Jane Austen Wrecked My Life (2025) – Review
Quick Thoughts
- Grade – B+
- Director Laura Piani has crafted an unabashed romantic comedy that features all the familiar tropes (dancing, karaoke, love triangles, writing, lies, sex, bookstores, meet cutes), but still manages to feel fresh and likable
- Camille Rutherford is perfection
- The 98 minutes fly by
- Between Rye Lane, Anyone But You, Jane Austen Wrecked My Life, Palm Springs, The Half of It, I Want You Back, and Fire Island, rom-coms are in a good place.
The neat thing about Jane Austen Wrecked My Life is that it knows it’s a rom-com and doesn’t shy away from genre tropes or characteristics. Director/writer Laura Piani set out to make an unabashed rom-com and the result is a warm, funny and literate experience. I’ve always been a fan of rom-coms and I love when they lean into the genre and manage to make familiar tropes feel fresh. Last year I got tasked with the enviable job of analyzing 86 R-rated romantic comedies to figure out the perfect R-rated rom-com. During the research, I created a list of 11 tropes and characteristics that appear in most of the films (lies, sex, love triangles, singing, dancing, books) – and learned that on average, each of the 86 films features eight of the tropes/characteristics. This means that no matter how great (Rye Lane, Grosse Pointe Blank), or terrible (Good Luck Chuck, My Best Friend’s Girlfriend), rom-coms mostly stick to a playbook.
Jane Austen Wrecked My Life is an example of a rom-com that leans into tropes successfully to create a fresh and familiar experience. The film revolves around a bookseller named Agathe Robinson (Camille Rutherford) who gets herself invited to a Jane Austin writers’ residency after a wildly successful drunken writing session. After years of conceiving and abandoning book ideas, the self-described “Palme d’Or of losers” finds the courage to leave her home in France and travel to a sprawling English estate where she’ll hopefully find inspiration on the grounds that Jane Austen once walked on. Since it’s a rom-com, she doesn’t write much and instead, she gets drunk, sings karaoke, and pukes on the shoes of a handsome man named Oliver (Charlie Anson). Agathe is an interesting character in that she’s quick-witted and kind but also considers herself to be a genuine imposter (with imposter syndrome) and she compares herself to Anne Elliot, the “spinster” character from Persuasion. Agathe is haunted by a car accident that killed both her parents and refuses to drive or leave her town. This is why her best friend Félix (Pablo Pauly) drives her to the France to England ferry, and before she leaves, they share a kiss. What’s great about Jane Austen Wrecked My Life is that minutes after Agathe and Félix kiss she comes across the handsome Oliver, and the love triangle commences! I won’t spoil the rest, just know that a lot of rom-com shenanigans happen on the estate.
In an interview with IndieWire, Piani stated “I wanted to make a comedy about writing and the absurdity and the difficulty of what it means to write when everything in life pushes you to not do that and to do something else, because it’s the hardest thing in the world.” I’ve never sold a screenplay or published a book (working on it though! – it’s taking a while), but I completely understand what Piani is saying. Writing is tough, but it’s films like this that motivate me to find my “ruins.” Oddly enough, a viewing of the rom-com Forgetting Sarah Marshall motivated me to start writing in 2008, and it led me on an interesting 17-year journey.
Final thoughts – Jane Austen Wrecked My Life is wonderful. Watch it!
Dogma (1999) – 25th Anniversary – Review
Quick thoughts
- Check out the Dogma website to learn more about the tour and where to watch it.
- Grade – A
- It holds up. The comedy, ideas and performances still feel fresh and hilarious.
- Linda Fiorentino is wonderful.
- Jason Mewes and Alan Rickman are the MVPS.
- Affleck and Damon are great together.
- For a wildly profane film, it’s loaded with excellent ideas.
One of my favorite all-time movie-going experiences happened in 1999 at an AMC theater in St. Petersburg, Florida. Watching Dogma in a packed theater was electric because everyone was excited to see what Kevin Smith’s “blasphemous” film was all about. All we knew was that controversies delayed the film’s release for close to a year and it featured Matt Damon, Alan Rickman, Ben Affleck, Linda Fiorentino, Chris Rock, George Carlin, Salma Hayek, Jason Lee, and Alanis Morisette in various roles. Aside from a few movie critics, no one had watched Dogma, but the idea of it inspired people to picket the film and write hate mail to Disney, the parent company of Miramax — the company that planned on releasing it. While watching the movie I distinctly remember thinking that the conversations started by the 128-minute film could be really important (I also thought the ”Knocks strong odors out” bit was hilarious). Dogma is an intelligent movie that is deeply rooted in faith, but it also questions organized religion in ways nobody was expecting. For instance, I remember perking up when Rufus (Chris Rock) says (about Jesus) “He still digs humanity, but it bothers Him to see the sh** that gets carried out in His name — wars, bigotry, televangelism. But especially the factioning of all the religions. He said humanity took a good idea and, like always, built a belief structure on it.” The line is interesting and can be explored by Christians and non-Christians who are looking to talk about Christianity and its many branches.
Dogma revolves around two exiled angels (Ben Affleck and Matt Damon) discovering a loophole (created by the Catholic Church) that will get them back into heaven — and out of Wisconsin. All they have to do is travel to New Jersey so they can enter a church and receive a plenary indulgence which will forgive their sins. On paper, the loophole is just a loophole, but if the two angels get back into heaven it will nullify all existence by disproving God’s omnipotence. Since God can’t be bothered to make the trip to New Jersey, her messenger Metatron (Alan Rickman) travels to Illinois and tasks an abortion clinic worker named Bethany (Linda Fiorentino) with the unenviable job of stopping the angels from destroying the world. In her quest to New Jersey, she meets two prophets (Kevin Smith and Jason Mewes), the 13th prophet (Chris Rock) and Serendipity (Salma Hayek), who help her avoid murderous poop monsters and hockey goons (with great shirts) sent to earth by Azrael (Jason Lee).
At its core, Dogma is a road trip comedy that blends heady themes with hundreds of swear words, countless sexual advances and mass murder. It’s a lot, and Smith admits that he could never replicate it because he was a “brave motherf***er” back in the 1990s. The reason Dogma works is that it’s an earnest exploration of religion created by a Catholic (Smith) who grew up in the church — but also had liberal-leaning views. The result is an intelligent piece of cinema that features an idiot named Jay (Jason Mewes) saying insane things like “We figure an abortion clinic is a good place to meet loose women. Why else would they be there unless they like to f***?”
I love that Smith was able to wrangle Dogma away from the Weinsteins, and I hope the 25th- anniversary tour and re-release are a success because it’s an excellent film that can still create conversations. The 4K restoration looks wonderful and the jokes are still as great as central air. Also, it’s fun watching Jason Mewes hold his own with Fiorentino, Rickman, Rock and Hayek. Since 1994, Mewes has impressed me with his ability to be likable while playing ultra-vulgar characters. It’s an unheralded skill that few can match and it’s super evident during his scenes with the legendary Alan Rickman.
Final thoughts – Watch it in theaters!
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 623 – Punisher: War Zone (2008), Mirror Destruction, Ray Stevenson
You can download or stream the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker (or wherever you listen to podcasts…..we’re almost everywhere).
If you get a chance please make sure to review, rate and share. You are awesome.
Mark and John discuss the wonderfully insane film Punisher: War Zone (2008). Directed by Lexi Alexander, and starring Ray Stevenson, Dominic West, Doug Hutchinson and an incredible amount of violence, the movie focuses on what happens when a burly man kills dozens of criminals. In this episode, they also talk about free running, mirror destruction, and big accents.
If you are a fan of the podcast, make sure to send in some random listener questions (we love random questions). We thank you for listening, and hope you enjoy the episode!
You can download the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker.

Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (2025)
Quick thoughts:
- Grade – B
- It’s a lot.
- There are two tremendous set pieces that are worth the price of admission. Cruise put an incredible amount of work into creating them and they need to be seen in theaters.
- Shea Whigam’s hair…..
- Katy O’Brian and Tramell Tillman steal their scenes.
- Treadmill Cruise is now a thing (Oblivion, Top Gun: Maverick, Final Reckoning).
- Seriously, the two huge set pieces are worth the price of admission.
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning is a lot. Which is a good and bad thing. The good news is that there are two beautiful set pieces that are spectacular in scope, ambition, and technical ability. The bad news is that there are way too many characters and the self-seriousness of the 169-minute film drags it down deeper than the sunken submarine housing the MacGuffin (there’s always a MacGuffin in M:I films). Like every other action franchise in existence, the Mission: Impossible franchise has gotten grander in scope so it’s no surprise that the eighth entry is so gigantic.
Two years ago, I researched and wrote a Mission: Impossible franchise episode for the Fandom show By the Numbers. For the assignment, I analyzed the seven films and learned a lot about them and I wanted to share them with you.
- People stand around and talk about the logistics of an impossible mission. Then, they accomplish the impossible mission. This is nice because audiences can enjoy the mission without being bombarded with too much expository dialogue.
- Tom Cruise loves problems on top of problems. Nothing is easy.
- Each film introduces new characters. Some characters stick around (Luther, Benji), but expect new faces.
- The MacGuffins get mentioned many times (Where’s the Rabbit Foot?…etc…)
- The first three films had the personality of their directors (DePalma, Woo, Abrams). However, since Ghost Protocol, they’ve had the same vibe (which isn’t a bad thing).
- Ethan always goes rogue. The only time he doesn’t is in M:I2.
- Ethan is saved by a cool lady in six of the eight films.
- The scope has gotten out of hand. Ethan has always traveled around the globe for his adventures, but The Final Reckoning really goes for it.
- Characters always remind Ethan that the mission is impossible.
- Ethan gets the job done
- Villains are almost always the weakest aspect (except for M:I3 and Fallout)
Quick Note – I’ve also figured out how far Cruise has sprinted since 1981 (here’s a ranking of all his running scenes). On top of his running, Fandom paid me to figure out Cruise’s average height across his films. The assignment was a bit insane, but it allowed me to watch his movies again. I’ve spent a lot of time watching Tom Cruise movies since 2018.
It’s because of these assignments that I was prepared for the bloated theatrics of The Final Reckoning. The Mission: Impossible franchise has a limited playbook (like all other franchises), but it excels at running its plays at an optimal and admirable level. The film revolves around Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) attempting to literally save the world from the AI antagonist dubbed “The Entity.” The all-powerful villain plans on taking control of the world’s nuclear arsenal and using it to blow up the world. To prevent the world from ending, Hunt needs to find a Russian nuclear submarine somewhere on the bottom of the Arctic Ocean, so he can grab the Entity’s source code and use it against the sentient malware. Since the Mission: Impossible franchise loves problems on top of problems, Hunt has to deal with his nemesis Gabriel (Esai Morales), while staying ahead of agent Jasper Briggs (Shea Whigham and his giant hair) – who wants Ethan in jail. To defeat the Entity, Hunt and his makeshift team made up of Benji Dunn (Simon Pegg), Luther Stickell (Ving Rhames), Grace (Hayley Atwell), Paris (Pom Klementieff) and Degas (Greg Tarzan David), have to travel around the world and accomplish impossible tasks that require perfect timing and terrible odds.
I expected the theatrics but I wasn’t prepared for the amount of dialogue used to explain how impossible all the tasks are. The weight of the expository dialogue drags down the experience and makes the first hour feel like a slog. That being said, the experience is still thoroughly enjoyable and the second half features two incredible set pieces built around a sunken submarine and an airplane chase that features at least 43 jaw-dropping moments. The almost $300 million budget can be seen on screen and the new characters played by Hannah Waddingham, Katy O’Brian, Lucy Tulugarjuk, Nick Offerman, Tramell Tillman (his line delivery is wonderful), and Holt McCallany (same) all pop on screen. Toss in returning characters played by Angela Bassett, Janet McTeer, Charles Parnell and Mark Gatiss – and you have a lot of movie.
I don’t want to spoil anything, just know that despite all the bloat you should watch this film on the biggest screen possible. The Mission: Impossible movies have always built their stories around action scenes, and the two featured in The Final Reckoning are bananas. Cinematographer Fraser Taggart (Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning) has a long history of filming second-unit action scenes for movies such as Edge of Tomorrow, Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, and Kingsman: The Secret Service – so he knows how to capture action in thrilling ways. The production design from Gary Freeman (Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning, Everest, Tomb Raider) is fantastic and the highlight of his work is the massive submerged submarine that must’ve needed a tremendous amount of gimbals to work. During production, the gigantic submarine (which cost 23 million Euros to make) got wedged into its 8.5 million litres tank. This delayed the production for several weeks, as the crew attempted to figure out how to make the giant scene work. I love how big Cruise goes to make his movies enjoyable.
Director Christopher McQuarrie and Cruise have worked closely together since 2008’s Valkyrie (McQuarrie wrote the film), and they’ve become wildly successful collaborators. However, their successful partnership has seemingly created unchecked creative control which could explain why the M:I Reckoning films are jam-packed with so many ideas and characters. They’ve earned the right to guide the franchise wherever they want, but it would’ve been nice if someone told them to tighten the film up a bit.
Final Thoughts – Watch it on the biggest screen possible.
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 622: Rapid Fire (1992), Brandon Lee, Sleeveless Shirts
You can download or stream the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker (or wherever you listen to podcasts…..we’re almost everywhere).
If you get a chance please make sure to review, rate and share. You are awesome.
Mark and Professor Mike Dillon discuss the 1992 action film Rapid Fire. Directed by Dwight H. Little, and starring Brandon Lee, Powers Boothe, and Kate Hodge, the movie is famous for giving Lee his first leading role in a Hollywood production. In this episode, they also talk about bratty protagonists, bowling alleys, and the excellence of Brandon Lee. Enjoy!
If you are a fan of the podcast, make sure to send in some random listener questions (we love random questions). We thank you for listening, and hope you enjoy the episode!
You can download the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker.

The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 621: Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, Camping, and Rock Climbing
You can download or stream the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker (or wherever you listen to podcasts…..we’re almost everywhere).
If you get a chance please make sure to review, rate and share. You are awesome.
Mark and Niall discuss the infamous 1989 sequel Star Trek V: The Final Frontier. Directed by William Shatner, and starring Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, and William Shatner, the movie focuses on what happens when a god needs a starship. In this episode, they also talk about camping scenes, bad decisions and oops moments.
If you are a fan of the podcast, make sure to send in some random listener questions (we love random questions). We thank you for listening, and hope you enjoy the episode!
You can download the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker.

MY CALL: I hope you were looking for a flick that’s all sorts of gross. Because that’s what you’re going to get! MORE MOVIES LIKE Street Trash: Well, there’s obviously the original cult classic Street Trash (1987). For more “melt horror” consider The Devil’s Rain (1975), The Incredible Melting Man (1977), Slime City (1988), The Blob (1988), and Body Melt (1993). And for more South African horror, consider Zygote (2017), Fried Barry (2020) and Gaia (2021).
The future is wrought with corporate monopolies, government control, and an ever-shrinking middle class and growing lower class. Homeless populations have grown tremendously. To solve this problem, the mayor has ordered experiments on vagrants to test a toxic agent called Viper, which literally melts those exposed from the inside-out into piles of colorful gobbledygook.
As if competing with the opening scene from the 1987 original, the first death scene is a spectacle. Guts pour out of the victim’s abdomen onto the floor as he oozes purple slime from his eyes, ears and other orifices, including projectile vomit. His skin pulsates and sloughs off in big chonkety chunks as he screams and peels off his own face. The opening death scene award goes to 1987 in my opinion, but not for lack of a great effort from 2024, which is still extra gross and sloppy!
A goofy nice touch is that one homeless guy (Gary Green; Fried Barry) has a raunchy blue goblin imaginary friend (i.e., drug-induced schizoid delusion). Unfortunately, later in the movie this becomes more tired and annoying than charming and quirky. Also like 1987, there is a long-running severed phallus gag. So, yeah, in case you were wondering—it’s that kind of slapstick movie.
But the gore is why you showed up, right? Faces fall right off of skulls, bones melt and collapse under the victim’s own bodyweight, and slime geysers from bodily orifices. Victims pour out variously colored slime, they pulsate and bubble and rupture, they leave disembodied partially disintegrated limbs behind as they crawl for help, and they all become gross pieces of macabre performance art.
Director Ryan Kruger (Fried Barry) takes the short film-turned cult classic Street Trash(1984, 1987) and contemporizes it with corrupt government officials. This remake is just as deliberately classless as its source material—and I applaud that. The writing, acting, budget, effects and direction feel on par with the original as well. If anything, the greatest improvement is in its pacing. The greatest change is the form and implementation of Viper (just some old, mysterious liquor in 1987), now having a more deliberate RoboCop-ish (1987) utility in this dystopian corporate future. And speaking of RoboCop (1987), one death scene seems to homage the toxic waste mutant exploding when struck by a car.
The final 20-30 minutes are loaded with action. But we just keep seeing the same gore gags over and over again during clumsy action scenes. As much action as there was, I found this final act on the verge of boring with a few momentary exceptions—e.g., an exploding gory breast.
This remake certainly had its moments. But if I’m being totally honest, I favor original. They’re both fun bad movies. Yet 1987 just felt more organically “so bad it’s good.” Whereas this remake is trying too hard to be “so bad it’s good.”
John’s Horror Corner: Grafted (2024), Face/Off meets Re-Animator-LITE in this gross medical body horror.
MY CALL: Combining elements of foreign horror, Face/Off (1997), and Re-Animator (1985) give this directorial debut much quirky spunk. MORE MOVIES LIKE Grafted: Not much). For more New Zealand horror, try Bad Taste (1987), Dead-Alive (1992), Black Sheep (2006), Housebound (2014), Deathgasm (2015) and What We Do in the Shadows (2015). For more regeneration-gone-wrong horror, I’d recommend Re-Animator (1985), Rejuvenator (1988), Death Becomes Her (1992), and The Substance (2024).
The daughter of a medical researcher, Wei (Joyena Sun) bears a large, discolored birthmark on her face. The opening death scene is an entertaining spectacle of an experimental skin graft-gone-wrong that regeneratively expands to seal its recipient’s mouth and nostrils shut, leading to her father’s death. Some time after losing her father to a horrible biomedical accident, she moves to New Zealand to live with her cousin (Jess Hong; 3 Body Problem) and aunt (Xiao Hu) for college.
Wei tries to make new friends, and does so in the nicest ways. But her culture, interests, and even her food are off-putting to these Kiwi-brand Mean Girls. So Wei’s only support comes from her professor (Jared Turner; 30 Days of Night).
Playing a bit off the aged coattails of Re-Animator (1985), Wei has her father’s research notebook and intends to continue this research as a lab assistant under her professor. And also like Re-Animator (1985), her academic superior aims to steal her research for personal gain.
Some Mean Girls blackmail her, a girlfight-turned accidental death transpires, a little medical self-mutilation, and some ad-hoc experimentation take the movie in an interesting direction. Throw in some Face/Off-esque (1997) face swapping and identity theft, and we have a proper vehicle for some catty-motivated revenge. Yeah, it gets weird.
This film offers a refreshing cultural crossover—the kind we need more often. Many of the characters speak Mandarin, the film takes place mostly in New Zealand, and it was written and directed by women. In fact, this was director Sasha Rainbow’s first feature film. This film is very well made, decently written and acted, and has just enough gore gags and murder to maintain good pacing. Pretty nice job!
MY CALL: Another average horror anthology. This one has some good messages, yet lacks the execution to feel impactful. MORE MOVIES LIKE Horror Noire: For more “horror noir”, consider trying Def by Temptation (1990), A Vampire in Brooklyn (1995), Tales from the Hood (1995), Bones (2001), Get Out (2017), Us (2019), Lovecraft Country (2020), Spell (2020), Candyman (2021), and Them (2021-2024). There is also the documentary Horror Noire: A History of Black Horror (2019).
MORE HORROR ANTHOLOGIES: Dead of Night (1945), Black Sabbath (1963), Tales from the Crypt (1972), The Vault of Horror (1973), The Uncanny (1977), Screams of a Winter Night (1979), Creepshow (1982), Screamtime (1983), Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983), Stephen King’s Cat’s Eye (1985), Deadtime Stories (1986), Creepshow 2 (1987), From a Whisper to a Scream (1987; aka The Offspring), After Midnight (1989), Tales from the Crypt Season 1 (1989), Tales from the Darkside: The Movie (1990), Grimm Prairie Tales (1990), The Willies (1990), Two Evil Eyes (1990), Body Bags (1993), Necronomicon: Book of the Dead (1993), Tales from the Hood (1995), Hellraiser: Bloodline (1996), Campfire Tales (1997), Dark Tales of Japan (2004), 3 Extremes (2004), Creepshow 3 (2006), Trick ‘r Treat (2007), Chillerama (2011), Little Deaths (2011), V/H/S (2012), The Theater Bizarre (2012), The ABCs of Death (2013), V/H/S 2 (2013), All Hallows’ Eve (2013), The Profane Exhibit (2013), The ABCs of Death 2 (2014), V/H/S Viral (2014), Southbound (2015), Tales of Halloween (2015), A Christmas Horror Story (2015), The ABCs of Death 2.5 (2016), Holidays (2016), Terrified (2017; aka Aterrados, a pseudo-anthology), Oats Studios, Vol. 1 (2017), Ghost Stories (2017), XX (2017), All the Creatures Were Stirring (2018), The Field Guide to Evil (2018), Nightmare Cinema (2018), Blood Clots (2018), Deathcember (2019), Shudder’s series Creepshow (2019-2021), Scare Package (2019), The Mortuary Collection (2019), Xenophobia (2019), V/H/S/94 (2021), Netflix’s series Cabinet of Curiosities (2022), V/H/S/99 (2022), V/H/S/85 (2023) and V/H/S/Beyond (2024).
Whenever I encounter a horror movie that really fits my interests (e.g., horror anthologies) that was released years ago and I somehow never even heard of it, I wonder how it flew under my radar. Sometimes these under-advertised or (on streaming apps) under-auto-recommended movies become little hidden indie gems for whom I want to run down the halls of the internet announcing my accolades. And other times, well, there was perhaps a reason I hadn’t heard of them. Horror Noir unfortunately is the latter.
Still, for those seeking a variety grab-bag of horror concepts, this anthology features a giant spider, murderous cults, a siren-like lake monster, family curses, a doppelganger, magical runes, vampires, occult Nazi symbology, and some social commentary on black issues. In this case, there is a theme uniting all the stories. However, the theme does not link the stories or characters in any way.
So, let’s review the segments…
———————
The Lake—A single woman (Lesley-Ann Brandt; Lucifer, Spartacus) and her cat move into a lake house shortly after an alligator attack killed the local pastor and a child. In classic troped up style, a wise, old harbinger-type warns her not to swim in the lake and tells her the sad story. But, perhaps feeling drawn to the lake, or just dismissing the old man’s warnings, she swims in the lake and develops cravings. Her personality begins to change, and even her body changes.
This starts out okay and closes as dumb as it gets… even in terms of monster make-up.
Brand of Evil—A street artist (Brandon Mychal Smith; Appendage) is hired by a wealthy white man to illustrate a specific symbol based on vague verbal instructions. Yes, of course it looks like some magical rune or occult glyph or whatever. The pay is so good he turns his back on his community, and the demands for more illustrations come in fast. But as the commissioned symbols are completed, black people in the community die bloody deaths. The obvious themes here are temptation and greed overcoming duty, honor and loyalty (and everything else).
The premise is interesting, but the execution just isn’t there. The finale evil that is conjured is laughable and sadly cheapens the entire segment with hokiness.
Bride Before You—After desperately trying all honorable means to become pregnant to avoid being cast out by her husband (Sean Patrick Thomas; Halloween: Resurrection, Dracula 2000, The Burrowers), a wealthy woman (Lenora Crichlow; Being Human) seeks dark magic to solve her problems. After the birth of her son (Tyriq Withers; Him), the cost she paid is that her home is forever inhabited with a dark presence.
This was among the stronger segments… in at least some ways. Still, I’d just say watch Cobweb (2023) instead. But this one had stronger allegory in its resolution.
Fugue State—Cult researcher Dr. Berry (Malcolm Barrett; Preacher) is proselytized into a cult of his own investigation. It’s not riveting. But things get just weird enough to remain interesting as he attempts to convince his wife to join him to “church.” Maybe go watch something like Faults (2014) if you want the top tier version of this. But this wasn’t half bad, and it was nice seeing a cameo by Tony Todd (Final Destination, Hatchet, Wishmaster).
Daddy—A father receives an ominous warning from an elderly fellow, and then the father suffers a scare. He receives more, and less kind, fatherly anecdotes from the older stranger, and is overcome with a paranoid protectiveness of his son. We wander into an ill-executed “fear of the other” situation. Ultimately, there are good bones in this script. It just could have been done better.
Sundown—A campaign team for a black West Virginia political candidate find themselves stranded in a historically racist “sundown town” after dark. The creepy fiddle-playing mayor (Peter Stormare; Constantine) leads them to an evening dinner party with a questionable main course. This was the most fun segment, as it was horror-comedy and decently executed despite a painfully limited budget for the almost-all-off-screen action and gore.
———————
The production value in this anthology is good-ish (until you judge any gore or monster effects), the acting is fine-ish, but the content and writing itself seems to be the prevalent shortcoming. Still, this wasn’t bad. Not regrettable anyway. Just also not very recommendable.
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 620: Alien 3 (1992), David Fincher and Sigourney Weaver
You can download or stream the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker (or wherever you listen to podcasts…..we’re almost everywhere).
If you get a chance please make sure to review, rate and share. You are awesome.
Mark and Norbert discuss the infamous 1992 sequel Alien 3. Directed by David Fincher, and starring Sigourney Weaver, Charles Dance, Charles S. Dutton, and a super fast xenomorph, the movie focuses on what happens when a xenomorph runs amok inside an isolated prison. In this episode, they also talk about director’s cuts, troubled productions, and the Alien franchise.
If you are a fan of the podcast, make sure to send in some random listener questions (we love random questions). We thank you for listening, and hope you enjoy the episode!
You can download the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker.




















