Karen review – Karen is going to hate this movie
We all know what a Karen is: a loud, nosy, extremely entitled white lady who has never been asked to live outside of her comfort
Hamnet – Now available on 4K UHD, Blu-Ray, DVD, and Digital
How to Make a Killing – another enjoyable lark from Glen Powell
Charli XCX Double Feature: The Moment and Wuthering Heights
I Like to Movie Movie episode 278 – LABYRINTH w/ Mo (It’s her favorite movie)
January Roundup: Mercy, Shelter, and The Wrecking Crew
Book review: Tom’s Crossing – a dense, immensely satisfying western
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple – weird, audacious horror filmmaking at its very best
I Like to Movie Movie episode 277 – The Best Movie Movies of 2025
Greenland 2: Migration – blandly going where many films have gone before
Dead Man’s Wire – A sturdy, unremarkable true crime tale
We all know what a Karen is: a loud, nosy, extremely entitled white lady who has never been asked to live outside of her comfort
’m on vacation, which means I didn’t have time to write and record a classic episode and also I was drunk BUT since I love
One needn’t ever have seen the original Candyman to know of its mythology. The basics are the stuff of spooky sleepover lore: Say “Candyman” into
We flex our knowledge of Presidents from the GET, and then we do the MONSTER MASH. Stephen goes DOWN UNDAH for a snack. Why are
I get the feeling most people aren’t going to like Reminiscence. It’s kinda all over the place tonally, and certain things happen that strain credulity
There is an extremely well designed scare in The Night House that I can’t seem to shake. It’s not a jump scare, nor is it
Comedian and former Super Crappy co-host Kevin Lau (not Kevin Hart) loves The Village. After hearing another podcast talk shit on it, he’s finally had
This one starts out a little dark, but we also talk about a lot of food. We finally hear audio of Dan’s drunk day out.
**Originally published at Phindie** Annette is absolutely preposterous. It’s exactly the type of thing that I’d dismiss as being super pretentious if it weren’t so
The story behind The Suicide Squad (the movie, not the squad itself) is one of those odd, childish pieces of contemporary culture that seems increasingly