
thomas-psyopcinema@protonmail.com
For verified host and producer emails, sign up to view.
Episodes: 134
Frequency: Irregular
Rating: 4.6/5.0
Estimated listeners: 1k-10k
Gender skew: Male
Location: USA
thomas-psyopcinema@protonmail.com
For verified host and producer emails, sign up to view.
Thomas Millary - Co-host of Psyop Cinema. Focuses on analyzing films from a “deep politics” perspective, connecting cinema to psychological/technological knowledge, cultural influence, and esoteric or occult readin...
Brett Carollo - Co-host of Psyop Cinema. Conducts research-driven examinations of film as a mechanism of psychological and technological influence, often using conspiracy-oriented cultural analysis to interpret ho...
Jamie Hanshaw Dyer - Analysis Of True Detective: Night Country Through Occult Feminist And Anti-order Narrative Lenses; Additional Commentary On The Series’ Underlying Intentions.
The Firm, with Steven DeLay (Surveillance Cinema 3)
June 12, 2026
Steven Delay returns to our Surveillance Cinema series for a discussion of Sydney Pollack's 1993 legal thriller The Firm, starring Tom Cruise. We first spend some time on Pollack's background, including his established Mossad connections and the themes of his 1975 paranoid spy thriller Three Days of the Condor, which had significant CIA involvement in its production. The Firm turns out to be largely a misdirection op, depicting a white shoe law firm as running interference for the mafia (a fa...
Eddington, Bugonia, and Beau is Afraid, with Travis Mateer
June 05, 2026
After many requests Thomas is joined by Travis Mateer to cover Eddington, Ari Aster's 2025 neo-Western political satire and early-Covid period piece. We break down the film's portrayal of technology, social media, conspiracy theories, Covid, Wokeness, and data collection, situating its messaging within the context of the cultural transitions and inter-elite warfare of the last half decade. While many have called the film meta-political or omni-political, comments from Aster and a careful read...
Born on the Fourth of July (Oliver Stone 6)
April 29, 2026
After his hyper-sus digression of Talk Radio (1988), we return to the thematic focus that defined this era of Olive Stone's career. He continues to explore the ghosts of the 1960s with Born on the Fourth of July, his 1989 anti-war drama starring Tom Cruise. We keep analyzing Stone's treatments of religion, sexuality, war, and masculinity, go over some sus production credits, and talk about how this film sets the stage for his even more extensive interaction with the counterculture psyop in 19...
Try us risk free with a FREE 3 days trial.
Join hundreds of PR teams using Podseeker to pitch and land bookings