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How to Make Films and Influence People

How to Make Films and Influence People

By: Andrew Curzon and Peter Kimball
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In this podcast, we talk about our own approach to screenwriting and filmmaking, discuss great works of cinema, and blasphemously imagine how they could be remade. Each week we tackle a movie widely considered to be a "great film". We ask the important questions: How would you remake this as a family film? What's the no-budget version? How do you turn this into a 10-episode Netflix series? Join us as we walk through our creative process, share updates from our screenplay, and talk about what we've been watching lately.

Andrew Curzon and Peter Kimball 2025
Art
Episodes
  • The Graduate
    Apr 11 2026

    Peter and Andrew discuss Mike Nichols’ iconic 1967 film The Graduate, exploring how its blend of comedy, melancholy, and social commentary captured the uncertainty of a generation. They analyze Dustin Hoffman’s breakout performance, the film’s ambiguous tone, and why Benjamin Braddock’s aimlessness still resonates today.

    Plus, they discuss the movie’s famous Simon & Garfunkel soundtrack and its lasting influence on coming-of-age cinema. In their remake scenarios, they tackle a generational challenge: How do you adapt a story about drifting youth for modern audiences? Could it work as a family film without the affair? What would a no-budget hotel version look like? Would it be better as a TV series about finding meaning in the 21st century?

    The hosts also share their current viewing habits, including Ready or Not 2, Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen, and The Drama, while referencing Tootsie, Risky Business, American Pie, and May December.

    Topics covered: The legacy of 1960s counterculture, generational drift, the evolution of the coming-of-age story, ambiguous endings, and why some films are both funny and sad.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Tokyo Story
    Apr 6 2026

    Peter and Andrew explore Yasujiro Ozu’s 1953 masterpiece Tokyo Story, examining how this quiet family drama became one of the most revered films in cinema history. They discuss Ozu’s unique visual style, the film’s meditative pace, and how its subtle exploration of generational change, aging, and family expectations resonates across cultures.

    In their remake scenarios, they face a delicate challenge: How do you adapt a story built on everyday life? Could it work as an animated Miyazaki-style film for families? What would a no-budget or earthquake-disaster version look like? Would it be better as a TV series exploring different families in postwar Japan?

    The hosts also share their current viewing habits, including Listers and Crime 101, while referencing Spirited Away, Lars von Trier’s The Boss of It All, Jaws, and Late Spring.

    Topics covered: Minimalist filmmaking, the universality of family dynamics, Japanese vs. Western storytelling, static camera composition, and why some films are more about feeling than plot.

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    55 mins
  • Jaws
    Mar 27 2026

    Peter and Andrew dive into Steven Spielberg’s blockbuster classic Jaws, exploring how it redefined the summer movie and set the standard for modern thrillers. They analyze the film’s masterful pacing, iconic suspense sequences, and why the shark remains terrifying even when barely seen. They also discuss the film’s deeper themes of responsibility, community, and the clash between business and safety.

    In their remake scenarios, they tackle a cinematic challenge: How do you make a shark attack movie family-friendly? What would a no-budget version focus on? Would it be better as a TV series set in Amity?

    The hosts also share their current viewing habits, including On Golden Pond and Project Hail Mary, while referencing Jurassic Park, Open Water, and various Spielberg classics in their analysis.

    Topics covered: Blockbuster filmmaking, practical effects vs. CGI, the evolution of the monster movie, small-town politics, and why some thrillers never lose their bite.

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    1 hr and 8 mins
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