Lost in the Movies: May 2025

May 2025 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #9: Eve's Bayou


Suggested to me by a patron who very much emphasized its Twin Peaks connections, Kasi Lemmons' 1997 debut feature Eve's Bayou yields more discussion of that aspect than most of my other podcast episodes (aside from the designated Twin Peaks Cinema series). My coverage includes a non-spoiler and spoiler section so I won't get too much into the details here, but the way this film deals with memory and perspective, family ties and hidden secrets, passionate betrayal and murderous revenge, makes for an interesting companion with my favorite series. In fact, there are aspects I didn't even dig into - for example, both taking place in a tightknit community and playing with psychic premonitions - which only speaks to the power of their overlap. The story of an affluent family in rural Louisiana, Eve's Bayou is told through the eyes of ten-year-old Eve (Jurnee Smollett), who idolizes her charismatic father Dr. Louis Batiste (Samuel L. Jackson) but is troubled to discover he is cheating on her mother. From there, her world begins to unravel even as the great joys and quiet pleasures of her everyday life are on full display in Lemmons' evocative direction. Drawing particularly on the analysis of a video essay which I discovered just before recording, I was struck by the subtle ways the film (with the help of some deleted scenes) hints at a truth beneath its various points of view, even as it allows them to remain in tension. Meanwhile, the film's mournful sense of its characters' mortality (including an aunt, played by Debbi Morgan, who grieves three deceased partners and worries about taking on another) is echoed by the theme of an advance work-in-progress* I shared with all tiers this month. *Update 6/2: The issue with the advance has been fixed and the link has been updated.

What is the exclusive May reward?

2000 Posts on Lost in the Movies


What does this number mean exactly? After all, if you individually count the Patreon posts, YouTube videos, public podcasts, and other work on different platforms, I have well over two thousand distinct pieces. In terms of this main website, however - ranging from a few words (or even just a single image) to hours upon hours of audio presented as a single unit - this is my two thousandth post. The one thousandth post, which was a bit more long-winded, arrived less than eight years after the first, and this one arrives more than nine years after that - surprisingly even intervals despite the variety of my pace since 2008. (The span would have been even closer if not for my shift away from regular public posts in the fall of 2023.) That said, I use the term "one thousandth post" advisedly. From today's vantage point, after I restored a number of earlier posts that had been initially featured on other websites, that commemoration is actually my one thousand twenty-sixth post; the real one thousand post is my Oscar Blues montage video from a couple months earlier.

(Update at midnight: I've finally removed Disqus from this site, so you can comment on any of these two thousands posts for the first time in months - using Blogger's native comment system for the first time in years. Now I just need to find a way to retrieve the comments previously left through Disqus...)

Here's a reminder of the best ways to explore my work aside from the five main categories on the home page (Twin Peaks, TV Viewing Diaries, Video Essays, written Film Reviews, and Podcasts)...


My strongest work, organized into five categories: essays, videos, images, lists, and podcasts

Striking images organized alphabetically by subject serve as links to the pieces featuring them

All of my individual posts, organized by era of my site's history
w/ posts subsequent to these chapters featured here

For further series and categories, scroll down the More to Explore page.

Nine years ago, I wrote, "Here's to 1000 more." I'm not sure if I truly believed that at the time, but here we are. I'm no less doubtful and (ambivalent) today. Still, in that same spirit, here's to 1000 more.