Hey guys, we all love movies and good movies at that. Are there any movies that you really like that the general public or your circle of friends detest? For instance, I like Arnold Schwarzenegger's End of Days, which was panned critically. Thanks!






Hey guys, we all love movies and good movies at that. Are there any movies that you really like that the general public or your circle of friends detest? For instance, I like Arnold Schwarzenegger's End of Days, which was panned critically. Thanks!
Hi Matt & Alex!
So, I was wondering if Matt had ever seen the Troma movie "Beware: Children at Play" before? I bring this up because of his comments during last weeks podcast where I believe he said, and I quote: "I admire movies where children get hurt". Just as a reminder, it was the movie that featured this scene:
Also, I was wondering what movies, if any, you guys would recommend to someone from the Troma catalog who's only ever seen Toxic Avenger and Nuke'Em High? Thanks!
Hey Matt and Alex,
Sorry if this has been asked before but is there any one movie (or multiple movies) that have made you cry?
I myself can't help but shed a tear for Carl Fredrickson in UP after he sadly looses his wife. Although a more tear inducing moment that gets me every time is in Toy Story 3 near the end where Woody and the other toys are confronting Lotso and Big Baby outside. Woody having the locket from Lotso and Big Baby's previous owner, tosses it to them with Big Baby looking at it and in the most tear jerking baby voice ever says "Momma". That scene simply rips me to shreds and gets me everytime.
Thanks
Atary77
I was wondering if in their hometowns growing up, did Alex and Rorie ever have any local tv channel that did a late night horror/B movie show with a local host? If you guys did have a local version, were there any standout movies for you guys?
The one I grew up watching, Off Beat cinema out of Buffalo, NY featured some films that would warp my young mind and plant the seed for a love of horror movies.
This was the first place I ever saw the original Night of the Living Dead and such classics as The Brain that Wouldn't Die, The Last Man on Earth and Santa Claus conquers the Martians.
What is your opinion on "simple" plotline with heavy CG movies are and will be doint great in the international market?
Do plotline is less important than visual spectacle because of the language and cultural differences? Or...it is the obvious reason that we shall not discuss (I'm a part of the international market myself so I can say that, right?)
Question (mostly) for Rorie regarding Princess Mononoke.
At the very end of the film, Ashitaka and San have a quick exchange of dialogue basically saying that they will go their separate ways now that the forest spirit has been restored etc. This shoots down the notion that they love each other and want to be together, they don't seem to be bothered in the slightest!
It's literally one or two spoken lines which pretty much sour the ending for me, where really it should have been left ambiguous. Does it bother you and do you think this choice is a cultural one? (i.e the Japanese audience doesn't expect them to get together).
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