ages until we get back to H.G.'s basement for the beginning of Nicholas Meyer's Time After Time(1979). This one stars sweethearts Malcolm McDowell and Mary Steenburgen, along with David Warner and some delicious pomme frites. One of the great things about our topic is that pretty much everything happens in time, and that's what we'll be discussing during the weeks to come. Everything. In this case, we do a fair bit of speculating about the possibility of human progress and the unfortunate ubiquity of the serial killer narrative. Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can!
This time out, Elise Moore and David Fiore set forth to explore the interior distances within the human psyche. Along the way, we question the proprietary nature of memory and gesture toward a theory of romantic stoicism. First up is Francis Ford Coppola's wistful PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED, starring Kathleen Turner, a young Nicolas Cage (voice-acted by Nicolas Cage's most impish impulses), Jim Carrey, Catherine Hicks, Joan Allen, Kevin J. O'Connor, Barry Miller, Don Murray, Maureen O'Sullivan, Leon Ames, and the immortal John Carradine. Then we venture into the twilit battleground between fruitfully incompatible auteurs Charlie Kaufman and Michel Gondry for a discussion of ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND. The movie stars Jim Carrey (decidedly less manic in this one), Kate Winslet, Kirsten Dunst, Mark Ruffalo, Elijah Wood, Jane Adams, David Cross, and Tom Wilkinson. We hope you enjoy the program! Please don't hesitate to contact us, either at anotherkindofdistance@gmail.com, on our Facebook Page, our Twitter account (@TimeTravelFilms), or David's Tumblr (where you'll find a bunch of images). We're now on all of the podcast delivery services, including iTunes and Stitcher, so please rate/review us there, if you can - we really want to get this podcast fluxing!
Brutal, brilliant and sad; just a few ways to describe episode 9 of season three. “The Rains of Castamere” further escalates the brutality that exists in the world of Westeros, and the sense of dread we’ve long felt that the Starks will never again be happy. The Red Wedding has been foreshadowed for awhile now, ... The post Game of Thrones Podcast #19: “The Rains of Castamere” with guest David Fiore appeared first on PopOptiq.
Michael Stoler and Mitchell Benerofe, Benerofe Properties Corp; Mark Ellman, Celestrial Capital Gp; David Fiore, Marcus Partners; Marjan Murray, People's United Bank; and Robert Weisz, RPW Group discuss residential and commercial markets in Westchester.