My Favourite Films cover art

My Favourite Films

My Favourite Films

By: Nine Ladies Productions
Listen for free

About this listen

My Favourite Films is a podcast for movie lovers who want to dive deep into the films that shaped us. Each episode takes a closer look at one standout movie — exploring its story, performances, direction, and the moments that make it unforgettable. From cult classics to modern masterpieces, we unpack what makes each film special and why it stays with us long after the credits roll.

Perfect for film fans, casual viewers, and anyone who loves behind-the-scenes stories, My Favourite Films brings insight, nostalgia, and a passion for cinema to your headphones.


All rights reserved.
Art
Episodes
  • Episode 6 - Rope - Murder, Morality, and the Illusion of Control
    Jan 30 2026

    In this episode, we examine Alfred Hitchcock’s most daring cinematic experiment: Rope (1948). Inspired by a real-life murder and staged to appear as a single continuous shot, the film transforms an elegant Manhattan apartment into a pressure chamber of guilt, arrogance, and moral collapse.

    We explore how Hitchcock adapted Patrick Hamilton’s stage play into a radical exercise in form, using extended takes, theatrical blocking, and precise camera movement to erase the safety of editing and trap the audience inside the crime. Through production history, philosophical context, and psychological analysis, this episode unpacks the film’s chilling exploration of intellectual elitism, moral relativism, and the dangers of ideas divorced from empathy.

    Drawing on verifiable, sourced insights from filmmakers, critics, and scholars, we examine the performances of John Dall, Farley Granger, and James Stewart, the film’s controversial themes, and Hitchcock’s own conflicted feelings about the experiment. We also consider Rope’s lasting influence on cinema — from long-take storytelling to films that blur the line between spectatorship and complicity.

    A film of quiet terror and unsettling restraint, Rope remains one of Hitchcock’s most provocative works — a thriller that unfolds not through action, but through conversation, confidence, and catastrophic certainty.



    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/my-favourite-films8417/donations
    Show More Show Less
    12 mins
  • Episode 5 - The Birds: When Nature Turns Silent
    Jan 28 2026

    In this episode, we turn to one of Alfred Hitchcock’s most disturbing and enigmatic films: The Birds (1963). A work that abandons traditional horror conventions, refuses explanation, and replaces music with the sound of terror itself, The Birdsremains one of cinema’s most unsettling experiences.

    We explore the film’s radical production choices, from its pioneering electronic sound design to Hitchcock’s decision to strip the narrative of resolution or comfort. Through historical context, behind-the-scenes insight, and psychological analysis, this episode examines how The Birds transforms everyday spaces — a schoolyard, a café, a quiet seaside town — into sites of mounting dread.

    Drawing on verifiable, sourced reflections from filmmakers, critics, and scholars, we unpack the film’s deeper themes: nature as retribution, human complacency, repression, and the fragility of social order. We also examine Tippi Hedren’s harrowing performance, the film’s controversial production, and the way Hitchcock uses restraint, rhythm, and silence to create fear without catharsis.

    A film that begins like a romantic comedy and ends in apocalyptic stillness, The Birds continues to haunt modern cinema. In this episode, we explore why its ambiguity, brutality, and restraint have only grown more powerful with time.

    Show More Show Less
    10 mins
  • North by Northwest: Identity, Desire, and the Perfect Chase
    Jan 27 2026

    In this episode, we explore Alfred Hitchcock’s exhilarating and impeccably crafted thriller North by Northwest — a film often described as the ultimate Hitchcock entertainment and a blueprint for the modern action film.

    We trace the story of Roger Thornhill, an ordinary man mistaken for a spy, and follow Hitchcock’s transformation of a simple case of mistaken identity into a globe-trotting nightmare of pursuit, paranoia, and seduction. From the cool sophistication of Cary Grant’s performance to Eva Marie Saint’s enigmatic allure, the film balances danger with wit, romance with menace.

    This episode examines the film’s production history, its famously audacious set-pieces — including the crop-duster attack and the Mount Rushmore climax — and Hitchcock’s meticulous control of suspense, scale, and rhythm. Drawing on verifiable, sourced insights from filmmakers, critics, and scholars, we explore how North by Northwest redefined cinematic movement, influenced generations of directors, and helped shape the language of the modern thriller.

    Beneath the spectacle, we uncover deeper themes of identity, performance, masculinity, and Cold War anxiety — revealing a film that is not only thrilling, but psychologically and culturally revealing.

    Stylish, playful, and relentlessly tense, North by Northwest remains one of Hitchcock’s most enduring achievements — and in this episode, we discover why it still feels effortlessly modern.

    Show More Show Less
    10 mins
No reviews yet