The Entertainment
The Entertainment
33. Zia Anger on 'My First Film' and the Pressures of the Debut
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33. Zia Anger on 'My First Film' and the Pressures of the Debut

Shadows of Welles in a fractured media landscape
There's Never Been a Movie Like Zia Anger's 'My First Film'
Odessa Young in My First Film

Fairly or not, there is a huge amount of pressure placed on the way an artist chooses to debut. The first film, album, book–it has potential to launch, and sometimes even define, a career. There’s something thrilling about a first film that manages to break out and signal a unique voice, someone announcing their talent and potential that we as viewers get to anticipate and experience across an emerging body of work. If we perhaps put too much emphasis on debuts, there are only a few debuts about debuting.

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This is, in fact, the plot, the function, and the thematic exploration of Zia Anger’s aptly titled My First Film, which tells the story of a failed attempt at debuting, mixing autobiographical elements with the fictionalized telling of how authorship manifests, clashes, and announces its presence. My First Film is streaming now on Mubi.

What are your favorite first films? Keep the conversation going in the comments. Follow The Entertainment on Facebook, Instagram, or Substack and let us know what you think. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and we’d love it if you gave us a review. The Entertainment is a production of KIOS 91.5 FM Omaha Public Radio. It is produced and edited by Courtney Bierman. Our artwork was created by Topher Booth. Thank you for listening.

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The Entertainment
The Entertainment
Everything we do is filtered through entertainment. If it’s not entertaining, there is a good chance that nobody is paying attention. So, to understand the world, you have to not only look at your screen but comprehend what is on it. Where does our entertainment come from? Why? How is it shaped by the world around us and how is it shaping that same world?
This is the focus of The Entertainment. Each week, host Tom Knoblauch explores an element of our culture through conversations with creators and consumers of film, television, music, art, and more.