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Celluloid Circuits

Celluloid Circuits

By: Anthony Rios
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About this listen

Welcome to Celluloid Circuits, the podcast where film meets technology!

I dive into the world of cinema to explore how iconic films have shaped and reflected our understanding of technology. From artificial intelligence to virtual reality, and from ethical dilemmas to futuristic visions, Celluloid Circuits examines the big ideas behind the big screen. Whether you’re a film buff, a tech enthusiast, or just curious about how movies influence the way we think about innovation, this is the podcast for you. Subscribe now and join us on this journey at the intersection of film and tech. As always the future is only a "Reel away."

Anthony Rios 2025
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Episodes
  • Ep 6: Before Privacy Died: What The Net (1995) Got Right About Us
    Jul 2 2025

    The Net (1995):

    Episode Summary

    In this episode of Celluloid Circuits, we boot up our 90s dial-up modems and dive deep into The Net — the 1995 techno-thriller starring Sandra Bullock that eerily predicted the age of digital surveillance, identity theft, and life lived entirely online.

    We explore:

    - How The Net captured early fears about the internet just as most people were getting online.

    - The tech tools that made Angela Bennett’s life so advanced (and vulnerable) in 1995.

    - Gatekeeper as a metaphor for trusting software — and how that trust can be exploited.

    - The chilling idea that if you’re erased from the system, you’re erased from society itself.

    - Why the film’s themes of isolation, convenience, and control are more relevant than ever.

    Plus, we break down how these ideas connect to today’s concerns about data breaches, algorithmic bias, and living in a world where your entire identity exists in scattered databases.

    TLDR

    Digital convenience often comes at the price of privacy and autonomy.

    A connected world doesn’t always mean a supported one — Angela’s story is a cautionary tale of isolation.

    The systems we trust to keep us safe can also be used to control or erase us.

    Nearly 30 years later, The Net feels less like retro paranoia and more like an unsettling prophecy.

    Links & Resources

    My main website

    Celluloid Circuits on RSS.com

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    If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, or share it with a friend — it’s the best way to help Celluloid Circuits grow and reach more film and tech fans.

    Up Next

    In our next episode, we’ll explore the blurred lines between human and machine in Her and Ex Machina. From romantic AIs to manipulative androids, we’ll break down how these films challenge our ideas of consciousness, ethics, and love.

    Thanks for listening — and remember, the future is only a reel away.

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    20 mins
  • Ep. 5 - Hackers (1995): When Cybercrime Was Cool
    Jun 25 2025

    Episode Title: Hackers (1995): When Cybercrime Was Cool

    Episode Summary: In this episode of Celluloid Circuits, we jack into the neon-lit, modem-screeching world of Hackers (1995). With rollerblades on our feet and floppy disks in our backpacks, we explore how the film captures the anxieties and fantasies of a rapidly digitizing world—where teenagers wield keyboards like weapons and cyberspace is a rave of rebellion.

    We'll break down the movie’s iconic (and sometimes hilariously inaccurate) portrayal of hacking, discuss its heavy dose of cyberpunk aesthetics, and consider what it got surprisingly right about tech culture, digital surveillance, and the emerging idea of the hacker as countercultural hero. From Zero Cool to Acid Burn, we’ll unpack the technobabble, the fashion, and the fantasy behind one of the most stylized depictions of computer crime in cinema.

    Film Referenced: Hackers (1995), directed by Iain Softley, starring Jonny Lee Miller, Angelina Jolie, Fisher Stevens, and Matthew Lillard.

    Outro: And remember—the future is only a reel away.

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    11 mins
  • Ep4: Before Snowden, There Was Bishop: Tech, Trust, and Sneakers (1992)
    Jun 18 2025

    Celluloid Circuits - Ep4: Before Snowden, There Was Bishop: Tech, Trust, and Sneakers (1992)

    In this episode of Celluloid Circuits, we slip into our wiretaps and headsets to revisit Sneakers (1992), the high-tech heist movie where cryptography meets comedy. We dig into the film’s surprisingly accurate portrayal of cybersecurity, explore how it predicted the rise of surveillance culture, and unpack the technology — real and imagined — that powers the story.

    From social engineering to pen testing and cryptographic paranoia, this episode explores why Sneakers still feels relevant in today’s world of black boxes and backdoors.

    What We Cover in This Episode:

    • Social engineering and why the human element is the ultimate vulnerability
    • The rise of penetration testing and ethical hacking, before it had a name
    • Why Sneakers predicted the modern cybersecurity dilemma — and did it with a wink

    If you enjoyed this episode of Celluloid Circuits, be sure to:

    Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform so you never miss a dive into techy cinema Leave a rating or review — it helps other cyber-curious movie fans find the show Share it with a friend who still thinks encryption is just for spies

    Visit Celluloid Circuits for show archives, transcripts, and more.

    And remember... “The future is only a reel away.”

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    9 mins
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