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Celebrating Cinema
LAB111
128 episodes
19 hours ago
A podcast for the love of cinema! For more info check out our website: https://celebratingcinema.com. As always, we want to hear from you so please get in touch at celebratingcinema@lab111.nl
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Film History
TV & Film
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All content for Celebrating Cinema is the property of LAB111 and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A podcast for the love of cinema! For more info check out our website: https://celebratingcinema.com. As always, we want to hear from you so please get in touch at celebratingcinema@lab111.nl
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Film History
TV & Film
Episodes (20/128)
Celebrating Cinema
Jack of All Trades: How Jack Nicholson Became a Cinema Icon

To mark the 50th-anniversary rerelease of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, hosts Hugo Emmerzael and Tom Ooms revisit the career of the man at the center of its enduring power: Jack Nicholson. In this episode, they explore how Nicholson’s performances, volatile and mischievous yet remarkably controlled, forged a style of American screen acting entirely his own.

From his countercultural rise in the late ’60s to the defining roles that secured his place as a cinema icon, Hugo and Tom examine the man behind the myth, the craft behind the charisma, and the legacy Nicholson leaves in his graceful retreat from the spotlight.

Get tickets to One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest @ LAB111

Get tickets to Jack of All Trades: The Best of Jack Nicholson @ LAB111

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1 day ago
57 minutes 49 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
The Smashing Machine, Back To The Future & It Was Just An Accident

This week, hosts Laura Gommans and Elliot Bloom take on three standout releases. Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine, a quirky biopic starring Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson as MMA legend Mark Kerr, prompts the question: did it really deserve a fifteen-minute standing ovation at the Venice Film Festival?

To celebrate its 40th anniversary, Robert Zemeckis’s blockbuster classic Back to the Future returns, as Laura and Elliot debate whether Marty McFly’s story is truly as relatable as we think.

Finally, they unpack Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident, the Palme d’Or–winning film made secretly in defiance of the Iranian regime, which continues to censor and punish Panahi for his bold filmmaking.

Get tickets to The Smashing Machine @ LAB111

Get tickets to Back To The Future @ LAB111

Get tickets to It Was Just An Accident @ LAB111

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1 week ago
32 minutes 55 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
How The American New Wave Took Over Hollywood

The American New Wave, or New Hollywood, launched the careers of some of the United States’ most iconic filmmakers, from Steven Spielberg and George Lucas to Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese. But what was this era, when studios granted directors unprecedented creative freedom, really about, and what did it reveal about 1970s America?

Hosts Elliot Bloom and Tom Ooms dive into this transformative period, discussing the quintessential elements of the movement while spotlighting cult heroes like Robert Altman and John Cassavetes and overlooked filmmakers such as Barbara Loden and Elaine May. They also ask whether today’s social and political climate in the United States could spark a new wave of radical cinema.

Get tickets to ⁠New Hollywood: The Films of The American New Wave⁠ @ LAB111

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2 weeks ago
59 minutes 10 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
What Bugonia Gets Wrong About Conspiracy Theorists + Kelly Reichardt On The Mastermind

Yorgos Lanthimos’s Bugonia follows two conspiracy-obsessed men who kidnap a powerful CEO, convinced she’s an alien bent on destroying Earth. Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons shine, but while host Laura Gommans revels in their performances, Elliot Bloom questions whether Lanthimos’s satire lands in the world we live in today.

Plus, Kelly Reichardt joins Hugo Emmerzael to discuss The Mastermind — a stripped-down art heist film set in 1970s suburban America — and her collaboration with Josh O’Connor.

Get tickets to Bugonia @ LAB111

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3 weeks ago
38 minutes 52 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Mark Cousins On Tilda Swinton And His Story Of A Life In Film

In collaboration with Eye Filmmuseum’s exhibition Ongoing, celebrating the singular career of Tilda Swinton, Hugo Emmerzael sits down with filmmaker, writer, and lifelong cinephile Mark Cousins — Swinton’s longtime collaborator and one of cinema’s great chroniclers.

Best known for The Story of Film and Women Make Film, which he created alongside Swinton, Cousins reflects on his wild years as a critic interviewing Hollywood legends in their homes, his boundless curiosity for the moving image, and how film endures as a universal language.

Get tickets to Caravaggio @ LAB111


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4 weeks ago
36 minutes 8 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Why Luca Guadagnino Is The Master Of Desire

Few filmmakers explore desire with as much curiosity and elegance as Luca Guadagnino. His cinema doesn’t just show yearning, it makes us feel it. With After the Hunt now in cinemas, Laura Gommans and Tom Ooms trace how the great films of desire have shaped Guadagnino’s work, from the charged glances to the slow unraveling of restraint.

But while Laura revels in the sensuality of his worlds, Tom questions the pretension that can often surround them, avoiding conflict. Together, they ask why cinema remains so obsessed with the ache of wanting, and where exactly the lines of attraction are drawn — both on screen and in ourselves.

Get tickets to After The Hunt @ LAB111

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1 month ago
43 minutes 15 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
How Rietland Put Dutch Cinema Back on the Map w/ Director Sven Bresser

Sven Bresser’s debut feature Rietland marks a striking moment for Dutch cinema — the first film in nearly 30 years to be selected for Cannes. This eerie, quietly devastating story follows a reed cutter whose discovery of a murdered girl’s body sets off an introspective search for truth, asking where violence really comes from — the world outside or something buried within. Set against the haunting stillness of the Dutch countryside, the film transforms landscape into witness.

Speaking with producer Elliot Bloom, Bresser reflects on why he wanted to tell a story rooted in the land he grew up in, how local truths can hold universal weight, and why casting non-actors brought an essential honesty to the film. Together, they explore what makes Rietland resonate so deeply — both at home and far beyond The Netherlands.

Get tickets to Rietland @ LAB111

Get tickets to CC Film Club: Challengers @ LAB111

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1 month ago
38 minutes 1 second

Celebrating Cinema
Eddington, Rietland and Tilly Norwood

A lot can change in a week at the movies. One Battle After Another—the film we crowned as the year’s best—has stumbled at the box office, but does that tell the full story? Meanwhile, Dutch cinema is making international headlines, though for all the wrong reasons: AI actors.

Alongside all this, new films demand our attention: Ari Aster returns with Eddington, a chaotic, unhinged attempt to wrestle with the Covid era, and Sven Bresser’s Rietland might just put The Netherlands back on the cinematic map. Hosts Laura Gommans and Elliot Bloom have plenty to unpack.

Get tickets to Eddington @ LAB111

Get tickets to Rietland @ LAB111

Get tickets to Yi Yi @ LAB111

Get tickets to One Battle After Another @ LAB111

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1 month ago
31 minutes 38 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
One Battle After Another, Yi Yi and Him

Paul Thomas Anderson’s $130 million blockbuster might just be the film of the year. In this episode, Laura and Elliot dive into the action-packed, satirical drama while lamenting Leonardo DiCaprio’s phenomenal performance—brilliant on screen, morally dubious off it. They also revel in the timeless elegance of Yi Yi, recently restored and returned to the big screen by Odyssey Classics, and ask why the thriller Him couldn’t live up to the hype, even with Jordan Peele’s name on it.

Get tickets to One Battle After Another @ LAB111

Get tickets to Yi Yi @ LAB111

Get tickets to Him @ LAB111

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1 month ago
36 minutes 56 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Make Chick Flicks Great Again....Or Not?

What ever happened to the chick flick? At the turn of the millennium, this fizzy, unabashedly feminine genre ruled the box office and sleepovers alike, but somewhere along the way, it slipped out of fashion.

To celebrate the 30th anniversary of Clueless, now screening at LAB111, Kiriko Mechanicus and Tom Ooms revisit their favorite titles and try to define what a chick flick really is. From iconic gems to forgotten cult favorites, they explore the pleasures, pitfalls, and cultural baggage of the genre, asking whether we still need chick flicks today, or if they’re better left in the early 2000s with flip phones and frosted lip gloss.

Get tickets to Clueless @ LAB111

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2 months ago
44 minutes 23 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Why Agnès Varda is a Cinema Icon

Coinciding with our Viva Varda retrospective now playing at LAB111 in Amsterdam, Elliot and Kiriko celebrate the life and cinema of French filmmaker and feminist icon Agnès Varda. They discuss why Varda is Kiriko’s ultimate cinematic hero and how her films mirror the warmth, curiosity, and humour of the woman herself.

Varda's approach to filmmaking is more than craft, it’s a way of seeing the world, a playful blueprint for us all to live by. Together, they unpack some of her classics and imagine how they might spend a single unforgettable day with Agnès Varda.

Get tickets to Viva Varda: The Films of Agnès Varda @ LAB111

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2 months ago
46 minutes 35 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
The Deadly Reality of Filming in Gaza: Fatima Hassouna’s Story w/ Sepideh Farsi

Sepideh Farsi’s Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk is a film made in the urgency of the present. Composed through a series of video calls with Palestinian photojournalist Fatima Hassouna, it documents a life confined in Gaza during the current phase of Israel’s genocide. Speaking with producer Elliot Bloom, Sepideh reflects on why the film is essential at a moment when Palestinian voices are being silenced and when the daily struggle to survive is kept at a distance from the world.

This conversation honors the remarkable presence of Fatima, the necessity of bearing witness, and the role of cinema and art in confronting horrors that resist comprehension.

Get tickets to Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk @ LAB111

Get tickets to CC Film Club: Charlie's Angels @ LAB111

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2 months ago
36 minutes 55 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Jaws: The Birth of the Summer Blockbuster & the History of Creature Features

In honor of its 50th anniversary, Jaws emerges from the depths of the cinematic sea to remind us why it remains the archetype of the summer blockbuster, forever shaping our fear of the ocean and giving sharks a bad rep. Join Laura Gommans and Tom Ooms as they dissect Spielberg’s masterstroke, from its thrilling mechanics to the happy accidents that made it an instant classic.

This episode also explores the evolution of creature features, tracing how this genre once thrived on tangible, terrifying creatures—and why such films are rarely made the same way today.

Get tickets to Jaws @ LAB111

Get tickets to CC Film Club: Charlie's Angels @ LAB111

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2 months ago
43 minutes 45 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Why Everyone is Talking About Weapons and Sorry, Baby

Back from a summer hiatus, Laura Gommans and Elliot Bloom reunite to trade notes on the hot new releases. Zach Cregger’s hotly anticipated Weapons has horror fans buzzing—though for producer Elliot, he can only manage to watch it through his fingers. They also dive into Sorry, Baby, Eva Victor’s quietly devastating debut, a tender comedy-drama about how life insists on moving forward no matter what.

Get your tickets to Weapons @ LAB111

Get your tickets to Sorry, Baby @ LAB111

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3 months ago
29 minutes 49 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Morgan Knibbe on The Garden of Earthly Delights and the Silence Around It

In this episode, Kiriko sits down with Dutch filmmaker Morgan Knibbe to discuss his blistering debut fictional feature The Garden of Earthly Delights—a formally audacious, emotionally harrowing portrait of the post-colonial legacy in the Philippines. Through a fictional lens, Knibbe confronts the ongoing violence of Western capitalism, power, and desire, exposing the devastating asymmetry between those who are seen and those who are never heard.

But why has a film this urgent and unflinching been met with near silence? Kiriko and Morgan explore the limits of representation, the discomfort of telling hard truths, and the price artists pay for making the invisible visible.

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4 months ago
34 minutes 42 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Plein Soleil and the Art of the Summer Movie

This week on Review Roundup, host Laura Gommans and Elliot Bloom head south for the summer with a sun-drenched revisit of Plein Soleil—René Clément’s slow-burning 1960 thriller that introduced the world to a dangerously magnetic Alain Delon, as we dip our toes into the Mr. Ripley universe.

Alongside Clément’s shimmering noir, they spotlight more scorchers from LAB111’s Heatwave program—including Aftersun, The Parent Trap, and Do the Right Thing—to explore what keeps us coming back to summer cinema: the heat, the heartbreak, and the haze of memory...or just a good old AC system.

Get tickets to Heatwave: Sweaty Summer Cinema program @ LAB111

Get tickets to Kingdoms of Rain: The Films of Akira Kurosawa @ LAB111

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4 months ago
26 minutes 6 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
What Akira Kurosawa Taught Us About Movies—and Morality

This week, Elliot and Kiriko dive into the legendary world of Akira Kurosawa—Japan’s master filmmaker and, let’s be honest, probably your favorite director’s favorite director. From samurai epics like Seven Samurai and Rashomon to powerful character dramas like Ikiru and High and Low, Kurosawa knew how to tell a story that hits you in the heart and keeps you on the edge of your seat.

They unpack the big questions his films tackle—truth, justice, mortality—and connect the dots between Kurosawa’s personal life and the unforgettable worlds he brought to the screen. Whether you’re a longtime fan or just Kurosawa-curious, this episode is a love letter to one of cinema’s all-time greats—and a reminder that great storytelling never goes out of style.

Get tickets to The Films of Kurosawa @ LAB111

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4 months ago
57 minutes 2 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Why Zombies Refuse to Die

With 28 Years Later lurching toward the screen, Laura Gommans and Tom Ooms revisit the undead legacy of the zombie in cinema — a genre that, much like its subject, refuses to stay buried.

From its racist roots in early 20th-century depictions of Haitian slavery to its reinvention as a metaphor for mass consumption, pandemic anxiety, and societal collapse, the zombie has shuffled through countless cinematic incarnations. But what keeps this creature so relentlessly alive in the cultural imagination? Why are they always so hungry for brains, and why, despite their numbers, can they never quite organize?

In this episode, our hosts unearth the genre’s origins, dissect key works from White Zombie to Night of the Living Dead, 28 Days Later, and beyond, and share personal favorites that speak to the zombie’s enduring power.

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5 months ago
45 minutes 37 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Dogme 95, The Phoenician Scheme, Twin Peaks: Why Wes Anderson Should Try Dogme-Style Filmmaking

With Dogme 95 turning 30 this year, hosts Laura Gommans and Elliot Bloom reflect on the radical movement that dared to strip cinema down to its bare bones—and what that legacy means today. Returning to last episode's ranking of Wes Anderson's films, the duo discuss The Phoenician Scheme, the American director's latest film that only seems to reinforce the “all style, no substance” label. Rounding out the episode is a look at David Lynch’s TV series Twin Peaks, soon to be screened at LAB111 on June 18. Laura and Elliot explore its haunting genius and why it still feels ahead of its time.

Get tickets to Dogme 95 Films @ LAB111

Get tickets to The Complete Filmography of Wes Anderson @ LAB111

Get tickets to The Phoenician Scheme @ LAB111

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5 months ago
31 minutes 57 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
Dispatch from Cannes (2025)

Reporting from the Croisette, host Hugo Emmerzael is joined by fellow film critic Savina Petkova who together reflect on two unforgettable selections from the 2025 Cannes Film Festival—films that stood apart amid a blur of screenings and industry spectacle.

Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value, led by a luminous Renate Reinsve, is a quietly devastating meditation on memory, loss, and emotional inheritance. Meanwhile, Óliver Laxe's Sirat propels us into a dystopian rave-scape, where pulsing techno and stark imagery evoke a world on the brink of collapse.

Together, Hugo and Savina unravel the layers of these two very different films, offering a glimpse into the bold cinema we can look forward to on screen at LAB111.

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5 months ago
25 minutes 23 seconds

Celebrating Cinema
A podcast for the love of cinema! For more info check out our website: https://celebratingcinema.com. As always, we want to hear from you so please get in touch at celebratingcinema@lab111.nl