
Show overview
Seasons: A Year of Movies has been publishing since 2018, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 34 episodes. That works out to roughly 60 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a monthly cadence, with the show now in its 4th season.
Episodes typically run over ninety minutes — most land between 14h 55m and 43h 40m — with run-times ranging widely across the catalogue. The publisher flags most episodes as explicit, so expect adult themes or strong language throughout. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language TV & Film show.
The catalogue appears to be on hiatus or wound down — the most recent episode landed 5.4 years ago, with no new episodes in over a year. The busiest year was 2019, with 17 episodes published. Published by Emma Ramirez.
From the publisher
Seasons: A Year Of Movies is a (mostly) weekly podcast where Emma Ramirez and Jacob Benfell talk about a series of films for each season of the year. The movies can be directly connected (a franchise, a director/writer/whatever’s filmography) or loosely connected (a thematic through-line.) We alternate picking the season’s theme, so the movies will be as varied as our thoughts are. We’ll explore why we watch the movies we do when we do, how context changes our understanding of art, geek out, and occasionally get into fights. Accompany us through the changing times of the year.
Latest Episodes
View all 34 episodes
S3 Ep 34Seasons 34: 9 to 5
EGrace and Emma join together for this workplace comedy that is not quite what it seems and find a very funny movie with a lot going on. We discuss shifting violence to mythological, colonized others, the role and limits of comedies about working and living in capitalism, as well as some truly wild facts about this film. Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machine. Follow Emma on Twitter @uofwhales. Follow the show @seasonsmoviepod.Podcast art by Cecil Smith. Follow him on Instagram at @ cecil_smith_Email us questions at [email protected] next movie is Man of Iron

S3 Ep 33Seasons 33: Norma Rae
EGrace and Emma watched a movie two months ago, recorded an episode about it one month ago, and are finally presenting you with the gift of this short episode. Emma likes handsome men, Grace does not like the Stephen King short story “Battleground,” and we really just love Salt of the Earth. Watch this movie or don’t; it’s rough out there.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machine Follow Emma on Twitter @uofwhales Follow the show @seasonsmoviepodPodcast art by Cecil Smith. Follow him on Instagram at @ cecil_smith_Email us questions at [email protected] next movie is Nine to Five

S4 Ep 32Seasons 32: Man of Marble
EEmma and Grace watched Andrzej Wajda’s Man of Marble the dehumanizing and humanizing process of filmmaking, the act of depicting labor on screen, and questions of what it means to watch a film that critiques non-capitalist societies. Emma makes a killer point about how abstract art is deployed in this film and Grace goes on a long tangent about Walter Benjamin.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machine Follow Emma on Twitter @uofwhales Follow the show @seasonsmoviepodPodcast art by Cecil Smith. Follow him on Instagram at @ cecil_smith_Email us questions at [email protected] movie is Norma Rae

S4 Ep 31Seasons 31: Salt of the Earth
EGrace and Emma discuss the film the US Government didn't want you to see, Salt of the Earth!!! They loved this antithesis to How Green Was My Valley and talk about the material conditions of the movie, its honesty and intensity around gender dynamics, and the joy found in community organizing. You can watch this piece of union propaganda on YouTube, so you should just go ahead and do it.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodPodcast art by Cecil Smith. Follow him on Instagram at @ cecil_smith_ Email us questions at [email protected] Next movie is Man of Marble

S4 Ep 30Seasons 30: How Green Was My Valley
Grace and Emma talk about the 1941, John Ford directed classic that reeks of gender. We discuss the movie’s surprisingly absent labor politics, its compassion for working people, and its cruelty towards the disabled. In other news, Emma gets excited about birds and Grace thinks a lot about set design.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodPodcast art by Cecil Smith. Follow him on Instagram at @ cecil_smith_ Email us questions at [email protected] Next movie is Salt of the Earth

S4 Ep 29Seasons 29: Modern Times
ETo start off our season about work and labor, we watched the 1936 Charlie Chaplin film, Modern Times. By leaning into artifice and exaggeration, the movie is able to highlight the very real issues of its day (and ours). Grace notices the oppressive authority of sound, Emma notices a certain lack of shoes, and we both display an incomplete knowledge of how cocaine works. Get comfy and settle in for a piece of “communist propaganda” that yearns for the middle-class dream and that we both absolutely adored.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodPodcast art by Cecil Smith. Follow him on Instagram at @ cecil_smith_Email us questions at [email protected] movie is How Green Was My Valley

S3 Ep 28Seasons 28: The Wind Rises
It’s a Ghibli finale! In the final episode of this season, Grace and Emma talk the limits of capitalist art, the beauty of horrible things, gender, clothes, and the joy of dreams. It’s Miyasaki’s most sober and self-reflective movie, so prepare for a lot of sad talk about movie production itself. They also rank every Miyazaki movie and introduce the theme for the next season!Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected] Theme is LaborNext movie is Modern Times

S3 Ep 27Seasons 27: Ponyo
EPonyo is not just a fish movie for babies; it’s also a representation of non-revolutionary utopia, a display of the sudden onset of climate change, and a hella trans fairy tale. Emma talks a lot about a Polish horror musical, and Grace unpacks the movie’s family dynamics. Please, always wear a seatbelt, follow traffic signs, and keep your eyes on the road when you drive.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 26Seasons 26: Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
EIn this episode, Grace and Emma return to their podcasting origins to talk about the latest and perhaps the worst Star Wars movie. Instead of watching The Rise of Skywalker, we recommend you: 1) listen to this episode, 2) watch the score-only version of The Last Jedi, and 3) write your Rose Tico fanfic.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

Seasons 25: Howl's Moving Castle
In this episode, Grace and Emma give their shortest summary yet! We spend a lot of time talking about gender, domesticity, labor, and the intersections thereof. What else would you expect?! Emma wants to be a witch, and Grace is a big ol’ romantic.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

Seasons 24: Spirited Away
Emma and Grace expose their dirty Marxist roots while they talk about this movie filled with images of childhood and class. They also discuss kids’ movies as a genre, whether the main character’s trust in others is naïve or important or both, and even dip in discourse about setting boundaries. The next movie is Howl’s Moving CastleFollow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 23Seasons 23: Princess Mononoke
EIn this episode, that is nearly as long as the movie it discusses, Grace and Emma attempt to break down this fantastical samurai epic. As this is masterful film with many questions and few answers, most of this episode’s runtime is existential and ambiguous. At first we try to contextualize its depiction of indigenous peoples and the Muromashi period in our shaky understanding of Japanese history Is there a way to reconcile civilization and nature? Is this movie environmental centrism? Is the ending hopeful, bleak, or even cheap? What last 19th, early 20th century classical composer does the soundtrack borrow from the most? All of the questions are discussed and much more!The resources we used to talk about Japanese history and indigenous peoples are: a summary of the history of both the Emishi and the Ainu, an account of the Ainu’s contemporary struggles, and a website about the Emishi’s cultural history. The critic Grace references at around an 1:06:20 of the podcast is Mark Shilling. The piece by Cole Henry that Grace discusses at 1:20:44 can be found here, and the twitter thread about indigenous survival discussed shortly thereafter can be found here.The music used at 1:38:36 mark is a 1967 Recording of Richard Strauss’s Salome, performed by the Vienna Philharmonic and conducted by Sir Georg Solti. The music at the 1:39 is the track San and Ashitaka in the Forest of the Deer God from the film’s soundtrack by Joe Hisaishi.The next movie is Spirited AwayFollow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 22Seasons 22: Whisper of the Heart
EIn this extra-long and rowdy episode, Grace and Emma talk over the politics of labor and creativity, their relationship to both the themes and production of this movie, and the anxieties of growing up. Grace is anxious about a missing lunch. Emma is agape over the animation’s small details. It all builds to a final conversation about… what else? Crushes!The next movie is Princess MononokeFollow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalessFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 21Seasons 21: Porco Rosso
EIn this episode, Emma and Grace discuss whether Porco Rosso complicates the idealized Europe often found in Ghibli films, the strong ladies who are definitely not moms, and the film’s interest in an inevitable turn of history that will consume all the characters. Come for our disdain for libertarianism, stay for the seaplane full of schoolgirls and pirates.Side note: The theorist that Grace talks about is Theodor Adorno, of the Frankfurt school. Max Weber is an earlier sociologist, who the Frankfort school studied and analyzed.The next movie is Whisper of the Heart.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 30Seasons 20: Kiki's Delivery Service
EIn this episode, we talk about girlhood, queerness, and critiquing media as queer people. Grace has a truly cursed realization about Tombo. Emma gushes about an incredible dog. We also talk about the movie’s depiction of an idealized, almost utopian, Europe and its portrayal of magic as both wondrous and mundane.The next movie is Porco Rosso.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 19Seasons 19: My Neighbor Totoro
EThis episode gets very personal as Grace and Emma talk over the innumerable childhood feelings this movie gave us. We talk about taking the emotions of children seriously, have our shortest summary yet, and get on a surprising number of tangents, including the unforgivably bad Totoro death God theory.The next movie is Kiki’s Delivery ServiceFollow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 18Seasons 18: Castle in the Sky
EBrimming with mystery, Laputa beckons to us! Grace and Emma rediscover the magic of this film and discuss its ecological worldview, condemnation of patriarchal power, and warm kindness. We also get off on several tangents including feminist discourse about mainstream video games and film, insecurity about liking movies that are cute and fun, what makes a movie for kids vs. for adults, and much more. We even manage a summary that is under 10 minutes!Next movie is My Neighbor Totoro.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 17Seasons 17: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
Apologies for the technical difficulties in this episode.After the whirlwind heist of Cagliostro, Grace and Emma settle in for the ecological science fiction of Nausicaä. They talk over the movie’s approach to political violence and protest, of mankind’s relationship to the natural world, and its complex gender politics.Next movie is Castle in the Sky.Follow Grace on Twitter @grace_machineFollow Emma on Twitter @uofwhalesFollow the show @seasonsmoviepodEmail us questions at [email protected]

S3 Ep 16Seasons 16: The Castle of Cagliostro
EEmma and Grace talk over the rip-roaring heist adventure that is Miyasaki’s debut. They delve into the movie’s abstract menace, expressive charm, immaculate cinematography, and messy deception of monarchy and class. They also read a reader letter and talk about their plans for the next season.

S3 Ep 15Sita Sings the Blues
EThis adaptation of part of the Ramayama was directed and animated entirely by Nina Paley. We discuss its layered approach to storytelling, the perils of working through stories from other cultures, and how even incredibly old religious stories are personal. Sita Sings the Blues is under creative commons and can be watched for free on YouTube or on sitasingstheblues.com. P.S. by the time we uploaded Emma got a Letterboxd (uofwhales).