Probes & Peripherals: A Deep Dive into Close Encounters
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About this listen
The provided audio file is a high-energy, irreverent discussion centered on Steven Spielberg's 1977 sci-fi classic, Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The speakers blend cinematic analysis with nostalgic humor and behind-the-scenes critiques.
Key Discussion Points- Genre and Tone: The speakers debate whether the film is strictly about aliens or something more "supernatural," noting that it carries a distinct "Spielberg signature".
- Technological Nostalgia: There is a humorous breakdown of the era's technology, specifically the use of "large floppy disks" and the Commodore 64 used for data processing in the film.
- Production Critique: The dialogue touches on the chaotic nature of the film's plot and production, specifically:
- The "art project" feel of certain scenes.
- A humorous critique of a scene where a child is taken instead of the mother, which the speakers joke "wasn't approved".
- The "Probe" Trope: The conversation takes an edgy turn discussing sci-fi tropes, specifically the recurring cultural obsession with alien "probes" and medical exams, compared jokingly to a colonoscopy.
The episode serves as a comedic retrospective that balances a genuine appreciation for the film's scale with a modern, skeptical eye toward its more eccentric plot points and 1970s technical limitations.
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