The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 530: Double Dragon, Video Game Adaptations and Jet Ski Action
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 1994 video game adaptation Double Dragon. Directed by James Yukich, and starring Mark Dacascos, Scott Wolf, Alyssa Milano, Robert Patrick and a mystical medallion, the movie focuses on what happens when two brothers are forced to battle a guy who can turn into a shadow. In this episode, they also talk about jet ski action scenes, video game adaptations, and dirty rivers.
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 529: The Mummy Returns, Brendan Fraser and Scorpions
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 David Cross (Itsmedavidcross on X) attempt to wrap their heads around the 2001 film The Mummy Returns. Directed by Stephen Sommers, and starring Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, Arnold Vosloo, Oded Fehr, Patricia Velasquez, John Hannah and lots of VFX creations, the movie focuses on some nonsense about Dwayne Johnson returning and laying the smackdown on the world. In this episode, they also talk about sand armies, intricate plots, and Action Hero Rachel Weisz. 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 528: Horror Comedies, Authentic Bulgarian Miak and Speaker Phones
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 (@ZaNandi on X) talk about their favorite moments from Deadstream, The Final Girls, Tucker and Dale vs. Evil, Ernest Scared Stupid, Scary Movie, The Visit, Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon, You’re Next, Spontaneous, and The Cabin in the Woods. 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 527: Spring Breakers, A24 and Florida Movies
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 Joey Lewandowski (@soulpopped on X) discuss the 2012 crime comedy Spring Breakers. Directed by Harmony Korine, and starring Vanessa Hudgens, Ashley Benson, James Franco, Rachel Korine, Gucci Man and James Franco, the movie focuses on what happens when four college kids spend their spring break vacation in Florida. In this episode, they also talk about A24 movies, balaclavas, and Harmony Korine’s filmography. 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: A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989), the wildest and most bizarre sequel yet closes out a three-sequel story arc.
MY CALL: The kills remain creative, Freddy has replaced all menace with silly mania, the characters are as shallowly written as ever, yet the rewatchability remains high. Otherwise, this is the first NOES sequel to specifically not impress me. But let’s be honest. I still enjoy it. The death scenes and FX are great and we close out an excellent story arc (NOES3-5). MOVIES LIKE The Dream Child: First off, you should first see the original A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge (1985), A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987) and A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: Dream Master (1988). For more recent horror with a similar sense of humor try Wishmaster (1997) and Hatchet (2006).
Franchise Timeline SIDEBAR: Dream Warriors ended with the unusual circumstance of three teen survivors: Joey, Kincaid and Kristen (replacing Patricia Arquette is Tuesday Knight)—instead of the standard “final girl” survivor theme. Contrary to the beginning of part 2 and part 3, both of which reference part 1 without really being “direct” sequels of the story, Dream Master continued with our three survivors back in high school to join an entirely new group of victims (including Alice and Dan). Over the course of the franchise Freddy began limited to affecting people in the dreams (NOES1) and later developed the ability to access reality through a human vessel (NOES2). In NOES3-4 the victims were able to pull each other into their dreams and Freddy’s reach continues to ebb into reality leaving the line between dream and reality ever more blurred.
Freddy (Robert Englund; Dead & Buried, Killer Tongue, A Nightmare on Elm Street 1-4, Galaxy of Terror, Hatchet II, The Phantom of the Opera) has fully embraced being a known entity rather than the mysterious boogeyman he was in NOES1-2. Not only has Freddy evolved, but so has Freddy’s dream world. Whereas Freddy once held all the power in his realm, with NOES3 the once defenseless teen dreamers became more empowered. Playing on that notion of power Kristen, the last of the Elm Street kids, dies and imbues Alice with her power not unlike a Highlander movie (1986, 1991). So now Alice can pull people into her dreams and, after Rick dies, she can use nunchucks, too!
By NOES4, Freddy’s menace has almost completely wicked away like his cindered flesh, leaving now the outwardly iconic sick sense humor we observe playfully eating pizza topped with teenage meatball souls, and feistily pelting out adages like “no pain, no gain,” “you can check in, but you can’t check out,” and “sayonara.” As for Freddy’s origins, NOES3 gave us Amanda Krueger, the ghostly nun who told the story of Freddy’s rape-conception in a mental hospital.
After their high school graduation, our now-pregnant Alice (Lisa Wilcox; A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: Dream Master, Watchers Reborn) finds herself wandering into nightmares while she’s wide awake. And after the events of part 4 (which she and her boyfriend Dan survived), she takes no chances and calls Dan (Danny Hassel; A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: Dream Master) to her aid right away. Rebirthed from the dreams of Alice’s unborn child, Freddy has returned to taunt Alice’s dreams. But as readily as we are reintroduced to Freddy Krueger, we likewise find his unwilling mother Amanda admonishing his dreamer.
As the franchise has evolved, Freddy has wandered into ever more touchy or challenging (at the time) aspects of society—capitalizing on parents with substance abuse problems (NOES1), homosexuality and identity crisis (NOES2), drug addiction and mental illness (NOES3), and now rape, disfigured newborn babies and eating disorders. Visions of Amanda Krueger (Beatrice Boepple; Quarantine) in the mental asylum are disturbing yet on the verge of slapstick, the birth scene of deformed baby Freddy was an uncomfortable sight, and baby Freddy wailing in the dilapidated church brings a new level of weirdness to the franchise. No, not weird. The word is bizarre.
Franchise themes SIDEBAR: This is the kind of sequel the franchise deserves! Not just for how it has evolved, but for what it retains. Like every sequel before it, Dream Child calls back to the paramount, iconic and perverse NOES themes. Parts 1-4 featured the steam-spewing boiler rooms, the power plant where Freddy worked, junkyard where his remains were hidden, all revisited in part 4, and now the insane asylum of his conception. Instead of face impressions on Nancy’s bedroom wall, Freddy’s form emerging through Jesse’s stomach, Freddy manifesting himself through a television set, or the impression of stolen souls trying to writhe free from Freddy’s body, we now find his face in the wiring of the motorcycle before he kills Dan. Where once the perverted Freddy licked Nancy through the phone, licked a young girls stomach, tongue-tethered a teenager’s limbs in a sick fantasy, or lecherously flicks his tongue and “sucks face” to kiss a teenager to death, now unborn Jacob unleashes some sort of projectile vomit soul tongue at Freddy. And rather than slicing off his own fingers, revealing his own brain, uncovering his soul-embedded chest, or revealing that he is literally filled with the souls of his victims, he’s now severing his own arm to fashion it into a seatbelt. Also continuing to flavor the franchise, we again revisit Nancy’s dilapidated house on 1428 Elm Street.
The special effects and death scenes truly serve FX and gorehounds in fine form. The motorcycle death scene boasts some cool effects as wires gruesomely embed themselves into Dan and transform him against his will into some macabre cyborg. During a bore of a dinner party, Freddy force-feeds teen model Greta (Erika Anderson; Twin Peaks) all manner of gross dinner wares as her cheeks distend to sickening comical degree. Mark (Joe Seely) follows the style of NOES3 and assumes his own fantasy as a comicbook hero to face Freddy; but Freddy returns in kind as Super Freddy. Yvonne (Kelly Jo Minter; The Lost Boys, Popcorn, The People Under the Stairs) is attacked by a stop-motion Freddy claw diving platform. Then the Escher-Labyrinth (1986) scene transitions into a Freddy’s Revenge playback as Freddy forms from within Alice, and tears himself from within her.
Thought that was enough wild and weird for one movie? Hold on, there’s more! Freddy’s ultimate demise is quite a gross spectacle as the souls collected (Mark, Greta, Dan) erupt from his back as twisted dollheads on eyeball stalks and drag his miscarried fetal form out into vulnerability so his purgatoried mother could reclaim him. However, the movie ends with the distinction that Freddy is defeated only for the moment.
Director Stephen Hopkins (The Reaping, The Ghost and the Darkness, Predator 2) undeniably made a worthy sequel to close out the rich storyline of NOES3-5 (discussed at length in our podcast episodes 311, 324 and 343). But this is the first Freddy movie (when viewed in order) that didn’t truly impress me. Oh, I enjoyed it! It’s entertaining, and the special effects make it highly rewatchable. But this sequel lacked the pizzazz that had me shocked me in NOES1-2 or yelling and laughing at the screen during NOES3-4. This movie probably had the richest potential, but it definitely didn’t make the most of it.
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 526: Rocky IV, Cold Stallone, and Epic Montages
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 Leavengood (@MFFhorrorcorner on X) discuss the 1985 blockbuster film Rocky IV. Directed and written by Sylvester Stallone, and starring Carl Weathers, Dolph Lundgren, and many montages, the movie focuses on what happens when Rocky has to battle a Russian tree trunk. In this episode, they also talk about cold Stallone, director’s cuts, and montages. 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: Basket Case 3 (1991), the third and most zany of this gory, cartoonish, horror-comedy trilogy.
MY CALL: If you love bizarre and violent 80s horror oddities, or enjoyed Basket Case (1982) or any other Henenlotter film, then you should enjoy this, too. It’s weird, it knows it’s weird, and it fully embraces this weirdness and goes full-tilt slapstick. MORE MOVIES LIKE Basket Case: Well, you ought to be sure you’ve seen Basket Case (1982) and Basket Case 2 (1990). If you want more communal-living monstrosities, try Nightbreed (1990) or Digging Up the Marrow (2014). I’d also recommend other films by director Frank Henenlotter (Frankenhooker, Brain Damage), as his films share a similar zany tone. To that end, there’s also The Greasy Strangler (2016).
We open with a recap of Belial’s mutant sex scene with Eve, and Duane (Kevin Van Hentenryck; Basket Case 1-2, Brain Damage) and Susan’s intimacy resulting in her death at the end of part 2. Basically, the first scenes of part 3 are literally replaying the last scenes of part 2, culminating in Duane brutally stitching Belial back onto his side. So all three movies are one continuous story with no time lapses between films whatsoever.
Now under the “psychiatric care” of Granny Ruth (Annie Ross; Witchery, Basket Case 2), Duane emerges from a catatonic state to learn that Eve is pregnant with Belial’s offspring. And with Eve’s complicated pregnancy, Granny Ruth’s whole household heads to Georgia to see Ruth’s estranged son, the only doctor that they can trust. The ensuing birth scene produces a dozen little malformed Belial clones. They’re… kinda’ cute actually.
Writer and director Frank Henenlotter’s (Basket Case 1-2, Frankenhooker, Brain Damage) wacky fever dream has reached new levels of lunacy. This kind of movie is most certainly an acquired taste. I could imagine many finding this aggravatingly cartoonish and intolerably silly. I did prefer the somewhat less slapstick and more brutal fare of part 1 over parts 2-3. The secondary characters toodle around the house and deliver wacky lines with the kookiness of a kids’ show, like a macabre Pee-Wee’s Playhouse.
Still, as wack-a-doo as this movie is, it also has its share of bloody gore, though not as much the 1982 original. Among the enjoyable gore gags is one of the most zany, eye-popping strangulations I’ve seen (to which The Greasy Strangler calls back); a deliciously gross and wonky face-eating scene pulling the teeth out of a deputy’s jaw; and a backwards-spun neck break was pretty cool! And for the finale, an homage to Aliens produces a sort of wonky robo-Belial.
I like part 1 the most and this the least… but it doesn’t mean I don’t like this one at all. Really, it’s just less rewatchable for me. With this said, revisiting any of these movies truly merits revisiting the trilogy as a whole since, unlike Freddy or Jason movies, these movies tell a seamlessly continuous story.
Recommended to fans of bizarre horror comedies.
John’s Horror Corner: May (2002), a macabre, obsessive, romantic medical horror about a very sick woman.
MY CALL: This movie is a thoughtful, engaging, one-hour character study of a sick young woman seeking love and friendship, followed by a 30-minute splatterfest of how it all goes wrong. Worth a watch, but only a soft recommendation. MORE MOVIES LIKE May: Well, for obvious reasons one might try Patchwork (2015). For more horrific medical stitchwork, one may also venture The Human Centipede (2009), Body Parts (1991), Frankenhooker (1990) and The Thing with Two Heads (1972).
A young woman hungry for human connection, May (Angela Bettis; The Woods, The Woman) is overcome with insecurity. Her social awkwardness painfully limits her. But as a viewer, I find her awkwardness sweet, endearing and pleasantly idiosyncratic. Watching her deliberately “saunter” across a café, naively swaggering her hips in hopes of gaining the attention of her crush, kindly reminds me of my own more awkward phases.
But the more we watch May try to connect with others, the more we realize that something’s just not right with her. She fixates on body parts, obsessed with her crush’s (Jeremy Sisto; Hideaway, Six Feet Under) perfect hands and her co-worker’s (Anna Faris; Scary Movie 1-4, Lovers’ Lane) beautiful neck. She also violates boundaries to feel intimacy, like touching strangers as they sleep. Still, she seems so sweet and innocent that any little connection she attempts strums our heartstrings. She’s the kind of character we hope finds happiness. At first, at least.
We come to learn that that May has an affinity for the macabre… and that affinity infects her romantic interests. When Adam (Sisto) doesn’t share her fetish, May is rejected and scorned. After all her efforts to put herself out there and connect with people, all forms of relationships seem to be going poorly.
Writer and director Lucky McKee (The Woods, All Cheerleaders Die, The Woman) spins a sweet yet twisted story of a young, lovelorn woman. This film feels less like a conventional feature length movie and more like a stretched-out Masters of Horror installment… but, without enough horror spread throughout. It takes forever for anything significant(ly bloody) to happen, with all “horror” limited to the final act. So, the first hour plays out more like a bloodless drama-thriller, and then the end is a bloody, murderous, mentally ill mess culminating in a Frankensteinian stitchwork horror.
Is the third act worth the wait? I guess so. Depends on the viewer, I think. I enjoyed the movie upon this second watch less than I did 20 years ago, and this is probably my last viewing of it as well. But no regrets. It’s an interesting little thing. For me, it leaves more gruesomeness to be desired. But the exploration of May’s character remains a satisfying experience on its own.
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 525: Miracle, Kurt Russell and Sports Movies
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 Leavengood (@MFFhorrorcorner on X) discuss the 2004 sports film Miracle. Directed by Gavin O’connor, and starring Kurt Russell, Noah Emmerich, and an overused whistle, the movie focuses on the heroics of the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey squad. In this episode, they also talk about sports movies, athletic actors and Kurt Russell’s suit game. 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: Invaders from Mars (1986), a “hard PG” family-friendly Sci-Horror classic.
MY CALL: This movie holds so much nostalgia for me—so I’m pretty biased. I’ve loved it since the late 80s! It’s a kid-friendly, generally bloodless horror that still packs some good creature effects and Sci-Fi concepts. MORE MOVIES LIKE Invaders from Mars: For a bit more blood in your 80s Sci-Horror, try Night of the Creeps (1986), Critters (1986), The Stuff (1985) and The Blob (1988).
Our young hero David (Hunter Carson) is a wholesome preteen with wholesome parents. He leads a simple, happy life until one night he witnesses a huge gnarly spaceship landing in the countryside. The next morning his father is behaving very strangely and has an odd wound on the back of his neck. Soon more people in the town are acting strangely just like David’s father, especially those who go investigate where this spaceship allegedly landed.
David has adult-like agency and it’s painfully obvious who is under brainwashed mind control and who isn’t. Perhaps that’s the PG-ness of the movie, making it more kid-friendly. The controlled adults do normal everyday things… but they do them wrong. They burn bacon and toast, drink coffee “wrong”, eat burgers “wrong”, and generally seem “off.” David’s parents want him to come to “see something” in the countryside. Sure, they do.
The weird behavior continues when David catches his teacher Mrs. McKeltch (Louise Fletcher; Shadowzone Firestarter, Exorcist II, Virtuosity, Grizzly II) eating a frog—a classically funny visual. McKeltch becomes very aggressive towards David, who is protected by the still unbrainwashed school nurse Linda (Karen Black; Children of the Night, It’s Alive III, House of 1000 Corpses, Mirror Mirror, Night Angel). The number of people that can be trusted in town is diminishing fast! Even his cute little classmate Heather (Virginya Keehne; Ticks, The Dentist) becomes an obvious alien-controlled enemy.
Eventually, David locates and investigates the underground cavernous lair created by the aliens. Here we find different alien castes: larger, lumbering workers and an Emperor Krang-like brain-shaped overlord. Some of the workers even have laser guns mounted on them. Trying to save humanity, David turns to General Wilson (James Karen; Return of the Living Dead I-II, Poltergeist, The Unborn, The Willies, Girlfriend from Hell) and NASA.
The monstrous creature effects are good, fun, and decent quality. No one gets killed (at least, not violently). So there are no death scenes to discuss other than a bloodless incineration. Although an alien death results in throwing some rubber guts in front of the camera for a giggle, and someone does get eaten by a worker alien in a kind of silly scene. The alien lair raid is a lot like a proto-Starship Troopers bug extermination. The workers shake and scuttle like Muppets when they’re being machine-gunned down.
A remake of the 1953 classic of the same name, this is much lighter fare for director Tobe Hooper (Lifeforce, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre II, Poltergeist, Funhouse). For all its softer PG-ness, I still enjoy this movie. This is more of a thrilling adventure/Sci-Horror with a kid hero than horror.


























