1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:03,880 Speaker 1: Hello, and welcome back to Movie Mike's Movie Podcast, your 2 00:00:03,920 --> 00:00:06,240 Speaker 1: go to source for all things movies, and it is 3 00:00:06,280 --> 00:00:09,160 Speaker 1: Halloween weeks, so we are wrapping up the month of October. 4 00:00:09,200 --> 00:00:11,959 Speaker 1: Have been talking horror movies all month long, but today 5 00:00:12,440 --> 00:00:15,800 Speaker 1: the episode you've been waiting for the scariest movies of 6 00:00:15,840 --> 00:00:18,720 Speaker 1: the last twenty years. I'll give you my top five. 7 00:00:19,040 --> 00:00:21,760 Speaker 1: I'll also give a movie review of the new movie Dune, 8 00:00:21,800 --> 00:00:24,239 Speaker 1: which came out in theaters and on HBO Max over 9 00:00:24,280 --> 00:00:27,200 Speaker 1: the weekend. And we're trying out the segment again Movie 10 00:00:27,200 --> 00:00:29,880 Speaker 1: Mike's Trailer Park. I'll be breaking down three trailers that 11 00:00:29,960 --> 00:00:32,400 Speaker 1: came out over the last week that I'm most excited about. 12 00:00:32,400 --> 00:00:34,720 Speaker 1: Wherever you're listening to this podcast right now, let me 13 00:00:34,760 --> 00:00:37,640 Speaker 1: just remind you can get brand new episodes every single Monday. 14 00:00:37,760 --> 00:00:40,840 Speaker 1: Just smashed that subscribe button, smash that follow button wherever 15 00:00:40,840 --> 00:00:43,199 Speaker 1: you're listening, so you get brand new episodes right there 16 00:00:43,240 --> 00:00:45,960 Speaker 1: on your phone, right there on your computer. All you 17 00:00:46,040 --> 00:00:49,199 Speaker 1: have to do, completely free. Thanks everybody for joining the 18 00:00:49,280 --> 00:00:53,400 Speaker 1: riot of this podcast. Without any further ado, It's Halloween week, 19 00:00:53,479 --> 00:00:56,440 Speaker 1: so let's get started. In a world where everyone and 20 00:00:56,480 --> 00:01:00,240 Speaker 1: their mother has a podcast. One man stand is to 21 00:01:00,360 --> 00:01:03,680 Speaker 1: infiltrate the ears of listeners like never before in a 22 00:01:03,800 --> 00:01:08,400 Speaker 1: movie Podcass a man with so much movie knowledge, he's 23 00:01:08,480 --> 00:01:12,880 Speaker 1: basically like a walking at MJVI, which classes from the 24 00:01:13,000 --> 00:01:19,520 Speaker 1: Nashville Podcast Network Movie Movie Podcast. I've been waiting to 25 00:01:19,560 --> 00:01:22,440 Speaker 1: do this episode all month long, and I've been talking 26 00:01:22,440 --> 00:01:26,360 Speaker 1: about horror movies in different kind of capacities here and 27 00:01:26,560 --> 00:01:28,560 Speaker 1: over the last few weeks, I've been taking all my 28 00:01:28,640 --> 00:01:32,000 Speaker 1: notes and making what I consider to be the scariest 29 00:01:32,080 --> 00:01:35,000 Speaker 1: movies of the last twenty years. The main goal when 30 00:01:35,000 --> 00:01:37,800 Speaker 1: I do this podcast is I like to show people 31 00:01:37,920 --> 00:01:40,759 Speaker 1: that movies are alive and well and want to give 32 00:01:40,800 --> 00:01:43,400 Speaker 1: you recommendations and things to watch that are happening now. 33 00:01:43,520 --> 00:01:45,440 Speaker 1: I'm just such a fan of movies, such a fan 34 00:01:45,520 --> 00:01:48,440 Speaker 1: of film, that it's important to me to show that, hey, 35 00:01:48,480 --> 00:01:51,160 Speaker 1: there's great movies being made right now, especially when it 36 00:01:51,200 --> 00:01:53,640 Speaker 1: comes to horror. And a lot of times with horror 37 00:01:53,680 --> 00:01:56,440 Speaker 1: movies we get, you know, caught in the classics, which 38 00:01:56,440 --> 00:01:58,880 Speaker 1: are great and all, but these are movies. I wanted 39 00:01:58,880 --> 00:02:00,640 Speaker 1: to showcase that if you have haven't seen any of 40 00:02:00,640 --> 00:02:03,640 Speaker 1: these yet, I highly recommend them. There's something about these 41 00:02:03,640 --> 00:02:06,520 Speaker 1: that are so different than anything else that came before them. 42 00:02:06,880 --> 00:02:09,359 Speaker 1: Some of them or OWDs, the classic movies that came 43 00:02:09,360 --> 00:02:12,120 Speaker 1: out back in the seventies and the eighties, and some 44 00:02:12,200 --> 00:02:14,560 Speaker 1: of these are just concepts all of their own, And 45 00:02:14,600 --> 00:02:17,360 Speaker 1: in some way, each of these movies have rattled me. 46 00:02:17,560 --> 00:02:20,080 Speaker 1: Whether it was giving me nightmares, whether it was reminding 47 00:02:20,120 --> 00:02:22,200 Speaker 1: me of a scary thing that happened in my life. 48 00:02:22,440 --> 00:02:25,360 Speaker 1: These are all movies that have affected me personally, and 49 00:02:25,400 --> 00:02:28,200 Speaker 1: I'm telling you that they actually scared me. So that 50 00:02:28,320 --> 00:02:31,120 Speaker 1: is the criteria I put into making this list, and 51 00:02:31,160 --> 00:02:33,079 Speaker 1: then of course just considering if they're good movies or not, 52 00:02:33,120 --> 00:02:34,840 Speaker 1: and I would recommend them to other people. But I 53 00:02:34,880 --> 00:02:36,840 Speaker 1: think at the very core of these these are all 54 00:02:36,919 --> 00:02:39,120 Speaker 1: movies that legit scared me, which I think is important 55 00:02:39,120 --> 00:02:42,000 Speaker 1: because I mentioned the hardest things about making movies are 56 00:02:42,000 --> 00:02:45,160 Speaker 1: invoking emotions out of people, and the hardest emotions are 57 00:02:45,400 --> 00:02:48,720 Speaker 1: I would say, scaring people, followed by making people laugh. 58 00:02:49,000 --> 00:02:51,480 Speaker 1: So I love horror movies. I love talking about them. 59 00:02:51,520 --> 00:02:55,000 Speaker 1: Here's my top five scariest movies of the last twenty years, 60 00:02:55,200 --> 00:02:57,840 Speaker 1: and I had a really hard time finding my number 61 00:02:57,880 --> 00:03:00,840 Speaker 1: five slot. I'll get into some honorable mentions later, but 62 00:03:00,919 --> 00:03:02,680 Speaker 1: I kind of want to get into movies that I 63 00:03:02,760 --> 00:03:05,160 Speaker 1: was considering at this number five slot. There's a movie 64 00:03:05,200 --> 00:03:08,200 Speaker 1: I feel is very underrated called The Hills Have Eyes, 65 00:03:08,320 --> 00:03:10,440 Speaker 1: which is a remake of the old classic. But I 66 00:03:10,440 --> 00:03:13,440 Speaker 1: remember watching that movie and being like, this is the 67 00:03:13,480 --> 00:03:16,240 Speaker 1: most disturbing thing I've ever seen. But not only that, 68 00:03:16,280 --> 00:03:18,799 Speaker 1: it's something I feel like it actually happened. My family 69 00:03:18,800 --> 00:03:21,960 Speaker 1: would travel all the time from the United States down 70 00:03:22,000 --> 00:03:24,520 Speaker 1: to Mexico. From the border, we would probably go a 71 00:03:24,560 --> 00:03:28,520 Speaker 1: good eight to nine hours into Mexico, and it always 72 00:03:28,560 --> 00:03:30,600 Speaker 1: freaked me out if we ever had cars issues and 73 00:03:30,639 --> 00:03:33,200 Speaker 1: had a breakdown on the side of the road, because 74 00:03:33,200 --> 00:03:36,120 Speaker 1: as a kid going to Mexico, there was always rumors 75 00:03:36,160 --> 00:03:38,400 Speaker 1: that up in the mountains, if you're driving at night, 76 00:03:38,440 --> 00:03:41,440 Speaker 1: those little flashing lights that you see our witches, and 77 00:03:41,440 --> 00:03:43,400 Speaker 1: that would always really scare me as a kid. If 78 00:03:43,440 --> 00:03:45,160 Speaker 1: we were able to break down and one of those 79 00:03:45,160 --> 00:03:47,040 Speaker 1: witches or something would come down, That's what would happen 80 00:03:47,040 --> 00:03:48,920 Speaker 1: in my head. But in The Hills Have Eyes, it's 81 00:03:48,960 --> 00:03:52,640 Speaker 1: basically this family traveling the country and in this remote 82 00:03:52,640 --> 00:03:55,720 Speaker 1: part of basically nowhere, they think they break down, but 83 00:03:55,720 --> 00:03:58,800 Speaker 1: they're actually taken down by these people who live in 84 00:03:58,880 --> 00:04:02,040 Speaker 1: the hills, and they're the creepiest human beings ever. Some 85 00:04:02,120 --> 00:04:04,880 Speaker 1: really sick and twisted things happened. But I almost didn't 86 00:04:04,880 --> 00:04:06,880 Speaker 1: know if that movie was scary because I worried if 87 00:04:06,920 --> 00:04:09,520 Speaker 1: that would actually happen to me, or if it was 88 00:04:09,560 --> 00:04:12,800 Speaker 1: just so disturbing and violent. That almost made my slot 89 00:04:12,800 --> 00:04:14,400 Speaker 1: here at number five. So I wanted to mention that 90 00:04:14,400 --> 00:04:16,839 Speaker 1: one first, But what I went with instead is Paranormal 91 00:04:16,880 --> 00:04:19,520 Speaker 1: Activity from two thousand and seven. And I will say 92 00:04:19,560 --> 00:04:22,800 Speaker 1: the Paranormal Activity franchise is great, and that's a hill 93 00:04:23,080 --> 00:04:25,080 Speaker 1: that I am prepared to die on. And I think 94 00:04:25,080 --> 00:04:27,800 Speaker 1: this first one is a classic, and it really changed 95 00:04:27,880 --> 00:04:31,800 Speaker 1: the landscape of what found footage horror movies are. I 96 00:04:31,800 --> 00:04:35,520 Speaker 1: think the Blair Witch Project basically walked so that Paranormal 97 00:04:35,560 --> 00:04:38,640 Speaker 1: Activity could run. And it's a franchise that has spawned 98 00:04:39,000 --> 00:04:42,520 Speaker 1: numerous sequels. It's been parody of a bunch, but also 99 00:04:42,600 --> 00:04:44,840 Speaker 1: one and I love this, is that the first one 100 00:04:44,960 --> 00:04:47,800 Speaker 1: was made for only fifteen thousand dollars. It went on 101 00:04:47,839 --> 00:04:51,400 Speaker 1: to make millions and millions at the box office. And 102 00:04:51,839 --> 00:04:54,560 Speaker 1: I think, as somebody who loves just the art of 103 00:04:54,600 --> 00:04:57,400 Speaker 1: making a movie, I always love horror movies that are 104 00:04:57,440 --> 00:05:00,560 Speaker 1: done with very minimal budget and a very minimal way, 105 00:05:00,600 --> 00:05:03,159 Speaker 1: because it's all about the concept. And that's where I 106 00:05:03,160 --> 00:05:05,600 Speaker 1: think horror movies can succeed in ways that others can't, 107 00:05:05,680 --> 00:05:07,880 Speaker 1: is because they can take this just scary concept do 108 00:05:08,000 --> 00:05:10,120 Speaker 1: it in a way that doesn't cost a whole lot 109 00:05:10,160 --> 00:05:12,279 Speaker 1: of money. But if you're able to get those scares 110 00:05:12,320 --> 00:05:14,839 Speaker 1: out of people, that's really where it all matters and 111 00:05:14,880 --> 00:05:16,760 Speaker 1: where people will go and see this in the theater 112 00:05:17,080 --> 00:05:19,680 Speaker 1: tell other people about it, which is essentially what happened 113 00:05:19,680 --> 00:05:22,520 Speaker 1: with Paranormal Activity. And it's a movie that after you 114 00:05:22,600 --> 00:05:26,799 Speaker 1: watch it, you will question every single noise in your home. 115 00:05:27,120 --> 00:05:29,520 Speaker 1: And this movie gave me that feeling of like, whenever 116 00:05:29,960 --> 00:05:32,200 Speaker 1: I'm about to go to sleep at night, I am 117 00:05:32,240 --> 00:05:34,479 Speaker 1: like running down the hallway to turn on the light 118 00:05:34,520 --> 00:05:36,560 Speaker 1: as I go to the bedroom because I am freaked 119 00:05:36,560 --> 00:05:38,719 Speaker 1: out that something will happen to me. So at number 120 00:05:38,760 --> 00:05:41,200 Speaker 1: five and the scariest movies of the last twenty years, 121 00:05:41,240 --> 00:05:43,960 Speaker 1: I'm going with Paranormal Activity at number four as a 122 00:05:44,000 --> 00:05:46,760 Speaker 1: movie from eighteen, which I think is just one of 123 00:05:46,760 --> 00:05:49,919 Speaker 1: the scariest movies of all and it's a movie that 124 00:05:50,040 --> 00:05:52,520 Speaker 1: kind of feels like a reoccurring nightmare of my own, 125 00:05:52,520 --> 00:05:54,159 Speaker 1: which I'll get into here in a bit, But the 126 00:05:54,200 --> 00:05:57,799 Speaker 1: movie is called Hereditary came out and why I found 127 00:05:57,839 --> 00:06:00,680 Speaker 1: this movie so scary is there's so and scenes in 128 00:06:00,680 --> 00:06:03,640 Speaker 1: this movie that I remember watching for the first time 129 00:06:03,680 --> 00:06:07,120 Speaker 1: and being shocked by. And there were scenes so jarring 130 00:06:07,279 --> 00:06:09,840 Speaker 1: watching it for the very first time and seeing this 131 00:06:09,880 --> 00:06:13,159 Speaker 1: person basically losing their mind, being a relatively normal person 132 00:06:13,200 --> 00:06:16,120 Speaker 1: at the start of this movie and then completely losing 133 00:06:16,160 --> 00:06:18,240 Speaker 1: it by the end of this movie. There's just something 134 00:06:18,279 --> 00:06:20,680 Speaker 1: about a descent into madness that I find just so 135 00:06:20,760 --> 00:06:23,479 Speaker 1: fascinating in any kind of movie, but when done in 136 00:06:23,480 --> 00:06:25,839 Speaker 1: a horror movie like this, it's another one. I felt. 137 00:06:25,839 --> 00:06:28,520 Speaker 1: It just became an instant classic for me and one 138 00:06:28,560 --> 00:06:31,599 Speaker 1: that I just see appear on everybody's favorite top horror 139 00:06:31,640 --> 00:06:34,880 Speaker 1: movies really ever, and I think with good reason. I 140 00:06:34,920 --> 00:06:36,840 Speaker 1: think if you're someone like me and has ever had 141 00:06:36,880 --> 00:06:41,039 Speaker 1: a reoccurring dream where something just horrible happens for no 142 00:06:41,160 --> 00:06:43,680 Speaker 1: reason that you can't really determine, I kind of get 143 00:06:43,720 --> 00:06:47,200 Speaker 1: that same feeling while watching this movie. It feels like 144 00:06:47,320 --> 00:06:49,919 Speaker 1: literally a nightmare. And not only that, it has a 145 00:06:49,920 --> 00:06:53,560 Speaker 1: great cast, great acting, which is essential to a good 146 00:06:53,560 --> 00:06:55,680 Speaker 1: horror movie to kind of take away that line from 147 00:06:55,680 --> 00:06:57,960 Speaker 1: it being cheesy and believable to really taking it to 148 00:06:58,000 --> 00:07:00,599 Speaker 1: the next level. So at number four this Garius movies 149 00:07:00,600 --> 00:07:03,280 Speaker 1: in the last twenty years, I'm going with Hereditary at 150 00:07:03,360 --> 00:07:07,000 Speaker 1: number three is a movie from called Year Next. And 151 00:07:07,040 --> 00:07:10,600 Speaker 1: there's just something about a good home invasion movie. It's 152 00:07:10,600 --> 00:07:12,600 Speaker 1: a genre that was really made popular in like the 153 00:07:12,680 --> 00:07:15,360 Speaker 1: nineteen seventies with movies like The Last House on the 154 00:07:15,440 --> 00:07:18,280 Speaker 1: Left or When a Stranger Calls, And I think it's 155 00:07:18,280 --> 00:07:21,280 Speaker 1: because it's something that we can all relate to and 156 00:07:21,280 --> 00:07:24,760 Speaker 1: all kind of put ourselves into these movies because there's 157 00:07:24,840 --> 00:07:29,000 Speaker 1: oftentimes that we're all home alone, we hear a noise outside, 158 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:31,320 Speaker 1: or we go to sleep and wonder, hey, what if 159 00:07:31,360 --> 00:07:33,960 Speaker 1: somebody broke into my house? How would I take that 160 00:07:34,000 --> 00:07:37,240 Speaker 1: situation on? And there have been several other horror movies 161 00:07:37,240 --> 00:07:39,520 Speaker 1: that have tackled this since you know, the early Wins 162 00:07:39,560 --> 00:07:41,640 Speaker 1: back in the seventies. I think one that I saw 163 00:07:41,760 --> 00:07:44,560 Speaker 1: commented a lot in the response to the question I 164 00:07:44,600 --> 00:07:48,480 Speaker 1: put out on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook was The Strangers, 165 00:07:48,840 --> 00:07:52,200 Speaker 1: which I think was probably more a commercially successful movie. 166 00:07:52,440 --> 00:07:55,520 Speaker 1: Also a really great, well done movie capturing this whole 167 00:07:55,560 --> 00:07:58,200 Speaker 1: kind of idea of home invasion in dealing with these 168 00:07:58,240 --> 00:08:01,040 Speaker 1: just people trying to terrorize and kill you outside of 169 00:08:01,080 --> 00:08:03,840 Speaker 1: your home. But I think this movie Your Next took 170 00:08:03,840 --> 00:08:06,840 Speaker 1: it a whole another level, but it takes the same idea. 171 00:08:06,960 --> 00:08:09,400 Speaker 1: There's this family. They have a little weekend getaway for 172 00:08:09,480 --> 00:08:13,040 Speaker 1: this wedding anniversary, and there's this group of killers all 173 00:08:13,080 --> 00:08:16,600 Speaker 1: wearing these creepy animal masks, and basically the family has 174 00:08:16,640 --> 00:08:19,760 Speaker 1: to come together to either you know, work through their issues, 175 00:08:19,880 --> 00:08:23,240 Speaker 1: fight back against these people, or just end up dying. 176 00:08:23,480 --> 00:08:26,080 Speaker 1: And what I think I found better about this movie 177 00:08:26,200 --> 00:08:29,200 Speaker 1: than The Strangers is like, unlike in The Strangers, this 178 00:08:29,280 --> 00:08:31,400 Speaker 1: movie had a little bit more of twist and turns 179 00:08:31,440 --> 00:08:34,760 Speaker 1: took it a bit further with the action. It almost 180 00:08:34,800 --> 00:08:37,160 Speaker 1: felt like what happens in Home Alone, but with like 181 00:08:37,240 --> 00:08:40,480 Speaker 1: real life consequences, if all the injuries and all the 182 00:08:40,520 --> 00:08:43,120 Speaker 1: contraptions actually had real effects on the people and they 183 00:08:43,160 --> 00:08:45,160 Speaker 1: were actually getting hurt. And it's also a movie I 184 00:08:45,160 --> 00:08:47,760 Speaker 1: feel like gets overlooked a lot when it comes to 185 00:08:47,840 --> 00:08:50,400 Speaker 1: the scariest movies. So that is all I will say 186 00:08:50,400 --> 00:08:52,400 Speaker 1: about the Twist and Turns. But if you haven't seen 187 00:08:52,480 --> 00:08:56,200 Speaker 1: this movie yet you're into the home invasion genre, you'll 188 00:08:56,240 --> 00:08:58,119 Speaker 1: see why I think this is one of the scariest 189 00:08:58,559 --> 00:09:01,400 Speaker 1: at number two. It's not only of my favorite horror movies, 190 00:09:01,640 --> 00:09:04,280 Speaker 1: but if I was making a list of my favorite 191 00:09:04,559 --> 00:09:08,280 Speaker 1: just movies of all time, this would easily be on 192 00:09:08,400 --> 00:09:11,480 Speaker 1: that list. And it's from called Cabin in the Woods, 193 00:09:11,800 --> 00:09:13,839 Speaker 1: and it's a horror movie that I hope never gets 194 00:09:13,840 --> 00:09:16,800 Speaker 1: remade because you really can't capture what this movie did 195 00:09:16,960 --> 00:09:20,800 Speaker 1: in any other way. And the movie starts by making 196 00:09:20,840 --> 00:09:24,080 Speaker 1: you think that you're watching just the normal, average, almost 197 00:09:24,160 --> 00:09:27,120 Speaker 1: cliche horror movie, like all the same things that you're expecting, 198 00:09:27,760 --> 00:09:31,040 Speaker 1: like the horny teenagers, the same cast of characters, like 199 00:09:31,080 --> 00:09:33,679 Speaker 1: the jock, the preppy guy, like all those things that 200 00:09:33,720 --> 00:09:37,680 Speaker 1: you normally see in like a typical nineties early two 201 00:09:37,720 --> 00:09:41,400 Speaker 1: thousand's horror movie. That's what you think you're watching. But 202 00:09:41,440 --> 00:09:44,560 Speaker 1: then it takes you on this ride, this mental journey 203 00:09:44,600 --> 00:09:47,480 Speaker 1: that you are never expected to see. And I'll leave 204 00:09:47,520 --> 00:09:49,320 Speaker 1: it at that, because I think this movie is like 205 00:09:49,360 --> 00:09:52,240 Speaker 1: a roller coaster you really just have to experience for yourself, 206 00:09:53,760 --> 00:09:56,240 Speaker 1: and for me, it's rare to find a movie that's 207 00:09:56,280 --> 00:10:00,320 Speaker 1: scary but also funny and self aware at the same time. 208 00:10:00,720 --> 00:10:03,440 Speaker 1: It could almost fall on both lists like a Shaun 209 00:10:03,440 --> 00:10:06,000 Speaker 1: of the Dead or like a Zombie Land to where 210 00:10:06,000 --> 00:10:09,360 Speaker 1: it does have humor inside of it. But I think 211 00:10:09,800 --> 00:10:13,120 Speaker 1: because of the horror elements in this movie, because of 212 00:10:13,160 --> 00:10:15,600 Speaker 1: what happens in this movie, it's able to do at 213 00:10:15,640 --> 00:10:19,319 Speaker 1: the same time be a completely scary, dark and twisted movie, 214 00:10:19,320 --> 00:10:21,280 Speaker 1: but also just a movie that you can have fun 215 00:10:21,280 --> 00:10:23,960 Speaker 1: and watch with some friends, a movie that I love 216 00:10:24,000 --> 00:10:26,560 Speaker 1: so much. I actually watched this movie on my wedding 217 00:10:26,640 --> 00:10:28,880 Speaker 1: day like before, when my groomsman and I were hanging 218 00:10:28,880 --> 00:10:31,960 Speaker 1: out getting ready. We all sat down and watched this 219 00:10:32,000 --> 00:10:35,240 Speaker 1: movie and everybody loved it. So I think it's definitely 220 00:10:35,240 --> 00:10:38,040 Speaker 1: a horror must. If you haven't seen this movie, throw 221 00:10:38,080 --> 00:10:40,760 Speaker 1: it on this Halloween and you will enjoy it. And 222 00:10:40,800 --> 00:10:42,959 Speaker 1: before I get to number one, and I have a 223 00:10:42,960 --> 00:10:45,800 Speaker 1: long list of honorable mentions, because horror is just one 224 00:10:45,840 --> 00:10:49,160 Speaker 1: of my favorite genres, if not my favorite, probably only 225 00:10:49,240 --> 00:10:52,320 Speaker 1: next to superhero movies. I have a list that basically 226 00:10:52,400 --> 00:10:54,320 Speaker 1: I've been working on for ten years of just my 227 00:10:54,400 --> 00:10:57,040 Speaker 1: favorite horror movies. So here are some other ones that 228 00:10:57,080 --> 00:10:59,559 Speaker 1: I would recommend. Given that maybe you've seen some of 229 00:10:59,600 --> 00:11:01,480 Speaker 1: the ones I've talked about old, or you think maybe 230 00:11:01,480 --> 00:11:03,240 Speaker 1: some of those won't be for you. Here are some 231 00:11:03,320 --> 00:11:05,480 Speaker 1: others that I still consider to be great horror movies. 232 00:11:05,520 --> 00:11:09,840 Speaker 1: From a movie called It Follows, which is basically about 233 00:11:09,880 --> 00:11:13,120 Speaker 1: this curse that gets passed on to other people after 234 00:11:13,160 --> 00:11:17,720 Speaker 1: they hook up. There's a movie called Hush from also 235 00:11:17,840 --> 00:11:20,600 Speaker 1: in that home invasion genre, but in this one, the 236 00:11:20,640 --> 00:11:23,320 Speaker 1: main character is deaf and trying to fight off this 237 00:11:23,400 --> 00:11:25,880 Speaker 1: home intruder with this kind of creepy ghost mask in 238 00:11:25,920 --> 00:11:28,760 Speaker 1: a hoodie. No bells and whistles really on. That movie, 239 00:11:28,800 --> 00:11:31,600 Speaker 1: just basically a cool story about a woman fighting back 240 00:11:31,600 --> 00:11:34,080 Speaker 1: against a home invader. She goes away to write a 241 00:11:34,120 --> 00:11:36,840 Speaker 1: book out in the middle of nowhere, has really no 242 00:11:36,960 --> 00:11:40,000 Speaker 1: business being in this house this big alone, So in 243 00:11:40,080 --> 00:11:41,679 Speaker 1: that way, you kind of have to let yourself buy 244 00:11:41,720 --> 00:11:43,800 Speaker 1: into it a little bit, but it's really well done. 245 00:11:44,160 --> 00:11:46,520 Speaker 1: Another movie, if you're really into it, I wouldn't say 246 00:11:46,520 --> 00:11:49,520 Speaker 1: it's just straight ahead like horror, but kind of dark 247 00:11:49,559 --> 00:11:52,959 Speaker 1: and twisted mythical in a way. As a movie from 248 00:11:52,960 --> 00:11:56,040 Speaker 1: two thousand nine called The Witch, and that's with two vs. 249 00:11:56,080 --> 00:11:58,600 Speaker 1: Not a W. But that's a movie I watched, and 250 00:11:58,760 --> 00:12:01,320 Speaker 1: afterward it was just like, huh, First of all, what 251 00:12:01,360 --> 00:12:04,120 Speaker 1: did I just watch? And second of all, why was 252 00:12:04,160 --> 00:12:07,240 Speaker 1: that so entertaining? Also in one of my favorite genres, 253 00:12:07,280 --> 00:12:11,040 Speaker 1: the found footage genres, there's a movie called VHS which 254 00:12:11,080 --> 00:12:16,560 Speaker 1: was really greatly inspired by Paranormal Activity. But what I 255 00:12:16,640 --> 00:12:18,679 Speaker 1: liked about this one is it's a bunch of found 256 00:12:18,679 --> 00:12:21,040 Speaker 1: footage but kind of a compilation, so it's like a 257 00:12:21,080 --> 00:12:23,520 Speaker 1: bunch of short films inside one big film. There's no 258 00:12:23,640 --> 00:12:27,400 Speaker 1: like overarching storyline. It's just a lot of creepy, scary 259 00:12:27,400 --> 00:12:29,920 Speaker 1: events that get captured on VHS tapes. So if you 260 00:12:29,960 --> 00:12:32,719 Speaker 1: have kind of a short attention span and just want 261 00:12:32,720 --> 00:12:37,360 Speaker 1: to see quick, different core little scenes one after another, 262 00:12:37,600 --> 00:12:41,760 Speaker 1: I would recommend VHS from twelve. And along those same lines, 263 00:12:42,080 --> 00:12:44,120 Speaker 1: there's a movie that I think maybe I'm the only 264 00:12:44,120 --> 00:12:47,040 Speaker 1: one who watched and enjoyed this movie, but it's called Unfriended. 265 00:12:47,200 --> 00:12:49,480 Speaker 1: And what I like about Unfriended is it kind of 266 00:12:49,559 --> 00:12:53,480 Speaker 1: captured a time in my life that I feel like 267 00:12:53,679 --> 00:12:57,400 Speaker 1: only a certain amount of millennials experienced. And if you 268 00:12:57,440 --> 00:13:00,200 Speaker 1: were in high school or in college and the only 269 00:13:00,320 --> 00:13:03,520 Speaker 1: tends it was a lot different than kids now who 270 00:13:03,720 --> 00:13:06,160 Speaker 1: just grow up in a world that always had the Internet, 271 00:13:06,240 --> 00:13:08,720 Speaker 1: grew up playing with tablets. There was kind of a 272 00:13:08,720 --> 00:13:12,000 Speaker 1: moment to where the Internet was still relatively new, but 273 00:13:12,120 --> 00:13:14,920 Speaker 1: we used it so much, and we were on Facebook, 274 00:13:15,000 --> 00:13:18,520 Speaker 1: and we didn't really have FaceTime completely down yet. We 275 00:13:18,520 --> 00:13:21,320 Speaker 1: were just kind of in this transition period from just 276 00:13:21,520 --> 00:13:25,160 Speaker 1: having iPhones in two thousand seven to having our entire 277 00:13:25,240 --> 00:13:27,400 Speaker 1: lives on our phones. And there was a moment in 278 00:13:27,480 --> 00:13:30,199 Speaker 1: time where I remember everybody kind of being on Skype 279 00:13:30,200 --> 00:13:32,160 Speaker 1: and talking to friends on Skype. We don't really do 280 00:13:32,200 --> 00:13:34,920 Speaker 1: that anymore. We just FaceTime people. But what Unfriended is, 281 00:13:34,960 --> 00:13:37,640 Speaker 1: that's a horror movie that takes place entirely over Skype. 282 00:13:37,760 --> 00:13:40,640 Speaker 1: Every scene is over a Skype called group Chats, and 283 00:13:40,720 --> 00:13:44,080 Speaker 1: every kill scene happens over the Internet. And this movie, 284 00:13:44,160 --> 00:13:46,560 Speaker 1: after I watched it, I could not hear that Skype 285 00:13:46,640 --> 00:13:49,360 Speaker 1: ring tone at all. Like I I still associate that 286 00:13:49,480 --> 00:13:55,920 Speaker 1: ring tone with this movie. So if you're into found 287 00:13:55,920 --> 00:13:59,600 Speaker 1: footage movies, I will admit it's not the greatest angule 288 00:13:59,679 --> 00:14:02,640 Speaker 1: ever watched. But if you're into that concept, I think 289 00:14:02,640 --> 00:14:05,840 Speaker 1: it's done really well and it kind of captures anybody 290 00:14:05,840 --> 00:14:09,040 Speaker 1: who was a teenager early twenties. At that time, it's 291 00:14:09,040 --> 00:14:11,440 Speaker 1: like this little slice in moment of time that I 292 00:14:11,480 --> 00:14:16,320 Speaker 1: think just gets forgotten. So from twenty fourteen it's called Unfriended. Also, 293 00:14:16,360 --> 00:14:19,200 Speaker 1: I was talking about last week I reviewed Halloween Kills 294 00:14:19,240 --> 00:14:22,280 Speaker 1: if you missed that review, but I would get close 295 00:14:22,360 --> 00:14:26,720 Speaker 1: to considering the Halloween version to be one of the 296 00:14:26,760 --> 00:14:28,800 Speaker 1: best in the last twenty years. It was so well 297 00:14:28,880 --> 00:14:32,400 Speaker 1: done in a way that kind of recaptured what the 298 00:14:32,400 --> 00:14:36,360 Speaker 1: original nineteen seventy eight version was, but had an identity 299 00:14:36,400 --> 00:14:37,720 Speaker 1: of its own. And I think that's why I was 300 00:14:37,760 --> 00:14:40,560 Speaker 1: so excited for Halloween Kills, because I felt like they 301 00:14:40,600 --> 00:14:44,360 Speaker 1: finally got it down right, and with Halloween Kills just 302 00:14:44,400 --> 00:14:47,160 Speaker 1: not feeling like a Halloween movie basically just being a 303 00:14:47,240 --> 00:14:50,040 Speaker 1: slasher film on steroids, I kind of took that one 304 00:14:50,040 --> 00:14:52,560 Speaker 1: off my list a little bit, pulled it down just 305 00:14:52,600 --> 00:14:54,640 Speaker 1: a bit. But there's some other great ones like it, 306 00:14:54,760 --> 00:14:57,440 Speaker 1: from which I think a lot of people have seen. 307 00:14:58,320 --> 00:15:00,720 Speaker 1: You get what you kind of go into with the 308 00:15:00,800 --> 00:15:04,280 Speaker 1: Knit movie, more over the top kind of fantasy horror 309 00:15:04,320 --> 00:15:08,000 Speaker 1: in a way. You also have Get Out from Midsummer 310 00:15:08,040 --> 00:15:10,560 Speaker 1: from twenty nineteen, which is the movie I always recommend 311 00:15:10,560 --> 00:15:13,360 Speaker 1: to people it's not as full on horror as some 312 00:15:13,400 --> 00:15:15,760 Speaker 1: of these other movies, more so on the creepy and 313 00:15:15,800 --> 00:15:18,840 Speaker 1: disturbing side. And then finally, one of the most recent 314 00:15:18,920 --> 00:15:20,960 Speaker 1: movies is a movie that came out last year called 315 00:15:21,080 --> 00:15:23,760 Speaker 1: The Invisible Man, which was a movie I had very 316 00:15:23,880 --> 00:15:27,080 Speaker 1: zero expectations going into it. I kind of thought it 317 00:15:27,120 --> 00:15:29,360 Speaker 1: was gonna be a Hollow Man rip off, but I 318 00:15:29,440 --> 00:15:31,480 Speaker 1: ended up really enjoying that one too. So if you're 319 00:15:31,480 --> 00:15:34,720 Speaker 1: looking to watch something relatively pretty new, I think you 320 00:15:34,760 --> 00:15:39,000 Speaker 1: would enjoy that one. But finally, at number one, the 321 00:15:39,040 --> 00:15:43,880 Speaker 1: scariest movie of the last twenty years from The Conjuring. 322 00:15:44,240 --> 00:15:46,000 Speaker 1: If you're like me, you're a fan of like the 323 00:15:46,080 --> 00:15:48,600 Speaker 1: Exorcists from back in the day, but we're also looking 324 00:15:48,640 --> 00:15:52,600 Speaker 1: for a movie to kind of capture that same energy, 325 00:15:52,920 --> 00:15:56,920 Speaker 1: but also done in a modern way with better visual effects, 326 00:15:56,920 --> 00:16:00,720 Speaker 1: with better cinematography. I think The Conjuring did exactly that. 327 00:16:00,840 --> 00:16:02,920 Speaker 1: It's also based on his true story from the early 328 00:16:03,000 --> 00:16:06,840 Speaker 1: nineteen seventies. You got these paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. 329 00:16:07,840 --> 00:16:09,840 Speaker 1: They go to this family who just bought a house 330 00:16:09,840 --> 00:16:12,680 Speaker 1: in Rhode Island and they think their home is haunted, 331 00:16:13,040 --> 00:16:15,960 Speaker 1: and the opening of This movie alone kind of had 332 00:16:16,000 --> 00:16:17,840 Speaker 1: me on the edge of my seat for the entire movie. 333 00:16:17,920 --> 00:16:20,120 Speaker 1: But what I loved about it, and what it does 334 00:16:20,160 --> 00:16:24,200 Speaker 1: a great job of, is pacing all the scares. You 335 00:16:24,240 --> 00:16:27,320 Speaker 1: get to know this family, you get to know their backstory, 336 00:16:27,440 --> 00:16:29,160 Speaker 1: you get to know why they're in the house, and 337 00:16:29,200 --> 00:16:31,000 Speaker 1: you get some scares in between, but it doesn't give 338 00:16:31,040 --> 00:16:33,480 Speaker 1: you a whole lot right away. And I think that's 339 00:16:33,480 --> 00:16:36,600 Speaker 1: what a great horror movie does, is it builds up 340 00:16:36,600 --> 00:16:40,480 Speaker 1: to those scary moments, and then once they come, they 341 00:16:40,520 --> 00:16:43,920 Speaker 1: come a little bit more steadily. It's like something happens, Bam, 342 00:16:43,960 --> 00:16:45,960 Speaker 1: there's a scare, something else happens, the bam, there's a 343 00:16:46,000 --> 00:16:48,840 Speaker 1: bigger scare, and then something else happens that leads to 344 00:16:48,880 --> 00:16:51,240 Speaker 1: that final show down at the end. It never really 345 00:16:51,280 --> 00:16:54,640 Speaker 1: goes for those cheap jump scares. It never really has 346 00:16:54,680 --> 00:16:58,000 Speaker 1: a sense of cheesiness or unrealism. It's done in a 347 00:16:58,040 --> 00:17:00,440 Speaker 1: way that, even though it's just based on the true story, 348 00:17:00,440 --> 00:17:03,320 Speaker 1: you almost feel like you're watching something that actually happened. 349 00:17:03,480 --> 00:17:06,000 Speaker 1: So it keeps true to that traditional horror, to that 350 00:17:06,040 --> 00:17:10,320 Speaker 1: traditional kind of possession genre, but this more sinister and 351 00:17:10,400 --> 00:17:13,080 Speaker 1: modern feel. And there are some shots in this movie 352 00:17:13,119 --> 00:17:16,560 Speaker 1: that are just beautiful, like the scenes with going underneath 353 00:17:16,560 --> 00:17:19,760 Speaker 1: the bed to twisting upside down. There's just so many 354 00:17:19,800 --> 00:17:23,000 Speaker 1: cool visual effects and visual aspects that just your eyes alone, 355 00:17:23,320 --> 00:17:25,800 Speaker 1: we'll get a treat from this. It's also spawned off 356 00:17:25,800 --> 00:17:29,919 Speaker 1: its own trilogies, spinoff movies, origin movies, with the Annabelle movies, 357 00:17:30,240 --> 00:17:32,239 Speaker 1: There's just a lot to dive into if you end 358 00:17:32,320 --> 00:17:36,000 Speaker 1: up really enjoying the Conjuring franchise. And I think why 359 00:17:36,040 --> 00:17:40,960 Speaker 1: I found this movie so scary is because the element 360 00:17:41,200 --> 00:17:44,800 Speaker 1: of seeing demons or feeling something when you're asleep, it's 361 00:17:44,800 --> 00:17:47,720 Speaker 1: something that I relate to personally. I think for a 362 00:17:47,760 --> 00:17:50,159 Speaker 1: couple of years, maybe three years of my life, I 363 00:17:50,200 --> 00:17:53,800 Speaker 1: suffered from something that I later diagnosed to be sleep paralysis. 364 00:17:53,800 --> 00:17:55,879 Speaker 1: And I would go to sleep and then kind of 365 00:17:55,920 --> 00:17:58,359 Speaker 1: woke myself up as I felt something like on my 366 00:17:58,520 --> 00:18:02,000 Speaker 1: chest getting heavier and year and that's kind of how 367 00:18:02,040 --> 00:18:05,760 Speaker 1: it started. But that escalated into a feeling of I 368 00:18:05,840 --> 00:18:08,359 Speaker 1: felt like something was pulling the covers off of me, 369 00:18:09,560 --> 00:18:12,440 Speaker 1: and I would feel it like tugging my feet, pull 370 00:18:12,520 --> 00:18:15,080 Speaker 1: the covers down to where like they were legit off 371 00:18:15,119 --> 00:18:17,000 Speaker 1: of me, and I would pull them back up and 372 00:18:17,000 --> 00:18:19,679 Speaker 1: it would happen again. They would get pulled down, and 373 00:18:19,720 --> 00:18:22,160 Speaker 1: then as I would keep continuing to put him over 374 00:18:22,200 --> 00:18:24,920 Speaker 1: my body, I felt them getting tighter and tighter, almost 375 00:18:24,960 --> 00:18:27,800 Speaker 1: if someone was like putting both hands around me and 376 00:18:27,800 --> 00:18:30,680 Speaker 1: pressing down on my mattress, to the feeling where I 377 00:18:31,119 --> 00:18:35,280 Speaker 1: couldn't move, and it led to me not being able 378 00:18:35,320 --> 00:18:37,879 Speaker 1: to sleep great and later I found out yes, this 379 00:18:37,920 --> 00:18:40,600 Speaker 1: is something that people call a sleep paralysis, and the 380 00:18:40,640 --> 00:18:43,880 Speaker 1: worst it ever got it was one time I remember 381 00:18:44,359 --> 00:18:47,760 Speaker 1: sleeping and it kind of chilled out for a while, 382 00:18:48,280 --> 00:18:50,679 Speaker 1: but I had that feeling again of that pressure on me, 383 00:18:51,200 --> 00:18:54,600 Speaker 1: pulling the covers, pulling them further, pulling them down tighter, 384 00:18:55,880 --> 00:18:58,879 Speaker 1: but to the point to where it got so bad 385 00:18:58,960 --> 00:19:02,440 Speaker 1: that I could almost see like myself out of my body, 386 00:19:03,560 --> 00:19:06,680 Speaker 1: and I felt almost something in the room, this kind 387 00:19:06,720 --> 00:19:10,560 Speaker 1: of presence, and I remember physically turning my head to 388 00:19:10,760 --> 00:19:13,439 Speaker 1: the right, and I was living with my brother at 389 00:19:13,440 --> 00:19:16,760 Speaker 1: the time, and I tried to open my mouth to scream, 390 00:19:16,920 --> 00:19:18,879 Speaker 1: my mouth face towards the door, my head face to 391 00:19:18,920 --> 00:19:20,639 Speaker 1: the door, because I could that's the only part of 392 00:19:20,640 --> 00:19:23,040 Speaker 1: my body that I can move, and I went to 393 00:19:23,119 --> 00:19:27,080 Speaker 1: scream to yell out for help, and no sound came 394 00:19:27,080 --> 00:19:32,440 Speaker 1: out of my mouth, and luckily after that it kind 395 00:19:32,440 --> 00:19:35,880 Speaker 1: of chilled out. And I think almost that's what kind 396 00:19:35,880 --> 00:19:38,760 Speaker 1: of led to my whole health journey. I realized that 397 00:19:38,800 --> 00:19:41,119 Speaker 1: I just was just so unhealthy in my life to 398 00:19:41,200 --> 00:19:43,880 Speaker 1: the point to where I wasn't sleeping great. I think 399 00:19:43,920 --> 00:19:46,840 Speaker 1: after I changed my lifestyle completely, if you're not aware 400 00:19:46,840 --> 00:19:49,800 Speaker 1: of my story, ended up losing over a hundred pounds 401 00:19:49,840 --> 00:19:51,480 Speaker 1: and been able to keep that off, and I was 402 00:19:51,800 --> 00:19:55,679 Speaker 1: greatly due to changing what I ate, my overall agious lifestyle. 403 00:19:56,520 --> 00:19:58,720 Speaker 1: And after I changed that in my life, my sleep 404 00:19:58,760 --> 00:20:02,359 Speaker 1: got better and I've no longer had issues with the 405 00:20:02,359 --> 00:20:07,160 Speaker 1: sleep paralysis. But when I watched the Conjuring and those 406 00:20:07,200 --> 00:20:10,080 Speaker 1: images of those demons, you know, messing with them in 407 00:20:10,119 --> 00:20:13,680 Speaker 1: their bed, pulling their feet, I was like, oh, my gosh, 408 00:20:13,720 --> 00:20:16,240 Speaker 1: that's exactly what I experienced, and it rigged me out 409 00:20:16,280 --> 00:20:19,199 Speaker 1: so bad, and those scenes are still hard for me 410 00:20:19,240 --> 00:20:22,520 Speaker 1: to watch. And aside from that, I remember the moments 411 00:20:22,520 --> 00:20:24,359 Speaker 1: of just seeing the demons for the first time in 412 00:20:24,400 --> 00:20:28,080 Speaker 1: this movie and being visually scared because they're very creepy looking. So, 413 00:20:29,040 --> 00:20:32,440 Speaker 1: without a doubt, my favorite horror movie of the last 414 00:20:32,440 --> 00:20:36,399 Speaker 1: twenty years because it literally rattled me. It literally scared 415 00:20:36,440 --> 00:20:38,040 Speaker 1: me to the point of like, I don't even know 416 00:20:38,040 --> 00:20:41,280 Speaker 1: if I could finish watching this movie. But I'm good now. 417 00:20:41,359 --> 00:20:44,280 Speaker 1: I've been able to watch it multiple times since. So 418 00:20:44,359 --> 00:20:47,719 Speaker 1: there's my scary story real life, though none of that 419 00:20:47,840 --> 00:20:50,280 Speaker 1: is made up. Sometimes you just watch a movie and 420 00:20:50,320 --> 00:20:52,920 Speaker 1: it rattled you to the core, and that is the conjuring. 421 00:20:53,040 --> 00:20:55,240 Speaker 1: That is my list of the scariest movies of the 422 00:20:55,320 --> 00:20:58,360 Speaker 1: last twenty years. A lot there to dive into. If 423 00:20:58,359 --> 00:21:01,960 Speaker 1: you haven't seen some of those, Hey, this weekend Halloween, 424 00:21:02,400 --> 00:21:04,640 Speaker 1: throw one of them on. Let me know what you watch, 425 00:21:04,800 --> 00:21:06,919 Speaker 1: send me a tweet, or you can always email me 426 00:21:07,160 --> 00:21:13,119 Speaker 1: movie Mike d at gmail dot com. Let's get into 427 00:21:13,240 --> 00:21:17,360 Speaker 1: a spoiler free movie review talking about Dune, which came 428 00:21:17,359 --> 00:21:20,280 Speaker 1: out over the weekend in theaters and on HBO Max. 429 00:21:20,680 --> 00:21:22,919 Speaker 1: You had the ability to choose how you wanted to 430 00:21:22,920 --> 00:21:27,000 Speaker 1: watch this movie, and you probably had two different experiences, 431 00:21:27,040 --> 00:21:30,200 Speaker 1: I would say, depending on what you chose. So I'll 432 00:21:30,200 --> 00:21:32,320 Speaker 1: get into that. But if you haven't seen the trailer 433 00:21:32,359 --> 00:21:34,920 Speaker 1: for this movie yet, here's just a little bit of that. 434 00:21:36,560 --> 00:21:38,920 Speaker 1: We are house the trades. There is no coal. We 435 00:21:38,960 --> 00:21:45,520 Speaker 1: do not answer, there is no face that we've betrayed. Smile, Kearnie, 436 00:21:45,640 --> 00:21:49,399 Speaker 1: I am smiling. He ever asks us to bring peace 437 00:21:49,440 --> 00:21:55,560 Speaker 1: to a rockets. How's the tradees? What's up? So let's 438 00:21:55,560 --> 00:21:59,120 Speaker 1: talk about Dune. It's a movie. Well it's a remake 439 00:21:59,160 --> 00:22:01,439 Speaker 1: first of all, but the first movie came out in 440 00:22:01,560 --> 00:22:03,879 Speaker 1: nineteen eighty four, but it's based on a book that 441 00:22:03,920 --> 00:22:07,159 Speaker 1: came out in nineteen sixty five, this sci fi novel. 442 00:22:07,680 --> 00:22:10,160 Speaker 1: So I had a lot of issues with this movie 443 00:22:10,760 --> 00:22:13,680 Speaker 1: going into it. And I'll say at the beginning of this, 444 00:22:14,119 --> 00:22:18,320 Speaker 1: sci fi epics really aren't my thing. Aside from Star Wars, 445 00:22:18,720 --> 00:22:20,800 Speaker 1: I really have to be in the mode of wanting 446 00:22:20,840 --> 00:22:23,679 Speaker 1: to watch a sci fi epic because you're very big. 447 00:22:24,040 --> 00:22:26,199 Speaker 1: There's a lot you have to follow along too. And 448 00:22:26,359 --> 00:22:28,440 Speaker 1: what I found in this one not a whole lot 449 00:22:28,480 --> 00:22:30,960 Speaker 1: of action. But I felt this movie had a lot 450 00:22:31,000 --> 00:22:34,320 Speaker 1: of hype around it, which was interesting to me because 451 00:22:35,480 --> 00:22:38,040 Speaker 1: of all the movies I've heard of people wanting remakes 452 00:22:38,080 --> 00:22:42,280 Speaker 1: to readaptations too, I never really heard about people calling 453 00:22:42,320 --> 00:22:46,239 Speaker 1: for a Dune remake, a movie that really didn't do 454 00:22:46,320 --> 00:22:48,560 Speaker 1: so well when it first came out, but a movie 455 00:22:48,600 --> 00:22:50,560 Speaker 1: I've kind of found in some research I did that 456 00:22:51,160 --> 00:22:54,440 Speaker 1: the novel had a lot of similarities to when Star 457 00:22:54,440 --> 00:22:56,520 Speaker 1: Wars came out, and a lot of people say that, well, 458 00:22:56,560 --> 00:22:58,760 Speaker 1: George Luke has borrowed a lot of stuff from the 459 00:22:58,760 --> 00:23:01,920 Speaker 1: book and turned it in to its own sci fi epic, 460 00:23:02,400 --> 00:23:05,800 Speaker 1: So I think unfairly. When I first started watching this movie, 461 00:23:05,840 --> 00:23:09,280 Speaker 1: I was comparing it to Star Wars when really it's 462 00:23:09,320 --> 00:23:12,639 Speaker 1: a movie of its own. But while watching it, it 463 00:23:12,720 --> 00:23:15,960 Speaker 1: kind of gave me like Rogue One vibes just visually 464 00:23:16,040 --> 00:23:18,280 Speaker 1: in the overall story. So it kind of took a 465 00:23:18,280 --> 00:23:21,480 Speaker 1: little bit of me getting used to it. And what 466 00:23:21,560 --> 00:23:23,600 Speaker 1: I thought I was getting into going into it was 467 00:23:24,600 --> 00:23:27,400 Speaker 1: basically like Game of Thrones in the desert is kind 468 00:23:27,400 --> 00:23:29,840 Speaker 1: of how I described it from the trailer. But as 469 00:23:29,880 --> 00:23:32,679 Speaker 1: I watched this two and a half hour movie, I 470 00:23:32,760 --> 00:23:35,840 Speaker 1: really got to give it credit because Dune really knew 471 00:23:35,880 --> 00:23:38,399 Speaker 1: what it wanted to be. It wanted to be this bigger, 472 00:23:38,960 --> 00:23:41,480 Speaker 1: larger than life sci fi epic, and I think it 473 00:23:41,560 --> 00:23:44,600 Speaker 1: did exactly that. Just upon watching it, I realized it's 474 00:23:44,600 --> 00:23:48,320 Speaker 1: not for me. It's about this gifted young man played 475 00:23:48,320 --> 00:23:52,280 Speaker 1: by Timothy shallow May. He's born to basically royalty. His 476 00:23:52,440 --> 00:23:54,639 Speaker 1: dad trains him how to be a great fighter, and 477 00:23:54,720 --> 00:23:57,639 Speaker 1: his mom teaches him these other powers that she has. 478 00:23:58,200 --> 00:24:00,720 Speaker 1: So he has to travel to this danger risk planet 479 00:24:00,960 --> 00:24:04,760 Speaker 1: in this big, giant universe where everybody's fighting over this 480 00:24:04,840 --> 00:24:09,680 Speaker 1: precious resource that you find out is spices, which why 481 00:24:09,760 --> 00:24:11,800 Speaker 1: that kind of took me away a little bit. I'm like, really, 482 00:24:11,800 --> 00:24:14,400 Speaker 1: this whole movie is about spices, but there's this whole 483 00:24:14,400 --> 00:24:17,680 Speaker 1: meaning behind the spices. So I felt that Dune really 484 00:24:17,720 --> 00:24:20,359 Speaker 1: just played into knowing exactly what it wanted to be 485 00:24:20,400 --> 00:24:23,199 Speaker 1: and exactly the story it wanted to tell. So I 486 00:24:23,240 --> 00:24:26,880 Speaker 1: gotta respect them for that. And visually this movie was amazing, 487 00:24:27,760 --> 00:24:30,600 Speaker 1: And what I realized is it was really played to 488 00:24:30,960 --> 00:24:32,959 Speaker 1: the big screen. A lot of people I saw who 489 00:24:33,000 --> 00:24:35,560 Speaker 1: watched it over the weekend went to see it in Imax, 490 00:24:36,520 --> 00:24:38,960 Speaker 1: and I could see that just being an experience of 491 00:24:39,000 --> 00:24:41,680 Speaker 1: its own, watching something like this on the biggest screen 492 00:24:41,760 --> 00:24:46,400 Speaker 1: possible would probably give you a different experience. It kind 493 00:24:46,400 --> 00:24:49,160 Speaker 1: of reminded me of when I went to see Gravity 494 00:24:49,160 --> 00:24:51,439 Speaker 1: in theaters. I felt like I had a whole different 495 00:24:51,480 --> 00:24:54,440 Speaker 1: experience because of that, because not only was I able 496 00:24:54,480 --> 00:24:56,320 Speaker 1: to get the story, but I was also able to 497 00:24:56,359 --> 00:24:59,359 Speaker 1: experience what space would be like on the biggest screen. 498 00:25:00,040 --> 00:25:02,040 Speaker 1: And I think a lot of experiencing a movie like 499 00:25:02,080 --> 00:25:05,960 Speaker 1: that is that in theater experience the biggest screen possible, 500 00:25:06,359 --> 00:25:09,240 Speaker 1: the biggest sound possible. And for me that I watched 501 00:25:09,240 --> 00:25:12,040 Speaker 1: it at home on HBO Max, that a little bit 502 00:25:12,160 --> 00:25:14,240 Speaker 1: was lost on me. What I did kind of take 503 00:25:14,280 --> 00:25:17,600 Speaker 1: into big cinematography. It was maybe too big for my 504 00:25:17,680 --> 00:25:21,080 Speaker 1: own TV. So I'm here relying mainly on the story, 505 00:25:21,359 --> 00:25:23,800 Speaker 1: which I feel there just wasn't a whole lot of it, 506 00:25:24,080 --> 00:25:26,399 Speaker 1: which was because an hour end is really when you 507 00:25:26,440 --> 00:25:29,040 Speaker 1: get like the first piece of action. And the weird 508 00:25:29,119 --> 00:25:31,399 Speaker 1: part is I was never really bored with this movie, 509 00:25:31,680 --> 00:25:34,440 Speaker 1: but I was also never really fully engaged with what 510 00:25:34,480 --> 00:25:37,280 Speaker 1: was going on, mainly because sometimes I just wasn't really 511 00:25:37,320 --> 00:25:39,080 Speaker 1: aware of what was going on. I almost felt like 512 00:25:39,119 --> 00:25:41,800 Speaker 1: you needed somebody to pop out on the screen and 513 00:25:41,840 --> 00:25:44,159 Speaker 1: give you like little clipher notes of like, Okay, this 514 00:25:44,200 --> 00:25:46,119 Speaker 1: is what's happening right now, this is where they're going to, 515 00:25:46,600 --> 00:25:49,200 Speaker 1: this is what they're trying to do, here's the next scene. 516 00:25:49,440 --> 00:25:52,760 Speaker 1: And again I'll compare it to Star Wars of the 517 00:25:52,800 --> 00:25:55,440 Speaker 1: same thing. With the first Star Wars movie, they just 518 00:25:55,520 --> 00:25:58,560 Speaker 1: kind of put you into this world. They don't explain 519 00:25:58,560 --> 00:26:00,439 Speaker 1: a whole lot. You're just kind of in it, and 520 00:26:00,440 --> 00:26:02,720 Speaker 1: then you learned, you go and you accept everything for 521 00:26:02,760 --> 00:26:04,760 Speaker 1: what it is. But the other thing that Star Wars 522 00:26:04,840 --> 00:26:06,800 Speaker 1: does is one give you a lot of action leading 523 00:26:06,880 --> 00:26:09,320 Speaker 1: up to all those things, but it also just does 524 00:26:09,359 --> 00:26:12,160 Speaker 1: a better job of kind of explaining itself later on, 525 00:26:12,960 --> 00:26:15,720 Speaker 1: and you can still follow along with the plot of 526 00:26:15,720 --> 00:26:17,720 Speaker 1: the movie, you know what's going on. When I was 527 00:26:17,760 --> 00:26:21,000 Speaker 1: watching Dune, I found myself lost again and again. So 528 00:26:21,040 --> 00:26:24,160 Speaker 1: I think the easiest thing to say would be like, oh, 529 00:26:24,200 --> 00:26:27,000 Speaker 1: it was too long. I don't really think the runtime 530 00:26:27,000 --> 00:26:29,840 Speaker 1: itself took me out of this movie. It was the 531 00:26:29,840 --> 00:26:32,240 Speaker 1: pacing of this movie and then feeling like at an 532 00:26:32,240 --> 00:26:35,800 Speaker 1: hour end that that could have been entirely just contained, 533 00:26:35,840 --> 00:26:39,000 Speaker 1: like chopped in half and got to the action a 534 00:26:39,080 --> 00:26:40,840 Speaker 1: little bit more, got to the story a little bit more. 535 00:26:40,880 --> 00:26:44,120 Speaker 1: I just didn't feel like any characters were really developed 536 00:26:44,119 --> 00:26:47,520 Speaker 1: in that first hour. The story itself was just kind 537 00:26:47,520 --> 00:26:50,920 Speaker 1: of big and out there, and it wasn't really until 538 00:26:50,960 --> 00:26:53,679 Speaker 1: an hour and a half end that I was really like, Okay, 539 00:26:54,600 --> 00:26:57,480 Speaker 1: I'm into this a little bit. But then the movie 540 00:26:57,520 --> 00:27:00,320 Speaker 1: really abruptly ends and I won't ruin the ending by 541 00:27:00,320 --> 00:27:03,199 Speaker 1: any way, but it feels like once it starts getting good, 542 00:27:03,520 --> 00:27:05,679 Speaker 1: end of movie, and there's no word yet on if 543 00:27:05,680 --> 00:27:08,080 Speaker 1: they're doing a Dune too. But that goes back to 544 00:27:08,160 --> 00:27:10,520 Speaker 1: my feeling of, oh, they were really kind of setting 545 00:27:10,520 --> 00:27:13,520 Speaker 1: out to make this big epic movie on this major scale, 546 00:27:14,240 --> 00:27:17,360 Speaker 1: and having continuing on and on and on that they 547 00:27:17,359 --> 00:27:19,680 Speaker 1: were fine just leaving it at that, But I felt 548 00:27:19,680 --> 00:27:22,679 Speaker 1: a little bit ripped off at that point. Not only that, 549 00:27:22,720 --> 00:27:26,160 Speaker 1: but Zendo was only in this movie for about seven minutes, 550 00:27:26,880 --> 00:27:29,120 Speaker 1: which also really threw me off because she's been all 551 00:27:29,119 --> 00:27:31,200 Speaker 1: over the trailer, all over the press of this movie, 552 00:27:31,760 --> 00:27:34,320 Speaker 1: and she's barely in this movie. I could probably count 553 00:27:34,400 --> 00:27:37,040 Speaker 1: all her lines in this movie on both of my hands. 554 00:27:37,359 --> 00:27:40,080 Speaker 1: And while overall the movie does have a great cast, 555 00:27:40,440 --> 00:27:42,199 Speaker 1: I really feel like none of them really have a 556 00:27:42,320 --> 00:27:46,400 Speaker 1: chance to shine. Their characters aren't really that memorable. It's 557 00:27:46,400 --> 00:27:49,520 Speaker 1: a lot of just Timothy shallow May standing there looking 558 00:27:49,560 --> 00:27:52,040 Speaker 1: gallant into the sand with the wind blowing in his hair. 559 00:27:52,080 --> 00:27:53,720 Speaker 1: It's a lot of just close up shots of him, 560 00:27:53,760 --> 00:27:55,840 Speaker 1: and then people walking to meet these people they've never 561 00:27:55,880 --> 00:27:59,040 Speaker 1: met before. So I felt overall it just lacked a 562 00:27:59,040 --> 00:28:01,080 Speaker 1: lot of action, which I was looking for, and I 563 00:28:01,119 --> 00:28:03,440 Speaker 1: felt this movie just wasn't really for me. But if 564 00:28:03,480 --> 00:28:08,639 Speaker 1: you are really into big, epic sci fi movies, this 565 00:28:08,760 --> 00:28:11,880 Speaker 1: maybe the movie for you. Visually, it kind of felt 566 00:28:11,880 --> 00:28:14,240 Speaker 1: like if Kanye West were to make a movie, this 567 00:28:14,280 --> 00:28:16,320 Speaker 1: is what it would look like like. I really enjoyed 568 00:28:16,760 --> 00:28:20,000 Speaker 1: the overall color palette of this movie, with the dark blacks, 569 00:28:20,080 --> 00:28:23,760 Speaker 1: the grays, the tones of the sand, the weird powder 570 00:28:23,800 --> 00:28:25,840 Speaker 1: blue eye effect on some of the characters I thought 571 00:28:25,920 --> 00:28:28,240 Speaker 1: was cool, and the wardrobe It kind of feels like 572 00:28:28,280 --> 00:28:30,720 Speaker 1: a easy line to me. I also like the scenes 573 00:28:30,760 --> 00:28:33,280 Speaker 1: that took place at night, and while they were so dark, 574 00:28:33,480 --> 00:28:36,880 Speaker 1: you could still see everything perfectly defined, which I haven't 575 00:28:36,880 --> 00:28:39,600 Speaker 1: really seen the movie before of it being completely dark 576 00:28:39,680 --> 00:28:41,920 Speaker 1: but still being able to make out all the characters. 577 00:28:41,960 --> 00:28:44,200 Speaker 1: Like the lighting, and that was great. But if I'm 578 00:28:44,200 --> 00:28:47,280 Speaker 1: watching a movie and the biggest thing I can compliment 579 00:28:47,440 --> 00:28:50,160 Speaker 1: is the lighting, yeah, I probably didn't really love the movie, 580 00:28:50,240 --> 00:28:53,080 Speaker 1: so I would say within that first hour I was 581 00:28:53,080 --> 00:28:56,080 Speaker 1: going to rate this movie at one point five. By 582 00:28:56,120 --> 00:28:58,480 Speaker 1: the end of it, with it winning itself back a 583 00:28:58,520 --> 00:29:01,760 Speaker 1: little bit for me, with it finally gaining some traction 584 00:29:01,840 --> 00:29:05,560 Speaker 1: with some action in there, but that abrupt and really 585 00:29:05,640 --> 00:29:08,320 Speaker 1: kind of killed any other expectation I would have of 586 00:29:08,360 --> 00:29:11,080 Speaker 1: wanting to watch a second one. I would give Dune 587 00:29:11,360 --> 00:29:18,440 Speaker 1: two out of five grains of sand. All Right, I 588 00:29:18,480 --> 00:29:20,480 Speaker 1: tried this segment out for the first time last week. 589 00:29:20,560 --> 00:29:23,040 Speaker 1: Saw some pretty good response on this, so try and 590 00:29:23,080 --> 00:29:26,000 Speaker 1: get out officially. Now even have some intro music, So 591 00:29:26,520 --> 00:29:29,040 Speaker 1: let's see what we can do here. It's time to 592 00:29:29,240 --> 00:29:33,840 Speaker 1: head down to movie Paul. So what we do on 593 00:29:33,880 --> 00:29:36,320 Speaker 1: this segment is I break down some of the newest 594 00:29:36,320 --> 00:29:39,120 Speaker 1: trailers that came out over the last week. Some of 595 00:29:39,120 --> 00:29:41,200 Speaker 1: the things I'm most excited to see. Some of the 596 00:29:41,240 --> 00:29:45,280 Speaker 1: things I can't believe that they're being made. So let's 597 00:29:45,320 --> 00:29:48,160 Speaker 1: get into what came out this week. First up is 598 00:29:48,200 --> 00:29:51,160 Speaker 1: one I'm probably the most excited about. And I know 599 00:29:51,280 --> 00:29:53,320 Speaker 1: this show was way before my time, but I don't 600 00:29:53,360 --> 00:29:57,600 Speaker 1: think that matters. I Love Lucy had a significant impact 601 00:29:57,640 --> 00:30:00,600 Speaker 1: on my childhood because growing up, we didn't have a 602 00:30:00,600 --> 00:30:03,240 Speaker 1: whole lot. We didn't have cable, we didn't have satellite. 603 00:30:03,840 --> 00:30:06,640 Speaker 1: We had just the antenna and the TV and all 604 00:30:06,680 --> 00:30:09,080 Speaker 1: the channels you could pick up from that. And I 605 00:30:09,120 --> 00:30:12,520 Speaker 1: remember during the summer I would sit there probably from 606 00:30:12,520 --> 00:30:15,280 Speaker 1: when I woke up in the morning or sometimes late 607 00:30:15,320 --> 00:30:19,400 Speaker 1: afternoon and just watch anything. And I remember I Love Lucy. 608 00:30:19,440 --> 00:30:21,320 Speaker 1: There was always like a block of it that would 609 00:30:21,320 --> 00:30:24,680 Speaker 1: come on some random channel towards the end of the 610 00:30:24,760 --> 00:30:27,320 Speaker 1: channels that we could get on that thing, and I 611 00:30:27,360 --> 00:30:30,200 Speaker 1: would sit there and watch hours of I Love Lucy 612 00:30:30,360 --> 00:30:36,160 Speaker 1: every single day. And I've probably seen, of course, all 613 00:30:36,160 --> 00:30:39,040 Speaker 1: the classic episodes. I probably fell off in the later 614 00:30:39,120 --> 00:30:41,400 Speaker 1: years to where they moved away, were in a different house. 615 00:30:41,760 --> 00:30:44,080 Speaker 1: I think at one point it was just Lucy and Ethel, 616 00:30:44,480 --> 00:30:46,480 Speaker 1: But I think I Love Lucy is one of the 617 00:30:46,480 --> 00:30:49,880 Speaker 1: most iconic comedies of all time, like just straight up 618 00:30:49,920 --> 00:30:53,600 Speaker 1: comedic elements and anything that came out of during that time, 619 00:30:54,280 --> 00:30:56,520 Speaker 1: Like it was a huge hit. And not only that, 620 00:30:56,600 --> 00:30:59,320 Speaker 1: it's a show that I could watch with my parents, 621 00:30:59,400 --> 00:31:03,800 Speaker 1: who English isn't their first language. They primarily still speak Spanish. 622 00:31:04,160 --> 00:31:07,360 Speaker 1: But when you're watching I Love Lucy, that really doesn't 623 00:31:07,400 --> 00:31:11,120 Speaker 1: matter because all of the comedy, some of it is slapstick, 624 00:31:11,200 --> 00:31:16,760 Speaker 1: some of it is just like very physical lucile balls, 625 00:31:16,840 --> 00:31:20,000 Speaker 1: just facial expressions are funny enough that even if you 626 00:31:20,040 --> 00:31:22,920 Speaker 1: don't understand exactly what's going on exactly what is being said. 627 00:31:23,040 --> 00:31:25,680 Speaker 1: It is a funny show. So I am excited for 628 00:31:25,720 --> 00:31:29,280 Speaker 1: this new movie coming out on Amazon starring Nicole Kidman. 629 00:31:29,640 --> 00:31:33,000 Speaker 1: Comes out in theaters on December and on Amazon on 630 00:31:33,080 --> 00:31:36,440 Speaker 1: December one. Here's just a little bit of the being 631 00:31:36,440 --> 00:31:40,000 Speaker 1: the Ricardo's trailer. I work side by side with my husband, 632 00:31:40,040 --> 00:31:44,880 Speaker 1: who was genuinely impressed by me, and all I have 633 00:31:44,960 --> 00:31:47,360 Speaker 1: to do to keep it is killed for thirty six 634 00:31:47,400 --> 00:31:52,640 Speaker 1: weeks into roup and then do it again the next year. 635 00:31:52,800 --> 00:31:54,920 Speaker 1: It's a pretty quick little teaser. You don't even get 636 00:31:54,920 --> 00:31:57,560 Speaker 1: to see a whole lot of Nicole Kidman in that surprisingly, 637 00:31:58,120 --> 00:32:02,080 Speaker 1: but you have Javier Bardam also who plays Desi Arnez. 638 00:32:02,480 --> 00:32:05,600 Speaker 1: And this movie has been in work since so I'm 639 00:32:05,600 --> 00:32:07,960 Speaker 1: excited for this one to finally come out, finally see 640 00:32:08,000 --> 00:32:09,880 Speaker 1: the light of day. And I did see a little 641 00:32:09,880 --> 00:32:14,840 Speaker 1: bit of controversy surrounding the casting of Nicole Kidman as 642 00:32:14,920 --> 00:32:17,640 Speaker 1: Lucille Ball, and some people were saying that Deborah Messing 643 00:32:17,720 --> 00:32:20,360 Speaker 1: should have been cast as Lucille Ball because she looks 644 00:32:20,640 --> 00:32:23,320 Speaker 1: a lot more like her. And what I have to 645 00:32:23,360 --> 00:32:25,600 Speaker 1: say about that, I don't think when you make a 646 00:32:25,600 --> 00:32:28,680 Speaker 1: biopic like this that the idea is to find somebody 647 00:32:28,720 --> 00:32:32,360 Speaker 1: who resembles them the most. I think at the core 648 00:32:32,440 --> 00:32:34,320 Speaker 1: of this what you want is somebody who has the 649 00:32:34,360 --> 00:32:37,600 Speaker 1: acting ability to capture the person they are trying to portray. 650 00:32:38,000 --> 00:32:40,600 Speaker 1: It doesn't really matter exactly what they look like to 651 00:32:40,680 --> 00:32:42,840 Speaker 1: me anyway. Like when I go back and watch movies 652 00:32:42,880 --> 00:32:45,120 Speaker 1: like Walk the Line, I don't think what Keen Phoenix 653 00:32:45,160 --> 00:32:48,000 Speaker 1: looks like Johnny Cash or Reese Witherspoon looks like June 654 00:32:48,000 --> 00:32:50,360 Speaker 1: Carter Cash, but I think they were the best actors 655 00:32:50,400 --> 00:32:53,080 Speaker 1: to play those parts. And while Debra Messing is a 656 00:32:53,120 --> 00:32:55,360 Speaker 1: great actor in the Room right, I don't think just 657 00:32:55,440 --> 00:32:58,000 Speaker 1: because she looks the most like her she deserves the role. 658 00:32:58,200 --> 00:33:00,920 Speaker 1: Nicole Kidman has really proven her self again and again, 659 00:33:01,000 --> 00:33:04,040 Speaker 1: not only in movies but recently in TV shows that 660 00:33:04,160 --> 00:33:06,720 Speaker 1: she has the ability to take roles to a whole, 661 00:33:06,920 --> 00:33:11,280 Speaker 1: entirely different level. She has that range, and through costumes 662 00:33:11,280 --> 00:33:14,240 Speaker 1: and makeup, you can really make her look like Lucile Ball. 663 00:33:14,360 --> 00:33:16,200 Speaker 1: So I think she is the perfect choice for this, 664 00:33:16,400 --> 00:33:18,560 Speaker 1: and that's why I'm excited to see this movie. Up 665 00:33:18,600 --> 00:33:21,280 Speaker 1: next in the trailer park is a movie called Ambulance 666 00:33:21,320 --> 00:33:24,240 Speaker 1: starring Jake Jillen Hall, who I just watched in the 667 00:33:24,280 --> 00:33:27,080 Speaker 1: Guilty and the thing I love about this trailer is 668 00:33:27,120 --> 00:33:30,120 Speaker 1: that it literally shows the entire movie and the trailer 669 00:33:30,240 --> 00:33:33,600 Speaker 1: so here's just a little bit of that. You are 670 00:33:34,000 --> 00:33:36,440 Speaker 1: gonna have the greatest story to tell Atton to night 671 00:33:40,240 --> 00:33:57,400 Speaker 1: shoot it, block everything down, nothing gets out. So that 672 00:33:57,440 --> 00:34:00,400 Speaker 1: movie comes out on February. It's a direct did buy 673 00:34:00,400 --> 00:34:03,720 Speaker 1: Michael Bay, and it really looks like a Michael Bay movie. 674 00:34:03,760 --> 00:34:06,520 Speaker 1: Big explosions, big action, and sometimes you just need a 675 00:34:06,560 --> 00:34:09,080 Speaker 1: movie like this, You just need a kind of by 676 00:34:09,080 --> 00:34:11,200 Speaker 1: the book. You know exactly what's going to happen in 677 00:34:11,239 --> 00:34:14,680 Speaker 1: the movie, but if it's done the right way, it's 678 00:34:14,680 --> 00:34:17,560 Speaker 1: a great popcorn movie. It's just funny to me when 679 00:34:17,600 --> 00:34:20,400 Speaker 1: a trailer literally shows the entire movie. If you go 680 00:34:20,440 --> 00:34:23,520 Speaker 1: watch this trailer for yourself, you know exactly what's happens. 681 00:34:23,600 --> 00:34:26,440 Speaker 1: Is these two guys make this plot to rob a bank. 682 00:34:26,760 --> 00:34:29,319 Speaker 1: They get to the bank, pulling people hostage in there, 683 00:34:29,560 --> 00:34:32,200 Speaker 1: and then an officer comes in. They let him in, 684 00:34:32,440 --> 00:34:35,160 Speaker 1: he gets shot. They throw him in an ambulance to escape, 685 00:34:35,360 --> 00:34:37,719 Speaker 1: trying to keep him alive. They have an actual paramedic 686 00:34:37,840 --> 00:34:40,880 Speaker 1: in there with them. There's probably this whole moral dilemma 687 00:34:41,000 --> 00:34:43,640 Speaker 1: on do they let the cop live Andy were't supposed 688 00:34:43,640 --> 00:34:45,440 Speaker 1: to shoot him to begin with, And then you have 689 00:34:45,520 --> 00:34:48,920 Speaker 1: the paramedic and they are probably trying to escape and 690 00:34:48,960 --> 00:34:51,480 Speaker 1: save her own life. And get this, like all these 691 00:34:51,520 --> 00:34:53,600 Speaker 1: things you can see from the trailer. So it may 692 00:34:53,640 --> 00:34:56,120 Speaker 1: sound like I've already seen this movie and I'm ruining 693 00:34:56,160 --> 00:34:58,719 Speaker 1: it for you, but that's exactly what the trailer is. 694 00:34:59,040 --> 00:35:01,520 Speaker 1: So if you want to save yourself the money, you 695 00:35:01,560 --> 00:35:03,279 Speaker 1: want to see this movie now, just go check out 696 00:35:03,320 --> 00:35:06,640 Speaker 1: the trailer. And then finally in the trailer park, they 697 00:35:06,680 --> 00:35:10,759 Speaker 1: released the international trailer for Ghostbusters Afterlife. This comes out 698 00:35:10,800 --> 00:35:13,200 Speaker 1: on November and here's just a little bit of that 699 00:35:13,239 --> 00:35:17,359 Speaker 1: new trailer. What exactly is happening here? So you need 700 00:35:17,400 --> 00:35:31,719 Speaker 1: to finish with our grandfather starting. So this movie was 701 00:35:31,719 --> 00:35:34,160 Speaker 1: already supposed to be out and now we're less than 702 00:35:34,200 --> 00:35:36,120 Speaker 1: a month away from it. But for the first time, 703 00:35:36,120 --> 00:35:39,560 Speaker 1: in this trailer, I see some callbacks to the original movie. 704 00:35:39,880 --> 00:35:42,560 Speaker 1: There's a part where Paul Red's character is being swarmed 705 00:35:42,600 --> 00:35:45,759 Speaker 1: by a flock of these miniature stay Puff Marshmallowman, and 706 00:35:45,760 --> 00:35:47,879 Speaker 1: then there's one scene where he's being chased by one 707 00:35:47,880 --> 00:35:49,960 Speaker 1: of the terror dogs from the original. So I kind 708 00:35:49,960 --> 00:35:52,920 Speaker 1: of like that they're just bringing in elements from the 709 00:35:52,920 --> 00:35:55,920 Speaker 1: original Ghostbusters into this, but it kind of feels like 710 00:35:55,960 --> 00:35:58,080 Speaker 1: it's going to be its own movie on its own, 711 00:35:58,520 --> 00:36:01,520 Speaker 1: like not focus so heavily on the back story or 712 00:36:01,520 --> 00:36:03,600 Speaker 1: anything that came from that movie, aside from the fact 713 00:36:03,719 --> 00:36:06,319 Speaker 1: that it's the grand Kids kind of take get on now. 714 00:36:06,680 --> 00:36:09,040 Speaker 1: So it's Paul Rudd playing the teacher who is helping 715 00:36:09,080 --> 00:36:11,560 Speaker 1: these kids try to save the world. So I think 716 00:36:11,560 --> 00:36:14,640 Speaker 1: that Everybody Interesting comes out on November eight, So that's 717 00:36:14,680 --> 00:36:17,200 Speaker 1: the episode for this week. But before I hop out 718 00:36:17,200 --> 00:36:19,080 Speaker 1: of here, every single week I shout out to one 719 00:36:19,080 --> 00:36:22,120 Speaker 1: of you who sends me a tweet on Instagram, an 720 00:36:22,120 --> 00:36:24,759 Speaker 1: email movie like d a Gmail dot com, or a 721 00:36:24,800 --> 00:36:28,120 Speaker 1: tweet at Mike d stro just as a way to 722 00:36:28,160 --> 00:36:30,160 Speaker 1: thank you guys for listening and know that I do 723 00:36:30,280 --> 00:36:32,600 Speaker 1: check all those emails. I do check all those messages. 724 00:36:32,760 --> 00:36:34,960 Speaker 1: I love it when you interact with the podcast. I 725 00:36:35,000 --> 00:36:37,480 Speaker 1: honestly think that's what makes this the most fun to do. 726 00:36:37,920 --> 00:36:40,120 Speaker 1: So I actually have a d m from Paula on 727 00:36:40,200 --> 00:36:42,719 Speaker 1: Instagram who is a fan of the podcast and would 728 00:36:42,760 --> 00:36:44,799 Speaker 1: like me to share some of funny scary movies to 729 00:36:44,800 --> 00:36:47,640 Speaker 1: watch on Halloween, was just talking about Ghostbusters. I think 730 00:36:47,680 --> 00:36:50,120 Speaker 1: that's a great one. One of my favorites though, is 731 00:36:50,200 --> 00:36:54,120 Speaker 1: Idle Hands from It's a movie I still randomly quote 732 00:36:54,160 --> 00:36:57,080 Speaker 1: has that kind of teen slasher vibeu say it's a 733 00:36:57,160 --> 00:37:00,920 Speaker 1: hand killing everybody, so kind of a stoner horror comedy. 734 00:37:01,200 --> 00:37:03,480 Speaker 1: But of course they're shot at the dead. The o 735 00:37:03,640 --> 00:37:07,399 Speaker 1: G scary movie, the first one, and then also Zombie Land. 736 00:37:07,440 --> 00:37:08,920 Speaker 1: I think that was all kind of fall in that 737 00:37:08,960 --> 00:37:11,480 Speaker 1: funny scary movie category. If you don't watch any if 738 00:37:11,480 --> 00:37:13,520 Speaker 1: you're not really looking to watch anything scary, you just 739 00:37:13,600 --> 00:37:15,279 Speaker 1: kind of want something funny to have on, maybe in 740 00:37:15,320 --> 00:37:17,480 Speaker 1: the background at a Halloween party. I would go with 741 00:37:17,560 --> 00:37:20,760 Speaker 1: Idle Hands. So thanks again for listening to another episode 742 00:37:20,760 --> 00:37:23,799 Speaker 1: of the podcast. If you're listening on Apple Podcasts, and 743 00:37:23,800 --> 00:37:25,279 Speaker 1: if you haven't done this yet, you can leave a 744 00:37:25,320 --> 00:37:28,319 Speaker 1: five star rating right a quick little review, because that 745 00:37:28,360 --> 00:37:31,319 Speaker 1: really helps me out kind of battling out all the 746 00:37:31,360 --> 00:37:34,440 Speaker 1: other TV and movie podcast so I would appreciate that. 747 00:37:34,680 --> 00:37:37,440 Speaker 1: I hope you have a great Halloween this year. If 748 00:37:37,480 --> 00:37:40,520 Speaker 1: you're wondering what I'm dressing up as, the answer is nothing. 749 00:37:40,600 --> 00:37:42,680 Speaker 1: As much as I love horror movies as much as 750 00:37:42,719 --> 00:37:45,080 Speaker 1: I love getting into the spirit of Halloween and talking 751 00:37:45,120 --> 00:37:47,479 Speaker 1: about it, I never really liked dressing up. I guess 752 00:37:47,520 --> 00:37:49,960 Speaker 1: as a kid never had money for like a cool costume. 753 00:37:50,400 --> 00:37:53,040 Speaker 1: I would just go to the dollar store and get 754 00:37:53,120 --> 00:37:55,640 Speaker 1: like a tube of blood and spray it like on 755 00:37:55,640 --> 00:37:58,080 Speaker 1: an old white T shirt that I no longer needed. 756 00:37:58,239 --> 00:38:00,279 Speaker 1: That was kind of the extent of my hallow Qeen 757 00:38:00,360 --> 00:38:02,640 Speaker 1: costumes as a kid and as an adult, I just 758 00:38:02,719 --> 00:38:04,840 Speaker 1: never really got into it. So I won't be dressing 759 00:38:04,920 --> 00:38:07,000 Speaker 1: up this year. My wife and I will be handing 760 00:38:07,000 --> 00:38:09,840 Speaker 1: out some candy and I may convince her to watch 761 00:38:09,840 --> 00:38:12,720 Speaker 1: a horror movie with me. But those are my Halloween plans. 762 00:38:12,760 --> 00:38:14,319 Speaker 1: I hope you have a great one, have a great 763 00:38:14,360 --> 00:38:16,759 Speaker 1: rest of your week, and until next week, which we'll 764 00:38:16,760 --> 00:38:18,840 Speaker 1: get off horror movies and do a whole new topic. 765 00:38:19,120 --> 00:38:20,640 Speaker 1: I'll talk to you later.