Every Friday Chris hand-selects a streaming recommendation for your weekend.
This Week’s Featured Flick
The short-lived, but much beloved David Lynch/Mark Frost television series Twin Peaks on Netflix
The short-lived, but much beloved David Lynch/Mark Frost television series Twin Peaks on Netflix
The week after Memorial Day features football and cowboys, Dutch and the Duke, and Spencer Tracy delivering social sermons and Judo justice. God Bless America!
Chris and Hunter review Hunter’s War Crime – David Lynch’s 1986 Blue Velvet. In Special Features, The Dudes discuss What Makes A Memorable Villain? Also, they set the stage for the first-ever Summer Shandy Chug Off.
Drinking Game Idea – Take a shot every time someone says “Roger Ebert”!
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00:03:22 – Review – Blue Velvet
Beer Recommendation: Pabst Blue Ribbon – Pabst Brewing Company
00:33:57 – Special Features – Memorable Movie Villains
00:52:23 – Really Rad Recommendations
My penchant for picking pictures with Orson Welles and Gary Cooper continues unabated. Clearly I have a type.
Werner Herzog’s 2005 documentary, Grizzly Man, on Netflix.
This week features The Bard, the Barrymores, and prima ballerinas. Be sure to check out at least one of these.
Hunter (a.k.a. Tony Snark/Ironic Man) and Chris (a.k.a. Gale-Gar The Woozy) review the indie cult classic Avengers: Age of Ultron. In Special Features, the dudes let their nerd flags fly, discussing Comic Book Movies – Where Do We Go From Here? PLUS! They realize Zack Snyder’s next logical Batsuit modification to follow-up Joel Schumacher’s rubber nipples. Face front, True Believers!
Subscribe: iTunes, Pocket Casts, Stitcher, RSS
Follow: Facebook | Twitter | Tumblr | Spotify Playlist
Help us reach new listeners by reviewing the show on iTunes.
00:05:51 – Review – Avengers: Age of Ultron
Beer Recommendation: Summer Solstice – Anderson Valley Brewing Company
00:41:01 – Special Features – Comic Book Movies: Where Do We Go From Here?
01:05:24 – Really Rad Recommendations
Buster Keaton’s inventive silent comedy form 1924, Sherlock Jr, on Netflix.
Perhaps my favorite decade for film was the 1950s. It bridged the Old Hollywood class of the 1930s and 1940s, with the more honest, outspoken, and organic New Hollywood of the 1960s and 1970s. These three films give a strong representation of the cinematic diversity the 1950s displayed.