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Quick links/Discussed in this episode:
R.I.P. David Lynch: The news broke just after the podcast was recorded. Giles Edwards expresses condolences on behalf of the entire 366 family.
Incubus (1966): Legi la recenzon de Giles Edwards (read Giles Edwards’ review.) The Esperanto art-horror arrives on 4K UHD or Blu-ray in a typically lavish disc from Arrow. Buy Incubus.
La Pieta (2022): Read Giles Edwards’ review. Eduardo Casanova‘s stylized oedipal would-be cult film debuts this week on Film Movement’s proprietary streaming service, Film Movement+ (free trial available). There’s also this other La Pieta official site.
Omni Loop (2024): Mary Louise Parker is going to die thanks to a black hole growing in her chest, so she takes a pill to repeatedly travel back in time to try to. Now available on Blu-ray (or DVD) only (at least at the moment). Buy Omni Loop.
“Pastoral: To Die in the Country”: A special screening of this rare and often requested Japanese avant-garde autobiographical film from Shuji Terayama, courtesy of NYC’s Japan Society. As always, we hope that this screening presages an imminent physical media (or even just a streaming) release. “Pastoral: To Die in the Country” at Japan Society.
Snowpiercer (2013): Read James Phillips’ review. Joon-ho Bong‘s train-bound sci-fi allegory gets the 4K UHD treatment this week. Buy Snowpiercer.
WHAT’S IN THE PIPELINE:
Next week, Gregory J. Smalley will be back from vacation, though likely still suffering from jet lag, as he is joined on Pod 366 by Pete Trbovich (and possibly others); the major topic of discussion will be David Lynch. In written reviews, Shane Wilson excavates the Soviet supernatural mystery Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel (1979), while Giles Edwards struts his stuff with the musical blaxploitation oddity Darktown Strutters (1975). Onward and weirdward!