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Regular or Menthol: Kino Movies Podcast

Regular or Menthol is a weekly movie podcast where hosts Chris and Mike dig into the subtleties of "kino" — the films, scenes, and performances they think are worth obsessing over. Each episode picks apart a single movie, ranging from heavy hitters like Apocalypse Now and American Psycho to cult oddities like Gleaming the Cube and Face/Off. The vibe is loose, funny, and irreverent — full of tangents about absurd plot mechanics and the kind of rewatch-energy commentary that feels like hanging out with two movie-obsessed friends.

  1. 56

    The Rover (2014)

    Buckle up — this week we’re diving headfirst into the dusty, lawless wasteland of The Rover — the bleak, slow-burning Australian neo-western that pairs raw survival with haunting minimalism. Directed by David Michôd (of Animal Kingdom fame), this isn’t your typical post-apocalyptic thrill ride — it’s a stark, emotionally charged journey through a collapsed world where trust is scarce and morality is even scarcer.Set in a near-future Australia following economic collapse, the film follows Eric (Guy Pearce), a hardened drifter whose car is stolen by a gang of criminals. What unfolds is a relentless pursuit across barren landscapes, joined by the gang’s abandoned and wounded member Rey (Robert Pattinson), delivering a career-defining performance that strips away any lingering Twilight expectations. Together, they form an uneasy alliance in a world where survival often outweighs humanity.We’re breaking down everything: the film’s haunting atmosphere, its stripped-down storytelling, and how its quiet intensity sets it apart from traditional dystopian films. We also explore Pattinson’s transformative performance, Pearce’s cold, calculating presence, and the film’s deeper themes of loyalty, isolation, and moral ambiguity in a broken society.Is The Rover an underrated modern classic, or is its bleak tone too unforgiving for mainstream audiences? How does it compare to other post-apocalyptic films like Mad Max? And what makes its minimal dialogue and raw performances so impactful?Whether you’re a fan of gritty character studies, indie cinema, or unsettling dystopian worlds — this episode delivers a powerful, thought-provoking ride into one of the most overlooked films of the 2010s.Topics covered: The Rover 2014 | Robert Pattinson performance | Guy Pearce films | David Michôd | post-apocalyptic movies | Australian cinema | dystopian films | indie film analysis | slow burn movies | neo-western films | survival movies | A24 style films | minimalist storytelling | dark character studies | underrated films | movie review podcast | film breakdown | modern cult classicsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: would you survive in The Rover’s world?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  2. 55

    BMX Bandits (1983)

    Hold onto your handlebars. This week we’re hitting the streets for BMX Bandits (1983) — the sun-soaked Australian cult classic that turned bike riding into a full-blown adventure and introduced the world to a young Nicole Kidman before Hollywood came calling. This isn’t just a kids’ movie — it’s a time capsule of 80s energy, DIY thrills, and pure, pedal-powered chaos.Directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith, the film follows three Sydney teens — P.J., Goose, and Judy — who stumble upon a stash of stolen police radios and quickly find themselves tangled in a cat-and-mouse game with bumbling bank robbers. What starts as a carefree day of riding turns into a high-speed chase across beaches, construction sites, and suburban streets, with BMX bikes as the ultimate getaway vehicles.We’re breaking down everything: the film’s scrappy charm, its inventive (and sometimes hilariously low-budget) action sequences, and how it captures a very specific moment in 80s youth culture when BMX wasn’t just a hobby — it was a lifestyle. We also dive into Nicole Kidman’s early performance, the movie’s unexpected legacy, and why it continues to resonate as a cult favorite decades later.Is BMX Bandits just nostalgic fun, or does it deserve more credit as a formative adventure film? How does it stack up against other 80s kid-led action movies? And what makes its blend of innocence and danger so rewatchable?Whether you grew up riding bikes until the streetlights came on, love discovering cult classics, or just want a dose of feel-good, high-energy filmmaking — this episode is worth the ride.Topics covered: BMX Bandits 1983 | Nicole Kidman early roles | 80s adventure movies | BMX culture | Australian cinema | cult classic films | kids action movies | coming of age films | Brian Trenchard-Smith | 1980s nostalgia | practical stunts | bike chase scenes | family adventure films | underrated 80s movies | movie review podcast | film analysis | childhood adventure movies | cult film discoveriesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: are you more P.J., Goose, or Judy?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  3. 54

    In Bruges (2008)

    This week we’re heading to the cobblestone streets of In Bruges — Martin McDonagh’s darkly hilarious and unexpectedly heartfelt crime tale that blends sharp wit with existential dread. Equal parts comedy, tragedy, and character study, In Bruges turns a picturesque Belgian city into the backdrop for guilt, redemption, and some very bad decisions.In Bruges follows two Irish hitmen, Ray (Colin Farrell) and Ken (Brendan Gleeson), who are sent to lay low in the medieval city of Bruges after a job goes horribly wrong. While Ken embraces the city’s quiet beauty and history, Ray spirals into guilt and boredom—until their volatile boss Harry (Ralph Fiennes) arrives with orders that force both men to confront morality, loyalty, and their own sense of right and wrong.We’re diving into everything: McDonagh’s razor-sharp dialogue and pitch-perfect balance of humor and violence, the film’s use of Bruges as both a literal and symbolic setting, and how it shifts effortlessly between laugh-out-loud comedy and gut-punch drama. We’ll break down Farrell’s career-defining performance, Gleeson’s quiet emotional core, and Fiennes’ explosive, scene-stealing turn as one of cinema’s most unpredictable crime bosses.Plus, we explore the film’s deeper themes — guilt, redemption, morality, and the search for meaning in a world that often feels absurd.Was In Bruges an instant cult classic, or has its reputation grown over time? How does it compare to other dark comedies in the crime genre? And where does it rank among the best films of the 2000s?Whether you’re a fan of dark humor, character-driven storytelling, or films that make you laugh and reflect in equal measure, this episode is for you.Topics covered: Martin McDonagh direction | In Bruges analysis | Colin Farrell performance | Brendan Gleeson character study | Ralph Fiennes performance | dark comedy films | crime drama themes | guilt and redemption in film | Bruges setting symbolism | cult classic movies | hitman stories | dialogue-driven filmsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: is In Bruges more comedy or tragedy?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  4. 53

    Nightcrawler (2014)

    You gotta watch the city—and know what sells. This week, we’re chasing the story into the night with Nightcrawler (2014) — the slick, disturbing, neon-soaked thriller that turns ambition into something predatory. If you’ve ever wondered how far someone will go to get ahead, this is the movie that answers: all the way.Directed and written by Dan Gilroy, the film follows Lou Bloom (Jake Gyllenhaal), a driven but morally unmoored drifter who stumbles into the world of freelance crime journalism in Los Angeles. Armed with a police scanner, a camera, and an unsettling amount of determination, Lou reinvents himself as a “nightcrawler,” capturing graphic footage of accidents, crimes, and tragedies to sell to local news stations. As his ambition grows, so does his willingness to manipulate—and even manufacture—the stories he covers. Also starring Rene Russo, Riz Ahmed, and Bill Paxton.We’re diving deep into everything: Gyllenhaal’s career-best, skin-crawling performance and physical transformation, the film’s razor-sharp critique of media sensationalism and “if it bleeds, it leads” culture, and Rene Russo’s underrated turn as a desperate news director willing to blur every ethical line for ratings. We also break down how Nightcrawler captures the eerie emptiness of Los Angeles at night, and why its tension feels so real it’s almost documentary-like.Is Nightcrawler one of the best thrillers of the 2010s? How does it hold up as a commentary on capitalism, media exploitation, and the gig economy before those conversations went mainstream? And what makes Lou Bloom such a uniquely terrifying character—not because he’s chaotic, but because he’s calculated? We get into all of it.Whether you’re a fan of psychological thrillers, dark character studies, Jake Gyllenhaal performances, media critique films, or movies that leave you unsettled long after the credits roll—this episode is for you.Topics covered: Nightcrawler 2014 | Jake Gyllenhaal Lou Bloom | Rene Russo Nina Romina | Riz Ahmed Rick | Dan Gilroy director | crime thriller movies | psychological thrillers | media ethics films | journalism movies | Los Angeles films | neo-noir movies | best thrillers of the 2010s | dark character studies | independent films 2014 | movie review podcast | film analysis | capitalism in film | news media satire | investigative journalism movies | unsettling films | best Jake Gyllenhaal moviesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: how far would you go for the perfect shot?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  5. 52

    Manhunter (1986)

    This week we’re stepping into the shadows and breaking down Manhunter (1986) — Michael Mann’s sleek, psychological thriller that introduced audiences to one of cinema’s most chilling villains long before The Silence of the Lambs. Stylish, haunting, and ahead of its time, Manhunter blends neon-soaked visuals with a deeply unsettling dive into the mind of a killer—and the man trying to stop him.Manhunter follows former FBI profiler Will Graham (played by William Petersen), who’s pulled out of retirement to track down a brutal serial killer known as “The Tooth Fairy.” To catch him, Graham must once again enter the psyche of another brilliant monster: Hannibal Lecktor (portrayed here by Brian Cox), setting off a dangerous psychological game that blurs the line between hunter and hunted.We’re diving into everything: Michael Mann’s signature visual style and use of color and music, the film’s eerie atmosphere, and how it laid the groundwork for modern crime thrillers. We’ll break down Tom Noonan’s deeply disturbing performance as Francis Dollarhyde, the evolution of the Hannibal Lecter character across films, and how Manhunter compares to later adaptations of Thomas Harris’s work.Plus, we explore the film’s deeper themes — obsession, empathy, psychological toll, and the cost of getting too close to darkness in pursuit of justice.Was Manhunter a misunderstood classic that deserved more recognition? How does it stack up against The Silence of the Lambs and Red Dragon? And where does it rank among the greatest crime thrillers of the 1980s?Whether you're a fan of psychological horror, crime procedurals, or stylish, character-driven filmmaking, this episode is for you.Topics covered: Michael Mann direction | Manhunter vs Red Dragon | Hannibal Lecter origins | Will Graham character analysis | 1980s crime thrillers | serial killer psychology | Thomas Harris adaptations | film aesthetics and soundtrack | FBI profiler storytelling | cult classic films | Brian Cox performance | Tom Noonan performanceSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us who did it better: Brian Cox or Anthony Hopkins.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  6. 51

    Iron Man 2 (2010)

    This week we’re suiting up and breaking down Iron Man 2 (2010) — the high-octane, swagger-filled sequel that helped cement the foundation of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Iron Man 2 brings Robert Downey Jr. back as Tony Stark, the genius billionaire grappling with his own mortality, the pressures of being Iron Man, and a growing list of enemies closing in from all sides.We’re diving into everything: Jon Favreau’s expansion of the Iron Man world, the introduction of Natasha Romanoff (played by Scarlett Johansson), Mickey Rourke’s electric turn as the vengeful Ivan Vanko, and Sam Rockwell stealing scenes as the wildly entertaining Justin Hammer. Plus, we’ll talk about the film’s deeper themes — legacy, ego, accountability, and what happens when a hero becomes the system he once challenged.Was Iron Man 2 an underrated sequel or an overstuffed stepping stone for the MCU? How does it hold up against the original Iron Man? And where does it rank among Phase One films as Marvel Studios began building toward something bigger?Whether you're a Marvel die-hard, a casual superhero fan, or just love character-driven action with sharp dialogue and big personality, this episode is for you.Topics covered: Marvel Cinematic Universe | Tony Stark character analysis | Iron Man trilogy ranking | superhero sequels | Phase One MCU | Black Widow introduction | villain analysis Ivan Vanko | Justin Hammer performance | comic book movies | 2010 action films | Jon Favreau direction | Robert Downey Jr. performance | superhero legacy themesYouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  7. 50

    The Color of Money (1986)

    This week we're racking up and breaking down The Color of Money (1986) — Martin Scorsese's gritty, stylish sequel to The Hustler and one of the most underrated sports dramas of the 1980s. Paul Newman returns as "Fast Eddie" Felson, the legendary pool shark turned liquor salesman who finds a new shot at glory when he crosses paths with Vincent Lauria — a raw, electric Tom Cruise at his most charismatic — and his sharp, scene-stealing girlfriend Carmen, played by Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio.We're breaking down everything: Scorsese's signature direction, the film's iconic billiards sequences, that unforgettable 80s soundtrack featuring Eric Clapton and Warren Zevon, and why Paul Newman's Oscar-winning performance still holds up decades later. Was this a worthy sequel to The Hustler? How does it rank in Scorsese's filmography? And what does this film really say about ambition, ego, mentorship, and redemption?Whether you're a die-hard Scorsese fan, a classic Hollywood movie buff, a Tom Cruise completist, or just love a great underdog sports story, this episode is for you.Topics covered: Martin Scorsese films | Paul Newman Oscar win | Tom Cruise 1980s movies | pool hustling movies | classic 80s movies | sports drama films | sequel films | movie review podcast | film analysis | underrated movies | John Turturro early roles | Atlantic City films | coming-of-age drama | mentor-protégé stories | classic Hollywood cinemaSubscribe, rate, and leave a review — and let us know: who had the better game, Fast Eddie or Vincent?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  8. 49

    Hackers (1995)

    Hack the planet! This week we're diving deep into Hackers (1995) — the wildly stylish, neon-soaked cult classic that somehow captured the rebellious spirit of early internet culture before most people even knew what the internet was. Directed by Iain Softley, the film follows a crew of teenage hackers led by Dade Murphy, aka "Zero Cool," aka "Crash Override" (Jonny Lee Miller), who uncover a massive corporate extortion conspiracy and find themselves hunted by the Secret Service and the villainous Eugene "The Plague" Belford (Fisher Stevens). Oh, and a little-known actress named Angelina Jolie shows up as "Acid Burn" .We're breaking it all down: the film's iconic 90s aesthetic, that legendary electronica and techno soundtrack featuring The Prodigy, Orbital, and Massive Attack, the over-the-top (and completely bonkers) depictions of hacking, and why this movie became a cult phenomenon despite mixed reviews on release. The cast actually met with real-life hackers — including Kevin Mitnick — and attended underground hacker conventions to prepare for their roles. Does that authenticity come through? We debate it all.Whether you're a 90s nostalgia junkie, a cyberpunk fan, a tech culture enthusiast, or just someone who wants to know why an entire generation of nerds considers this movie a sacred text — this episode is for you.Topics covered: Hackers 1995 movie | Angelina Jolie early career | Jonny Lee Miller | Matthew Lillard | cult classic films | 90s movies | cyberpunk films | internet culture history | hacker movies | tech thriller | cybercrime films | 90s nostalgia podcast | underrated 90s films | movie review podcast | film analysis | Iain Softley | Kevin Mitnick | hacker subculture | 90s fashion | electronica soundtrack | computer movies | Y2K aestheticSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: are you Zero Cool or Acid Burn?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  9. 48

    Boiling Point (2021)

    This week we're stepping into the kitchen — and we are not coming out alive. Boiling Point (2021) is one of the most technically audacious and emotionally brutal British films of the decade, and we're breaking down every single nerve-shredding minute of it.Directed by Philip Barantini, this one-shot film — meaning the entire movie is filmed in a single, unbroken take — is set in a packed London restaurant on the busiest night of the year. Stephen Graham plays Andy Jones, a charismatic but crumbling head chef balancing a knife's edge of personal and professional crises as a surprise health and safety inspection, an overbooked dining room, and a staff on the verge of mutiny all converge at once.We're digging into everything: how Barantini and his cast pulled off this jaw-dropping technical feat in real time, why Stephen Graham delivers one of the greatest performances in recent British cinema, what the film gets so viscerally right about restaurant culture and the hospitality industry, and why this movie hits completely differently if you've ever worked a kitchen shift. Incredibly, the final film used just the third of four total takes — all filmed under real pressure with a real restaurant, real staff, and no safety net.Whether you're a film technique nerd, a foodie, a fan of intense character-driven drama, a Stephen Graham devotee, or just someone who loves hidden-gem British cinema — this episode is essential listening.Topics covered: Boiling Point 2021 | Stephen Graham | Philip Barantini | one-shot film | single take movie | British drama | best British films | restaurant movies | kitchen drama | chef movies | Vinette Robinson | Ray Panthaki | Hannah Walters | hidden gem films | indie British cinema | movie review podcast | film analysis | immersive filmmaking | long take cinematography | hospitality industry film | best films of 2021 | Netflix British movies | BBC dramaSubscribe, rate, and leave a review — and let us know: could you survive one shift in Andy Jones' kitchen?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  10. 47

    Cool Hand Luke (1967)

    What we've got here is a failure to communicate — and this week, we're fixing that. We're going deep on Cool Hand Luke (1967), one of the greatest American films ever made and arguably the role that cemented Paul Newman as a cinematic legend for all time.Directed by Stuart Rosenberg and based on Donn Pearce's semi-autobiographical 1965 novel, the film follows Lucas "Luke" Jackson — a decorated war veteran and nonconformist convict in an early 1950s Florida prison camp who refuses, at every turn, to submit to the system. George Kennedy plays Dragline, the yard's resident heavy who ends up admiring Luke's unbreakable will — and won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor doing it.We're breaking it all down: the legendary egg-eating scene, that iconic "failure to communicate" line, Conrad Hall's breathtaking cinematography, Lalo Schifrin's Oscar-nominated score, and what makes Luke Jackson one of cinema's most enduring anti-heroes. We also dig into the film's incredible ensemble — Dennis Hopper, Harry Dean Stanton, Ralph Waite, Joe Don Baker, and Wayne Rogers — and its lasting influence on everything from The Shawshank Redemption to O Brother, Where Art Thou?Is this Paul Newman's greatest performance? Where does it rank among the all-time prison films? And what does this movie — made in 1967 at the height of the counterculture — still say about individualism, rebellion, and the crushing weight of authority in America?Whether you're a classic Hollywood buff, a Paul Newman fanatic, a fan of prison dramas, or someone who just loves movies that refuse to be broken — this episode is for you.Topics covered: Cool Hand Luke 1967 | Paul Newman best films | George Kennedy Oscar | classic Hollywood movies | prison drama films | anti-hero movies | 1960s cinema | chain gang movies | Stuart Rosenberg | Conrad Hall cinematography | Lalo Schifrin | failure to communicate | egg eating scene | counterculture films | American classics | movie review podcast | film analysis | best films of the 1960s | The Shawshank Redemption influence | rebel films | Dennis Hopper early career | Harry Dean Stanton | classic films ranked | most iconic movie quotes Subscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: could you eat 50 eggs?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  11. 46

    Apocalypto (2006)

    A civilization in collapse. A man running for his life. And one of the most relentlessly intense survival thrillers ever committed to film. This week we're covering Apocalypto (2006) — Mel Gibson's audacious, visceral, and deeply controversial epic that somehow shouldn't work and yet absolutely, completely does.Directed and produced by Mel Gibson, the film follows Jaguar Paw, a young Mesoamerican hunter whose village is raided by an invading force. He and his fellow tribesmen are dragged on a harrowing journey to a Maya city for human sacrifice, at a time when the Maya civilization is already crumbling from within. The entire film features a cast of Indigenous and Mexican actors — led by Rudy Youngblood, Raoul Trujillo, and Dalia Hernández — performing entirely in a modern reconstruction of the Yucatec Maya language, with English subtitles. No major stars. No safety net. Just pure, primal cinema.We're digging into everything: how Gibson stripped the action-chase genre back to its most raw and elemental form, Dean Semler's jaw-dropping cinematography shot on location in the Mexican jungle, James Horner's thundering score, the film's controversial historical accuracy and its portrayal of Maya civilization, and why that final 45-minute chase sequence stands as one of the greatest ever put on screen. Gibson and co-writer Farhad Safinia deliberately wanted to reinvent the chase genre by stripping away all technology — no cars, no guns — to create the purest possible version of a man running for his life toward something that matters.Can you separate the art from the artist? Is Apocalypto a respectful portrait of an ancient civilization or an exploitation of it? We debate all of it.Whether you're an action movie fanatic, a world cinema enthusiast, a history buff, a fan of survival thrillers, or just someone who wants to watch a film that grabs you by the throat and never lets go — this episode is unmissable.Topics covered: Apocalypto 2006 | Mel Gibson director | Rudy Youngblood | Maya civilization film | Mayan history | survival thriller movies | best chase movies | epic action films | indigenous language films | foreign language films | subtitled movies | Dean Semler cinematography | James Horner score | best films of 2006 | historical epic films | jungle survival movies | Yucatan Mexico film | human sacrifice history | movie review podcast | film analysis | underrated action films | controversial films | Mel Gibson best films | Touchstone Pictures | best movie chase scenesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: does Apocalypto deserve its place among the all-time action greats?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  12. 45

    Rounders (1998)

    Listen to your gut, Mike. This week we're sitting down at the table for Rounders (1998) — the underground poker cult classic that didn't just capture a world, it helped create one. This is the movie that launched a thousand poker careers, and we're dealing every single card.Directed by John Dahl and written by Brian Koppelman and David Levien, the film follows Mike McDermott (Matt Damon), a gifted New York law student and poker prodigy who loses his entire bankroll to Russian mobster and underground card room operator Teddy KGB (John Malkovich). He goes straight — until his fast-talking, self-destructive childhood friend Lester "Worm" Murphy (Edward Norton) walks out of prison and drags him back into the game, deeper and more dangerous than ever before. Also starring John Turturro, Gretchen Mol, Martin Landau, and Famke Janssen.We're going all in on everything: Malkovich's unhinged, Oreo-munching, accent-mangling performance as Teddy KGB (one of the great movie villains of the 90s), the film's eerily accurate portrait of underground poker culture, Edward Norton at his most slippery and electric, and why Rounders — a modest box office performer in 1998 — became the bible of the poker boom that exploded in the early 2000s. Pro players like Brian Rast, Hevad Khan, and Gavin Griffin have all credited the film with getting them into the game, and it's not hard to see why. This movie makes you want to shuffle up and deal.Is Rounders the greatest gambling movie ever made? How does it hold up as a film about obsession, loyalty, and following your calling against all common sense? And just how did Koppelman and Levien get the underground poker world so right? We answer all of it.Whether you're a poker fanatic, a Matt Damon completist, a fan of late-90s crime dramas, a cult movie devotee, or someone who just loves a film that completely immerses you in a world — this episode belongs in your stack.Topics covered: Rounders 1998 | Matt Damon | Edward Norton | John Malkovich Teddy KGB | best poker movies | underground poker | Texas Hold'em movies | gambling movies | John Dahl director | Brian Koppelman | David Levien | cult classic films | late 90s movies | crime drama films | best films of the 1990s | poker culture | World Series of Poker | movie review podcast | film analysis | Good Will Hunting Matt Damon | John Turturro | Martin Landau | Famke Janssen | underground gambling films | best gambling scenes in movies | poker boom 2000s Subscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: are you a Mike McDermott or a Worm?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  13. 44

    Super Troopers (2001)

    The time is meow. This week we're pulling over Super Troopers (2001) — one of the greatest cult comedies ever made, a film that critics mostly dismissed, audiences absolutely devoured, and basically an entire generation still quotes on a daily basis. Litracola. Meow. Chicken fucker. You know the ones.Written, directed by, and starring the Broken Lizard comedy group — Jay Chandrasekhar, Kevin Heffernan, Steve Lemme, Paul Soter, and Erik Stolhanske — the film follows five bored, prank-obsessed Vermont state troopers who stumble onto a drug smuggling ring while fighting to keep their station from being shut down by budget cuts, all while waging an all-out turf war against the insufferable local Spurbury PD. Brian Cox plays their long-suffering captain, and Lynda Carter shows up as the Governor of Vermont because why not.We're breaking down everything: the meow scene, the syrup-chugging scene, Farva's liter of cola, the opening stoner cold open that is one of the greatest comedy setups in early 2000s cinema, and how a film made on a budget of just $1.2 million premiered at Sundance, got picked up by Fox Searchlight for $3.2 million, and went on to gross over $23 million worldwide before becoming one of the most endlessly rewatchable comedies in modern memory. We also dig into how Broken Lizard's model of pooling resources and maintaining creative control laid the groundwork for their later crowdfunding success — their Super Troopers 2 Indiegogo campaign raised over $4.5 million from fans in record time.Underrated masterpiece or gloriously dumb stoner comedy? The answer, obviously, is both — and that's exactly why we love it.Whether you're a die-hard Broken Lizard fan, a lover of early 2000s cult comedies, a stoner comedy enthusiast, someone who works in law enforcement and needs a laugh, or just a person who has ever demanded a liter of cola — this episode is for you.Topics covered: Super Troopers 2001 | Broken Lizard | Jay Chandrasekhar | Kevin Heffernan | Farva | meow scene | liter of cola | cult comedy films | best stoner comedies | early 2000s movies | police comedy films | Vermont movies | Fox Searchlight | Sundance Film Festival | cult classic movies | best comedy movies of the 2000s | Super Troopers 2 | Brian Cox | Lynda Carter | movie review podcast | film analysis | ensemble comedy films | indie comedy films | most quotable movies | crowdfunding movies | best comedy scenes everSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us your favorite Super Troopers scene. And if you say anything other than the meow scene, we're putting you in the car.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  14. 43

    Con Air (1997)

    Put the bunny back in the box. This week we're boarding the Jailbird for Con Air (1997) — the most gloriously unhinged, completely self-aware, and relentlessly entertaining action blockbuster of the entire 1990s. And yes, we are going to talk about the mullet.Directed by Simon West in his feature directorial debut and produced by the legendary Jerry Bruckheimer, Con Air follows Cameron Poe (Nicolas Cage), a former Army Ranger who — freshly paroled for manslaughter — finds himself trapped aboard a federal prison transport plane hijacked by the most dangerous criminals in America. Leading the chaos is John Malkovich as Cyrus "The Virus" Grissom, a highly intelligent career criminal and mastermind of the escape plot, backed up by Ving Rhames as Diamond Dog, and the incomparably creepy Steve Buscemi as Garland "The Marietta Mangler" Greene. John Cusack, Dave Chappelle, Danny Trejo, and Colm Meaney round out a cast so stacked it barely seems real.We're breaking down everything: Malkovich chewing every inch of scenery as one of the great 90s movie villains, Buscemi's Hannibal Lecter-esque turn that somehow ends with him sitting on a merry-go-round with a little girl, Nicolas Cage in full peak-mullet action hero mode, that Las Vegas runway crash sequence, and the Trisha Yearwood "How Do I Live" needle drop that absolutely nobody asked for and yet somehow became iconic. The film grossed over $224 million worldwide against a $75 million budget, cementing Bruckheimer's reign as the undisputed king of 90s blockbuster filmmaking — and landing right in the middle of Cage's extraordinary holy trinity alongside The Rock and Face/Off.Is Con Air a good movie? No. Is it one of the most entertaining films ever made? Absolutely, unequivocally, without question yes.Whether you're a Nicolas Cage devotee, a Jerry Bruckheimer action junkie, a 90s blockbuster fanatic, a lover of so-bad-it's-great cinema, or just someone who wants to spend an hour reliving the most ridiculous movie plane crash ever put on screen — this episode is mandatory listening.Topics covered: Con Air 1997 | Nicolas Cage | John Malkovich | Steve Buscemi | Jerry Bruckheimer | Simon West | Ving Rhames | John Cusack | Dave Chappelle | Danny Trejo | Cyrus the Virus | best 90s action movies | Nicolas Cage best films | peak Nicolas Cage | 90s blockbusters | prison movies | action thriller films | guilty pleasure movies | best movie villains | How Do I Live Trisha Yearwood | movie review podcast | film analysis | The Rock Face/Off Con Air trilogy | best ensemble casts | over the top action films | Jerry Bruckheimer films ranked | 90s nostalgia | best movie one-linersSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle this once and for all: Con Air, The Rock, or Face/Off — which is the greatest Nicolas Cage action film of 1997?Join us as we discuss Con Air and all of the interesting things about this movie.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  15. 42

    True Detective S1, Pt. 2 (2014)

    Time is a flat circle. And this week, we're going back to Louisiana. We're covering True Detective Season 1 (2014) part 2 — covering the last four of the eight episodes of HBO television so dense, so atmospheric, and so staggeringly well-performed that nothing before or since has quite matched it. This is the one that redefined what prestige TV could be.Created by Nic Pizzolatto and directed in its entirety by Cary Joji Fukunaga, the season follows Louisiana State Police homicide detectives Rustin "Rust" Cohle (Matthew McConaughey) and Martin "Marty" Hart (Woody Harrelson) as they investigate the ritualistic murder of a woman named Dora Lange — a case that spans 17 years, told through a brilliant nonlinear structure that braids 1995, 2002, and 2012 together. Michelle Monaghan is devastating as Marty's wife Maggie, and Alexandra Daddario, Michael Potts, and Tory Kittles round out a flawless supporting cast.We're going deep on everything: Rust Cohle's nihilistic philosophy and why it hit so hard with an entire generation, the terrifying mythology of the Yellow King and Carcosa, that extraordinary six-minute single-take tracking shot in episode four, Fukunaga's breathtaking direction across the Louisiana bayou, T Bone Burnett's haunting score, and what McConaughey delivered here — arguably the greatest performance in the history of American television. The season won five Emmy Awards including Outstanding Directing and Outstanding Cinematography, and it turned what was already the peak of the McConaissance into something genuinely transcendent.We're also asking the big questions: Does the ending hold up? How does Season 1 compare to the seasons that followed? And is True Detective Season 1 the single greatest achievement in prestige television history — better than The Wire, better than The Sopranos, better than Breaking Bad?Whether you're a die-hard prestige TV fanatic, a crime drama obsessive, a McConaughey devotee, a Woody Harrelson fan, a lover of Southern Gothic atmosphere, or someone who just wants to relive one of the most electrifying viewing experiences of the last decade — this episode is essential.Topics covered: True Detective Season 1 | Matthew McConaughey | Woody Harrelson | Rust Cohle | Marty Hart | Yellow King | Carcosa | Nic Pizzolatto | Cary Joji Fukunaga | best HBO shows | best limited series ever | best TV of 2014 | prestige television | Southern Gothic | Louisiana noir | serial killer TV shows | nonlinear storytelling | McConaissance | best TV performances ever | T Bone Burnett | six minute tracking shot | best TV cinematography | crime drama podcast | TV review podcast | True Detective ending explained | True Detective vs The Wire | best anthology series | HBO drama ranked | best detective showsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate: is True Detective Season 1 the greatest limited series ever made, or does something else hold the crown?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  16. 41

    True Detective S1, Pt. 1 (2014)

    Time is a flat circle. And this week, we're going back to Louisiana. We're covering True Detective Season 1 (2014) part 1 — covering the first four of the eight episodes of HBO television so dense, so atmospheric, and so staggeringly well-performed that nothing before or since has quite matched it. This is the one that redefined what prestige TV could be.Created by Nic Pizzolatto and directed in its entirety by Cary Joji Fukunaga, the season follows Louisiana State Police homicide detectives Rustin "Rust" Cohle (Matthew McConaughey) and Martin "Marty" Hart (Woody Harrelson) as they investigate the ritualistic murder of a woman named Dora Lange — a case that spans 17 years, told through a brilliant nonlinear structure that braids 1995, 2002, and 2012 together. Michelle Monaghan is devastating as Marty's wife Maggie, and Alexandra Daddario, Michael Potts, and Tory Kittles round out a flawless supporting cast.We're going deep on everything: Rust Cohle's nihilistic philosophy and why it hit so hard with an entire generation, the terrifying mythology of the Yellow King and Carcosa, that extraordinary six-minute single-take tracking shot in episode four, Fukunaga's breathtaking direction across the Louisiana bayou, T Bone Burnett's haunting score, and what McConaughey delivered here — arguably the greatest performance in the history of American television. The season won five Emmy Awards including Outstanding Directing and Outstanding Cinematography, and it turned what was already the peak of the McConaissance into something genuinely transcendent.We're also asking the big questions: Does the ending hold up? How does Season 1 compare to the seasons that followed? And is True Detective Season 1 the single greatest achievement in prestige television history — better than The Wire, better than The Sopranos, better than Breaking Bad?Whether you're a die-hard prestige TV fanatic, a crime drama obsessive, a McConaughey devotee, a Woody Harrelson fan, a lover of Southern Gothic atmosphere, or someone who just wants to relive one of the most electrifying viewing experiences of the last decade — this episode is essential.Topics covered: True Detective Season 1 | Matthew McConaughey | Woody Harrelson | Rust Cohle | Marty Hart | Yellow King | Carcosa | Nic Pizzolatto | Cary Joji Fukunaga | best HBO shows | best limited series ever | best TV of 2014 | prestige television | Southern Gothic | Louisiana noir | serial killer TV shows | nonlinear storytelling | McConaissance | best TV performances ever | T Bone Burnett | six minute tracking shot | best TV cinematography | crime drama podcast | TV review podcast | True Detective ending explained | True Detective vs The Wire | best anthology series | HBO drama ranked | best detective showsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate: is True Detective Season 1 the greatest limited series ever made, or does something else hold the crown?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  17. 40

    Snow Angels (2007)

    This week we're shining a light on a film that almost nobody saw and almost everyone who did was completely shattered by. Snow Angels (2007) is one of the most devastating, achingly human, and woefully overlooked American dramas of the last 25 years — and it's time the world knew about it.Written and directed by David Gordon Green and based on Stewart O'Nan's 1994 novel, the film is set in a small Pennsylvania town in winter and weaves together two parallel stories: a shy, awkward teenager named Arthur (Michael Angarano) falling tentatively and sweetly into his first love with a new classmate named Lila (Olivia Thirlby), while his former babysitter Annie (Kate Beckinsale) watches her life unravel under the weight of a crumbling marriage, an affair, and an estranged husband named Glenn (Sam Rockwell) whose fragile grip on sobriety and faith is slipping toward something terrifying. Also starring Amy Sedaris, Griffin Dunne, and Tom Noonan in beautifully understated supporting roles.We're going deep on everything: Kate Beckinsale's career-best performance in a role that proved she was far more than a Hollywood action star, Sam Rockwell delivering one of the most heartbreaking and quietly unhinged turns of his career, David Gordon Green's extraordinary early indie period before Pineapple Express and the Halloween franchise, the film's stunning wintry cinematography, and what O'Nan's source novel brings to one of the most emotionally gutting third acts in modern American cinema. The film premiered in dramatic competition at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival and landed on multiple critics' top ten lists for the year — yet somehow it still barely registers in the wider conversation about great 2000s cinema.We're asking the big questions: Why did this film disappear? Is it the saddest movie of the decade? And where does it rank in the careers of Green, Rockwell, and Beckinsale?Whether you're a fan of quiet, devastating American indie drama, a David Gordon Green completist, a Sam Rockwell devotee, someone who loves the kind of small-town winter films that linger with you for weeks, or just a viewer who wants to be profoundly moved by something real — this episode is for you. Bring tissues.Topics covered: Snow Angels 2007 | David Gordon Green | Sam Rockwell | Kate Beckinsale | Michael Angarano | Olivia Thirlby | Stewart O'Nan novel | best indie films of the 2000s | underrated films | hidden gem movies | small town drama | American indie cinema | Sundance Film Festival | best Sam Rockwell performances | Kate Beckinsale dramatic roles | David Gordon Green early films | tragedy films | best forgotten films | grief and loss movies | winter films | Pennsylvania films | ensemble drama | movie review podcast | film analysis | most underrated films ever | best performances you've never seen | Warner Independent PicturesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: what's the most devastating film you've ever seen that nobody talks about? Snow Angels is our answer.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  18. 39

    Smokin' Aces (2007)

    Everybody wants Buddy Israel dead. And this week, we want to talk about Smokin' Aces (2007) — the gloriously unhinged, hyperkinetic, Tarantino-adjacent crime thriller that critics mostly dismissed and audiences absolutely lost their minds over. This is one of the most chaotically entertaining films of the entire 2000s, and it doesn't get nearly enough credit.Written and directed by Joe Carnahan, the film centers on Buddy "Aces" Israel (Jeremy Piven) — a Las Vegas magician turned mob associate who agrees to turn state's evidence against the mob, triggering a one-million-dollar bounty that sends every assassin, hit man, bounty hunter, and psychopath in the country converging on his Lake Tahoe penthouse at the same time. Standing between Buddy and a very messy death are FBI agents played by Ryan Reynolds and Ray Liotta — if they can survive the chaos long enough to matter.The cast alone is worth the price of admission: Ben Affleck, Jason Bateman, Common, Andy García, Alicia Keys, Taraji P. Henson, Ray Liotta, Chris Pine, and Matthew Fox all colliding in a hotel full of bullets, bad decisions, and genuinely unhinged energy. It was the official acting debut of both Alicia Keys and Common. And then there are the Tremor Brothers — Chris Pine and Kevin Durand as a pair of neo-Nazi psychopaths so spectacularly unhinged they almost steal the entire film from everyone else.We're breaking down everything: Carnahan's frenetic direction and split-screen style, the film's bonkers third act, Clint Mansell's propulsive score, why critics were wrong to dismiss it, and why even Terrence Malick went out of his way to praise the film's direction at a Princeton University screening in 2016. We're also asking the big question — is Smokin' Aces actually an underrated masterpiece of controlled chaos, or is it just the world's most entertaining beautiful mess?Whether you're a fan of hyper-stylized crime thrillers, an ensemble action movie junkie, a Jeremy Piven devotee, a Chris Pine completist, a Joe Carnahan fan, or just someone who loves a movie that throws absolutely everything at the wall and somehow makes most of it stick — this episode is for you.Topics covered: Smokin' Aces 2006 | Joe Carnahan | Jeremy Piven | Ryan Reynolds | Ray Liotta | Ben Affleck | Chris Pine | Alicia Keys | Common | Taraji P. Henson | Andy Garcia | Jason Bateman | Matthew Fox | best ensemble action movies | 2000s action films | Tarantino-style movies | hitman movies | Lake Tahoe film | best guilty pleasure movies | cult action films | underrated 2000s movies | Clint Mansell score | movie review podcast | film analysis | best ensemble casts | crime thriller films | mob movies | Joe Carnahan films ranked | Narc director | most chaotic movies ever madeSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle this: team FBI agents or team assassins? And who's your favorite character in the whole glorious mess?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  19. 38

    The Wizard (1989)

    I love the Power Glove. It's so bad. This week we're plugging in our NES cartridges and heading cross-country for The Wizard (1989) — the gloriously shameless, utterly endearing, feature-length Nintendo advertisement that somehow also managed to be one of the most beloved cult films of an entire generation's childhood.Directed by Todd Holland, the film follows three kids on a road trip to California to compete in a massive video game tournament called Video Armageddon — brothers Corey (Fred Savage) and Jimmy (Luke Edwards), a withdrawn boy processing the trauma of his sister's death who turns out to be a supernatural genius at video games, joined by a street-smart girl named Haley (Jenny Lewis) who spots Jimmy's talent and points them toward a $50,000 prize. Hot on their trail: their father Sam (Beau Bridges), older brother Nick (Christian Slater), and the most punchable bounty hunter in cinema history. Also — in his very first film role ever — a young Tobey Maguire blinks and you'll miss him.We're breaking down everything: the Power Glove scene, the infamous "he touched my breast" line that parents everywhere panicked about, the film's extraordinary legacy as the official North American introduction of Super Mario Bros. 3 to the world, why critics absolutely savaged it on release while kids made it a genuine cult phenomenon, and what it says about the golden age of Nintendo that a studio essentially made an $8 million toy commercial and an entire generation still gets emotional watching it. We're also talking about Jenny Lewis — yes, that Jenny Lewis, future frontwoman of Rilo Kiley and indie rock legend — as a kid hustler absolutely carrying half this movie.Is The Wizard a good film? Objectively, probably not. Is it an absolutely perfect time capsule of late 80s childhood, gaming culture, and the height of Nintendo mania? Without a single doubt.Whether you're an 80s nostalgia fanatic, a retro gaming enthusiast, a Nintendo history buff, a Fred Savage fan, a Jenny Lewis devotee, a lover of gloriously cynical product placement, or just someone who grew up arguing about whether the Power Glove was actually cool — this episode is mandatory listening.Topics covered: The Wizard 1989 | Fred Savage | Luke Edwards | Jenny Lewis | Christian Slater | Beau Bridges | Tobey Maguire film debut | Nintendo NES | Super Mario Bros 3 first appearance | Power Glove | Video Armageddon | 80s kids movies | retro gaming movies | Nintendo history | cult classic family films | 80s nostalgia | best Nintendo games | video game movies | Todd Holland director | product placement in movies | Jenny Lewis Rilo Kiley | movie review podcast | film analysis | best 80s road trip movies | childhood nostalgia films | most iconic 80s movie moments | Universal Studios HollywoodSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: did you think the Power Glove was cool? Be honest. We won't judge you.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  20. 37

    Home Alone (1990)

    Keep the change, ya filthy animal. This week we're heading to Winnetka, Illinois for Home Alone (1990) — one of the most beloved, most rewatched, and most endlessly quotable Christmas films in the history of cinema. This is the movie that made Macaulay Culkin a superstar, cemented John Hughes as the king of American family comedy, and somehow became a holiday institution watched by hundreds of millions of people every single December around the world.Written and produced by John Hughes and directed by Chris Columbus, the film stars Macaulay Culkin as eight-year-old Kevin McCallister, accidentally left behind when his enormous family departs for a Christmas vacation to Paris — and forced to defend his suburban Chicago home from a pair of bungling burglars, Harry and Marv, played with magnificent physical comedy by Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern. Catherine O'Hara and John Heard play the frantic parents, and John Candy turns up in one of the most charming and bittersweet supporting cameos of the entire decade.We're digging into everything: the booby trap sequences that traumatized and delighted a generation in equal measure, Joe Pesci deliberately avoiding Macaulay Culkin on set so the kid would genuinely be scared of him, John Williams' Oscar-nominated score, the surprisingly emotional subplot with Old Man Marley, and the film's staggering commercial legacy. Home Alone earned more than $470 million worldwide and was the highest-grossing film of 1990 — and it held the record as the highest-grossing live-action comedy for over two decades. We're also talking about the wild behind-the-scenes story: Warner Bros. originally shut down production after it exceeded budget, only for 20th Century Fox to swoop in and rescue the film entirely. And John Candy filmed all his scenes in a single 23-hour day, was paid just $414, and improvised every line of his dialogue.Is Home Alone the greatest Christmas movie ever made? Where does it sit in the John Hughes pantheon alongside Ferris Bueller, The Breakfast Club, and Planes, Trains and Automobiles? And does Kevin McCallister's booby trap gauntlet hold up as the greatest slapstick set piece in 90s cinema? We settle all of it.Whether you're a Christmas movie fanatic, a John Hughes devotee, a 90s nostalgia obsessive, a Macaulay Culkin fan, a lover of great physical comedy, or just someone who watches this every single December without fail — this episode is essential holiday listening.Topics covered: Home Alone 1990 | Macaulay Culkin | John Hughes | Chris Columbus | Joe Pesci | Daniel Stern | Catherine O'Hara | John Candy | best Christmas movies | best Christmas movies ever made | 90s family movies | Christmas comedy films | booby trap scene | Kevin McCallister | Wet Bandits | John Williams score | highest grossing comedy | best 90s movies | 90s nostalgia | Chicago Christmas movies | Winnetka Illinois | Home Alone house | movie review podcast | film analysis | John Hughes filmography ranked | best physical comedy movies | holiday classic films | Home Alone sequel | Kieran Culkin debut | Christmas movie rankingsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate once and for all: is Home Alone the greatest Christmas movie ever made, or does something else hold the crown?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  21. 36

    Die Hard (1988)

    Yippee-ki-yay. This week we're heading to Nakatomi Plaza on Christmas Eve for Die Hard (1988) — the film that didn't just launch one of the greatest action franchises of all time, it fundamentally rewrote the rules of what an action movie could be, invented the modern everyman hero, and sparked a holiday debate that is somehow still raging 35 years later. Is Die Hard a Christmas movie? We're settling it. For good. Maybe.Directed by John McTiernan and written by Jeb Stuart and Steven de Souza, Die Hard follows New York City cop John McClane (Bruce Willis) — in town on Christmas Eve to patch things up with his estranged wife Holly (Bonnie Bedelia) — who finds himself the only thing standing between a group of brilliantly organized terrorists and $640 million in bearer bonds, trapped barefoot in a Los Angeles skyscraper with nothing but his wits, a police radio, and an increasingly shredded undershirt. Leading the terrorists is Hans Gruber, played by Alan Rickman in what is inarguably one of the single greatest villain performances in cinema history. Reginald VelJohnson, William Atherton, Paul Gleason, and Alexander Godunov round out a perfect supporting cast.We're going all in on everything: how this film completely reinvented the action genre by making McClane vulnerable, funny, and fallible at a time when the prevailing action hero archetype was an invincible muscle-bound giant like Arnold Schwarzenegger — who was actually offered the role and turned it down. We dig into the wild behind-the-scenes story: Willis was paid $5 million — virtually unheard of for an actor known primarily from a TV comedy — a deal the industry considered a spectacular gamble. We talk about Rickman's unforgettable debut, the Nakatomi Plaza location that was actually 20th Century Fox's own headquarters, McTiernan's masterclass in suspense and spatial filmmaking, and why Die Hard has never been equaled by any of its many, many imitators.And yes — we are absolutely, definitively, once and for all addressing the Christmas movie debate.Whether you're an action movie obsessive, a Bruce Willis fan, an Alan Rickman devotee, a John McTiernan admirer, someone who watches this every December, or just a person who has an opinion — correct or incorrect — about whether Die Hard is a Christmas movie, this episode is required listening.Topics covered: Die Hard 1988 | Bruce Willis | Alan Rickman | John McTiernan | John McClane | Hans Gruber | Nakatomi Plaza | best action movies ever made | is Die Hard a Christmas movie | Christmas movie debate | best movie villains ever | 80s action movies | everyman hero | Bonnie Bedelia | Reginald VelJohnson | Alan Rickman debut | best action films of all time | action movie history | Yippee-ki-yay | Die Hard franchise | best Christmas movies | 20th Century Fox Plaza | movie review podcast | film analysis | greatest action movies ranked | best villain performances | Die Hard vs other Christmas movies | Arnold Schwarzenegger passed on Die Hard | best one-liners in moviesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and stake your claim: is Die Hard a Christmas movie? Wrong answers will be dealt with accordingly.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  22. 35

    Moon (2009)

    Wake up, Sam. This week we're orbiting one of the most quietly stunning, deeply human, and criminally underappreciated science fiction films of the 21st century. Moon (2009) is a film that does more with less than almost anything else in the genre — and if you haven't seen it, we're about to change your life.The feature film directorial debut of Duncan Jones — yes, David Bowie's son — Moon was specifically written as a vehicle for Sam Rockwell, and what Rockwell delivers here is nothing short of one of the greatest one-man performances in modern cinema. The film follows Sam Bell, a man nearing the end of a three-year solitary stint mining helium-3 on the far side of the Moon for a corporation called Lunar Industries, with only an AI assistant named GERTY — voiced with quietly unsettling warmth by Kevin Spacey — for company. With two weeks left on his contract and his mind beginning to fracture under the weight of three years of total isolation, Sam makes a discovery that unravels everything he thought he knew about himself, his mission, and his life back on Earth.We're going deep on everything: how Rockwell essentially acts opposite himself for the majority of the film in a technical and emotional tour de force that somehow never received an Oscar nomination, Duncan Jones' extraordinary debut that pays loving homage to the great cerebral sci-fi films of the late 70s and early 80s — Silent Running, Alien, Outland — while being entirely its own devastating thing, the film's brilliant use of practical effects over CGI, a production shot in just 33 days on a budget of $5 million that looks and feels like a major studio production, and Clint Mansell's hauntingly beautiful score. We're also talking about the film's rich thematic core — corporate ethics, identity, cloning, what it means to be human — and why Moon belongs in the conversation alongside 2001: A Space Odyssey and Solaris as one of the great philosophical science fiction films ever made.Whether you're a hard sci-fi devotee, a Sam Rockwell fanatic, a Duncan Jones admirer, a fan of slow-burn psychological drama, someone who loves films that trust their audience to think, or just a viewer who wants to be profoundly moved by something both intimate and cosmic — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Moon 2009 | Sam Rockwell | Duncan Jones | Kevin Spacey | GERTY | helium-3 | one man film | best sci-fi films of the 21st century | best sci-fi films ever made | psychological science fiction | cloning movies | identity crisis films | cerebral sci-fi | indie sci-fi | best directorial debuts | Duncan Jones David Bowie son | Clint Mansell score | practical effects sci-fi | best performances never nominated for Oscar | Sam Rockwell best films | philosophical sci-fi | corporate dystopia films | isolation movies | best films of 2009 | movie review podcast | film analysis | 2001 A Space Odyssey influence | Solaris comparison | best low budget films | BAFTA nominated films | Hugo Award winnerSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: where does Moon rank in your all-time sci-fi list? And does Sam Rockwell's performance here belong among the greatest ever put on screen?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  23. 34

    Edward Scissorhands (1990)

    Hold still. This week we're climbing the hill to the castle at the edge of the pastel suburb for Edward Scissorhands (1990) — Tim Burton's most personal, most achingly beautiful, and most enduring film. A Gothic fairy tale about loneliness, belonging, and the cruelty of the ordinary world toward anyone who dares to be different. And one of the most quietly devastating love stories ever put on screen.Written by Caroline Thompson from a story she developed with Burton, the film follows Edward — an unfinished artificial humanoid with scissor blades instead of hands, the incomplete creation of a dying inventor — who is taken in by a kind suburban Avon saleswoman named Peg (Dianne Wiest) and brought down from his crumbling Gothic castle into the impossibly bright, pastel-colored world below, where he falls irreversibly in love with her daughter Kim (Winona Ryder). Also starring Anthony Michael Hall, Kathy Baker, Alan Arkin, and Vincent Price in his final film role before his death.We're going deep on everything: how Burton conceived Edward Scissorhands directly from his own childhood feelings of isolation and inability to connect with people growing up in suburban Burbank — making this less a fantasy film and more a raw, thinly-veiled self-portrait — Johnny Depp's extraordinary silent-film-inspired performance that communicates more emotion without words than most actors manage with entire monologues, Danny Elfman's score which both Elfman and Burton consider their most personal and favorite collaboration, Stan Winston's astonishing practical makeup and scissor-hand design, and the film's devastating final act which remains one of the most heartbreaking endings in all of 90s cinema. Depp prepared for the role by studying Charlie Chaplin films extensively to understand how to generate pure sympathy without dialogue — and it shows in every frame.We're also asking the bigger questions: is this Tim Burton's masterpiece? Where does it sit in the Burton-Depp collaboration that defined both of their careers? And what does the film's central metaphor — a gentle soul who can create breathtaking beauty but can never hold the person he loves without causing harm — still say about outsiders, artists, and the unbearable cost of being different?Whether you're a Tim Burton devotee, a Johnny Depp fan, a lover of Gothic romance, someone who adores dark fairy tales, a Danny Elfman score enthusiast, or just a person who wants to feel something profound and beautiful — this episode is for you. Have tissues ready.Topics covered: Edward Scissorhands 1990 | Tim Burton | Johnny Depp | Winona Ryder | Dianne Wiest | Vincent Price final film | Danny Elfman score | Stan Winston makeup | Gothic romance | dark fairy tale films | best Tim Burton films | Johnny Depp best performances | Tim Burton filmography ranked | suburban satire films | outsider films | best 90s films | best fantasy films | Danny Elfman best scores | Gothic films | best movie endings | most emotional movie endings | Caroline Thompson | 90s cult classic | movie review podcast | film analysis | best romantic fantasy films | Tim Burton and Johnny Depp collaboration | Charlie Chaplin influence | best silent performance in a talkie | Halloween films | Christmas adjacent movies | gothic fairy tale filmsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: is Edward Scissorhands Tim Burton's greatest film, or does something else in his filmography hold the crown?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  24. 33

    For A Few Dollars More (1965)

    When the chimes end — begin. This week we're riding into the Almería desert for For a Few Dollars More (1965) — the second film in Sergio Leone's legendary Dollars Trilogy, and the one that gets the least attention despite being, by almost any measure, the most fully realized, most emotionally complex, and most flat-out thrilling of the three.Directed by Sergio Leone, the film stars Clint Eastwood as Manco — the Man with No Name — and Lee Van Cleef as Colonel Douglas Mortimer, a rival bounty hunter whose motivation turns out to be something far more personal than money. Together, this unlikely pair of cold-eyed professionals team up to take down El Indio (Gian Maria Volonté), a brilliant, ruthless, and deeply haunted outlaw and his gang — with Klaus Kinski lurking in the shadows as one of cinema's great unsettling supporting villains.We're going all in on everything: why this film deserves to be ranked alongside The Good, the Bad and the Ugly rather than perpetually overshadowed by it, Lee Van Cleef's career-defining performance as Mortimer — a man whose quiet devastation in the film's final act recontextualizes everything that came before — Gian Maria Volonté's extraordinary turn as El Indio, Ennio Morricone's iconic score which Leone famously played on set while filming so his actors could perform to the music in real time, and Leone's revolutionary approach to the Western — extreme close-ups, operatic silences, and duels stretched to almost unbearable tension — that permanently changed how action cinema looked and felt. The screenplay was written in just nine days by Luciano Vincenzoni, yet somehow produced one of the most elegantly constructed revenge narratives in genre history.We're also talking about the Dollars Trilogy as a whole — how to rank the three films, what each one contributes to the Leone legacy, and why the spaghetti western movement these films launched remains one of the most influential artistic revolutions in cinema history.Whether you're a classic Western devotee, a Sergio Leone obsessive, a Clint Eastwood fan, an Ennio Morricone score enthusiast, a film history buff, or just someone who loves discovering that the one everyone skips past might actually be the best one — this episode is for you.Topics covered: For a Few Dollars More 1965 | Sergio Leone | Clint Eastwood | Lee Van Cleef | Gian Maria Volonté | Klaus Kinski | Ennio Morricone | Dollars Trilogy | spaghetti western | Man with No Name | best spaghetti westerns | best western films ever made | Dollars Trilogy ranked | best Sergio Leone films | best Ennio Morricone scores | Colonel Mortimer | El Indio | bounty hunter movies | revenge westerns | Italian cinema | Almería Spain filming | best film villains | classic Hollywood westerns | movie review podcast | film analysis | Per qualche dollaro in più | best films of the 1960s | most underrated sequels | western film history | Leone vs Hollywood westerns | Clint Eastwood early careerSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it once and for all: how do you rank the Dollars Trilogy? And is For a Few Dollars More the most underrated film in the whole series?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  25. 32

    Fight Club (1999)

    The first rule of this podcast episode is: you absolutely talk about Fight Club. This week we're going deep on Fight Club (1999) — David Fincher's savage, visually revolutionary, and endlessly debated psychological thriller that bombed at the box office in 1999, became the defining cult movie of its generation on DVD, and has never stopped being argued about since.Based on Chuck Palahniuk's 1996 novel and adapted for the screen by Jim Uhls, the film follows an unnamed insomniac narrator (Edward Norton) — disenchanted with his sterile white-collar life and IKEA-catalog existence — who meets the electric, charismatic, and dangerously free Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt), a soap salesman who becomes his alter ego, his idol, and ultimately the architect of something terrifying. Helena Bonham Carter is unforgettable as Marla Singer, the self-destructive chaos agent who disrupts everything. Meat Loaf and a young Jared Leto round out a perfect supporting cast.We're going deep on everything: Fincher's jaw-dropping direction — his visual language born directly from years of music video work — which gave the film a kinetic, anxiety-soaked style that felt unlike anything in mainstream cinema in 1999 — Brad Pitt's performance as Tyler Durden which remains one of the most charismatic and dangerous turns in 90s cinema, Edward Norton's extraordinary work as the hollow everyman slowly cracking apart, the film's layers of hidden clues that reward and reward on rewatch, and the twist ending that genuinely shocked audiences and still hits first-time viewers like a freight train. We're also digging into the film's searing critique of consumerism, masculinity, and Generation X alienation — and the uncomfortable question of what it means that Tyler Durden became a genuine idol to some of the exact people the film was critiquing. Fincher himself addressed this directly in 2023, saying "It's impossible for me to imagine that people don't understand that Tyler Durden is a negative influence."Is Fight Club David Fincher's greatest film — better than Se7en, Zodiac, The Social Network, and Gone Girl? What does it say about masculinity, identity, and late capitalism that feels more relevant now than it did in 1999? And where does it rank among the all-time great twist endings in cinema history?Whether you're a David Fincher obsessive, a Brad Pitt fanatic, an Edward Norton devotee, a Chuck Palahniuk reader, a film theory enthusiast, someone fascinated by cult movie culture, or just a viewer who wants to argue about one of the most talked-about films ever made — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Fight Club 1999 | David Fincher | Brad Pitt | Edward Norton | Helena Bonham Carter | Tyler Durden | Chuck Palahniuk novel | best twist endings in movies | Fight Club twist explained | best films of the 1990s | 90s cult classics | Generation X films | consumerism in film | masculinity in film | psychological thriller | best David Fincher films | David Fincher filmography ranked | best Brad Pitt performances | best Edward Norton performances | cult classic movies | movie review podcast | film analysis | Fight Club themes explained | Project Mayhem | Meat Loaf Fight Club | Jared Leto early career | best movies to rewatch | hidden clues in movies | defining films of a generation | best 90s psychological thrillers | Se7en vs Fight ClubSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate: is Fight Club David Fincher's greatest film? And be honest — did you see the twist coming?*We apologize for Chris's audio in this episode. He recorded on the fly, away from his normal setup.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  26. 31

    Inherent Vice (2014)

    Don't worry if you don't follow the plot. Nobody does. And that's entirely the point. This week we're lighting one up and drifting into Inherent Vice (2014) — Paul Thomas Anderson's deliriously funny, achingly melancholy, and deliberately bewildering adaptation of Thomas Pynchon's novel, and one of the most singular, purely cinematic experiences of the last decade. This is the film that rewards surrender over comprehension.Written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson and based on Pynchon's 2009 novel — the first Pynchon work ever adapted for the screen — the film follows Larry "Doc" Sportello (Joaquin Phoenix), a perpetually stoned hippie private investigator in 1970 Los Angeles, who gets pulled into a labyrinthine web of missing persons, shadowy cartels, real estate conspiracies, and lost love when his ex-girlfriend Shasta (Katherine Waterston) shows up at his door asking for help. The extraordinary ensemble cast includes Josh Brolin as the square, frozen-chocolate-banana-eating LAPD detective "Bigfoot" Bjornsen in what might be the funniest performance of his career, alongside Owen Wilson, Reese Witherspoon, Benicio del Toro, Jena Malone, Maya Rudolph, Martin Short, Eric Roberts, Michael K. Williams, and — narrating the whole gorgeous fog of it — singer-songwriter Joanna Newsom as Sortilège.We're going deep on everything: what Inherent Vice is actually about beneath its deliberately tangled plot — the death of the counterculture, the end of the 1960s dream, paranoia as a way of life, and the unbearable weight of love you can't hold onto — Jonny Greenwood's extraordinary score recorded with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and featuring an unreleased Radiohead song alongside tracks from Neil Young and Can, Robert Elswit's warm and hazy 35mm cinematography, and why this is the Paul Thomas Anderson film that gets better and stranger and more heartbreaking with every single rewatch. Anderson has described it as "like a Cheech & Chong movie" — which is both completely accurate and wildly undersells what it's doing.We're also asking the essential questions: where does Inherent Vice sit in the PTA filmography alongside Boogie Nights, Magnolia, There Will Be Blood, and The Master? Is it genuinely his most personal film? And why does a movie deliberately designed to confuse you feel so emotionally devastating by the end?Whether you're a Paul Thomas Anderson devotee, a Joaquin Phoenix fanatic, a Thomas Pynchon reader, a neo-noir enthusiast, a lover of 1970s Los Angeles atmosphere, a Jonny Greenwood score obsessive, or just someone who wants to watch a great film and not understand a single thing that happened and feel completely fulfilled anyway — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Inherent Vice 2014 | Paul Thomas Anderson | Joaquin Phoenix | Josh Brolin | Katherine Waterston | Owen Wilson | Joanna Newsom | Thomas Pynchon adaptation | first Pynchon film | Jonny Greenwood score | Radiohead unreleased song | Robert Elswit cinematography | neo-noir films | 1970s Los Angeles | stoner detective films | end of the 60s counterculture | best PTA films | Paul Thomas Anderson filmography ranked | best films of 2014 | Boogie Nights vs Inherent Vice | There Will Be Blood vs Inherent Vice | most confusing movies | movies that reward rewatching | Benicio del Toro | Martin Short | Reese Witherspoon | Maya Rudolph | movie review podcast | film analysis | best literary adaptations | Pynchon novel explained | Doc Sportello | Golden Age Hollywood noirSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: did you understand Inherent Vice on your first watch? And does it matter?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  27. 30

    The Lost Boys (1987)

    Sleep all day. Party all night. Never grow old. Never die. It's fun to be a vampire. This week we're riding into Santa Carla for The Lost Boys (1987) — Joel Schumacher's supremely stylish, wickedly funny, endlessly rewatchable 80s horror masterpiece that didn't just make vampires cool, it permanently redefined what vampire movies could look and feel like.Directed by Joel Schumacher, the film follows two teenage brothers — Michael (Jason Patric) and Sam (Corey Haim) — who move with their divorced mother Lucy (Dianne Wiest) to the fictional California beach town of Santa Carla, only to discover it's the murder capital of the world, overrun by a gang of motorcycle-riding, leather-clad vampires led by the magnetic and terrifying David (Kiefer Sutherland). As Michael falls under the spell of the gang and the mysterious Star (Jami Gertz), it falls to Sam and the gloriously unhinged Frog Brothers — Corey Feldman and Jamison Newlander — to save his soul before it's too late. Also featuring Edward Herrmann, Barnard Hughes, and a pre-Bill & Ted Alex Winter lurking in the vampire pack.We're going deep on everything: Kiefer Sutherland's extraordinary, near-wordless performance as David — Schumacher himself said Sutherland "has the least amount of dialogue in the movie, but his presence is extraordinary" — the iconic boardwalk concert scene with shirtless saxophonist Tim Cappello, the film's revolutionary MTV-style visual language that made it look like nothing else in 1987, the legendary soundtrack featuring Echo & the Bunnymen's cover of "People Are Strange," and why the film is credited with helping permanently shift vampire mythology toward a younger, sexier, more dangerous aesthetic — directly inspiring everything from Buffy the Vampire Slayer to Twilight to What We Do in the Shadows.We're also talking about the Two Coreys — Corey Haim and Corey Feldman — at the absolute peak of their powers, the film's fascinating origins as a much more juvenile Goonies-style adventure before Schumacher transformed it into something sexier and darker, and what it means that this gleefully trashy, gorgeous, endlessly fun movie has only gotten better with age.Whether you're an 80s horror devotee, a vampire movie fanatic, a Kiefer Sutherland fan, a Two Coreys nostalgic, a cult classic collector, a lover of iconic movie soundtracks, or just someone who wants to spend an hour celebrating one of the most purely entertaining films ever made — this episode is a must.Topics covered: The Lost Boys 1987 | Joel Schumacher | Kiefer Sutherland | Corey Haim | Corey Feldman | Jason Patric | Jami Gertz | Dianne Wiest | Alex Winter | best vampire movies | best 80s horror films | 80s cult classics | vampire movie history | Two Coreys | Santa Cruz California filming | Echo and the Bunnymen People Are Strange | Tim Cappello sax scene | best 80s soundtracks | horror comedy films | vampire mythology | Buffy the Vampire Slayer influence | What We Do in the Shadows reference | 80s nostalgia | best horror films ever made | Joel Schumacher filmography | movie review podcast | film analysis | teen horror films | cult classic horror | best movie villains 80s | sleep all day party all night | most rewatchable 80s moviesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: is Kiefer Sutherland's David the greatest vampire villain in movie history? And be honest — did the noodles-into-worms scene get you?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  28. 29

    Scream (1996)

    What's your favorite scary movie? This week we're heading to Woodsboro for Scream (1996) — Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson's genre-shattering, self-aware, wickedly clever slasher masterpiece that didn't just revive a dying genre, it completely reinvented it and changed the course of horror cinema forever.Directed by Wes Craven and written by Kevin Williamson, the film follows high school student Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell), who on the anniversary of her mother's murder becomes the target of a masked killer known as Ghostface. The cast around her is extraordinary — Courteney Cox as the ruthlessly ambitious reporter Gale Weathers, David Arquette as the lovable and hapless Deputy Dewey, Matthew Lillard delivering a performance of unhinged comic genius, Rose McGowan, Skeet Ulrich, and Jamie Kennedy as Randy the horror movie obsessive who essentially narrates the film's rules directly to the audience — and to the killer. And that opening. Drew Barrymore. The phone call. Eleven minutes. Possibly the greatest horror movie opening sequence ever made.We're digging into everything: how Williamson wrote the script while house-sitting and watching a documentary about the Gainesville Ripper, producing a screenplay that became the subject of an intense bidding war from multiple studios before Miramax snapped it up, why the film was nearly directed by Robert Rodriguez, Danny Boyle, or Quentin Tarantino before Craven was brought on board, how the script's original title was Scary Movie before Harvey Weinstein changed it late in production, and the genius of Craven's cameo as Fred the janitor — dressed in Freddy Krueger's exact outfit as a direct homage to his own most famous creation. We're also talking about what makes Scream so much more than a slasher film — its genuine wit, its love for and simultaneous deconstruction of the genre it's operating in, and the way it made horror movie rules part of the actual plot in a way no film had done before.We're asking the big questions too: is Scream the greatest slasher film ever made? Is the opening scene the single greatest horror movie cold open in history? And how does the original compare to the sequels and the recent relaunch?Whether you're a horror devotee, a Wes Craven fanatic, a slasher movie enthusiast, a 90s pop culture obsessive, a Neve Campbell fan, a meta-horror nerd, or just someone who wants to spend an hour celebrating one of the most perfectly constructed genre films ever made — this episode is unmissable.Topics covered: Scream 1996 | Wes Craven | Kevin Williamson | Neve Campbell | Drew Barrymore | Courteney Cox | David Arquette | Matthew Lillard | Rose McGowan | Skeet Ulrich | Jamie Kennedy | Ghostface | best horror movies ever made | best slasher films | best horror movie openings | Drew Barrymore opening scene | horror movie rules | meta horror | self-aware horror | 90s horror films | horror film history | slasher film revival | best 90s movies | Woodsboro | Sidney Prescott | Scary Movie original title | Kevin Williamson screenplay | horror movie podcast | film analysis | Scream franchise ranked | Scream vs Halloween | best horror film soundtracks | Ghostface voice | Roger L. Jackson | Wes Craven filmography | best horror villainsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: is the Drew Barrymore opening the greatest cold open in horror history? And what's YOUR favorite scary movie?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  29. 28

    The Guest (2014)

    Hello. I served with your son. This week we're unlocking the front door and letting in The Guest (2014) — Adam Wingard's neon-soaked, synth-drenched, John Carpenter-worshipping action thriller that is simultaneously one of the most purely entertaining genre films of the decade and one of the most quietly devastating post-9/11 meditations on what America does to its soldiers. Also, Dan Stevens is absolutely terrifying and magnetic and you will not be able to take your eyes off him for a single second.Written by Simon Barrett and directed by Adam Wingard, the film follows David (Dan Stevens), a US soldier who shows up unannounced on the doorstep of the Peterson family — a grieving military household that lost their son Caleb in Afghanistan — claiming to be Caleb's best friend delivering a final message. The family welcomes him in. He is charming, helpful, and devastatingly handsome. And then people start dying. Maika Monroe plays Anna, the teenage daughter who starts putting the pieces together, with Lance Reddick, Leland Orser, and Sheila Kelley rounding out the family, and a Halloween-season small-town New Mexico setting providing the perfect backdrop for everything to spectacularly, violently unravel.We're going all in on everything: Dan Stevens' jaw-dropping physical and psychological transformation from Downton Abbey heartthrob into something genuinely dangerous and almost supernaturally charming — Wingard said Stevens was "the only serious contender" for the role and that he "spent hours in the gym" to physically become David — Steve Moore's legendary synth score that is one of the greatest genre soundtracks of the 21st century, Wingard and Barrett's loving but sharp homage to the John Carpenter thriller tradition, Maika Monroe's performance that launched one of the best careers in contemporary genre film, and the film's brilliantly escalating third act that ends in a burning Halloween haunted house with everything on fire. Critics compared it to the work of early John Carpenter and James Cameron at their lean, mean indie best.We're also asking the big questions: is The Guest the most underrated genre film of the 2010s? Is Dan Stevens' David one of the great movie monsters of the decade? And why does a film this good, this stylish, and this entertaining still fly so far under the radar?Whether you're a genre thriller fanatic, a Dan Stevens devotee, a Maika Monroe fan, a synth score obsessive, a John Carpenter worshipper, an Adam Wingard completist, or just someone who loves a lean, perfectly calibrated thriller that knows exactly what it is and delivers on every single promise — this episode is essential.Topics covered: The Guest 2014 | Adam Wingard | Dan Stevens | Maika Monroe | Simon Barrett | Lance Reddick | best thriller films 2010s | best synth soundtracks | Steve Moore score | John Carpenter influence | underrated thrillers | best hidden gem films | cult thriller films | Dan Stevens post Downton Abbey | Dan Stevens transformation | military thriller | Halloween themed films | genre filmmaking | You're Next Adam Wingard | best action thrillers | best performances 2010s | Maika Monroe early career | New Mexico films | best cult films | movie review podcast | film analysis | stranger comes to town films | most underrated films of the decade | best movie soundtracks | B-movie elevated | 80s throwback filmsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: would you have let David stay? Be honest. We know the answer.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  30. 27

    One Battle After Another (2025)

    No fear. Just like Tom Cruise. This week we're going all in on One Battle After Another (2025) — Paul Thomas Anderson's thundering, dizzying, deeply American epic that has critics calling it his masterpiece, awards voters showering it with nominations, and audiences either completely electrified or walking out in the first five minutes. This is the most talked-about film of the year, and we have a lot to say about it.Written, directed, and produced by Paul Thomas Anderson and loosely inspired by Thomas Pynchon's 1990 novel Vineland, the film follows washed-up ex-revolutionary Bob (Leonardo DiCaprio) — a stoned, paranoid recluse living off-grid with his fierce, self-reliant teenage daughter Willa (Chase Infiniti) — whose carefully hidden world explodes when his evil nemesis, the unhinged ultra-conservative Army Colonel Lockjaw (Sean Penn), resurfaces after sixteen years to hunt them down. Teyana Taylor plays Perfidia Beverly Hills — Bob's revolutionary former partner and Willa's mother — in a performance that has generated more awards buzz than almost anyone else in the film. Benicio del Toro, Regina Hall, Alana Haim, and Wood Harris round out an extraordinary cast.We're going deep on everything: Anderson shot the film in VistaVision — the large-format 1950s filmmaking technology that had barely been used since the 1960s — giving it a raw, painterly, almost overwhelming visual richness, Jonny Greenwood's propulsive and eclectic score featuring xylophones, marimbas, and what critics described as controlled chaos, Sean Penn's villain performance as Lockjaw which has been called one of the great movie villain turns of recent years, and why this film — two decades in the making — might be the most politically urgent American movie in a generation. It was nominated for 13 Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor for DiCaprio, and two separate Best Supporting Actor nominations for Penn and Del Toro — and it won Best Supporting Actress for Teyana Taylor.We're also asking the big questions: is One Battle After Another PTA's greatest film — better than There Will Be Blood, Boogie Nights, and The Master? Is this the film America needed right now? And where does Teyana Taylor's Perfidia rank among the great supporting performances of this decade?Whether you're a Paul Thomas Anderson devotee, a Leonardo DiCaprio completist, a Sean Penn fan, a Teyana Taylor enthusiast, a Thomas Pynchon reader, a film awards obsessive, a lover of ambitious American cinema, or just someone who wants to understand why everyone is arguing about this movie — this episode is essential.Topics covered: One Battle After Another 2025 | Paul Thomas Anderson | Leonardo DiCaprio | Sean Penn | Teyana Taylor | Benicio del Toro | Chase Infiniti | Regina Hall | Alana Haim | Jonny Greenwood score | VistaVision filmmaking | Thomas Pynchon Vineland adaptation | best films of 2025 | 2025 Oscar nominations | Best Picture 2025 | PTA filmography ranked | best American films | revolutionary cinema | political films | best villain performances 2025 | Sean Penn villain | Teyana Taylor Oscar | best film scores 2025 | movie review podcast | film analysis | epic films | best director 2025 | There Will Be Blood vs One Battle After Another | Warner Bros 2025 | most controversial films 2025 | American political cinemaSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: where does One Battle After Another sit in Paul Thomas Anderson's filmography? And was Teyana Taylor robbed of a bigger moment at the Oscars?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  31. 26

    John Carpenter's Vampires (1998)

    A vampire isn't a romantic figure in a frilly shirt with a euro-trash accent. This week we're strapping on the crossbow and heading into the New Mexico desert for John Carpenter's Vampires (1998) — the wildest, most unapologetically savage, and most criminally underrated vampire film of the entire 90s. This is the anti-Interview with the Vampire. This is what happens when John Carpenter decides to make a vampire western.Directed and scored by John Carpenter and adapted from John Steakley's novel Vampire$, the film follows Jack Crow (James Woods) — a lifelong vampire slayer raised by the Catholic Church after his parents were murdered by vampires — who, after his entire team is wiped out by Jan Valek, the most powerful vampire who ever lived, must hunt down and destroy the monster before he gets his hands on an ancient relic that will allow vampires to walk in sunlight. Daniel Baldwin plays Crow's loyal partner Montoya, Sheryl Lee plays Katrina — a woman with a psychic link to Valek after being bitten — Tim Guinee plays the nervous young priest along for the ride, and Maximilian Schell appears as the Cardinal pulling the strings. Thomas Ian Griffith is absolutely terrifying as Valek.We're going deep on everything: Carpenter's deliberately un-gothic vision of vampires as pure savage predators — "There isn't a second of brooding loneliness in their existence. They're too busy ripping and tearing humans apart" — the film's extraordinary opening raid sequence which remains one of the greatest cold opens in 90s horror, Carpenter's own twanging steel guitar score that gives the whole film the feel of a Spaghetti Western from hell, and why the dying Gene Siskel passionately advocated for James Woods to receive an Oscar nomination for Best Actor for this performance in his final "Memo to the Academy" segment — one of the most remarkable behind-the-scenes stories in 90s horror history. Carpenter had considered Clint Eastwood, Kurt Russell, Al Pacino, and Joe Pesci for the Jack Crow role before settling on Woods — and his reasoning was perfect: he wanted the vampire slayer to be as savage and menacing as the monsters themselves.We're also asking the big questions: is this John Carpenter's best film of the 1990s? Is Jack Crow the greatest vampire hunter in movie history? And does John Carpenter's Vampires deserve a serious reappraisal as a genuine genre classic?Whether you're a John Carpenter devotee, a James Woods fan, a vampire movie completist, a horror western enthusiast, a lover of late-90s practical effects horror, a Spaghetti Western admirer, or just someone who wants to watch a movie where vampires get dragged into the sunlight by steel cables attached to jeeps — this episode is for you.Topics covered: John Carpenter's Vampires 1998 | John Carpenter | James Woods | Jack Crow | Daniel Baldwin | Sheryl Lee | Thomas Ian Griffith | Maximilian Schell | Jan Valek | best vampire movies | vampire westerns | horror western films | John Carpenter filmography | late 90s horror | best horror films 1998 | Gene Siskel Oscar advocacy | Carpenter score steel guitar | practical effects horror | Catholic Church vampire hunters | anti-gothic vampires | underrated horror films | best vampire hunters in movies | John Steakley Vampire$ novel | best 90s horror films | horror movie podcast | film analysis | New Mexico horror | From Dusk Till Dawn comparison | best John Carpenter films ranked | most underrated 90s horrorSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: is Jack Crow the greatest vampire hunter in horror history? And is this John Carpenter's most underrated film?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  32. 25

    Good Will Hunting (1997)

    It's not your fault. This week we're heading to South Boston for Good Will Hunting (1997) — one of the most beloved, most emotionally devastating, and most enduringly powerful American dramas ever made. The film that launched Matt Damon and Ben Affleck into the stratosphere, gave Robin Williams his Oscar, and made an entire generation feel seen in ways they didn't know they needed.Directed by Gus Van Sant and written by Matt Damon and Ben Affleck — then unknown young actors in their mid-twenties — the film follows Will Hunting (Damon), a self-taught mathematical genius from working-class South Boston who works as a janitor at MIT, whose extraordinary talent is discovered by Professor Gerald Lambeau (Stellan Skarsgård). Facing jail time after assaulting a police officer, Will agrees to therapy with Sean Maguire — Robin Williams in the performance of his life — a psychologist whose own grief and loss turn out to be the key to unlocking the trauma Will has buried under brilliance, bravado, and walls so high nobody has ever managed to climb them. Minnie Driver is radiant as Skylar. Ben Affleck, Casey Affleck, and Cole Hauser are heartbreaking as the South Boston friends who love Will enough to want him to leave.We're going deep on everything: the extraordinary behind-the-scenes story of how two young unknowns wrote one of the most celebrated screenplays in Hollywood history, how the film was originally conceived as a thriller — a street kid recruited by the FBI — before Rob Reiner convinced them to strip everything away and focus entirely on the relationship between Will and his therapist, Robin Williams' legendary improvised monologue about his wife's flatulence that made the camera operator laugh so hard the camera shakes on screen, the ad-libbed therapy scenes that nobody saw coming and that Williams spent minimum seven takes perfecting because he wanted versions that explored different emotional registers, and what the park bench scene — Sean telling Will "it's not your fault" — means to every person who has ever been told they were the problem when the problem was what was done to them.We're also asking the big questions: is this Robin Williams' greatest dramatic performance? Where does Good Will Hunting rank among the great films about therapy, trauma, and the cost of genius? And what does it mean that two guys from Boston wrote this in their twenties and it still hits this hard?Whether you're a Robin Williams devotee, a Matt Damon or Ben Affleck fan, a lover of Boston films, someone who has been through therapy, someone who hasn't but needed this film anyway, a Gus Van Sant admirer, a lover of powerful screenwriting, or just a person who needs a good cry — this episode is for you.Topics covered: Good Will Hunting 1997 | Robin Williams | Matt Damon | Ben Affleck | Gus Van Sant | Stellan Skarsgård | Minnie Driver | Casey Affleck | best Robin Williams performances | Robin Williams Oscar | Matt Damon Ben Affleck screenplay | it's not your fault scene | park bench scene | best therapy scenes in movies | South Boston films | Boston movies | best 90s dramas | coming of age films | trauma in film | genius films | best screenplays ever written | Miramax films | Academy Award Best Original Screenplay | best films about therapy | movie review podcast | film analysis | most emotional movie scenes | Robin Williams dramatic roles | Good Will Hunting ending explained | best 90s movies | films about working class genius | Gus Van Sant filmographySubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: what's the scene in Good Will Hunting that gets you every single time? And is the park bench scene the greatest moment Robin Williams ever put on screen?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  33. 24

    The Island of Dr. Moreau (1996)

    Nobody would come out of their trailer. This week we're shipwrecked on the most chaotic film set in Hollywood history for The Island of Doctor Moreau (1996) — a movie so legendarily, spectacularly, cosmically doomed that the story of how it got made is more entertaining than the film itself. And the film itself, in its own deranged way, is absolutely unmissable.Based on H.G. Wells' 1896 novel and directed by John Frankenheimer — who was brought in as a replacement director halfway through the first week of shooting — the film stars Marlon Brando as the ice-bucket-hat-wearing, papal-throne-riding mad scientist Dr. Moreau, Val Kilmer as his perpetually stoned assistant Montgomery, David Thewlis as a UN agent stranded on the island, and Fairuza Balk as Moreau's half-cat daughter. Ron Perlman lurks in the creature makeup. The world's smallest man, Nelson de la Rosa, serves as Brando's miniature mirror image. A hurricane hit the set. The original director got fired and then secretly snuck back onto the set disguised as a dog-man extra. And Marlon Brando wanted his character to turn into a dolphin at the end.We're going through every single layer of this magnificent catastrophe: Bruce Willis was originally cast but dropped out when he began divorce proceedings from Demi Moore, replaced by Val Kilmer who immediately demanded 40% fewer shooting days — which in turn forced the entire casting to be reshuffled and knocked James Woods out of the production entirely. Brando refused to learn his lines and had them fed through an earpiece, spent hours in his air-conditioned trailer while the cast sweated in full creature makeup in tropical heat, and got into an ego standoff with Kilmer where neither man would leave his trailer first — leaving hundreds of extras waiting in full animal prosthetics for hours in the Australian sun. Brando became obsessed with Nelson de la Rosa and demanded the script be rewritten to give the tiny man more lines. And director Frankenheimer publicly declared he never wanted to work with Val Kilmer again.We're also talking about the 2014 documentary Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley's Island of Dr. Moreau — which tells the full story of the original director's vision, his firing, and his extraordinary return to the set in disguise — and asking the question every viewer of this film eventually asks: is The Island of Doctor Moreau a disaster, a masterpiece of accidental surrealism, or somehow both at the same time?Whether you're a Hollywood disaster movie enthusiast, a Marlon Brando devotee, a Val Kilmer fan, a lover of production hell stories, a behind-the-scenes movie nerd, a cult film collector, or just someone who needs to hear about the time Marlon Brando wore a bucket of ice on his head and rode through the jungle in a modified golf cart surrounded by animal-human hybrids — this episode is absolutely essential.Topics covered: The Island of Doctor Moreau 1996 | Marlon Brando | Val Kilmer | John Frankenheimer | David Thewlis | Fairuza Balk | Richard Stanley | Lost Soul documentary | production hell movies | worst movie productions | Hollywood disasters | H.G. Wells adaptation | Stan Winston makeup effects | Nelson de la Rosa | behind the scenes disasters | best worst movies | cult classic films | Val Kilmer controversial | Marlon Brando late career | Bruce Willis dropped out | movie production disasters | most chaotic film sets | Ron Perlman | Temuera Morrison | New Line Cinema | movie review podcast | film analysis | most insane movie productions | Hollywood behind the scenes | Marlon Brando ice hat | best documentary about bad movies | so bad it's good filmsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: is The Island of Doctor Moreau a disaster or an accidental masterpiece? And who do you blame — Brando, Kilmer, or the hurricane?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  34. 23

    Wedding Crashers (2005)

    Rule number one: never leave a fellow crasher behind. This week we're suiting up, picking a fake name, and crashing Wedding Crashers (2005) — the wildly funny, endlessly rewatchable, R-rated comedy that didn't just dominate the summer of 2005, it permanently changed the economics of adult comedy in Hollywood and gave us one of the greatest big-screen comedic pairings of the entire decade.Directed by David Dobkin, the film follows divorce mediators and lifelong best friends John Beckwith (Owen Wilson) and Jeremy Grey (Vince Vaughn) — who spend every wedding season crashing receptions across the DC area to eat free food, drink free booze, and inevitably charm their way into the beds of unsuspecting wedding guests. Their carefully constructed world comes crashing down when they infiltrate the wedding of the year — the daughter of Treasury Secretary William Cleary (Christopher Walken) — and John falls genuinely, helplessly in love with Claire (Rachel McAdams), while Jeremy gets latched onto by the unpredictably unhinged Gloria (Isla Fisher in a star-making performance). Bradley Cooper plays the villainous Sack Lodge. And Will Ferrell shows up uncredited as the legendary Chazz Reinhold — the original wedding crasher, now crashing funerals — in what might be the greatest cameo in 2000s comedy history.We're breaking down everything: the electric, lightning-in-a-bottle chemistry between Wilson and Vaughn that feels completely effortless, Isla Fisher's absolute scene-stealing performance, Christopher Walken being precisely as wonderfully strange as you'd expect Christopher Walken to be, the film's extraordinary opening wedding montage, and the staggering commercial legacy of a film that became the first R-rated comedy to earn over $200 million at the US box office and is credited alongside The 40-Year-Old Virgin with single-handedly reviving the adult R-rated comedy genre. We're also talking about the film's extraordinary launch pad effect — Wedding Crashers helped cement the star status of both Wilson and Vaughn while simultaneously launching the careers of Bradley Cooper and Isla Fisher — and how this movie fits into the peak Frat Pack era alongside Anchorman, Old School, and Dodgeball.Whether you're a 2000s comedy devotee, an Owen Wilson fanatic, a Vince Vaughn enthusiast, a Rachel McAdams fan, someone who quotes this movie constantly at weddings, a Isla Fisher admirer, or just a person who loves a comedy that makes you laugh until something comes out of your nose — this episode is for you.Topics covered: Wedding Crashers 2005 | Owen Wilson | Vince Vaughn | Rachel McAdams | Isla Fisher | Christopher Walken | Bradley Cooper | Will Ferrell cameo | Chazz Reinhold | David Dobkin | Frat Pack movies | best 2000s comedies | best R-rated comedies | best comedy movies ever | Will Ferrell uncredited cameo | Rachel McAdams early career | Isla Fisher breakout role | Bradley Cooper early career | best buddy comedies | R-rated comedy box office | 2005 movies | best romantic comedies | wedding movies | comedy film history | movie review podcast | film analysis | best comedy duos | Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn | first R-rated comedy 200 million | best comedy cameos ever | Frat Pack era rankedSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: is the Will Ferrell cameo the greatest uncredited cameo in comedy history? And what's your favorite rule from the wedding crashers rulebook?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  35. 22

    Speed (1994)

    Pop quiz, hotshot. There's a bomb on a bus. If the bus drops below 50 miles per hour, the bomb explodes. What do you do? What do you do? This week we're strapping in for Speed (1994) — Jan de Bont's perfectly engineered, relentlessly propulsive, gloriously ridiculous action masterpiece that launched Sandra Bullock into superstardom, cemented Keanu Reeves as one of the great action heroes of his generation, and gave Dennis Hopper one of the most enjoyably unhinged villain roles of the entire decade.Directed by Jan de Bont in his feature film directorial debut and written by Graham Yost, the film follows LAPD SWAT officer Jack Traven (Reeves) as he faces off against revenge-driven ex-bomb squad officer Howard Payne (Hopper), who rigs a city bus to explode if it drops below 50 miles per hour — forcing passenger Annie Porter (Bullock) to take the wheel while Jack tries to disarm the bomb and outthink the madman watching their every move. Jeff Daniels, Joe Morton, and Alan Ruck round out a perfectly cast supporting ensemble.We're going full throttle on everything: the extraordinary practical stunt work that made this film genuinely terrifying before CGI could fake it, Dennis Hopper's delirious scene-chewing as Howard Payne — the man who famously delivered the line "Poor people are crazy, Jack. I'm eccentric" — the real-life chemistry between Reeves and Bullock that audiences could feel crackling through the screen, and the wild behind-the-scenes story. Tom Cruise, Tom Hanks, Wesley Snipes, and Woody Harrelson were all considered for the lead role before de Bont cast Reeves after seeing him in Point Break, believing he projected the perfect balance of vulnerability and strength. The role of Annie was originally written as an African-American paramedic and first offered to Halle Berry, who turned it down. And Reeves himself secretly rehearsed the Jaguar-to-bus jump stunt and performed it himself against de Bont's explicit wishes.We're also talking about why Speed works so brilliantly as both a pure action machine and as a character piece — and why the sequel, Speed 2: Cruise Control, is one of the most catastrophic follow-ups in Hollywood history. Keanu said no. That should have been enough information.Whether you're a 90s action devotee, a Keanu Reeves fan, a Sandra Bullock enthusiast, a Dennis Hopper admirer, a Jan de Bont cinema archaeologist, someone who loves films that simply do not stop moving for two hours, or just a person who has strong feelings about the bus jump — this episode is essential listening.Topics covered: Speed 1994 | Keanu Reeves | Sandra Bullock | Dennis Hopper | Jan de Bont | Jack Traven | Howard Payne | best 90s action movies | best action thrillers ever | Die Hard on a bus | bomb on a bus | best movie villains 90s | Sandra Bullock breakout role | Keanu Reeves action hero | Halle Berry turned down Speed | Tom Cruise almost played Jack Traven | practical stunts 90s | best action movie premises | 90s blockbusters | Jeff Daniels | Graham Yost screenplay | Speed 2 worst sequel | best movie one-liners | movie review podcast | film analysis | best action movies ever made | Point Break Keanu Reeves | 90s nostalgia | most rewatchable action films | Mark Mancina score | best summer blockbusters | bus jump stuntSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: is Speed the greatest pure action film of the 1990s? And do we need to talk about Speed 2? Because we might need to talk about Speed 2.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  36. 21

    Point Break (1991)

    Vaya con Dios, Brah. This week we're paddling out for Point Break (1991) — Kathryn Bigelow's electrifying, sun-drenched, adrenaline-soaked action masterpiece that is simultaneously one of the greatest pure action films ever made and one of the most unexpectedly emotional stories about obsession, identity, and the intoxicating pull of a life lived completely without limits. This movie should not work as well as it does. It absolutely does.Directed by Kathryn Bigelow from a screenplay by W. Peter Iliff — developed in collaboration with her then-husband James Cameron — the film follows Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves), a hotshot rookie FBI agent and former Ohio State quarterback who goes undercover in the Los Angeles surf community to catch a gang of bank robbers known as the Ex-Presidents, who rob banks wearing masks of Reagan, Nixon, Carter, and Johnson. What he finds instead is Bodhi (Patrick Swayze) — the charismatic, philosophy-spouting, wave-riding, skydiving spiritual leader who makes Utah question everything he thought he believed — and Tyler (Lori Petty), the woman caught between them. Gary Busey is magnificent as Utah's seen-it-all partner Pappas. And yes, that is Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers getting his nose broken on screen.We're going deep on everything: Patrick Swayze's extraordinary performance — Swayze described the film as a "love story between two men" and played Bodhi as a philosophical warrior who genuinely believes in what he's chasing — the jaw-dropping practical stunt work including the skydiving sequences that Swayze actually performed himself, making 55 jumps and cracking four ribs during the surfing sequences — Bigelow's revolutionary direction which Rolling Stone called "the greatest female-gaze action movie ever made" — and why this film launched Keanu Reeves into the kind of action stardom that led directly to Speed and eventually The Matrix. The film was originally titled Johnny Utah and then Riders on the Storm before finally becoming Point Break halfway through filming.We're also asking the big questions: is Bodhi one of the great movie characters of the 1990s? Is Point Break secretly a film about toxic charisma and the seductive lie of pure freedom? And how does Kathryn Bigelow — the woman who would go on to direct The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty — make a movie about surfer bank robbers feel genuinely profound?Whether you're a 90s action devotee, a Keanu Reeves fan, a Patrick Swayze admirer, a Kathryn Bigelow enthusiast, a surf culture obsessive, a lover of films that operate simultaneously as pure entertainment and genuine philosophy, or just someone who has ever felt the pull of a life lived at maximum velocity — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Point Break 1991 | Kathryn Bigelow | Keanu Reeves | Patrick Swayze | Gary Busey | Lori Petty | Johnny Utah | Bodhi | Ex-Presidents bank robbers | best 90s action movies | best action films ever made | surfer movies | skydiving movies | James Cameron connection | Anthony Kiedis cameo | best undercover cop movies | 90s cult classics | female directors action films | Keanu Reeves early career | Patrick Swayze best films | best on-screen chemistry | practical stunts 90s | best buddy movies | FBI movies | bank robbery films | 90s nostalgia | movie review podcast | film analysis | most rewatchable 90s movies | Speed connection Keanu Reeves | best action movie endings | Point Break live theater | Hot Fuzz referenceSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the ultimate question: is Bodhi a visionary or a con man? And could you have let him go at the end?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  37. 20

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990)

    Turtle power. This week we're dropping into the sewers of New York City for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990) — the scrappy, gritty, genuinely surprising independent film that every major Hollywood studio passed on, became the highest-grossing independent film of its time, and defined the childhood of an entire generation. This movie is a bigger deal than people remember. We're making the case.Directed by Steve Barron and distributed by New Line Cinema — which at the time was a small independent company better known for low-budget B-movies — the film follows Leonardo, Donatello, Michelangelo, and Raphael as they surface from the sewers to take on the Shredder and his Foot Clan alongside reporter April O'Neil (Judith Hoag) and street vigilante Casey Jones (Elias Koteas). Corey Feldman voices Donatello. Kevin Clash — the man behind Elmo — voices Splinter. And the turtle costumes were created by Jim Henson's Creature Shop in one of Henson's last projects before his death just two months after the film's premiere.We're going deep on everything: the extraordinary practical animatronic work that Jim Henson himself called the most advanced creatures his shop had ever created, the film's surprisingly dark and gritty New York atmosphere that owes far more to the original Eastman and Laird comics than the Saturday morning cartoon, the remarkable behind-the-scenes story of a film that was turned down by Walt Disney, Columbia, Universal, MGM, Paramount, Fox, and Warner Bros. before New Line picked it up halfway through production — all of whom feared it would bomb like Masters of the Universe. Instead it became a cultural phenomenon. Also: a young Sam Rockwell is in this film, a young Skeet Ulrich is in this film, and a young Scott Wolf is in this film — all as uncredited Foot Clan members. That's genuinely insane.We're asking the big questions too: does the 1990 TMNT hold up as a genuinely good film beyond the nostalgia? Is its surprisingly emotional Splinter storyline one of the most underrated emotional arcs in any 90s family film? And what does your favorite turtle say about the man you became?Whether you're a lifelong TMNT devotee, a 90s nostalgia obsessive, a Jim Henson fan, a practical effects enthusiast, a New Line Cinema history buff, a Corey Feldman completist, or just someone who grew up believing pizza was a food group and ninjas were real — this episode is for you. Cowabunga.Topics covered: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1990 | TMNT original movie | Jim Henson Creature Shop | Corey Feldman | Kevin Clash | Steve Barron | Judith Hoag | Elias Koteas | Casey Jones | April O'Neil | Shredder | Foot Clan | Splinter | New Line Cinema | best 90s kids movies | childhood nostalgia films | best superhero origin films | practical effects movies | highest grossing independent film | TMNT history | original TMNT comics | Sam Rockwell cameo | Skeet Ulrich cameo | Scott Wolf cameo | 90s nostalgia | Jim Henson legacy | heroes in a half shell | movie review podcast | film analysis | best family films ever | TMNT ranked | Turtle Power | best martial arts movies | New York City movies | which turtle are you | pizza moviesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate that has divided friends, families, and entire generations: which turtle are you? No wrong answers. Except maybe Donatello.YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  38. 19

    Face/Off (1997)

    I could eat a peach for hours. This week we're going full operatic chaos for Face/Off (1997) — John Woo's barnstorming, dove-releasing, slow-motion-shooting, completely unhinged masterpiece that stands as not only the crown jewel of peak Nicolas Cage, not only the greatest film of John Travolta's career, but possibly the single most maximalist, most joyfully excessive, most purely cinematic action film ever produced by Hollywood. This movie is beyond category. It simply exists on its own plane.Directed by John Woo in his first Hollywood film with complete creative control and written by Mike Werb and Michael Colleary, the film follows FBI agent Sean Archer (John Travolta) and terrorist-for-hire Castor Troy (Nicolas Cage) — sworn mortal enemies — who through experimental facial transplant surgery end up literally wearing each other's faces, forcing each man to inhabit the other's identity, family, and life while hunting each other across Los Angeles in a series of increasingly unhinged set pieces. Joan Allen is extraordinary as Archer's wife. Alessandro Nivola, Gina Gershon, Dominique Swain, Nick Cassavetes, Margaret Cho, and a young Thomas Jane round out a perfectly cast ensemble.We're going all in on everything: the staggering list of actor pairings the studio considered before landing on Travolta and Cage — including Stallone and Schwarzenegger, De Niro and Pacino, Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt, and Mick Jagger and David Bowie — the extraordinary dual performances where both actors spent two weeks together studying each other's mannerisms, voices, and physical tics before filming began, the legendary church shootout that stands as one of the great action sequences in cinema history, John Woo's signature gun fu and heroic bloodshed style operating at absolute peak power, and why Face/Off sits alongside Con Air and The Rock in what fans have dubbed the holy trinity of peak Nicolas Cage action films — all released within a single extraordinary year.We're also asking the big questions: is Face/Off legitimately a great film or just a great spectacle? Is the premise — which the studio originally set in the future before Woo insisted on keeping it contemporary — actually a profound meditation on identity, obsession, and what it means to become your enemy? And could any two actors alive today pull off what Cage and Travolta did here?Whether you're a Nicolas Cage devotee, a John Travolta fan, a John Woo enthusiast, a lover of peak 90s action excess, a gun fu aficionado, or just someone who believes cinema at its most unhinged is cinema at its most alive — this episode is unmissable.Topics covered: Face/Off 1997 | John Woo | Nicolas Cage | John Travolta | Castor Troy | Sean Archer | holy trinity Nicolas Cage | Con Air The Rock Face/Off | best 90s action movies | best action films ever made | gun fu | heroic bloodshed | John Woo filmmaking | dual performances | actor transformation | Joan Allen | Alessandro Nivola | Gina Gershon | best action sequences ever | church shootout | speedboat chase | Johnny Depp passed on Face/Off | Stallone Schwarzenegger originally cast | De Niro Pacino considered | best movie premises | peak Nicolas Cage | movie review podcast | film analysis | most over the top movies | best action movies ranked | 90s blockbusters | Paramount Pictures | face transplant movies | identity moviesSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: Cage or Travolta — who is better when they're playing the other person? And is this the greatest action movie of the 1990s?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  39. 18

    The Big Lebowski (1998)

    The Dude abides. This week we're mixing a White Russian, lacing up our bowling shoes, and settling in for The Big Lebowski (1998) — the Coen Brothers' gloriously shaggy, endlessly quotable, impossibly warm masterpiece of American absurdist cinema that bombed with critics on release, baffled audiences who expected another Fargo, and then slowly, inexorably became one of the most beloved cult films in movie history. This is the one. This is the film that spawned an actual religion. We need to talk about it.Written, directed, and produced by Joel and Ethan Coen, the film follows Jeffrey "The Dude" Lebowski (Jeff Bridges) — a Los Angeles slacker, enthusiastic bowler, and devoted drinker of White Russians — who is assaulted by two thugs who have mistaken him for a millionaire of the same name. The Dude's quest to get someone, anyone, to pay for his ruined rug — which really tied the room together — spirals him into a labyrinthine world of nihilists, kidnappings, adult film producers, missing toes, Busby Berkeley dream sequences, and the constant, unshakeable presence of his best friend Walter Sobchak (John Goodman) — a Vietnam veteran for whom every situation is a Vietnam situation. Steve Buscemi is heartbreaking as Donnie. John Turturro appears for approximately two scenes as Jesus Quintana and somehow becomes one of the most memorable characters in Coen Brothers history. Philip Seymour Hoffman, Julianne Moore, Sam Elliott, and the band Flea round out an extraordinary ensemble.We're going deep on everything: how the Coen Brothers based The Dude on a real person — Jeff Dowd, a Los Angeles producer and political activist who once told them "a rug really tied the room together" — and drew Walter Sobchak from filmmaker John Milius, the film's brilliant Raymond Chandler-inspired structure where the plot is deliberately impossible to follow and entirely beside the point, the legendary bowling dream sequences, Carter Burwell's perfect score alongside one of the greatest needle-drop soundtracks ever assembled, and what it means that this film has generated an annual traveling festival, a genuine philosophical movement called Dudeism, and an entire vocabulary that people still use in daily conversation 25 years later.We're asking the big questions too: is The Big Lebowski the Coen Brothers' greatest film? What actually happens in the plot — does anyone know? And is Walter Sobchak one of the greatest comic performances in film history?Whether you're a lifelong Dude devotee, a Coen Brothers obsessive, a Jeff Bridges fan, a John Goodman enthusiast, a lover of absurdist comedy, a White Russian drinker, someone who has attended Lebowski Fest, or just a person who wants to understand why an entire generation considers this film sacred — this episode abides.Topics covered: The Big Lebowski 1998 | Coen Brothers | Jeff Bridges | John Goodman | Steve Buscemi | John Turturro | Philip Seymour Hoffman | The Dude | Walter Sobchak | Jesus Quintana | best Coen Brothers films | best cult films ever | White Russian cocktail | Dudeism | Lebowski Fest | best comedy films ever | absurdist comedy | Raymond Chandler influence | bowling movies | best movie soundtracks | Sam Elliott narrator | 90s cult classics | best Jeff Bridges performances | John Goodman best roles | most quotable movies | best ensemble casts | movie review podcast | film analysis | Coen Brothers filmography ranked | best films about nothing | nihilists movies | best 90s comedies | that rug really tied the room togetherSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: what's your favorite Big Lebowski quote? And is the plot actually impossible to follow, or have you cracked it?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  40. 17

    Snatch (2000)

    Do you know what "nemesis" means? A righteous infliction of retribution manifested by an appropriate agent. Personified in this case by an 'orrible c*** — me. This week we're deep in the London criminal underworld for Snatch (2000) — Guy Ritchie's hyperkinetic, impossibly quotable, perfectly engineered crime comedy that took everything brilliant about Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and somehow made it better, faster, funnier, and even more gleefully chaotic. This film goes so hard it practically vibrates.Written and directed by Guy Ritchie, the film weaves together two intertwined plots set in the London criminal underworld: one following a stolen 86-carat diamond being chased by seemingly everyone in Europe, the other following small-time boxing promoter Turkish (Jason Statham) who gets dangerously entangled with the sadistic gangster Brick Top (Alan Ford) after Mickey O'Neil — an absolutely incomprehensible Irish Traveller bare-knuckle boxer played by Brad Pitt — refuses to go down when instructed. Benicio del Toro is Franky Four Fingers. Vinnie Jones is Bullet-Tooth Tony. Dennis Farina is the furious, perpetually jet-lagged Cousin Avi. Rade Šerbedžija is Boris the Blade — or as he's better known, Boris the Bullet Dodger. Stephen Graham, Lennie James, and Robbie Gee round out an ensemble so perfect it barely seems real.We're going all in on everything: how Brad Pitt — who loved Lock, Stock so much he personally approached Guy Ritchie asking for a role — ended up as Mickey after he couldn't master a London accent, leading Ritchie to create the entirely new character of an unintelligible Irish Traveller specifically for him, the film's astonishing editing which operates like a comedy drum machine set to maximum, Brick Top's pig speech which remains one of the most casually horrifying monologues in British cinema, and why this film — alongside Lock, Stock — permanently defined a certain kind of cool, working-class British crime comedy that nobody has convincingly replicated since.We're also asking the big questions: is Snatch better than Lock, Stock? Is Brad Pitt's Mickey O'Neil actually comprehensible on repeated viewings? And is Brick Top one of the great movie villains of the 2000s?Whether you're a Guy Ritchie devotee, a Brad Pitt fan, a Jason Statham completist, a British crime cinema enthusiast, a Vinnie Jones admirer, a lover of hyper-stylized ensemble comedies, or just someone who wants to spend an hour arguing about which character is your favourite — this episode is absolutely essential.Topics covered: Snatch 2000 | Guy Ritchie | Brad Pitt | Jason Statham | Vinnie Jones | Benicio del Toro | Alan Ford | Brick Top | Mickey O'Neil | Bullet-Tooth Tony | Cousin Avi | Boris the Blade | best British crime films | best crime comedies ever | London criminal underworld | Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels comparison | Guy Ritchie filmography | Brad Pitt accent | incomprehensible Brad Pitt | best ensemble casts | bare-knuckle boxing films | diamond heist movies | best film editing | fast-paced editing | most quotable movies | best 2000s films | British gangster films | cult classic movies | movie review podcast | film analysis | Tarantino-style films | best movie villains 2000s | Stephen Graham early career | pig speech sceneSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: Snatch or Lock, Stock — which is the better Guy Ritchie film? And how many times did you watch Mickey before you understood a single word he said?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  41. 16

    Apocalypse Now (1979)

    The horror. The horror. This week we're going upriver for Apocalypse Now (1979) — Francis Ford Coppola's hallucinatory, operatic, psychologically devastating Vietnam War epic that is simultaneously one of the greatest films ever made and the product of one of the most chaotic, dangerous, nearly fatal film productions in Hollywood history. This is the movie Coppola said wasn't about Vietnam — it was Vietnam. And watching it, you believe him.Written by Coppola and John Milius with narration by Michael Herr and loosely adapted from Joseph Conrad's 1899 novella Heart of Darkness, the film follows Captain Willard (Martin Sheen), a haunted Special Forces officer sent on a secret mission deep into Cambodia to assassinate Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando) — a once-brilliant, heavily decorated officer who has gone rogue and set himself up as a god in the jungle. Robert Duvall delivers one of the greatest supporting performances in cinema history as the surf-obsessed Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore. Dennis Hopper lurks in the shadows as a crazed photojournalist. A 14-year-old Laurence Fishburne is on the patrol boat. Harrison Ford is barely in it and impossible to forget.We're going deep on all of it: the Ride of the Valkyries helicopter attack sequence that remains one of the most overwhelming spectacles ever put on film, Vittorio Storaro's stunning, award-winning cinematography, Walter Murch's revolutionary sound design, and the extraordinary — truly extraordinary — production nightmare behind the film. Brando arrived on set overweight and completely unprepared, having not read Heart of Darkness. Martin Sheen suffered a near-fatal heart attack on location. Typhoons destroyed million-dollar sets. Real human corpses were accidentally purchased from a grave robber, triggering a police investigation. The Philippine military kept recalling their helicopters mid-shoot to fight actual rebel groups. The film was originally intended to be directed by George Lucas as a faux documentary shot on location in Vietnam while the war was still happening — a fact so staggering it deserves its own episode. We're also digging into the three cuts of the film — the original theatrical release, Redux, and the Final Cut — and asking which version is definitive.This is a film about the end of something. The end of American innocence. The end of the myth of civilization. The end of the idea that there is a line between us and the darkness. We're asking whether Apocalypse Now is the greatest war film ever made — and whether it's even a war film at all.Whether you're a Coppola devotee, a Vietnam War cinema enthusiast, a Marlon Brando admirer, a Robert Duvall fan, a lover of New Hollywood cinema, a Conrad reader, a Hearts of Darkness documentary watcher, or just someone who believes cinema should be an experience that physically shakes you — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Apocalypse Now 1979 | Francis Ford Coppola | Marlon Brando | Martin Sheen | Robert Duvall | Laurence Fishburne | Dennis Hopper | Harrison Ford | Colonel Kurtz | Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore | Heart of Darkness adaptation | best war films ever made | best films ever made | Vietnam War films | New Hollywood cinema | Vittorio Storaro cinematography | Walter Murch sound design | Ride of the Valkyries scene | production hell | Hearts of Darkness documentary | George Lucas original director | Martin Sheen heart attack | Palme d'Or winner | best Coppola films | Godfather vs Apocalypse Now | Apocalypse Now Redux | Apocalypse Now Final Cut | movie review podcast | film analysis | best movie endings | horror quote | Joseph Conrad | best cinematography ever | most ambitious films ever madeSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate that has raged since 1979: which cut of Apocalypse Now is definitive? And does the ending stick the landing, or does the journey matter more than the destination?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  42. 15

    Full Metal Jacket (1987)

    This is my rifle. There are many like it, but this one is mine. This week we're shipping out to Parris Island and then straight into the Battle of Hué for Full Metal Jacket (1987) — Stanley Kubrick's ice-cold, darkly hilarious, and profoundly disturbing Vietnam War film that has generated one of the most passionately argued structural debates in all of cinema: is the first half so brilliant that the second half can never match it — or is that the whole point?Directed and produced by Kubrick from a screenplay he co-wrote with Vietnam War correspondent Michael Herr and novelist Gustav Hasford — based on Hasford's semi-autobiographical 1979 novel The Short-Timers — the film follows Private Joker (Matthew Modine) through the brutal dehumanizing machinery of Marine Corps boot camp at Parris Island, presided over by the volcanic Gunnery Sergeant Hartman (R. Lee Ermey), and then into the chaos of the Tet Offensive and the Battle of Hué. Vincent D'Onofrio plays Private Pyle — a performance so devastating, so carefully constructed, and so physically committed that it remains one of the great transformative performances in American cinema. Adam Baldwin is Animal Mother. Dorian Harewood is Eightball. And the film ends with one of the strangest, most quietly devastating final shots Kubrick ever composed.We're going deep on everything: R. Lee Ermey — a real former Marine drill instructor — ad-libbed the majority of his dialogue, drawing directly from his own Vietnam War experience, something almost unheard of in any Kubrick production where every word was typically controlled to a microscopic degree. Vincent D'Onofrio gained 70 pounds for the role — the largest weight gain for a film role in Hollywood history at the time. The entire film was shot in England — with Parris Island recreated at Bassingbourn Barracks and the bombed-out streets of Hué recreated at a derelict gasworks in Beckton, East London. And the film's score was written by Kubrick's own daughter Vivian, under the alias Abigail Mead — a fact that somehow makes the whole thing feel even more like a deeply personal Kubrick project than it already does.We're also asking the questions that have fueled film arguments for nearly 40 years: is the first half one of the greatest 45 minutes ever committed to film? Does the second half deliberately undercut the boot camp's operatic intensity to make a point — or does it simply fail to live up? And where does Full Metal Jacket rank against Apocalypse Now and Platoon in the pantheon of Vietnam War cinema?Whether you're a Kubrick devotee, a Vietnam War film obsessive, a R. Lee Ermey admirer, a Vincent D'Onofrio fan, a military cinema enthusiast, someone who has the Hartman monologues memorized, or just a person who believes the first half of Full Metal Jacket is the greatest sustained piece of filmmaking in Kubrick's entire career — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Full Metal Jacket 1987 | Stanley Kubrick | R. Lee Ermey | Vincent D'Onofrio | Matthew Modine | Gunnery Sergeant Hartman | Private Pyle | Adam Baldwin | best war films ever | best Vietnam War films | Full Metal Jacket first half vs second half | Kubrick filmography ranked | best Kubrick films | Marine Corps boot camp | Parris Island | Battle of Hue | Tet Offensive | dehumanization in film | military brainwashing | R. Lee Ermey ad-libbed dialogue | Vincent D'Onofrio weight gain | film shot in England | Beckton gasworks | most quotable movies | best movie drill sergeants | best supporting performances | Michael Herr Apocalypse Now connection | movie review podcast | film analysis | Apocalypse Now vs Full Metal Jacket | best films of 1987Subscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate once and for all: is the first half of Full Metal Jacket the greatest 45 minutes Stanley Kubrick ever directed? And does the second half deserve the criticism it gets?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  43. 14

    Platoon (1986)

    We did not fight the enemy. We fought ourselves. And the enemy was in us. This week we're going into the jungle for Platoon (1986) — Oliver Stone's raw, autobiographical, Academy Award-winning Vietnam War masterpiece that didn't just win Best Picture — it finally gave a generation of veterans the film they had been waiting a decade to see. This is the film where Stone settled his debts with the war. And it shows in every frame.Written and directed by Stone — himself a Vietnam War veteran who had struggled for over a decade to get the film made — Platoon follows Chris Taylor (Charlie Sheen), a naive, college-educated volunteer who enlists out of idealism and finds himself in a platoon torn apart by the moral conflict between the ruthless, battle-hardened Sergeant Barnes (Tom Berenger) and the more compassionate, free-spirited Sergeant Elias (Willem Dafoe). Keith David, Kevin Dillon, John C. McGinley, Forest Whitaker, and a young Johnny Depp in an early film appearance round out a cast who all underwent a two-week military boot camp in the Philippine jungle before a single frame was shot. It was the first Hollywood film ever written and directed by a Vietnam War veteran.We're going deep on everything: the extraordinary performances of Berenger and Dafoe — both received Academy Award nominations for Best Supporting Actor in the same year for the same film — Stone's visceral ground-level approach to combat that deliberately denies the audience the comfort of comprehending what's happening in a firefight, the devastating village raid sequence that remains one of the most morally confronting scenes in American war cinema, and the extraordinary behind-the-scenes story of a script that Stone wrote in the early 1970s based directly on his own experiences but couldn't get financed for over a decade until Hemdale finally backed it on a budget of just $6 million. We're also talking about the extraordinary cast that almost was: Mickey Rourke, Emilio Estevez, Kevin Costner, Denzel Washington, and Keanu Reeves were all considered for key roles before the final cast was assembled.We're also asking the big questions that Vietnam War cinema demands: where does Platoon rank against Apocalypse Now and Full Metal Jacket — the three films that define this genre? Is Barnes or Elias the moral heart of the film? And does Platoon remain the most honest depiction of the Vietnam War ever put on screen?Whether you're a Vietnam War cinema devotee, an Oliver Stone fan, a Charlie Sheen admirer, a Willem Dafoe enthusiast, a Tom Berenger fan, a student of American military history, a lover of Oscar-winning war films, or just someone who wants to understand why this film hit the culture like a thunderclap in 1986 — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Platoon 1986 | Oliver Stone | Charlie Sheen | Willem Dafoe | Tom Berenger | Forest Whitaker | Johnny Depp early career | Keith David | Kevin Dillon | Best Picture Oscar 1987 | best war films ever made | Vietnam War films ranked | Oliver Stone Vietnam veteran | Platoon vs Apocalypse Now | Platoon vs Full Metal Jacket | best Vietnam War movies | ground-level war cinema | anti-war films | village raid scene | Sergeant Barnes | Sergeant Elias | Kevin Costner passed on Platoon | Keanu Reeves passed on Platoon | Denzel Washington almost in Platoon | $6 million budget Best Picture | most authentic Vietnam War films | movie review podcast | film analysis | Oliver Stone filmography | best Oscar winners | Barnes vs Elias debate | Born on the Fourth of July trilogy | first Vietnam film by veteranSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the debate that has raged since 1987: in the Vietnam War film pantheon, is Platoon better than Apocalypse Now? And who do you side with — Barnes or Elias?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  44. 13

    Gleaming the Cube (1989)

    Gleaming the cube: pushing your limits to the edge. This week we're grabbing our boards, ditching class, and rolling hard into Gleaming the Cube (1989) — the utterly singular, completely unhinged, gloriously committed late-80s teen thriller in which a teenage skateboarder investigates his adopted Vietnamese brother's murder using exclusively the power of skateboarding. This movie exists. It is real. And we need to talk about it at length.Directed by Graeme Clifford and starring Christian Slater as Brian Kelly, a 17-year-old Orange County skateboarder who refuses to accept the official ruling that his adopted Vietnamese brother Vinh died by suicide — and who goes full amateur detective, eventually uncovering a Vietnamese weapons smuggling ring operating out of a video store, with only his skateboard skills, his crew, and one sympathetic detective (Steven Bauer) standing between him and the truth. The villain is a former South Vietnamese army colonel. Tony Hawk is in this movie. Rodney Mullen is a stunt double. Stacy Peralta directed all the skateboarding sequences. This is a real film that was released in theaters.We're going all in on everything: former pro-skater Tommy Guerrero was paid $500 a day to teach Christian Slater how to skateboard, while pro-skaters Mike McGill and Rodney Mullen served as his stunt doubles — and Stacy Peralta, legendary Bones Brigade promoter, served as second-unit director and shot every single skate sequence in the film — giving it a genuine authenticity to the late-80s skateboarding world that no studio movie had ever captured before or since. We're talking about the film's surprisingly earnest treatment of Vietnamese-American immigrant experience, its utterly delightful commitment to the premise that skateboarding can solve literally any problem, the magnificent 80s Orange County aesthetic, and why Jake Gyllenhaal has publicly stated he wants to remake this film.Also: the title. The phrase "gleaming the cube" originated from a cryptic question asked in a 1983 Thrasher magazine interview — "Have you ever gleemed inside a cube?" — and the film adopted it as a metaphor for pushing your limits to the absolute edge. Which is exactly what this film does with its premise.Whether you're an 80s nostalgia devotee, a skateboarding culture enthusiast, a Christian Slater completist, a Tony Hawk fan, a lover of late-80s teen thrillers, someone who grew up catching this on cable at 3pm on a Tuesday, or just a person who believes that the correct response to your brother's suspicious death is to solve the crime via skateboard — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Gleaming the Cube 1989 | Christian Slater | Tony Hawk | Rodney Mullen | Stacy Peralta | Tommy Guerrero | Bones Brigade | 80s skateboarding movies | Orange County California | late 80s teen films | skateboarding culture history | cult classic 80s films | 80s nostalgia | teen detective films | Vietnamese-American representation | Jake Gyllenhaal remake | best 80s action films | skate culture films | most underrated 80s movies | best cult films | movie review podcast | film analysis | 80s cheese | high concept 80s films | Thrasher magazine | gleaming the cube meaning | best skateboarding films ever | Steven Bauer | Bones Brigade documentary connection | Pizza Hut Tony Hawk | most committed bad premises in film historySubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: have you ever gleamed inside a cube? And is this the greatest or the most insane film ever made about skateboarding as a vehicle for solving violent crime?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  45. 12

    American Psycho (2000)

    Do you like Huey Lewis and the News? This week we're slipping on our morning moisturizer, reviewing business cards with horrifying intensity, and diving headfirst into American Psycho (2000) — Mary Harron's ice-cold, wickedly funny, deeply unsettling satire of 1980s Wall Street masculinity that was nearly destroyed by studio interference, saved by a director who understood exactly what it was, and has since become one of the most quoted, memed, and genuinely misunderstood films in modern cinema history.Directed by Mary Harron and co-written with Guinevere Turner, based on Bret Easton Ellis's controversial 1991 novel, the film follows Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale) — a handsome, meticulously groomed Manhattan investment banker in 1987 who harbors an increasingly violent secret life — operating in a world of identical Valentino suits, competitive business cards, and men so interchangeable they literally cannot tell each other apart. Also starring Willem Dafoe, Jared Leto, Reese Witherspoon, Chloë Sevigny, Samantha Mathis, Justin Theroux, Josh Lucas, and Matt Ross in a cast so precisely assembled it feels like casting as satirical act in itself.We're going deep on everything: the extraordinary behind-the-scenes story of a film that was nearly taken away from Harron after Lions Gate pursued Leonardo DiCaprio — who wanted a $21 million fee and demanded Oliver Stone direct, with the mandate to remove all the satire and turn it into a straight psychological thriller. Stone was brought aboard. DiCaprio ultimately departed for Danny Boyle's The Beach. Stone withdrew. Harron was rehired and finally allowed to cast Bale, who had waited nine months turning down other roles, completely convinced DiCaprio would eventually leave. Christian Bale based his entire performance on Tom Cruise — specifically on an appearance on the Letterman show where Bale noticed "this very intense friendliness with nothing behind the eyes."We're also talking about what American Psycho actually is — a razor-sharp feminist satire about toxic masculinity, hollow consumerism, and the murderous void at the center of 1980s American ambition — and why the fact that it became primarily famous for memes about business cards and Huey Lewis is, in its own way, exactly the point. We're asking the big questions: is Bateman actually killing anyone? Does it matter? And is Mary Harron's film the definitive version of the story, or does it soften Ellis's unbearable novel?Whether you're a Christian Bale fan, a Mary Harron admirer, a Bret Easton Ellis reader, a fan of satirical horror, a meme historian, someone fascinated by the business card scene, a lover of 80s Wall Street films, or just a person who needs to understand why a movie about a murderous yuppie became one of the most referenced films on the internet — this episode is essential.Topics covered: American Psycho 2000 | Mary Harron | Christian Bale | Patrick Bateman | Bret Easton Ellis | Jared Leto | Willem Dafoe | Reese Witherspoon | Chloë Sevigny | business card scene | Huey Lewis and the News scene | Leonardo DiCaprio almost cast | Oliver Stone almost directed | Tom Cruise inspiration | best satire films | best horror comedies | 80s Wall Street satire | toxic masculinity in film | feminist horror | cult classic films | best Christian Bale performances | most memed movies | American Psycho ending explained | is Patrick Bateman real | best films of 2000 | Sundance Film Festival | movie review podcast | film analysis | Bret Easton Ellis adaptation | best psychological thrillers | most misunderstood films | meme culture and film | Lions Gate Films historySubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle the ultimate American Psycho question: is Patrick Bateman actually killing anyone? And does the answer change what the film means?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  46. 11

    Kingpin (1996)

    He just got Munsoned. This week we're lacing up our rental shoes and rolling into Kingpin (1996) — the Farrelly Brothers' dark, mean, outrageously funny sophomore film that bombed spectacularly at the box office upon release, got overlooked in the shadow of Dumb & Dumber and There's Something About Mary, and has spent the three decades since quietly building a cult following among people who understand that this might be the best thing the Farrellys ever made. And it has Bill Murray at his most unhinged and magnificent. Come on. That alone is enough.Directed by Bobby and Peter Farrelly, the film follows Roy Munson (Woody Harrelson) — the 1979 Iowa State Amateur Bowling Champion whose career is destroyed when his supposed partner Ernie McCracken (Bill Murray) abandons him mid-hustle, leaving Roy to face the consequences and lose his bowling hand in the ball return. Seventeen years later, a broken, alcoholic Roy discovers Ishmael (Randy Quaid) — an Amish bowling prodigy hiding a supernatural talent — and hatches a plan to hustle their way across the country to a major tournament in Reno. Vanessa Angel rounds out the road trip trio, with McCracken lurking as the film's perfectly oiled villain waiting at the finish line.We're going deep on everything: why this film bombed — it opened the same weekend as the 1996 Olympics and nobody went to the movies — and how it was almost instantly forgotten until cable television slowly turned it into a cult classic over the following years, the extraordinary Bill Murray performance which many Farrelly fans quietly consider a top-five Bill Murray career moment, the film's surprisingly dark and genuinely melancholy heart underneath all the gross-out gags, and the alternate casting history — Jim Carrey was the original first choice for Ernie McCracken, while Michael Keaton and Chris Farley were considered for the roles that went to Harrelson and Quaid. We're also talking about why Kingpin is essentially The Hustler or The Color of Money set in the deliberately ridiculous world of professional bowling — and why that premise is not a joke but the entire genius of the film.We're asking the big questions too: is Kingpin the best Farrelly Brothers film? Is Big Ern McCracken Bill Murray's greatest comedic villain performance? And why does this film — crude, mean, and consistently hilarious — also hit you unexpectedly hard in the final act?Whether you're a Farrelly Brothers devotee, a Bill Murray enthusiast, a Woody Harrelson fan, a Randy Quaid admirer, a lover of 90s comedies that went underappreciated on release, someone who has ever been Munsoned, or just a person who believes bowling is an inherently comedic sport — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Kingpin 1996 | Farrelly Brothers | Woody Harrelson | Bill Murray | Randy Quaid | Vanessa Angel | Ernie McCracken | Roy Munson | Ishmael | best 90s comedies | most underrated 90s films | bowling movies | Dumb and Dumber comparison | There's Something About Mary comparison | best Bill Murray performances | Bill Murray villain | Jim Carrey almost played McCracken | Chris Farley almost in Kingpin | best road trip comedies | dark comedies | Farrelly Brothers filmography ranked | best sports comedies | The Hustler comparison | cult classic comedies | box office bomb cult following | 90s nostalgia | getting Munsoned | movie review podcast | film analysis | best rubber hand jokes | Blues Traveler cameo | most underrated Bill Murray roles | Amish comedy filmsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it once and for all: is Kingpin the greatest Farrelly Brothers film? And is Big Ern McCracken Bill Murray's best comedic villain role — or is that even a competition?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  47. 10

    The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007)

    He was famous the way that people are afraid to be famous. And the man who killed him became famous for nothing else. This week we're riding into the long golden prairie dusk for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007) — Andrew Dominik's hypnotic, achingly beautiful, deliberately paced meditation on fame, obsession, myth, and the terrible weight of being a legend that nobody wanted to see in theaters in 2007 and that everybody now agrees is one of the greatest Westerns — and one of the greatest American films — of the 21st century. This is the one. We need to talk about it.Written and directed by Andrew Dominik and based on Ron Hansen's 1983 novel, the film follows the last seven months of Jesse James's life — beginning with the Blue Cut train robbery in 1881 and ending with his murder the following April. Nick Cave composed the score and appears in the film. This cast, assembled for a film that made almost nothing at the box office, is almost incomprehensible in its quality.We're going deep on everything: Roger Deakins' cinematography — nominated for the Academy Award and widely considered among the finest work of his extraordinary career — shooting the Alberta prairies as a stand-in for Missouri, with imagery so overwhelming that multiple critics compared individual frames to the paintings of Andrew Wyeth, Casey Affleck's performance which earned him an Oscar nomination and which may be the finest work of his career — a portrait of toxic fandom, wounded ego, and creeping murderous jealousy that feels startlingly contemporary — and the brutal behind-the-scenes story of a film that Dominik originally envisioned at over three hours, was repeatedly cut down by the studio against his wishes, bombed spectacularly upon release, and has spent the years since being gradually, inevitably recognized as a masterpiece. Also worth discussing: the role of Robert Ford was contested between Casey Affleck and Shia LaBeouf, with Affleck ultimately winning out because LaBeouf was felt to be too young. Imagine that film. We don't have to.We're also asking the big questions: is this Brad Pitt's single greatest performance? Is it Casey Affleck's? Is it the greatest Western of the 21st century? And what does it mean that the man who killed Jesse James became famous only for killing Jesse James — reenacting the murder on stage every night for audiences who booed him and called him a coward — until he too was shot dead by a stranger in a Colorado saloon?Whether you're a Western devotee, a Brad Pitt fan, a Casey Affleck admirer, a Roger Deakins enthusiast, an Andrew Dominik aficionado, a Nick Cave devotee, a lover of slow-burn cinema that rewards patience with devastation, a Red Dead Redemption II player who discovered this film through the game, or just someone who believes that the greatest films are the ones that stay with you for days — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Assassination of Jesse James 2007 | Andrew Dominik | Brad Pitt | Casey Affleck | Roger Deakins cinematography | Sam Rockwell | Jeremy Renner | Sam Shepard | Nick Cave score | best Westerns ever made | best films of 2007 | best Brad Pitt performances | best Casey Affleck performances | Jesse James history | Robert Ford history | best box office bombs | most underrated films ever | revisionist Western | obsession and fame | toxic fandom in film | Red Dead Redemption 2 inspiration | Shia LaBeouf almost cast | best cinematography ever | Roger Deakins best work | slow burn cinema | best American films 21st century | movie review podcast | film analysis | best film scores | Venice Film Festival Volpi Cup | most beautiful films ever madeSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: does it matter that Robert Ford got exactly what he wanted — and it destroyed him?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  48. 9

    Burn After Reading (2008)

    Report back to me when... uh, I don't know. When it makes sense. This week we're deep inside the most gloriously misanthropic, casually catastrophic, and criminally underappreciated entry in the entire Coen Brothers filmography — Burn After Reading (2008). This is the film the Coens made immediately after winning Best Picture for No Country for Old Men, assembled the most absurdly stacked cast imaginable, wrote specifically for each actor, and then watched as critics shrugged and audiences mostly moved on. Fifteen years later, this film is getting a serious reappraisal. We're leading the charge.Written, directed, and edited by Joel and Ethan Coen — with parts of the script written simultaneously with their No Country for Old Men adaptation — the film follows what happens when a disc containing the draft memoirs of recently fired CIA analyst Osborne Cox (John Malkovich) ends up in the hands of two hopelessly dim gym employees: Linda Litzke (Frances McDormand), who desperately wants cosmetic surgery, and Chad Feldheimer (Brad Pitt), who is perhaps the single most cheerfully stupid character in Coen Brothers history. George Clooney is a womanizing U.S. Marshal sleeping with everyone in Washington. Tilda Swinton is Cox's glacially cold wife. Richard Jenkins is the gym manager who loves Linda with quiet, heartbreaking sincerity. J.K. Simmons plays a CIA superior who spends the film trying to make sense of events that make no sense whatsoever, in what may be the greatest two-scene performance in any Coen Brothers film.We're going deep on everything: the Coens wrote every major role specifically for the actor who ended up playing it — with the sole exception of Tilda Swinton, who was cast after the script was written, the extraordinary fact that Brad Pitt — upon receiving the script and being told the Coens had written Chad specifically for him — told them he wasn't sure whether to be flattered or insulted, and then confessed he didn't know how to play the part because the character was such a complete idiot, and what it means that the Coens described this as completing their "idiot trilogy" with Clooney, following O Brother Where Art Thou? and Intolerable Cruelty. We're also talking about the film's genuinely dark, quietly devastating heart underneath the farce — particularly in the Richard Jenkins and Frances McDormand storyline — and why the J.K. Simmons scenes function as the greatest meta-commentary on meaningless chaos in Coen Brothers history.Whether you're a Coen Brothers devotee, a Brad Pitt fan, a George Clooney enthusiast, a Frances McDormand admirer, a John Malkovich fan, a J.K. Simmons completist, a lover of deeply stupid spy comedies, or just someone who has been waiting for the world to properly appreciate this film — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Burn After Reading 2008 | Coen Brothers | Brad Pitt | George Clooney | Frances McDormand | John Malkovich | Tilda Swinton | Richard Jenkins | J.K. Simmons | Chad Feldheimer | best Coen Brothers films ranked | most underrated Coen Brothers film | Coen Brothers filmography | idiot trilogy Coen Brothers | No Country for Old Men connection | best Brad Pitt comedic performances | George Clooney Coen Brothers collaboration | spy comedy films | best black comedies | best ensemble casts | CIA comedy | Washington DC films | most misanthropic comedies | Coen Brothers nihilism | best supporting performances | Brad Pitt written for him | movie review podcast | film analysis | 2008 films | best film comedies of the 2000s | dildo chair scene | J.K. Simmons best scenes | Fargo comparison | most underrated 2000s filmsSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: is Burn After Reading the most underrated Coen Brothers film? And is Chad Feldheimer the greatest comedic performance Brad Pitt has ever given?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  49. 8

    Blow (2001)

    Sometimes you're flush and sometimes you're bust, and when you're up, it's never as good as it seems, and when you're down, you never think you'll be up again. But life goes on. This week we're going deep on Blow (2001) — Ted Demme's visceral, emotionally devastating, criminally underappreciated biographical crime drama that tells the true story of George Jung — the Massachusetts kid who accidentally helped establish the American cocaine market in the 1970s, built a $100 million empire with the Medellín Cartel, and lost absolutely everything, including the one person he loved most. This is not a film about drugs. It's a film about fathers and daughters. And it will hit you like a freight train if you let it.Directed by Ted Demme and adapted from Bruce Porter's 1993 book by David McKenna and Nick Cassavetes, the film follows George Jung (Johnny Depp) from his working-class childhood in Weymouth, Massachusetts — where watching his father Fred (Ray Liotta) work himself to the bone and still go bankrupt plants a seed of ambition that will eventually grow into something monstrous — through his rise from small-time California marijuana dealer to the man who, alongside the Medellín Cartel, established the American cocaine trade in the 1970s, at one point reportedly supplying over 85% of all cocaine entering the United States. Penélope Cruz is volcanic as Mirtha, the wife who ultimately destroys him. Franka Potente is heartbreaking as Barbara. Paul Reubens is unexpectedly perfect as Derek Foreal, the flamboyant middleman who starts everything. And a young Emma Roberts plays George's daughter Kristina — the person the whole film is really about.We're going deep on everything: the extraordinary Johnny Depp performance that somehow gets overlooked in discussions of his best work, the devastating Ray Liotta turn as Fred Jung — a man whose quiet decency and unconditional love for his son makes the final act almost unbearable — the real George Jung's actual story and how closely the film tracks reality, and the genuinely tragic postscript that the film closes with: George Jung sentenced to 60 years in Otisville Correctional Facility, with his daughter Kristina having never visited him in prison at the time the film was made — a detail the film lingers on with devastating restraint. We're also talking about why this film gets unfairly dismissed as a GoodFellas knockoff when it is actually doing something far more personal, far quieter, and far sadder than GoodFellas ever attempted.Whether you're a Johnny Depp fan, a Ray Liotta admirer, a Penélope Cruz enthusiast, a true crime devotee, a lover of biographical crime dramas, a GoodFellas and Scarface fan looking for something more personal, someone fascinated by the real story of George Jung and the Medellín Cartel, or just a person who believes the best crime films are really about family — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Blow 2001 | Ted Demme | Johnny Depp | Ray Liotta | Penélope Cruz | Franka Potente | Paul Reubens | George Jung real story | Medellín Cartel | Pablo Escobar | Carlos Lehder | American cocaine history | best biographical crime films | best crime dramas 2000s | most underrated Johnny Depp performances | GoodFellas comparison | Scarface comparison | rise and fall drug films | father son relationship films | Kristina Sunshine Jung | Emma Roberts early career | Boston George Jung | true story crime films | 1970s drug trade | most underrated 2000s films | movie review podcast | film analysis | best Ray Liotta performances | drug kingpin films | best crime films ever | Ted Demme filmography | Boogie Nights comparisonSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: is Blow one of the most underrated crime films of the 2000s? And is the relationship between George and his father the real heart of the movie — or is it the relationship with his daughter?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

  50. 7

    The Town (2010)

    I need your help. I can't tell you what it is, you can never ask me about it later, and we're gonna hurt some people. Whose car we gonna take? This week we're heading to Charlestown for The Town (2010) — Ben Affleck's lean, brutal, impeccably crafted crime thriller that stands as the single most definitive argument for Ben Affleck as one of the most natural and instinctive directors of his generation. This is the film that made the world stop asking about Gigli and start asking when his next film was coming out. And it absolutely holds up.Co-written and directed by Affleck, adapted from Chuck Hogan's 2004 novel Prince of Thieves, the film follows Doug MacRay (Affleck) — a Charlestown bank robber, former hockey prospect, and recovering addict who is desperate for one last score before getting out — who falls unexpectedly in love with Claire Keesey (Rebecca Hall), the bank manager his crew took hostage during their last job, without knowing she can identify them. Jeremy Renner is James Coughlin — Doug's volatile, fiercely loyal, deeply dangerous best friend who will burn everything down rather than let Doug leave. Jon Hamm is FBI Special Agent Frawley, closing in from every angle. Blake Lively is Krista, James's sister and Doug's ex, dangerously close to the FBI's investigation. Pete Postlethwaite is Fergie, the neighborhood crime boss who owns everyone. Chris Cooper appears in a single devastating scene as Doug's incarcerated father and makes it count more than most actors do with an entire film.We're going deep on all of it: the behind-the-scenes story of a project that had been in development since 2003 under multiple directors including Adrian Lyne, who envisioned a three-and-a-half hour Scorsese-styled epic with a $90 million budget before creative differences ended his involvement, Jeremy Renner's Academy Award-nominated performance that arrived on the heels of The Hurt Locker and announced him as one of the most electrifying character actors of his generation, Ben Affleck joking that if any scene had a weak moment he could simply cut to Renner looking at a napkin and it would work, the extraordinary Fenway Park heist sequence that remains one of the great set pieces of the decade, and why this film sits comfortably alongside Heat, The Departed, and The Friends of Eddie Coyle in the pantheon of Boston crime cinema.We're asking the big questions: is The Town Ben Affleck's best film as a director — better even than Argo? Is James Coughlin one of the great supporting characters in 2000s crime cinema? And is Charlestown — as portrayed here — the most romanticized criminal neighborhood in American film history?Whether you're a Ben Affleck fan, a Jeremy Renner admirer, a Jon Hamm enthusiast, a Boston crime cinema devotee, a heist film obsessive, a lover of lean and efficient action thrillers, a Heat or Departed fan looking for something to slot right alongside them, or just someone who thinks the nun masks are the greatest bank robbery disguise in cinema history — this episode is essential.Topics covered: The Town 2010 | Ben Affleck director | Jeremy Renner | Jon Hamm | Rebecca Hall | Blake Lively | Charlestown Boston | bank heist films | best heist movies ever | best Boston crime films | The Departed comparison | Heat comparison | Gone Baby Gone comparison | Ben Affleck filmography | Jeremy Renner Oscar nomination | Argo vs The Town | Fenway Park heist | best action sequences 2010s | best crime thrillers 2000s | Chuck Hogan Prince of Thieves | Adrian Lyne almost directed | nun masks heist | best supporting performances | Chris Cooper | Pete Postlethwaite | movie review podcast | film analysis | best crime films 21st centurySubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and settle it: is The Town Ben Affleck's best film as a director? And is the Fenway Park heist sequence the greatest set piece in any Boston crime film ever made?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Regular or Menthol is a weekly movie podcast where hosts Chris and Mike dig into the subtleties of "kino" — the films, scenes, and performances they think are worth obsessing over. Each episode picks apart a single movie, ranging from heavy hitters like Apocalypse Now and American Psycho to cult oddities like Gleaming the Cube and Face/Off. The vibe is loose, funny, and irreverent — full of tangents about absurd plot mechanics and the kind of rewatch-energy commentary that feels like hanging out with two movie-obsessed friends.

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What is Regular or Menthol: Kino Movies Podcast about?

Regular or Menthol is a weekly movie podcast where hosts Chris and Mike dig into the subtleties of "kino" — the films, scenes, and performances they think are worth obsessing over. Each episode picks apart a single movie, ranging from heavy hitters like Apocalypse Now and American Psycho to cult...

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