From Nate DiMeo, the creator of The Memory Palace, and Karina Longworth, creator of You Must Remember This, comes a new movie podcast. Each episode, Karina and Nate reach out from their quarantines to a guest who’ll pick a movie they’ve heard is great but never found the time to watch. They’ll watch it, break it down, even play a game or two. All while raising money to support independent movie theaters, film societies, and other places that make us love going out to the movies.
Join them and watch the best of the big screen on whatever little screens you have on hand as you hunker down and wait this thing out.
From Nate DiMeo, the creator of The Memory Palace, and Karina Longworth, creator of You Must Remember This, comes a new movie podcast. Each episode, Karina and Nate reach out from their quarantines to a guest who’ll pick a movie they’ve heard is great but never found the time to watch. They’ll watch it, break it down, even play a game or two. All while raising money to support independent movie theaters, film societies, and other places that make us love going out to the movies.
Join them and watch the best of the big screen on whatever little screens you have on hand as you hunker down and wait this thing out.
On this episode of It’s the Pictures That Got Small, Karina Longworth and Nate DiMeo are by one of their favorite actors, Natasha Lyonne! Join them as their consciousnesses are expanded by the spice melange of the desert planet, Arakis, and evolve over the course of 4,000 years into weird, floating blobs that can bend space-time in David Lynch’s Dune!
To follow Karina on Twitter, click here. To follow Nate, click here. And definitely follow Natasha, who’s kind of a Twitter genius.
Subscribe to You Must Remember This and The Memory Palace, while you’re at it.
Find out what our friends at The Art-House America Campaign are up to.
Stuff Discussed in this Episode:
The DisneyNature Documentaries
Room to Dream by David Lynch and Kristine McKenna
Next Week:
We’re watching Vera Chytilova’s Daisies with Tony-winning director, Rachel Chavkin!
Credits
This show was produced with engineering assistance from Elizabeth Aubert.
Our theme music is by WMD.
All the little harp pieces are composed just for this show by the remarkable Mary Lattimore.
Our show logo comes from Nate’s Uncle Matt.