Look out New York - we're walkin' here ;-)
In this special episode, recorded LIVE from the streets of New York City, Noah and big-brain friend of the show Darcey Eagle spend a not-so-lazy Saturday racing around the Big Apple to relish in celluloid bliss at some of the cities most beautiful and historic cinemas. They start at the Paris Theatre in Lower Manhattan with Make Way For Tomorrow (1937), a bleak American drama about the burden an aging couple poses to their adult children, before making their way over to the Anthology Film Archives, an iconic establishment for the preservation of film, for a screening of La Vie de Bohème (1992), a black tragicomedy about struggling and selfish artists, and finally kickin' up their boots at the Metrograph for a packed screening of Jonathan Demme's screwball comedy riot Something Wild (1986).
Witness the couple try to earn their Cinemania-c badge by suppressing their hangover to take part in New York's exciting and constant appreciation of film history. Will their love of the movies get them through the whole day? Which of the day's movies will be top of the heap? And is Noah's answer to that question full of shit? You're a New Yorker now buddy, think for yourself!!
This episode was recorded on the land of the Lenape people, and we recognise the Lenape people as the Indigenous caretakers and traditional custodians of this land and water.