Purple Rain (1984) episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 22, 2026 · 1H 4M

Purple Rain (1984)

from the Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast · host TruStory FM

Dearly Beloved, We Are Gathered Here to Talk About Purple Rain Welcome to this episode of The Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast. Hosts Krissy Lenz (comedian and director at Neighborhood Comedy Theatre) and Nathan Blackwell (independent filmmaker at Squishy Studios) are joined this week by not one but two returning special guests—podcaster and writer Kyle Olson and podcast producer and improv impresario Pete Wright—to dig into one of the most electric, beguiling, and undeniably Prince films ever committed to celluloid: Purple Rain (1984).Neither Krissy nor Nathan had ever seen the movie before this episode—a confession that earns them some gentle ribbing from the two superfans across the table. What unfolds is a warm, funny, and genuinely insightful conversation about Prince as performer, The Kid as character, and what it means to watch a film that is less a story and more a time capsule from another world.🎸 The Concert Film That Got a Plot Attached to ItThe group quickly zeroes in on Purple Rain's greatest paradox: the performances are absolutely transcendent—opening on Let's Go Crazy, arguably one of the greatest concert openers in film history—while the story threading them together is, as Pete diplomatically puts it, a little rough around the edges. Kyle suggests there may exist a perfect 50-minute cut of this film that is simply the greatest concert film ever made. The consensus? Every time the band steps off stage, the movie struggles; every time they step back on, it soars.Pete brings essential context: Purple Rain was a massive cultural moment in 1984, released the same summer as Ghostbusters, and it landed especially hard for Minneapolis audiences who recognized First Avenue and Hennepin Avenue as their own streets, their own stomping grounds. Kyle—who lived in the Twin Cities from 2000 to 2010—had visited First Avenue many times without realizing he was standing in the house that Prince built. This film is a time capsule of a city and a singular artist in full ascent.👊 The Kid Is Kind of a Jerk—and That's Kind of the PointOne of the episode's richest threads is the group wrestling with the fact that Prince plays The Kid—a fictionalized character adjacent to his real life—and The Kid treats nearly everyone around him badly. Krissy notes that she kept waiting for more of the film to show Prince's creative genius on screen the way the music does; instead, we get a young man repeating cycles of trauma and slowly, reluctantly, learning to let others in.Pete makes a fascinating observation: despite Prince being the architect of essentially every creative element in the film—the bands, the songs, the image—he chose to let himself look genuinely bad on screen. That's not a vanity project move. It's something closer to art. The comparison to Eight Mile and Saturday Night Fever arises naturally: all three are films about someone with enormous talent trying to escape the gravitational pull of a difficult past.🎭 Morris Day, Jerome, and the Movie Inside the MovieNo discussion of Purple Rain would be complete without celebrating Morris Day and Jerome Benton, who the hosts agree feel like they wandered in from a much sillier, more vaudevillian film—and are absolutely electric every second they're on screen. Their onstage charisma is unmatched, their comedic chemistry reads as completely natural, and somewhere in the multiverse, per Nathan, there exists a Morris Day and the Time's Big Adventure that we all deserve to see.🎵 A Few More Things Worth Knowing Before You ListenThe group's scale for rating films this episode? Poofy white shirts—on a scale of one to ten.The synchronized choreography in the concert scenes sparks a delightful tangent about the continuum from the Temptations and Four Tops all the way to boy bands—and what was lost in between.Pete drops some genuinely surprising trivia about the iconic custom guitar Apollonia gives The Kid, where it was made, and where the last one lives today.The hosts discuss the original female lead who was meant to star opposite Prince—and the behind-the-scenes reason she didn't.Krissy shares a deeply personal and tearful moment involving the Stranger Things finale and two very specific Prince songs played at two very emotional moments.🎬 The VerdictAll four hosts land at seven poofy white shirts out of ten. The film is imperfect, occasionally baffling, and unmistakably of its moment—but Prince is Prince. Krissy sums it up perfectly: even the things she didn't like, she liked that she didn't like them. This is a movie that earns its place in the conversation, not because it's great cinema, but because it's a genuinely unrepeatable cultural artifact. And the music? The music is flawless, full stop.🎁 Bonus Content for MembersThis week's member bonus is a juicy one: all four hosts share their most epic superfan blowout stories—times they threw caution (and travel budgets) to the wind to follow an artist or experience something completely over the top but absolutely justified. Kyle and Pete's trip to the world premiere of the Purple Rain musical in Minnesota is just the beginning. Members get every episode a week early, ad-free, plus exclusive bonus content like this. Join at trustory.fm/join.💬 Have a Listen and Let Us Know:If you've ever watched Purple Rain, did you find yourself rooting for The Kid even when he was being insufferable? And if you haven't seen it—are you more of a first-time viewer like Krissy and Nathan, or a lifelong Prince devotee like Kyle and Pete? Come find us and tell us where you land.📻 Find the Show & ConnectLearn more about The Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast and the TruStory FM network at trustory.fm.Follow and chat with us on social media:FacebookInstagramBlueskyLearn more about your hosts at Neighborhood Comedy Theatre and Squishy Studios.Be excellent to each other—and party on! ---Learn more about supporting this podcast by becoming a member. It's just $5/month or $55/year. Visit our website to learn more.

Dearly Beloved, We Are Gathered Here to Talk About Purple Rain Welcome to this episode of The Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast. Hosts Krissy Lenz (comedian and director at Neighborhood Comedy Theatre) and Nathan Blackwell (independent filmmaker at Squishy Studios) are joined this week by not one but two returning special guests—podcaster and writer Kyle Olson and podcast producer and improv impresario Pete Wright—to dig into one of the most electric, beguiling, and undeniably Prince films ever committed to celluloid: Purple Rain (1984).Neither Krissy nor Nathan had ever seen the movie before this episode—a confession that earns them some gentle ribbing from the two superfans across the table. What unfolds is a warm, funny, and genuinely insightful conversation about Prince as performer, The Kid as character, and what it means to watch a film that is less a story and more a time capsule from another world.🎸 The Concert Film That Got a Plot Attached to ItThe group quickly zeroes in on Purple Rain's greatest paradox: the performances are absolutely transcendent—opening on Let's Go Crazy, arguably one of the greatest concert openers in film history—while the story threading them together is, as Pete diplomatically puts it, a little rough around the edges. Kyle suggests there may exist a perfect 50-minute cut of this film that is simply the greatest concert film ever made. The consensus? Every time the band steps off stage, the movie struggles; every time they step back on, it soars.Pete brings essential context: Purple Rain was a massive cultural moment in 1984, released the same summer as Ghostbusters, and it landed especially hard for Minneapolis audiences who recognized First Avenue and Hennepin Avenue as their own streets, their own stomping grounds. Kyle—who lived in the Twin Cities from 2000 to 2010—had visited First Avenue many times without realizing he was standing in the house that Prince built. This film is a time capsule of a city and a singular artist in full ascent.👊 The Kid Is Kind of a Jerk—and That's Kind of the PointOne of the episode's richest threads is the group wrestling with the fact that Prince plays The Kid—a fictionalized character adjacent to his real life—and The Kid treats nearly everyone around him badly. Krissy notes that she kept waiting for more of the film to show Prince's creative genius on screen the way the music does; instead, we get a young man repeating cycles of trauma and slowly, reluctantly, learning to let others in.Pete makes a fascinating observation: despite Prince being the architect of essentially every creative element in the film—the bands, the songs, the image—he chose to let himself look genuinely bad on screen. That's not a vanity project move. It's something closer to art. The comparison to Eight Mile and Saturday Night Fever arises naturally: all three are films about someone with enormous talent trying to escape the gravitational pull of a difficult past.🎭 Morris Day, Jerome, and the Movie Inside the MovieNo discussion of Purple Rain would be complete without celebrating Morris Day and Jerome Benton, who the hosts agree feel like they wandered in from a much sillier, more vaudevillian film—and are absolutely electric every second they're on screen. Their onstage charisma is unmatched, their comedic chemistry reads as completely natural, and somewhere in the multiverse, per Nathan, there exists a Morris Day and the Time's Big Adventure that we all deserve to see.🎵 A Few More Things Worth Knowing Before You ListenThe group's scale for rating films this episode? Poofy white shirts—on a scale of one to ten.The synchronized choreography in the concert scenes sparks a delightful tangent about the continuum from the Temptations and Four Tops all the way to boy bands—and what was lost in between.Pete drops some genuinely surprising trivia about the iconic custom guitar Apollonia gives The Kid, where it was made, and where the last one lives...

NOW PLAYING

Purple Rain (1984)

0:00 1:04:10

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Big Old Life: Heather Blackbird interviews people on planet earth. Heather Blackbird loves asking questions. This podcast is a learning experience. Join me, Heather Blackbird, as I talk to people about their lives. Frequency of new episodes is a little all over the place and I'm learning as I go. Big Old Life is a small way of talking about the vastness of life, one person at a time. If you are reading this or found this podcast it's probably because someone you know gave you a link to it. :) Explicit Tales Of A Superstar DJ The Insomniac Spun seemingly out of nowhere from her complacent life in the corporate world, turned seemingly overnight from 16-Hour shift work and into the life of a literally starving artist and working musician, The Protagonist navigates her supposed rise to fame and superstardom on a journey through spiritual awakening, coming-of-age, and intimate self-realization--guided by an omnipresent force and equipped with the power of love, magic, and music. {Enter The Multiverse.} [The Festival Project] The Festival Project, Inc.™ is a multidimensional multimedia platform which encompasses exploratory and artistic social personifications and expressions on cosmic theory, spirituality, growth, health & wellness, philosophy and theoretic dynamics in entertainment such as music, design, film, television, radio, dance and festival culture, art, fashion, literature, and science. The Festival Project™ and its subsidiary Non-Profit, The Collective Complex © aims to challenge modern artistic and philosop Explicit Bitcoin Is Dead Trey Carson Welcome to Bitcoin is Dead, the ultimate Bitcoin variety show where host Trey takes you on a journey through the ever-evolving world of Bitcoin. Each episode brings new personalities, fascinating locations, and insightful conversations with politicians, educators, and innovators shaping the future of Bitcoin. Whether you're a seasoned Bitcoiner or just starting your journey, tune in for thought-provoking discussions, unique perspectives, and a deep dive into the ideas and people driving the Bitcoin revolution. Explicit The Sacred +Profane Podcast nephtaragrace The Sacred + Profane Podcast is a provocative conversation dedicated to cementing a better future for all. We specialize in unpacking the nuances of what is considered sacred and profane, particularly focusing on sex, death, and all that pertains to the circle of life. Our aim in focusing on such ”taboo” subject matter is to demystify what is unconscious, bring to light what has been known for centuries as ”the occult,” and empower the rapid transformation that is occurring on the Planet. Explicit

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of the Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast?

This episode is 1 hour and 4 minutes long.

When was this the Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast episode published?

This episode was published on April 22, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Dearly Beloved, We Are Gathered Here to Talk About Purple Rain Welcome to this episode of The Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast. Hosts Krissy Lenz (comedian and director at Neighborhood Comedy Theatre) and Nathan Blackwell (independent filmmaker at...

Is there a transcript available for this episode?

Yes, a full transcript is available for this episode. You can read the complete transcript on the episode page.

Can I download this the Most Excellent 80s Movies Podcast episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!