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The Spe Salvi Institute draws on the legacy of Christian hope in Europe to refocus the Church and society in North America.
My Dinner with Andre: The Greatest Film of Our Meaning-Starved Age
Spe Salvi Institute Podcast
1 hour 13 minutes
1 day ago
My Dinner with Andre: The Greatest Film of Our Meaning-Starved Age
Why does a 40-year-old + film about two men talking feel like the cinematic antidote we need most in 2025?
In this episode of the Spe Salvi Institute Podcast, hosts Andrew Petiprin and Robert Mixa dive into Louis Malle's 1981 masterpiece My Dinner with Andre—a film consisting almost entirely of one extended conversation between two friends over dinner—and argue why it stands as the greatest film of our meaning-starved age.
In an era dominated by distraction, superficial spectacle, and a widespread crisis of purpose, this quiet, dialogue-driven film prophetically diagnoses the spiritual emptiness of modern life. Wallace Shawn and André Gregory's raw, meandering exchange touches on existential alienation, the numbing comforts of technology, the loss of authentic human connection, and the desperate search for transcendence—issues that resonate even more deeply in our digital, post-Christian world today.
From a perspective of Christian hope, Andrew and Robert explore how the film's unflinching confrontation with despair points toward the need for a greater hope: one rooted not in fleeting experiences or material progress, but in the encounter with the living God who redeems our restlessness.
Spe Salvi Institute Podcast
The Spe Salvi Institute draws on the legacy of Christian hope in Europe to refocus the Church and society in North America.