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Required Watching
The King Of Comedy
Season 1, Ep. 172
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Required Watching is your curriculum for cinematic literacy. We deconstruct the art and craft of filmmaking to help you become a sharper storyteller.
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173. Aladdin
08:29||Season 1, Ep. 173SummaryIn this episode,we discuss the profound impact of Disney's 1992 film Aladdin on the animation industry and its cultural significance. He highlights how Aladdin redefined Disney's approach to animated musicals through innovative storytelling, memorable music, and the introduction of a relatable protagonist. The film's humor, particularly through Robin Williams' iconic performance as the Genie, attracted a broader audience and set a precedent for celebrity voice casting in animation. Epps also emphasizes the film's legacy in shaping future Disney films and its role in cementing Disney's place in pop culture during the 1990s.Chapters00:00 The Impact of Aladdin on Disney's Animation05:38 Cultural Significance and Legacy of Aladdin
1. The Human IP Bubble: Why Hollywood Is Manufacturing Stars Into Irrelevance
11:35||Season 2, Ep. 1You're tired of actors you actually like. That's not an accident — it's a business model. Hollywood is treating talent as intellectual property and audiences as brand targets, casting for TikTok engagement rather than craft. This episode breaks down the human IP factory, why it's going to collapse, and what Song Kang-ho and Paul Mescal's careers tell us about what's actually worth watching.
170. The Lion King and the Most Perfectly Constructed Protagonist Desire Arc in Animation History
08:04||Season 1, Ep. 170A personal re-watch of The Lion King — this time with a kid and a writer's eye — surfaces something hiding in plain sight. "I Just Can't Wait to Be King" is Simba telling the audience exactly what he wants and the film giving it to him in the cruelest possible way. A breakdown of protagonist desire, emotional craft, and why this film hits differently as a parent.
169. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari Is Where Horror's DNA Begins — And Nobody Talks About It
07:51||Season 1, Ep. 169A 67-minute German silent film from 1920 is the foundation of modern horror, film noir, and psychological cinema. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari invented the unreliable narrator, the expressionist frame as psychological state, and the authoritarian villain. Here's why it still matters.
168. Chennai Express and the Mid-Budget Movie Hollywood Decided It Was Too Good to Make Anymore
07:40||Season 1, Ep. 168Hollywood abandoned the mid-budget everything-film. Chennai Express — Shah Rukh Khan, Rohit Shetty, every genre at once — proves Bollywood never did. A breakdown of why this specific kind of film is so hard to make well, and what it teaches about craft.
167. Twisters and the Real Disaster: When Blockbusters Are Scared of Themselves
05:24||Season 1, Ep. 167Twisters has some of the best storm sequences in recent cinema. It also abandons Daisy Edgar-Jones, pivots to a rom-com, and loses the thread entirely in the second half. Quick reaction on what went wrong, and why a film this well-made managed to underdeliver.
165. The Kevin Hart Problem: What Does the Biggest Star in Hollywood Actually Want?
06:42||Season 1, Ep. 165Kevin Hart made a show about Kevin Hart wanting to be an action star — except he already is one. Die Hart is fun, disposable, and accidentally fascinating. This episode is a short rant that becomes a bigger question: what happens when enormous talent picks small bets?
164. Patrice: The Movie and Why Disability Docs Are Actually About What We Choose Not to Notice
06:55||Season 1, Ep. 164A film from the London Film Festival about a disabled couple who want to get married — and can't, because the UK benefits system punishes them for it. Patrice: The Movie is playful, warm, and devastating. And it exposes a privilege most of us have never thought to question.