Cinema Callback

Cinema Callback

Cinema Callback is a voicemail-based film podcast hosted by Andy and Michael, two lifelong movie lovers . Each week they exchange voice messages dissecting cult classics, hidden gems, and new releases. From horror to noir, indie to blockbusters, it’s an honest, playful take on cinema’s best. New episodes weekly.

  1. A Month in the Country (1987) — A Father’s Day Special

    5 days ago

    A Month in the Country (1987) — A Father’s Day Special

    For this special Father’s Day episode of Cinema Callback, Andy is joined by his dad, Jim , to discuss Jim’s favourite film, A Month in the Country (1987). Using the show’s signature voice note format, father and son reflect on a film that means a great deal to one of them and is being experienced for the first time by the other, creating a unique conversation about cinema, memory, and the ways stories shape our understanding of ourselves. Set in a quiet English village in the aftermath of the First World War, A Month in the Country follows two veterans, played by a young Colin Firth and Kenneth Branagh, as they attempt to rebuild their lives in a society that has little understanding of the psychological wounds they carry. Through a series of thoughtful voice note exchanges, Andy and Jim explore the film’s themes of trauma, healing, and the act of uncovering the past, both literally and emotionally. The discussion examines how the film’s central acts of discovery—a medieval church mural and an ancient archaeological site—mirror the characters’ attempts to confront, process, or bury their own experiences. They also explore the film’s portrayal of art, craft, and ordinary village life as a form of therapy long before such language existed, and discuss how meaning can be found in quiet routines, human connection, and shared purpose. Along the way, they delve into questions of memory, identity, symbolism, and spirituality, considering how our relationship with films changes as we age and why certain stories continue to resonate across generations. The episode also reflects on the film’s deeply moving treatment of time, loss, and the feeling of returning to a place—or a memory—with a completely different understanding of who we once were. Whether you are a fan of J. L. Carr’s novel, a lover of understated British cinema, or simply interested in how films connect families across generations, this Father’s Day special offers a heartfelt and deeply personal conversation about one of Britain’s most quietly powerful films.

    1hr 3min
  2. One Battle After Another (2025)

    17 Jun

    One Battle After Another (2025)

    In this episode of Cinema Callback, Andy and Michael dive headfirst into Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest cinematic whirlwind, One Battle After Another. Told through the show’s signature voice note format, the conversation unfolds organically over time, with the hosts responding to each other’s ideas, challenging interpretations, and gradually building a picture of the film rather than delivering a conventional review. The result is a discussion that feels closer to an ongoing conversation than a verdict. Across a series of back and forth voice notes, they unpack the film’s kinetic, high octane energy and debate whether it recaptures the spirit of PTA’s early masterpieces like Boogie Nights and Magnolia, or whether it plays more like a deliberately chaotic remix of the director’s greatest themes. Key Discussion PointsThe Last Movie Star:Leonardo DiCaprio’s performance as a seemingly washed up, deadbeat protagonist. Is he perfectly cast as the centrepiece needed to get a film this ambitious made, or does the role deliberately strip away too much of his natural charisma? The Teyana Taylor Factor:Why her magnetic, scene stealing performance creates a vacuum once her character exits the narrative, and how that absence reshapes the film. The Great Revolution Debate:One host sees a timely, pro revolutionary fable, while the other reads the film as a darkly comic satire about the way ideology, bureaucracy, and endless "admin" doom political movements from within. Cinematic Highlights:From the geography and staging of the breathtaking car chase to the unsettling propulsion of Jonny Greenwood’s score, the episode digs into the craft behind some of the film’s most memorable moments. Whether you are here for Benicio Del Toro’s effortlessly brilliant supporting turn, to untangle the film’s politics, or just to find out whether we ever located that elusive Modelo in the beer aisle, this is a deep dive into one of the year’s most energetic, ambitious, and hotly debated films.

    1hr 32min

About

Cinema Callback is a voicemail-based film podcast hosted by Andy and Michael, two lifelong movie lovers . Each week they exchange voice messages dissecting cult classics, hidden gems, and new releases. From horror to noir, indie to blockbusters, it’s an honest, playful take on cinema’s best. New episodes weekly.