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The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Donn Lawler Podcasts
43 episodes
4 days ago
Hosted by Donn Lawler, this podcast explores film theory one movie at a time. Each episode breaks down a single film—no jargon, no lectures—just sharp analysis in under 10 minutes. Noir, sci-fi, horror, dystopias… every story says more than you think. New episodes weekly. Minimum Commitment. Maximum Meaning.
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TV & Film
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All content for The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses is the property of Donn Lawler Podcasts 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.
Hosted by Donn Lawler, this podcast explores film theory one movie at a time. Each episode breaks down a single film—no jargon, no lectures—just sharp analysis in under 10 minutes. Noir, sci-fi, horror, dystopias… every story says more than you think. New episodes weekly. Minimum Commitment. Maximum Meaning.
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TV & Film
Episodes (20/43)
The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
See You Next Time

As Season 1 draws to an end, I want to express my heartfelt gratitude to everyone who has tuned in over the past year. Throughout this journey, I have gained valuable insights and truly enjoy witnessing how the show has transformed—from simple, templated ideas for upcoming episodes to rich, multi-platform media experiences. I look forward to welcoming you back next year when Season 2 premieres on February 5, 2026.

Until then, THANK YOU for listening and for being part of this small but rapidly growing community. I deeply appreciate your support.


See you next time!

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2 weeks ago
4 minutes 50 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Conan the Barbarian – Steel, Flesh, and the Fire of Becoming

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

John Milius’s Conan the Barbarian is more than just a sword-swinging adventure; it is a myth told through the power of muscle, blood, and silence. In this episode of The Minimum Commitment, we examine Conan’s epic journey through the lens of Joseph Campbell’s monomyth, then dive deeper into semiotics and formalism to reveal how concepts of power are crafted, challenged, and reshaped.

Steel symbolizes strength. Flesh embodies belief. Fire signifies transformation.

But what occurs when the myth turns its reflection back onto the one who wields it?

Through sinister serpent cults, blazing resurrection fires, and imposing temples of obedience, Conan the Barbarian immerses us in a brutal world where the gods fall silent, leaving only the indomitable will to survive to carve out the story..


Recommended Reading:

“Myths to Live By” by Joseph Campbell

A powerful collection of essays that explores how ancient mythologies continue to shape human behavior, belief systems, and cultural identity. Campbell’s work offers a vital framework for understanding how films like Conan the Barbarian reinterpret classical motifs for modern audiences.

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3 weeks ago
16 minutes 6 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Dragonslayer – The Age of Fire, the Fall of Magic

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

Matthew Robbins’ Dragonslayer is more than a monster movie. It’s an elegy. A tale of collapsing systems, vanishing gods, and the quiet transition from wonder to order. In this episode of The Minimum Commitment, we explore how the film reflects the dying breath of magic in a world slowly overtaken by belief, power, and institutional control.

Using structuralist theory and the lens of cultural hegemony, we’ll break down how symbols change as they pass from myth to machinery. The dragon is more than a beast, it’s a metaphor for the old ways. Ulrich’s death is more than sacrifice, it’s the extinguishing of mystery. And Galen doesn’t become a legend. He becomes a witness. One who understands that history doesn’t remember magic. It replaces it.

Recommended Reading:

“The Uses of Enchantment” by Bruno Bettelheim

A landmark work in myth and psychology, Bettelheim’s book explores how fairy tales help children understand moral conflict, identity, and cultural transition. For viewers of Dragonslayer, it provides insight into why stories of sacrifice, transformation, and magical inheritance still resonate, and what they teach us about the systems that raise and rule us.

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1 month ago
16 minutes 56 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
The Green Knight – Bravery, Performed

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.


David Lowery’s The Green Knight offers a fresh and intricate retelling of a classic myth, weaving unfamiliar consequences into the narrative fabric. This episode explores the story through the lens of post-structuralist theory, presenting Gawain’s journey not merely as a straightforward triumph of courage but as a complex exploration of performance, fear, and the elusive construction of meaning. Through distorted symbols, fragmented timelines, and a world crafted from poetry and peril, The Green Knight compellingly reminds us that stories do not provide definitive answers—only a series of pivotal choices that shape our understanding and destiny.


Recommended Reading:

“The Postmodern Beowulf” (ed. E. L. Risden)

Includes essays examining how mythic texts are reinterpreted in contemporary culture and media, including comparisons between Beowulf and The Green Knight.

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1 month ago
16 minutes 18 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Excalibur – The Sword, the Spectacle, and the End of Magic

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready. 

John Boorman’s Excalibur transforms the Arthurian legend into a mythic opera—grand, poetic, and soaked in metaphor. In this episode of The Minimum Commitment, we explore how the film uses visual spectacle and semiotic design to breathe new life into the monomyth, while also forecasting its collapse. Through the lens of post-structuralism and symbolic formalism, we’ll examine how Excalibur treats magic as a language—one that loses power as its users forget what their words mean. From Uther’s violent rise to Arthur’s tragic decline, Excalibur traces the failure of meaning itself: when myths are no longer believed, all that remains is theater.

This isn’t just a story about swords and kings.

It’s a reflection on what endures after the magic fades.

A world still trying to remember

what the sword once stood for.


Recommended Reading:

“The Mabinogion”, translated by Jeffrey Gantz

A vivid collection of ancient Welsh myths and folktales that predate and inform the Arthurian legend. These stories offer a glimpse into the symbolic world Excalibur draws from—where swords, kings, and prophecies speak to deeper cultural truths. For anyone curious about the roots of Merlin, magic, and the shifting shape of myth, this is essential reading.

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1 month ago
20 minutes 44 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Beowulf – The Lie That Made the Legend

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

Robert Zemeckis’s 2007 animated film Beowulf offers a modern reimagining of the ancient epic, blending cutting-edge digital animation with a reinterpretation of traditional myth. The film presents a world where formidable digital bodies collide with fractured mythologies, revealing a story that challenges conventional notions of heroism. Beneath the dazzling golden armor and the shimmering illusions lies a narrative rooted in deeper themes of consequence and moral complexity. Using post-structuralist theory, this episode explores the legendary tale of Beowulf and how it begins to crumble under the oppressive weight of denial, temptation, and the silencing of multiple generations. We analyze how identity becomes fragmented under the pressure of mythic expectations and how the monsters we dread often symbolize the uncomfortable truths we refuse to confront or acknowledge.

Recommended Reading:

“Mythologies” by Roland Barthes

A cornerstone of post-structuralist thought, Barthes dissects how cultural myths are constructed and what they conceal. Essential for understanding how stories like Beowulf sustain power by hiding the truth in plain sight.

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1 month ago
19 minutes 17 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Us: The Horror in the Mirror

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready. 


Jordan Peele’s film Us intricately deconstructs the American dream, portraying it as a distorted hall of mirrors that reflects the complex interplay of class, privilege, and identity. Through the meticulous use of symmetry, deliberate sound design, and compelling performances, Peele reveals the subtle horror of recognition — the unsettling realization that our deepest fears are not external threats or strangers, but the unacknowledged parts of ourselves. This episode explores themes of duality, the phenomenon of othering, and the film’s precise formal craftsmanship, which collectively form a social anatomy that exposes the underlying guilt and primal instincts of survival embedded in American society.


At its heart, Us isn’t a story about invasion.

It’s a story about recognition and the cost of pretending we’re not connected to what lives beneath us.


Recommended Reading:


“The Souls of Black Folk” by W.E.B. Du Bois. An essential exploration of “double consciousness,” a concept that deeply informs Peele’s portrait of divided identity.

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2 months ago
20 minutes 20 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Hereditary – The Shape of Inheritance

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

Ari Aster’s Hereditary is less a story about grief than it is about inevitability. Evil doesn’t stalk from outside; it festers within the walls of family, passed down like memory or blood. In this episode, we explore how the film dissects generational trauma, control, and the illusion of choice, using formal precision and psychological collapse to expose the darker side of inheritance.

By the end, Hereditary reminds us that horror doesn’t need monsters or ghosts. It only needs a home and a family willing to repeat the pattern.

Suggested Reading:

The Family Romance by Sigmund Freud – A foundational text in understanding the psychological patterns that shape family identity and repetition.


Dedicated to Ace Frehley. You will be missed.

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2 months ago
18 minutes 42 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
The Exorcist – A Crisis of Faith and Flesh

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

William Friedkin’s The Exorcist isn’t just a story of demonic possession; it’s a powerful and haunting collision of faith and reason set against a backdrop where the world seems to have forgotten how to accept and understand true mystery. This episode explores how the film forces both science and religion to confront the uncomfortable limits of their own understanding and beliefs. Using Regan’s possession as a visceral reflection of cultural doubt, spiritual crisis, and human suffering, the narrative explores the profound tension between doubt and faith. Through a postmodern lens, we’ll analyze how the institutions that once promised absolute certainty—medicine, psychology, and the Church—struggle and sometimes fail to make sense of the unexplainable, revealing broader questions about belief, knowledge, and the nature of reality.

At its core, The Exorcist is not about a girl possessed by a demon.

It’s about a culture possessed by doubt.

Recommended Reading:

“Faith and Doubt in the Modern World” by Charles Taylor

An insightful exploration of how secularism has reshaped the Western understanding of faith, belief, and transcendence, making it a perfect companion to Friedkin’s crisis of meaning.

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2 months ago
19 minutes 42 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
The Shining: Madness in the Method

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining isn’t merely a straightforward haunted house story; it’s a richly layered, postmodern exploration into a chaotic universe where traditional notions of meaning and perception continually dissolve and escape understanding. Through innovative cinematic techniques such as 

  • Fragmentation: a disjointed narrative structure
  • Hyperreality: blurring the line between illusion and reality
  • Simulation: creating an artificial sense of authenticity


The ominous Overlook Hotel transforms into a haunting mirror of Jack Torrance’s fractured, unstable psyche. This eerie environment reflects his psychological unraveling in visceral, visual terms, emphasizing the instability of identity and perception. This episode examines the intricate interplay between 

  • Architecture: its oppressive, labyrinthine design
  • Personal identity: its fragile, shifting nature
  • Primal fear: core human terror

intertwining them into a labyrinthine maze that has no clear center or exit. This complex spatial and psychological structure embodies a universe where certainty is illusory, and ambiguity reigns supreme, immersing the viewer in a world devoid of stable ground or definitive meaning.

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2 months ago
16 minutes 50 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Jaws – What Lurks Beneath

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

Beneath the surface of shark attacks and summer screams lies a profound and thought-provoking film that explores the complex themes of institutional collapse, mounting disillusionment, and a society that has gradually lost its ability to understand and interpret the world around it. Spielberg didn’t merely terrify audiences with a monstrous creature; he masterfully illuminated the devastating consequences of cherished myths and perceptions failing to withstand scrutiny. The film serves as a powerful commentary on societal fears, the fragility of collective belief, and how the breakdown of institutions can lead to chaos and despair.

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2 months ago
16 minutes 40 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Halloween – A Knife in the Quiet

NOTE: This episode contains MAJOR spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

John Carpenter’s Halloween revolutionized the horror genre not through an abundance of gore and shocking violence, but through its masterful use of quiet, subtlety, and atmosphere. This episode explores how minimalist techniques, extended long takes, and meticulous sound design work together to evoke genuine fear in plain sight, turning the mundane suburban landscape into the perfect backdrop for mounting dread. Additionally, we will analyze Laurie Strode's character through the lenses of gender and survival, exploring why the relentless, shape-shifting presence that haunts her becomes even more terrifying when it chooses not to run or react.

Men, Women, and Chain Saws by Carol J. Clover The origin of the “Final Girl.” If you want to understand how horror films reflect gender and survival, this book is essential. Smart, sharp, and still cited in nearly every serious discussion of slasher cinema.

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3 months ago
15 minutes 20 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Arrival – Language of Tomorrow

In Denis Villeneuve’s Arrival, the most profound discovery isn’t merely the revelation of extraterrestrial life, but the profound transformative power of language to fundamentally reshape our understanding of time, perception, and reality itself. This episode examines the captivating Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, highlighting how language shapes thought and perspective. It also highlights Amy Adams’ luminous and emotionally resonant portrayal of Louise Banks, a linguist caught between human emotion and cosmic mystery. Additionally, the film’s intriguing central paradox is examined: would we choose love and human connection, knowing fully well how our story might unfold in the grand tapestry of time?

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3 months ago
16 minutes 2 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
2001: A Space Odyssey – Becoming Beyond Reason

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.


In Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, the director masterfully transforms the narrative of human existence into a profound visual language that encapsulates themes of evolution, advancing technology, and the mysterious unknown. This film episode meticulously employs pure imagery and soundscapes to portray the profound leap of humanity from primitive survival instincts to a state of cosmic transcendence and enlightenment. Every carefully composed frame is imbued with deliberate intent, and even the silence between scenes conveys meaning, creating a rich tapestry of sensory experience. By applying formalist techniques and posthumanist theory, we analyze how Kubrick’s exacting craftsmanship elevates a simple bone into a groundbreaking spacecraft, transforms an ordinary machine into a deadly killer, and depicts a journey that serves as a meditation on humanity's future trajectory and destiny in the universe.

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3 months ago
17 minutes 18 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Interstellar – Love in the Time of Gravity

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.


This episode explores Interstellar, examining it through the complex scientific principles of Einstein’s relativity as well as the profound emotional humanism that underpins its narrative. Nolan’s expansive space epic masterfully bends the fabric of time and space, creating a mind-bending voyage across cosmic horizons. Yet, amidst the vastness of the universe, the story remains anchored by what truly matters—the enduring love we carry with us and the hope we send ahead into the unknown. In Interstellar, it becomes clear that what ultimately saves us isn’t raw force or technology but the depth of our feelings, connections, and hope that propel us forward.


If you’d like to read more about Vivian Sobchack’s approach to phenomenology, her landmark texts are:

• The Address of the Eye: A Phenomenology of Film Experience (1992)

• Carnal Thoughts: Embodiment and Moving Image Culture (2004)


Both works dive deep into how film is not just a story we interpret but a lived, bodily experience we inhabit.

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3 months ago
14 minutes 22 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Logan’s Run – Faith in the Countdown

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.


In Logan’s Run, life is programmed to end at the age of thirty, a brutal societal norm that is unquestioned by its citizens. This episode explores the film from Michel Foucault’s perspective on biopolitics, examining how rituals surrounding death, a techno-theocratic government, and a society founded on artificially constructed belief systems serve as tools of silent control. The society manipulates perception, turning gentle light into an instrument of subdued authority. Obedience to these rules is mistaken for purpose, rebellion is deemed heresy, and death is transformed from tragedy into a ceremonial act, a dark celebration of societal order.

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4 months ago
13 minutes 54 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Blade Runner – Memories You Can’t Trust

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.


This episode explores Blade Runner through Alison Landsberg’s theory of prosthetic memory.

In a future where memories are manufactured and identity is built from fiction,

the question isn’t whether your past is real—it’s whether it feels real enough to matter.

Because in Blade Runner, the soul may be synthetic,

but the sorrow is always genuine.


Learn more about prosthetic memory in Alison Landsberg’s Prosthetic Memory: The Transformation of American Remembrance in the Age of Mass Culture.

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4 months ago
14 minutes 58 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Dark City: Memory Is a Crime Scene

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

In Alex Proyas’ Dark City, reality is portrayed as a fragile construct, meticulously crafted and easily manipulated. Memory, within this dystopian universe, transforms into a potent weapon, used to control, deceive, or conceal the truth. This episode explores the film's themes through the lens of sci-fi existentialism, examining questions about the nature of identity when memories are deliberately altered, erased, or fabricated altogether. As John Murdoch begins to unravel the hidden truths embedded within the mysterious city, we are confronted with a haunting question: if all that you hold as memories are illusions, then who are you truly beneath the veneer of falsehoods?

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4 months ago
9 minutes 50 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Chinatown – The Lie That Lives

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.


In this episode, we explore the intricate tapestry of Chinatown, examining it through the provocative lenses of Marxist political theory and existentialism. Jake Gittes embarks on a labyrinthine journey, grappling not only with the pervasive corruption that envelops him but also unearthing a deeply entrenched system where the very notion of truth is rendered powerless. In this bleak landscape, justice assumes a haunting irrelevance, and the noble pursuit of righteousness ultimately leads to a chilling silence. In the world of Chinatown, resolution is not an outcome; it is a concession. The mysteries that Gittes confronts remain unresolved, leaving an unsettling void that echoes the futility of his quest for clarity in a place where shadows loom larger than light.

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4 months ago
8 minutes 2 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Blue Velvet – Darkness Found Me First

NOTE: This episode contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film yet, you might want to hit pause and come back when you’re ready.

This episode dives deep into David Lynch’s Blue Velvet, a film that peels back the polished layers of suburbia to reveal the chaos crawling underneath. We explore themes of voyeurism, suppressed violence, and the illusion of innocence, examining how Jeffrey Beaumont’s descent reflects our own discomfort with the truth. In Lumberton, the birds chirp, the lawns are green… and the rot never left.

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5 months ago
13 minutes 2 seconds

The Minimum Commitment: Film Theory in Small Doses
Hosted by Donn Lawler, this podcast explores film theory one movie at a time. Each episode breaks down a single film—no jargon, no lectures—just sharp analysis in under 10 minutes. Noir, sci-fi, horror, dystopias… every story says more than you think. New episodes weekly. Minimum Commitment. Maximum Meaning.