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The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 597 – The Penguin, DC Studios, and Florida Sewers

December 31, 2024

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 DJ Valentine (@TryingToBeDJV on X) talk about the 2024 DC Studios show The Penguin (2024). In this episode, they also talk about Jock Jams, villains being villainous, and the excellence of Cristin Milioti. 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.

John’s Horror Corner: Deathcember (2019), a Christmas anthology horror featuring 24 Advent-style shorts.

December 25, 2024

MY CALL: An above average horror anthology with some solid ideas to showcase in 5-minute intervals. Entertaining, and often bloody and funny. But the lack of build-up in a 5-minute short keeps the highs lower. MOVIES LIKE Deathcember: For more 20+ segment anthologies, aim for The ABCs of Death trilogy (2013, 2014, 2016).

This is essentially a holiday-themed ABCs of Death anthology in that we have 24 short films averaging 5 minutes each. So we see a lot of inklings and ideas, but not much in the way of meaningful resolutions. I like to think of this as a filmmakers’ portfolio of ideas for films that may one day be made.

The filmmakers hail from diverse backgrounds, delivering short films in German, English, Spanish, French, and Japanese; exploring the genres of Sci-Fi, fantasy, thriller, horror, dark comedy, crime, slapstick, and even silent film; and tackling iconic concepts like Advent calendars, nightmare Christmas shoppers, Santa suits, Christmas parties, Christmas carols, family gatherings, meeting the parents, Christmas miracles, letters to Santa, ice skating, and Christmas presents.

Despite their brevity, many of the horror segments include some shocking and gory bits. Ritual sacrifice, blood-drinking, fantastic consequence, monstrous reindeer, killing Santa, mean revenge, brutal handsaw dismemberment, and a completely fragmented stomped skull are among the effects-driven gags explored.

A few of these shorts are worthy of mention. All Sales Fatal (#2) features Tiffany Shepis (Victor Crowley, The HazingSharknado 2) as a mega-Karen who tries to return a toy, fails, and throws a very violent (and hilarious) temper tantrum that snowballs into a great fight with stabbery, fisticuffs, and a nail gun. Similarly haphazard and laughably bloody was December 19th (#19), which featured several amusingly brutal ice-skating injuries.

Other memorable shorts include Xmas on Fire (#4) with a mass Santa-police shootout and musical number; a very Lovecraftian, inherited family tentacle monster in Family Matter (#8); a fantasy-comedy showcasing the magical power of letters to Santa in Milk and Cookies (#16); and an awkward family game night culminating with a wildly gross exploding head in Christmas Cracker (#23). But what really stood out to me as unique was They Once Had Horses (#18), a featurette of a kind dialogue between two old west types around a fire, one of them badly injured, both of them scared of a monster in the darkness. But they still took a moment to exchange a small Christmas present and affirm how much they valued each other’s friendship. That was nice.

Overall, this was maybe an above average horror anthology. Entertaining for sure. But the lack of build-up in a 5-minute short keeps the highs lower.

Bad Movie Tuesday: Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker (1991), perhaps the “best bad movie” of the franchise.

December 24, 2024

MY CALL: Wonky killer toys, campy tactics, cheesy effects and an insane homicidal toymaker? This is the very nuts and bolts of a solid Bad Movie Tuesday. MOVIES LIKE Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: Probably Dolls (1987) or Demonic Toys (1992).

CHRISTMAS HORROR MOVIES: For more holiday horror, check out Black Friday (2021), Black Christmas (19742006 remake2019 reimagining), Await Further Instructions (2018), Holidays (2016; Christmas), Better Watch Out (2016), A Christmas Horror Story (2015), Krampus (2015), Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010), Silent Night, Deadly Night 4: Initiation (1990; hardly Christmasy), Elves (1989), Tales from the Crypt Season 1 (1989; And All Through the House), Christmas Evil (1980), Silent Night Deadly Night (1984), Gremlins (1984), and Tales from the Crypt (1972; And All Through the House). I might skip Don’t Open Till Christmas (1984), The Oracle (1985), Silent Night Deadly Night part 2 (1987), Silent Night Deadly Night part 3: Better Watch Out (1989), and maybe even All the Creatures Were Stirring (2018).

This franchise has taken some interesting turns. Sure, we began with a proper psycho killer Christmas horror movie followed by the cheapest of throwaway sequel treatments in SNDN 2. But then we wandered into an ultra-basic Frankensteinian Michael Myers stalker movie in SNDN 3, and SNDN 4 feels like someone rewrote a witch movie to take place during Christmas for the sake of profiting on the recognized namesake. It seems that for SNDN 3-4, a bunch of weird crap just happens to occur around Christmas time (like Lethal Weapon 1987) instead of a proper Christmas movie (e.g., Die Hard 1988). But fret not, SNDN 5 is, at the very least, a Christmas horror movie! Even if it, like SNDN 3-4, has nothing to do with the source material.

One strange Christmas Season, young Derek (William Thorne; Demonic Toys) watches as a toy from a mysteriously delivered present murders his father (Van Quattro). Now mute since witnessing this tragedy, his mother Sarah (Jane Higginson; General Hospital, Slaughterhouse) is doing her best to have a normal Christmas for me. Their local, elderly toy store owner Joe Petto (Mickey Rooney; The Intruder, The Thirsting) and his son (Brian Bremer; Pumpkinhead, Dead Birds, Society) are behind the toy-related death, and more deaths to come. It doesn’t get explained, but these toys seem to be robotic intelligent.

Cheap, grotesque effects bring a smile to my face as an evil toy called Larry the Larva crawls through a victim’s mouth and eye socket. Very cheesy, hokey fun. I’m also left to wonder if this invertebrate monster is meant to be a tie-in to the gross giant larvae from SNDN 3. Additional off-kilter callbacks include a seasonal mall Santa Claus named Ricky (Clint Howard; Silent Night Deadly Night 4, Ticks, Ice Cream Man, EvilspeakLeprechaun 2Lords of Salem), though clearly not the same character despite being the same character name and actor; and Sarah’s neighbor Kim (Neith Hunter; Carnosaur 2, Silent Night Deadly Night 4), again the same character name and actor, but clearly not the same character.

Many of the corrupted toy deaths are weak. The rollerblades scene was lame was even worse than Derek’s dad’s death. Larry the Larva is the only death scene with a cool-looking toy. But then there’s the sex scene toy massacre, which is ultra-campy with extra cheese. This marks a real turning point in the horror action, effects and entertainment value in this movie.

I keep waiting for the third act revelation that Kim and Ricky are the very same Kim and Ricky from SNDN 3, a newly initiated witch and a mentally disturbed witch’s son. But no such satisfaction is to be found. But at least we wander into some very odd territory involving intelligent robots and highly perverse daddy and mommy issues.

As it turns out, this might be my favorite of the SNDN franchise. It’s not great, by any means. But this is the most worthy “bad movie” from the series (just above SNDN 3). Finally, a SNDN that’s so bad it’s good. Merry Christmas to everyone!

The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 596 – The 2024 Movie Draft

December 23, 2024

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 Brandon Peters (@brandon4KUHD on X) draft their favorite 2024 films and talk about the greatness of Hundreds of Beavers, Red Rooms, Humanist Vampire Seeking Consenting Suicidal Person, Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World and more cool films. Enjoy!

Make sure to listen to The Brandon Peters Show wherever you listen to podcasts.

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.

John’s Horror Corner: Heretic (2024), a thoughtful repartee of religious horror.

December 22, 2024

MY CALL: Wow. This film is… a lecture hall experience. Hugh Grant is a charmer of a villain in this very intellectual horror. Probably not recommended for the devout, and more for the agnostic. MOVIES LIKE Heretic: Some other interesting forays into religious horror include Azrael (2024) and The First Omen (2024).

Eager to save and baptize souls on their Mormon mission, Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher; Maxxxine, The Boogeyman) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East; The Wolf of Snow Hollow) work through their list of names and addresses to make their way to the home of Mr. Reed.

Mr. Reed (Hugh Grant; The Lair of the White Worm) is every bit as exceedingly charming as the actor filling his shoes. And from the very outset of their soul saving introductions, Reed peppers them with his knowledgeable religious inklings interspersed with poignant yet directly personal questions about his would-be saviors. These questions quickly verge upon invasive, and his inquiries begin to arouse spiritual origins clearly outside of the purview of the Church of Latter-Day Saints… even directly challenging LDS practices and general common religious practices alike.

Not 15 minutes into their house call, Sisters Barnes and Paxton have come to realize that Mr. Reed has proselytizing plans of his own for them. They are trapped in his home and require his “help” to find their way home. And now, his challenges of their perception, family values, and denial that shape their religious beliefs put a perverse twist to their house call. Is this a game that can be solved and won? Is it simply a cruel punishment to these religious women?

In many ways, this film feels like one of the most engaging theology-philosophy-history lectures I ever had the privilege to enjoy. The whole script is thoughtful repartee. I find it all captivating, somewhat as an intellectual exercise contesting for or against religion, and somewhat as a hostage chamber thriller.

Sure, aspects of this story may challenge one’s suspension of disbelief. But I loved this. Hugh Grant is such a delight even when donning the antagonist’s hat. Scott Beck and Bryan Woods (Haunt, Nightlight) co-wrote and co-directed this theological curiosity, and I now cannot wait for their next project!

John’s Horror Corner: Silent Night, Deadly Night 4: Initiation (1990), hardly a Christmas Horror sequel, but more of a rewrite into a Witch movie.

December 21, 2024

MY CALL: This is a perfectly “decent” choice for a Bad Movie Tuesday. It has weird, gross, buggy special effects and gore and some over-the-top nonsense. PSA: This movie essentially has zero to do with the previous three Silent Night Deadly Night movies. MOVIES LIKE Silent Night, Deadly Night 4: For more holiday horror, check out Black Friday (2021), Black Christmas (19742006 remake2019 reimagining), Await Further Instructions (2018), Holidays (2016; Christmas), Better Watch Out (2016), A Christmas Horror Story (2015), Krampus (2015), Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010), Elves (1989), Tales from the Crypt Season 1 (1989; And All Through the House), Christmas Evil (1980), Silent Night Deadly Night (1984), Gremlins (1984), and Tales from the Crypt (1972; And All Through the House). I might skip Don’t Open Till Christmas (1984), The Oracle (1985), Silent Night Deadly Night part 2 (1987), Silent Night Deadly Night part 3: Better Watch Out (1989), and maybe even All the Creatures Were Stirring (2018).

This franchise has taken some interesting turns. Sure, we began with a proper psycho killer Christmas horror movie followed by the cheapest of throwaway sequel treatments for more of the same, but weaker in SNDN 2. But then we wandered into an ultra-basic Frankensteinian Michael Myers stalker movie in SNDN 3 and now… a holiday horror witch movie? It seems that for SNDN 3-4, a bunch of weird crap just happens to occur around Christmas time (like Lethal Weapon 1987) instead of a proper Christmas movie (e.g., Die Hard 1988). More specifically, SNDN 4 feels like someone rewrote a witch movie to take place during Christmas for the sake of stealing the recognized namesake.

Seeking to impress her boss (Reggie Bannister; Phantasm I-V, Wishmaster) and become an investigative reporter, Kim (Neith Hunter; Carnosaur 2, Silent Night Deadly Night 5) is looking into the unexplained death of a woman who fell from the roof of a building… while on fire. While researching spontaneous combustion, she is gifted a strange book (Initiation of the Virgin Goddess) by a conspicuously interested shopkeeper named Fima (Maud Adams; Tattoo) who also invites her to a group picnic with an uninvited kiss on the cheek. Viewers, this shopkeeper may just be an important character with some big reveals coming ahead.

Just to let you know you’re wandering into weird territory, by the very next scene a certifiable wacko (Clint Howard; Ticks, Ice Cream Man, EvilspeakLeprechaun 2Lords of Salem) pulls an impossibly giant, slimy, writhing insect larva from an air vent. Why…? No reason apparently. Just because it’s weird and the prop guy had access to it during filming is my best guess.

From here we see lots of bugs, a giant cockroach, some possessed pasta, yet more bugs, Kim regurgitates a giant roach-like larva-thing that is then used in some sort of ritual, and then a weird gross sex ritual, and then an even weirder birth-mutation-macabre menagerie sequence.

So what’s really weird here is that this is a SNDN sequel, yet the only character named Ricky (Clint Howard) seems to have nothing to do with the Ricky character of SNDN 1-3. In fact, this “sequel” behaves as if those previous movies never even happened, making this one of those awkward standalone sequels like House III (1989). In fact, the only connection I can find to SNDN is when Ricky turns on the TV—when he sneaks into the room while Kim is having sex—and watches a scene from Silent Night Deadly Night part 3 (1989).

The whole purpose of all this: to initiate Kim into a witch’s coven? Seems like a lot. Maybe they could’ve asked if she thought it would be cool to join. And if she wanted to… would it still involve all the nonconsensual stuff with that monster larva? But, I guess that’s the kind of gross delight we’ve simply come to expect from director Brian Yuzna (The Dentist 1-2SocietyBride of Re-AnimatorBeyond Re-AnimatorNecronomicon: Book of the DeadFaust, Return of the Living Dead IIIFrom Beyond).

The ending is kinda’ dumb, but totally par for the course for this level of bad movie fare. And overall I think this movie is a perfectly “decent” choice for a Bad Movie Tuesday, even if not the level of bonkers I’d normally recommend. However, this is definitely the best of the SNDN sequels so far. So I guess there’s that.

Bonus Episode – The 2024 Marvel Cinematic Universe Recap

December 21, 2024

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 talk about Deadpool & Wolverine, X-Men ’97, Agatha All Along, and Venom: The Last Dance (which is technically a Sony release but it had to be covered). 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 Brutalist (2024) – Review

December 20, 2024

Quick Thoughts – Grade – A – Filmed in 34 days (what?) this $10 million budgeted epic is a thrilling and ambitious piece of filmmaking. Watch it!

In an interview with Variety, Corbet compared making a movie to constructing a skyscraper. It’s an interesting analogy because not only is there a tremendous amount of planning, there’s also budgets, egos, and clients who justifiably have a voice during the production/construction of each. László Tóth (Adrien Brody), the lead character of The Brutalist finds this out when he’s tasked with building a massive brutalist structure for a millionaire industrialist named Harrison Lee Van Buren (Guy Pearce). Amongst many other things, The Brutalist focuses on what happens when ambitious creative freedom meets the worried accountants of a blowhard millionaire.

What’s interesting is that Corbett has constructed a skyscraper of a movie for the price of a McMansion. To avoid opinions and notes, Corbet raised the $10 million budget over seven years and cut many corners to ensure that every cent was seen on screen. After years of delays due to Covid and other issues, Corbet shot the film in Hungary (and Italy) and edited it in the U.K to ensure some money-saving tax incentives. The finished product is a gorgeous 3.5 hour masterpiece that is split into two parts, an epilogue and a 15-minute intermission. It’s the type of film that only comes from a frustrated artist who wants to create something outside of the system – and it’s beautiful to behold in VistaVision.

The Brutalist revolves around a Hungarian-Jewish architect named László Tóth who made his way to America in 1947 and found himself living in Philadelphia with his cousin Attilla (Allessandro Nivola) and his American wife Audrey (Emma Laird). Attila owns a furniture shop and with the help of Lászlóstarts building a customer base which leads to an architectural assignment for Harry Lee Van Buren (Joe Alwyn – at his smarmy best), the son of a millionaire industrialist named Harrison Lee Van Buren. László’s modern designs are detested at first, but he is eventually hired by Harrison to build a community center that will stand as his legacy. 

On top of building a gigantic concrete structure on a hill in Doylestown, Pennsylvania,László, who is a functioning heroin-addict, also has to juggle the arrival of his mute niece Zsófia (Raffey Cassidy) and his wife Erzsébet (Felicity Jones), who developed osteoporosis after years of malnourishment during World War II. The reunion is bittersweet as the intelligent and capable Erzsébet learns that László has poured all of his pay into the project and refuses to compromise with the Lee Van Buren lawyers and advisors. During the production, Corbet barely saw his daughter because the film owned his life, and the same goes with Tóth as he dives headfirst into the project and wants to see it through no matter the physical and mental cost.

It feels a bit odd writing a short review about a film that required an immense amount of work to complete (much like most films, but this one is special). I hope the main takeaway from this review is that readers learn that The Brutalist is an ambitious and thrilling experience. Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce, Alessandro Nivola, Joe Alwyn, Raffey Cassidy and Stacy Martin are all excellent, and they must’ve taken massive pay cuts to take part in a film like this – and I admire them for it. The cinematography by Lol Crawley (Four Lions, The Devil All the Time, Vox Lux) is inspired and I appreciate how he made the film look epic while shooting in a widescreen variant of the 35 mm motion picture film format known as VistaVision. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Crawley said “What you see is What we shot,” and I love knowing how deliberate Crawley and Corbet were with their shot selection that included very little coverage and not much of a safety net for the final edit. The production design by Judy Becker (Carol, Brokeback Mountain, Garden State) is unsurprisingly top-notch and she said it was a “dream come true” working on the film because she had to “draw on every inspiration, idea and element in my inner library to become László Tóth.” There are some gorgeous moments that take place in the vast Carrara marble quarries and the scale of the performances, production design and cinematography combine to create a low-budget epic that feels grand.

Between The Pianist and The Brutalist, Brody has excelled in “ist” movies and in an interview with IndieWire he says that “The Brutalist “begins almost where [The Pianist] ended in a way. It is a Jewish immigrant’s journey, surviving.” He owns every second of the film and it’s been fun watching him collect trophies during the awards season because he’s rightfully earned them. Making The Brutalist must’ve been a draining and brutal experience for everyone involved, but the cast and crew supported Corbet’s vision and the end result is something special.

Nosferatu (2024) – Review

December 20, 2024

Quick thoughts – Grade – B+ – Nosferatu (2024) is a dark and foreboding addition to the lore of Count Orlock.

After an solid year for horror sequels (Terrifier 3, Smile 2), remakes (Speak No Evil), and prequels (A Quiet Place: Day One, Alien Romulus, The First Omen), it’s fun knowing that the Nosferatu remake will help 2024 horror cinema go out with a bang. On top of being a good year for horror sequels/remakes/prequels, it’s been a great year for vampire cinema with Abigail and Humanist Vampire Seeking Consenting Suicidal Person offering some beautiful new characters and moments to the vampire genre (think the onion bit from Abigail and the “Emotions” moment in Humanist Vampire).

What’s interesting about this latest Nosferatu film is that it pretty much sticks to the classic lore of Dracula/Nosferatu. The Nosferatu/Dracula story focuses on real estate deals, obsessive love, and a count named Orlock who wears cozy coats and drinks copious blood. Eggers’ iteration is familiar for anyone who has watched Dracula or Nosferatu, but the familiarity isn’t a bad thing because it allows the viewer to follow a familiar road while marveling in beautifully macabre sights and sounds. A nice wrinkle to this iteration of the wealthy vampire is that Count Orlock (Bill Skarsgård) is just straight evil and terrifying. There is nothing sensual about Skarsgård’s performance, instead he wheezes, adopts a gnarly voice, and goes to places that he never wants to go again. On top of putting himself into a depraved headspace for months, he worked with an opera singer to lower his voice, and while on set he practiced Mongolian throat-singing to make his voice even more menacing. Actors have always pushed themselves to extremes while working for Eggers, and it’s fun watching the sweat-drenched performances from Nicholas Hoult, Lily-Rose Depp, Willem Dafoe, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ralph Ineson and Emma Corrin.

Much like The Witch, The Lighthouse and The Northman, Nosferatu is a visual delight that features inspired camerawork from Jarin Blaschke (The Witch, Knock at the Cabin) who clearly enjoys trying to match the visual grandeur of the Francis Ford Coppola directed Bram Stoker’s Dracula. It would spoil the ending, but I can say that this film features the best overhead shot of 2024, and shooting with 35mm Kodak 500T film was an inspired choice. I also like how the 1.66 aspect ratio allows for some excellent ensemble staging and I kept saying “wow” as scenes  unfolded because of the staging choices. The production design is unsurprisingly excellent too, as another Eggers regular Craig Lathrop was able to use almost 10 years worth of collaborating with Eggers to create some memorable sets in Prague soundstages. Eggers was originally supposed to direct Nosferatu after finishing The Witch, and Lathrop admits that it’s a good thing that the production was delayed several years because it gave the crew time to grow as artists, individuals, and as a team. Lathrop built about 60 sets to create the German town of Wisborg (it’s a fictional city) on the Baltic coast and Orlok’s Transylvanian castle. Lathrop didn’t want anything to feel like a set and he succeeded in creating a rich world of filthy castles, winding streets, and homes built with red brick. 

The 2024 iteration is very faithful to the 1922 original directed by F.W. Murnau. However, the 1992 version is only 81 minutes, whereas Eggers’ movie is 132 minutes (Wener Herzog’s 1979 remake is 107 minutes). This means that while the basic story blueprint is upheld, there’s a lot more meat to this story. The extra minutes help give more agency to the character of Ellen Hutter (Depp), who becomes more of a central figure in defeating Orlock. Instead of being a human blood bag. This version of Hutter calls the shots and has agency throughout the entire film, which is a change of pace from the 1922 version which saw Hutter becoming the heroine during the final act.

It’s fun seeing Willem Dafoe back in another Egger’s film and his time around he doesn’t have to fart dozens of times (I love The Lighthouse). After earning an Oscar nomination for playing a vampire playing Count Orlock in Shadow of the Vampire, it’s neat seeing him back in the Nosferatu world. Also, between Juror #2, The Order, and Nosferatu, Nicholas Hoult is having a brilliant 2024 and he does some of the best paranoid sweating of the year as the out-of-his-league Thomas Hutter. Rounding out the cast are Emma Corrin, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ralph Ineson, and Simon McBurney, who all get the opportunity to be drenched in blood or look horrified as an ancient sorcerer haunts them. 

Final thoughts – You know the story, but the latest Nosferatu is a visual delight that features top notch performances, production design, cinematography and direction.

The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 595: Young Frankenstein, Mel Brooks and Classic Comedies

December 16, 2024

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 Zanandi discuss the 1974 comedy blockbuster Young Frankenstein, directed by Mel Brooks, and starring Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Cloris Leachman and Teri Garr, Young Frankenstein is one of the best comedies ever made. In this episode, they also talk about walking “this” way, epic comedies, and rewatchable movies. 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.