PodcastsBildungPhilosophy In Film

Philosophy In Film

Chris McTavish, Alain Beauclair and Craig Nickel
Philosophy In Film
Neueste Episode

106 Episoden

  • Philosophy In Film

    Philosophy In Film - 106 - Dogville

    30.06.2026 | 2 Std. 18 Min.
    Episode 106: Dogville
    This week on Philosophy in Film, the gang steps onto the chalk-lined streets of Lars von Trier's provocative 2003 drama, Dogville. When the mysterious Grace arrives seeking refuge from a pair of gangsters, the isolated mountain town reluctantly offers her shelter. But as hospitality gives way to exploitation, kindness slowly curdles into cruelty, revealing just how thin the line between virtue and self-interest can be.
    Craig draws the map with Producer's Notes (11:54), while Alain walks the bare stage for the Beauclair Synopsis (19:23), guiding us through Dogville's quiet descent from generosity to moral collapse. In Philosopher's Corner (43:35), Chris shines a light on Immanuel Kant's notion of radical evil, asking what happens when ordinary people gradually learn to justify the unjustifiable. The gang then gathers at the Round Table (57:01), where every line in the sand is up for debate before Reviews (1:48:23) pulls back the curtain for one final look.
    As always, we explore the philosophical and non-philosophical aspects of the film, because sometimes the darkest places are the ones that seem the most welcoming.
    🍻 Featured Beer 🍻 - Saints and Sinners IPA by Dog Island Brewing (Slave Lake, AB)
  • Philosophy In Film

    Philosophy In Film - 105 - Back to the Future

    02.06.2026 | 1 Std. 40 Min.
    Episode 105 - Back to the Future
    Great Scott! This week on Philosophy in Film, the gang travels back in time to 1985 with Robert Zemeckis' beloved sci-fi adventure classic, Back to the Future. When Marty McFly is accidentally sent back to 1955 in a time machine built by the eccentric Doc Brown, he quickly discovers that history is far easier to disrupt than repair. Craig kicks things off, generating 1.21 gigawatts of Producer's Notes (5:21), while Alain fires up the DeLorean for the Beauclair Synopsis (19:28). In Philosopher's Corner (37:42), Chris engages the flux capacitor to navigate the film's famously tangled family tree. The gang then convenes at the Round Table (51:05), where timelines intersect, paradoxes emerge, and nobody can quite agree on the rules. Reviews (1:26:33) and Mailbag (1:37:34) bring us safely back to the present, wrapping up the episode before the timeline can drift any further.
    As always, we explore the philosophical and non-philosophical aspects of the film, because where we're going, we don't need…roads.
    Come visit us at https://philosophyinfilm.ca/! 
    🍻 Featured Beer 🍻 - "Why Don't You Make Like A Tree And Get Outta Here" NZ Cascade Pale Ale⁠ by Backcountry Brewing (Squamish, BC)
  • Philosophy In Film

    Philosophy In Film - 104 - Glory Daze

    12.05.2026 | 2 Std. 8 Min.
    Episode 104: Glory Daze

    This week on Philosophy in Film, the gang cracks open a time capsule with Glory Daze, the scrappy 1995 Gen-X comedy filled with graduation panic, beer-soaked nostalgia, and an early Ben Affleck appearance before the Hollywood spotlight hit. Set over one chaotic night before graduation, the film follows a group of college friends desperately clinging to youth before adulthood finally calls their bluff. Craig stumbles into Producer's Notes (13:29), while Alain pulls an all-nighter for the Beauclair Synopsis (26:18), tracing the film's blend of drunken nostalgia and quarter-life existentialism. In Philosopher's Corner (45:13), Chris settles into the film's strange limbo between youth and adulthood, unpacking the quiet panic that comes with realizing freedom, responsibility, and identity rarely arrive at the same time. The gang gathers at the Round Table (53:50) to kick around one last semester of chaos before Reviews (1:37:46) and Mailbag (1:55:33) crack open a final beer and stumble across the graduation stage into the night.
    As always, we explore the philosophical and non-philosophical aspects of the film, because sooner or later, everybody has to leave campus.
    🍻 Featured Beer 🍻 - Mixtape Hazy IPA by Polyrhythm Brewing (Edmonton, Alberta)
    https://philosophyinfilm.ca/
  • Philosophy In Film

    Philosophy In Film - 103 - Stand by Me

    24.03.2026 | 1 Std. 45 Min.
    Episode 103: Stand by Me
    This week on Philosophy in Film, the gang sets out down the tracks with Rob Reiner's beloved coming-of-age classic, Stand by Me. Based on Stephen King's novella The Body, the film follows four boys as they leave in search of a missing body. What begins as childhood curiosity slowly unfolds into a meditation on friendship, memory, and the quiet moment when innocence gives way to experience. Craig packs the provisions with Producer's Notes (8:30), while Alain walks the rails through the Beauclair Synopsis (19:21), tracing the boys' winding path through campfire confessions and junkyard trials. In Philosopher's Corner (39:48), Chris reflects on the fragile architecture of childhood friendship, asking how loyalty, vulnerability, and social circumstance shape who we become long after the journey ends. The gang gathers at the Round Table (47:20) to revisit the film's enduring emotional resonance, weighing nostalgia against realism and asking why stories of youth often feel clearest in retrospect. Reviews (1:26:57) bring the trip home, as we reflect on a film that continues to find new meaning with each revisit.
    As always, we explore the philosophical and non-philosophical terrain of the film, because sometimes the longest journeys are the ones we only recognize after we've grown up.
    🍻 Featured Beer 🍻 - Alberta's Great Out S'mores Milk Stout by Hub Town Brewing (Okotoks, AB)
  • Philosophy In Film

    Philosophy In Film - 102 - Slap Shot

    24.02.2026 | 2 Std. 1 Min.
    Episode 102: Slap Shot
    With Special Guest: Megan Craig (Associate Professor of Philosophy and Art, Stony Brook University)
    The gloves are off this week on Philosophy in Film as the gang faces off with George Roy Hill's bruising classic, Slap Shot! Set in the fading mill town of Charlestown, the film follows player-coach Reggie Dunlop, played by Paul Newman, as he tries to save a failing hockey team by leaning into spectacle, violence, and the sudden popularity of the Hanson Brothers. What begins as a desperate bid for ticket sales spirals into a question about integrity, entertainment, and what happens when winning becomes secondary to drawing blood. At centre ice, Craig drops the puck with Producer's Notes (), while Alain takes out some teeth with the Beauclair Synopsis (). In Philosopher's Corner, Chris digs into the film's storied history and stitches connections to our hometown. The gang heads to the penalty box for the Round Table () to consider the ethics of aggression, masculinity on ice, and the simmering class tensions bubbling beneath the boards. Reviews sound the final buzzer as we tally the hits, the heart, and whether Slap Shot earns its place in the hall.
    As always, we explore the philosophical and non-philosophical aspects of the film, because when the crowd wants a fight, someone still has to decide what the game is really about.
    🍻 Featured Beer 🍻 - Cabin Beer Everyday Lager by Cabin Brewing Company (Calgary, AB)
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A fun and accessible podcast that explores philosophical ideas and themes in popular films. Come join the conversation at "Philosophy in Film"!
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