Commentary / Podcasts

Top 10 from Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast within the Last Year

The Marx Brothers w/ James Matthew Wilson by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Feb 18, 2025)

Poet and philosopher James Matthew Wilson joins the podcast to discuss two films by the Marx Brothers (Duck Soup, A Night at the Opera). Wilson also reads one of his poems featuring allusions to the Marx Brothers, and talks about the letters written between Groucho Marx and T.S....

Job and St. Augustine in one film: The Tree of Life (2011) by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Nov 15, 2024)

The Tree of Life may well be the greatest movie ever made. Heavily inspired by the book of Job and St. Augustine’s Confessions (and even including some lines about nature and grace seemingly derived from The Imitation of Christ), director Terrence Malick gives profound spiritual and...

Freedom in vocation: The Sound of Music (1965) by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Oct 21, 2024)

The Sound of Music is rightly beloved by Catholics. James and Thomas discuss the movie’s all-around excellence, break down Julie Andrews’s virtuosic performance, and explore what the film says about the freedom and openness necessary to discern and pursue one’s vocation in...

New birth for humanity: Children of Men (2006) w/ Timothy Reckart by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Dec 30, 2024)

Oscar-nominated writer and director Timothy Reckart rejoins the podcast to discuss a movie that has a marked resonance with the Nativity story, Alfonso Cuaron’s brilliantly crafted dystopian thriller Children of Men. Set in 2027, it depicts a world that has fallen into despair and chaos...

“I am a human being”: The Elephant Man (1980), w/ Andrew Petiprin by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Feb 4, 2025)

Andrew Petiprin joins James and Thomas to discuss the late David Lynch’s most uplifting film, The Elephant Man. The film is based on the real Victorian-era life of Joseph Merrick, a man who suffered terrible abuse because of his extreme deformities, yet whose human dignity was ultimately...

Bogart under suspicion: In a Lonely Place (1950) by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Jan 21, 2025)

James and Thomas discuss Nicholas Ray’s thrilling 1950 film noir In a Lonely Place. In an outstanding, nuanced performance, Humphrey Bogart plays quick-tempered screenwriter Dixon Steele, who enters into a fast-moving relationship with Laurel Gray (Gloria Grahame) just as he is under...

The Chosen, Season 4: Lectio Divina or Fan Fiction? by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Sep 23, 2024)

The Chosen has now passed the halfway point of its seven seasons. Four seasons in, it is possible to take a big-picture look at the show’s trajectory. Season four takes us from the execution of John the Baptist to the raising of Lazarus, ending on the verge of Holy Week with the...

Fragmented sexuality in Malick’s To the Wonder, Knight of Cups, & Song to Song by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From May 15, 2025)

After the artistic triumph of his magnum opus The Tree of Life, Terrence Malick had an unwontedly prolific period, releasing To the Wonder (2012), Knight of Cups (2015), and Song to Song (2017). In these films, known informally as the “Weightless Trilogy”, Malick took his...

Crucifixion darkness: Barabbas (1961) by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Apr 8, 2025)

Barabbas is an unusual specimen of the midcentury Hollywood Biblical epic, more spiritually searching (and edgier) than its peers. Starring Anthony Quinn as the criminal released by Pilate in place of Christ, Barabbas is based on a 1950 novel by Nobel winner Pär Lagerkvist (recently

The Ritual portrays exorcism accurately, but is stuck in genre cliches by Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast (From Jun 3, 2025)

The new exorcism film The Ritual, starring Al Pacino and Dan Stevens, is based on the famous 1928 exorcism of Emma Schmidt, which also partially inspired The Exorcist. The Ritual is touted as more realistic and meticulously researched than most exorcism films, and it does seem to portray...