Lupita Mendez-Jones and Justin Jones join the show to talk about Victor Fleming's (and George Cukor's and Sam Wood's) titanic epic, 1939's Gone With The Wind.
Filmmaker Jordan Beck (Sgt. Stubby) joins the show to bring his perspective on making an animated feature to analyzing Walt Disney's landmark first animated feature, 1937's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
Actor and comedian David Bluvband (The Chris Gethard Show, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel) joins the show to talk John Huston's directorial debut, the 1941 film noir The Maltese Falcon.
Advocate Amanda Rush joins the show to talk about how her own experiences working in D.C., and the more recent pop culture works that inspired it, are reflected in Frank Capra's 1939 political drama Mr. Smith Goes To Washington.
Documentarian Matthew Serrano joins the show to talk about Robert J. Flaherty's documentary Nanook of the North (1922), and how the film lives on the the DNA of the documentary medium, all the way through to Serrano's own films.
Sean and Carrie McCabe, the hosts of Ain't It Scary with Sean and Carrie, join us to talk about Alfred Hitchcock's most acclaimed piece of paranoia, 1958's Vertigo.
Actor and comedian Connor Ratliff joins us to talk about Stanley Kubrick, Peter Sellers and existential dread with the iconic 1964 Cold War comedy, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Filmmaker LJ Strong (Serial, Cigarette Soup) joins us to talk about coming of age films, nostalgia without rose colored glasses and the remarkable life of Gordon Parks with 1969's The Learning Tree.
Actor Jae Kim joins us to talk Marlon Brando, Elia Kazan, Eva Marie Saint and those immortal words "I coulda been a contender" as we talk 1954's On The Waterfront.
Acclaimed comic book writer Mark Russell (Billionaire Island, Second Coming) joins us to talk about Steinbeck, systemic oppression and the powerful legacy of John Ford's 1940 adaptation of The Grapes of Wrath.
Mike and Tom's former film professor, John Koshel, joins the show to talk about trains, pains and awesome ordeals as we look at Buster Keaton's iconic silent action-comedy The General (1927).
Writer/critic Matt Singer (ScreenCrush, Spider-Man: From Amazing to Spectacular) joins us for our final episode of the season: the oft-cited, hugely influential film that towers above the rest, 1941's Citizen Kane.