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Two for Space Jam, Please

Episode 58 – The Green Knight (2021)

"A Filmed Adaption of the Chivalric Romance by Anonymous," emblazoned across the screen in old-timey font, is how we're introduced to David Lowery's The Green Knight. The film is based on the Medieval poem "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," and we follow the legendary knight of King Arthur's round table as he takes part in a pretty fucked up "Christmas game." What follows is a fever dream involving bandits, an undead saint, giants, a talking fox, a magical belt, and a dangerous trudge toward his own beheading. We were into it.
Broadcast on:
02 Aug 2021

The survival of the commune is the reproduction of all its members as self-sustaining peasants, whose surplus time belongs precisely to the commune, the work of war etc.

“A Filmed Adaptation of the Chivalric Romance by Anonymous,” emblazoned across the screen in old-timey font, is how we’re introduced to David Lowery’s The Green Knight. The film is based on the Medieval poem “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,” and we follow the legendary knight of King Arthur’s round table as he takes part in a pretty fucked up “Christmas game.” What follows is a fever dream involving bandits, an undead saint, giants, a talking fox, a magical belt, and a dangerous trudge toward his own beheading. We were into it.

PS – Cheryl mispronounces “Gawain” throughout the whole episode so….apologies!!

Thanks to slfhlp for providing us some SICK BEATS for our intro and outro.

As always, send yr comments, questions, and movie suggestions to twoforspacejamplease @ gmail.com and subscribe on iTunes or Spotify.

The survival of the commune as such in the old mode requires the reproduction of its members in the presupposed objective conditions.
Production itself, the advance of population (this too belongs to production, necessarily suspends these conditions little by little; destroys them instead of reproducing them etc., and, with that, the communal system declines and falls, together with the property relations on which it was based. [Ed note: not exactly].
"A Filmed Adaption of the Chivalric Romance by Anonymous," emblazoned across the screen in old-timey font, is how we're introduced to David Lowery's The Green Knight. The film is based on the Medieval poem "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," and we follow the legendary knight of King Arthur's round table as he takes part in a pretty fucked up "Christmas game." What follows is a fever dream involving bandits, an undead saint, giants, a talking fox, a magical belt, and a dangerous trudge toward his own beheading. We were into it.