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Celluloid Circuits

Celluloid Circuits

De : Anthony Rios
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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
Art
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    Épisodes
    • Ep. 8 - Born Guilty - Gattaca + Minority Report: Engineering the Future
      Feb 18 2026

      Born Guilty

      Gattaca + Minority Report: Engineering the Future

      What if your life was decided before you ever made a choice?

      In this episode of Celluloid Circuits, I explore two sci-fi films that turn prediction into destiny: Gattaca and Minority Report.

      From genetically engineered embryos to psychic crime prediction, both films imagine societies obsessed with eliminating uncertainty. In one world, your DNA determines your worth. In the other, you can be arrested for a crime you haven’t committed yet.

      But how far are we from these futures already?

      In This Episode

      • How Gattaca envisions genetic profiling as a normalized social hierarchy
      • The subtle surveillance of DNA — where your body becomes your résumé
      • Vincent Freeman’s biological identity hack
      • How Minority Report built one of cinema’s most convincing predictive tech ecosystems
      • Gesture-based computing, biometric tracking, and personalized advertising
      • The ethical flaw at the heart of Precrime
      • Real-world parallels:
        • Consumer DNA testing and genetic privacy
        • CRISPR and embryo editing debates
        • Predictive policing software
        • Facial recognition and algorithmic bias
      • Why probability is not destiny
      • Would we trade freedom for certainty?

      Core Theme

      Both films ask the same chilling question:

      When technology predicts our future, do we still have one?

      In Gattaca, your genes define your ceiling. In Minority Report, your predicted actions define your guilt.

      In both worlds, humanity is reduced to data and choice becomes an inconvenience.

      Why It Matters Now

      As genetic testing kits grow more common and algorithmic systems increasingly shape hiring, insurance, advertising, and law enforcement, these once-speculative futures feel closer than ever.

      Are we engineering a safer world or quietly building systems that decide who we are allowed to be?

      Films Discussed

      • Gattaca (1997)
      • Minority Report (2002)

      If you enjoyed this episode, please consider subscribing and leaving a review it helps more people discover the show.

      You can find more of Anthony’s work at riosdoesit.com and explore past episodes at Celluloid Circuits.

      And remember… The future is only a reel away.

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      15 min
    • Ep. 7 - Double Feature Ex-Machina and HER
      Jul 15 2025

      In this special double feature episode of Celluloid Circuits, we boot up two of the most thought-provoking films about artificial intelligence: Spike Jonze’s Her and Alex Garland’s Ex Machina.

      If you’ve ever wondered how close we are to falling in love with our devices—or if our devices might already be studying us—this episode is your gateway.

      If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe on your favorite podcast platform so you never miss our next tech-infused film deep dive.

      Visit my site at riosdoesit.com for more of my work and behind-the-scenes thoughts.

      Check out our show’s home on rss.com for all episodes, show notes, and bonus content.

      Join the Conversation

      We’d love to hear your take—would you date an AI? Or is that a one-way ticket to heartbreak (or a robot uprising)? Leave a review, drop us a comment, or share your thoughts on social with the hashtag #CelluloidCircuits.

      And remember… the future is only a reel away.

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      29 min
    • 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

      Support the Show!

      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 min
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