Episodes

  • Belly Feels Like A Mixtape With Cameras: Belly (1998)
    Apr 18 2026

    Belly has a reputation that travels on pure memory: iconic lighting, a hard soundtrack, two hip hop giants on screen, and that feeling you had the first time you saw it. Then you hit play again and realize the real question isn’t “Is it a classic?” It’s “What exactly is this movie trying to be?”

    We’re Omari Williams and Jay Richardson, and we go scene by scene on Hype Williams’ 1998 crime drama starring DMX and Nas. We talk about the opening that looks like a million bucks, the “plot vs vibes” debate, and why the editing, pacing, and muddy audio make major moments hard to follow. We also dig into performances, the lack of chemistry between the leads, the late-game minister twist that changes the stakes with barely any runway, and why parts of the film’s portrayal of women clash with the message it wants to land.

    To make it concrete, we score Belly across our five categories: plot and writing, acting and casting, production and cinematography, music and sound, and cultural impact. If you’ve ever defended Belly, hated it, or only loved the soundtrack, you’ll have plenty to argue with here.

    Listen now, then subscribe, share the episode with a friend who swears Belly is untouchable, and leave a review with your rating: classic, mess, or both?

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Shadow the Leader, Sassy the Charm, Chance the Heart, and Bob the Villain: Homeward Bound (1993)
    Apr 10 2026

    That moment when Chance crests the hill and sprints toward Jamie still gives us chills, and we’re not even pretending otherwise. We grew up on Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey, so coming back to this 1993 family movie feels like opening a time capsule and then immediately starting an argument with it. The heart is real, the loyalty is undeniable, and Shadow is still the blueprint for why people call dogs “man’s best friend.”

    But watching as adults turns into a different kind of adventure: we start pulling apart the timeline, the move to San Francisco, and the decision to leave three pets behind like it’s a normal weekend errand. We also get way too deep on wilderness realism in the Sierra Nevada, from bear behavior to mountain lion speed, plus the hilarious problem of a cat somehow keeping up with two dogs on a cross-country trek.

    Then there’s the big one: the talking animals logic. These pets can deliver full sentences and pop culture references, but they can’t understand humans speaking directly to them, and it breaks our brains in the best and worst way. Along the way we shout out the voice cast (Michael J. Fox, Sally Field, Don Ameche), relive the “ghost girl” detour, debate whether Bob is secretly the villain, and finish with our category ratings and final scores. If you love movie reviews, 90s nostalgia, and honest critique of a classic Disney animal adventure film, hit play, subscribe, share it with a fellow 90s kid, and leave us a review.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Fred Willard Explains Dogs Like He Just Met One: Best In Show (2000)
    Apr 3 2026

    A movie about a dog show somehow turns into a full-on personality test, and our reactions could not be more different. We’re talking Best in Show, Christopher Guest’s mockumentary where the dogs are basically props and the real comedy is watching adults melt down over pride, status, and tiny mistakes. One of us sees brilliant ensemble work hiding under the chaos; the other sees peak unserious behavior and keeps asking the same question: where is the story?

    We get into what makes this film so distinctive: the heavily improvised style, the stacked cast (Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, Parker Posey, Jennifer Coolidge, Jane Lynch), and the way each handler becomes an exaggerated type you’ve met in real life. We also nerd out on details like the real championship dogs, how the production recreated a full dog show environment on a modest budget, and why some jokes land harder once you know what the movie is trying to do.

    And yes, we spend plenty of time on the MVP conversation. Fred Willard’s commentary is so confidently wrong it becomes the perfect running gag, and it might be the single best argument for giving the movie your attention. We wrap with our full rating breakdown across plot, acting, production, sound, and cultural impact, plus the final score that puts this one in rare company on our list.

    If you enjoy movie debates, improvised comedy, and honest reviews that aren’t afraid to disagree, hit play, then subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave us a review with your take: genius or nonsense?

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    51 mins
  • ...Mean Bastards You Need to Hang!: The Hateful Eight (2015)
    Mar 27 2026

    Snow, paranoia, and eight strangers who all feel guilty of something. We go back to Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight and review it the way it begs to be watched: as a chaptered Western mystery thriller where every story might be a lie and every smile might be a setup. From the stagecoach standoff to the uneasy “welcome” at Minnie’s Haberdashery, we follow how the tension keeps tightening even when the movie slows down on purpose.

    We talk performances first because they are the engine. Samuel L. Jackson’s Major Marquis Warren runs the room with patience and menace, Walton Goggins’ Chris Mannix swings between charm and threat, and Jennifer Jason Leigh makes Daisy Domergue funny, brutal, and weirdly unbreakable. Then we dig into Tarantino’s choices: the heavy “telling” instead of “showing,” the sudden narrator moment, the mid-movie flashback, and why the movie still feels cold and beautiful thanks to its cinematography and blizzard atmosphere.

    The second half turns into pure escalation: the poisoned coffee, the cabin turning into a crime scene, and a final negotiation where money, pride, and survival collide. We also bring trivia, including the Red Apple Tobacco callback and the infamous guitar smash that was way more real than it should have been. Hit play, drop your take on whether the Lincoln letter is truth or tactic, and if you enjoy the show, subscribe, share it with a Tarantino fan, and leave a review.

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    1 hr and 22 mins
  • A Cult Classic In Heels: Too Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar (1995)
    Mar 21 2026

    Three larger-than-life movie stars. Full drag. A bright yellow Cadillac. And a 1995 road trip comedy that still sparks arguments nearly 30 years later. We’re revisiting *To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar* with zero nostalgia goggles and a lot of honesty about what hits, what misses, and what it meant to see drag culture pushed into mainstream Hollywood.

    We talk through that unforgettable opening makeover sequence and why it can be genuinely jarring if you’ve never spent time around drag shows or LGBTQ nightlife. From there, we dig into the performances: Patrick Swayze’s grounded warmth as Vida, Wesley Snipes’ razor-sharp humor as Noxeema, and John Leguizamo’s hungry energy as Chi Chi. We also get into the questions the movie raises about representation, including whether Chi Chi is coded as transgender, and how much “authenticity” we should expect from a studio comedy built for a wide audience.

    The conversation turns when the film flirts with darker material like harassment, violence, and the constant calculation of safety while traveling through small towns. We break down the sheriff storyline, why it doesn’t fully work for us, and how the movie’s tone sometimes sprints away from consequences. Then we land on what makes the Snydersville stretch so memorable: chosen family, unexpected acceptance, and the way confidence can spread when people feel seen.

    If you love movie reviews, cult classics, and thoughtful debates about LGBTQ representation in film, hit play. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend, and leave a review telling us: does *To Wong Foo* hold up today?

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    1 hr and 12 mins
  • When The Government Picks You For Target Practice: Enemy of the State (1998)
    Mar 13 2026

    We revisit Enemy of the State and realize it hits even harder nearly 30 years later, once you map its paranoia onto today’s surveillance reality. We track how a random tape turns Will Smith’s life into a controlled demolition and why Gene Hackman’s spy craft makes the whole nightmare feel possible.

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    1 hr and 19 mins
  • How Scream Revived The Slasher And Birthed A Meta Horror Era: Scream (1996)
    Mar 7 2026

    What happens when a slasher knows you know the rules? We dive back into Scream (1996) and unpack why that opening phone call still rattles the nerves, how the film smuggles a satire inside a straight-up thriller, and where its physics-defying moments make us laugh out loud. We map the 90s-tastic cast—Neve Campbell’s steady center, Courtney Cox’s razor-edged Gale, David Arquette’s guileless Dewey, and Matthew Lillard’s chaotic Stu—and ask why Billy Loomis reads “killer” from his first greasy window entrance. Along the way, we revisit the film’s biggest swing: two killers. It’s a twist that scrambles alibis, doubles the dread, and humanizes Ghostface with pratfalls and door-to-the-face slapstick that make the mask feel real.

    We also follow the money and the myth. A December counter-programming gamble turned a small budget into a box-office phenomenon and a long-running franchise. We run a live trivia gauntlet on top-grossing horror series and place Scream among the giants—Halloween, Friday the 13th, and A Nightmare on Elm Street—while tracking how its meta DNA birthed Scary Movie and a generation of self-aware scares. Then we push past nostalgia and interrogate motive: was Billy wounded or always wired wrong? Is Stu just along for the ride till reality bites? And does Sidney still count as a “final girl” when she breaks the purity rule and flips predator at the end?

    Our scores land where the movie earns them: high marks for structure and cultural impact, solid craft and sound, modest acting and dialogue. But numbers aside, the reason Scream lasts is simple—it lets you be in on the joke without deflating the fear. Press play for sharp takes, shameless nitpicks, and a spirited case for why Ghostface might be a wizard when the plot needs him to be. If you’re into clever horror, 90s film lore, or arguments about what makes a killer tick, you’ll feel right at home. If you enjoyed this breakdown, follow, share with a horror-loving friend, and drop your top three slasher rankings in a review.

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Four Friends, One Plan, And The Cost Of Survival: Set It Off (1996)
    Feb 27 2026

    We revisit Set It Off to celebrate Black History Month and unpack why a 90s heist film still cuts close today. We balance the laughs and chemistry with the film’s gutting realism on policing, poverty, and the price of survival.

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    1 hr and 35 mins