The Name of the Rose Podcast Episodes
Written by Umberto Eco
10 Episodes - 560 pages - ★★★★ - 1.32K ratings
TV & Film Comedy Arts Film Reviews Film History film review movie movies welsh
The Name of the Rose (2019)
Media-eval: A Medieval Pop Culture Podcast - January 26, 2020 07:43 - 1 hour ★★★★★ - 51 ratingsLooks like Media-eval accidentally ended up with the world's worst monthly theme: it's Inquisition January, I guess? Join Sarah and fellow medievalist Kevin Lord as we delve into heresy, medieval debates about poverty, whether Christ laughed, and how The Name of the Rose (2019) managed to make ei...
265: The Name Of The Rose [1986] Movie Review
Spoiler Filled Film Conversation, Hooray! - January 19, 2020 17:04 - ★★★★★ - 1 ratingThis week Rich, Anthony and Abi tackle 1986’s The Name Of The Rose, starring everyone’s favourite octogenerian Scot, Sean Connery. Listen now to hear Abi chomping at the bit to call bullshit throughout, Rich’s inability to understand the concept of a conference and Anthony rightfully wax lyrical ...
Episode 34: The Name of The Rose
Welcome To The Party Pal: The Mind-Bending Film & Television Podcast You Didn't Know You Needed! - October 29, 2019 14:49 - 54 minutes ★★★★★ - 14 ratingsWelcome To The Party Pal transports listeners back in time to 1327 Italy in an episode dedicated to the multiple adaptations of Italian author Umberto Eco's renowned novel, The Name of The Rose. The Name of The Rose follows an enlightened friar and his young apprentice as they investigate a serie...
Episode 4: Pope John XXII and the Name of the Rose (January 24, 2019)
Modern Church History - Msgr. Witt - April 21, 2019 05:01 - 55 minutes ★★★★★ - 1 ratingIn this episode of Modern Church History, Msgr. Michael John Witt talks about Pope John XXII and the Name of the Rose. (January 24, 2019)
Episode 5 - The Name of the Rose
Film Yak - September 25, 2017 10:00 - 2 hours ★★★★ - 10 ratingsThis week, co-host Kevin assigned us to watch and review _The Name of the Rose, _the 1986 murder/mystery starring Sean Connery and Christian Slater as Franciscan monks. We also list our top 5 Harry Dean Stanton performances, talk lots about what we watched this past week, and respond to some fee...
Novels On Screen 1: The Name of the Rose
The screenspie's Podcast - September 19, 2017 19:38 - 29 minutes ★★★★★ - 1 ratingMark & Sarah start a quest to watch the 100 greatest novels everyone should read by watching TV and Film adaptations of these great works. Do these great books also make good TV and Film versions? Umberto Eco's bestseller in 1980 was given the screen treatment in 1986 starring Sean Connery and...
The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco (1986 Film)
The screenspie's Podcast - September 19, 2017 18:38 - 29 minutes ★★★★★ - 1 ratingMark & Sarah start a quest to watch the 100 greatest novels everyone should read by watching TV and Film adaptations of these great works. Do these great books also make good TV and Film versions? Umberto Eco's bestseller in 1980 was given the screen treatment in 1986 starring Sean Connery and...
Episode #102: "No One Expects the French Inquisition" | The Name of the Rose (1986)
30something Movie Podcast - November 30, 2016 00:01 - 50 minutes ★★★★★ - 27 ratingsSherlock Holm... I mean, William of Baskerville and his young pupil are called to an Italian abbey in 1327 to take part in a debate over the poverty of the church. While there they become embroiled in a murder mystery that threatens the lives and faith of everyone involved.
#10: The Name of the Rose v. Volcano (with Max Eddy)
This Is My Son - April 12, 2016 00:00 - 1 hour ★★★★ - 4 ratingsMax returns to the Son Zone with his grotesque boy, The Name of the Rose and a son for Cathy, Volcano. Also discussed: medieval garbage chutes, film major pedantry, seminal moments, Clavdivs, the sound of masculinity, melting physics, Disaster Man, and volcanoes fixing racism.
The History of The Name of the Rose
History on The Moncrieff Show - March 01, 2016 16:13 ★★★★★ - 2 ratingsOn Tuesdays at 3pm, Graham Finlay, from UCD’s School of Politics and International Relations takes a candid look into the past, revealing yet again that if there is anything we’ve learned from history is that we learn nothing from history.