Who’s ready to hear Matt Kelly (Horror Movie Night Podcast) and I talk about a sleazy, wine-centric horror film? Enjoy us figuring out The Vineyard starring James Hong.



Quick Facts

Directed by James Hong and William Rice
Produced by Harry Mok
Screenplay by James Hong and Douglas Kondo

The Vineyard (1989) VHS Movie Review

Starring
James Hong as Dr. Elson Po
Michael Wong as Jeremy Young
Sherri Ball as Celeste
Karl Heinz Teuber as Paul Edmonds
Karen Witter as Jezebel
Sean P. Donahue as Brian Whiteman

The Vineyard (1989) VHS Box Art

How to find Analog Jones

Discuss these movies and more on our Facebook page.

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Email us at analogjonestof@gmail.com with any comments or questions!

Listen to more Matt Kelly at hmnpodcast.com

Xbox Game Pass has brought some incredible value to the Xbox platform since its launch two years ago.

Since its launch, we’ve spent hundreds of hours in dozens of games that we may never have had the opportunity to discover otherwise, but in many of these cases, PC players have felt a little left out.

Subscribers to Xbox Game Pass who also own a PC have been able to enjoy a smattering of ‘Play Anywhere’ titles, like Sea of Thieves, Gears of War 4, Forza Horizon 4, and Wargroove, among others, but the service has never been worth subscribing to if you’re only a PC player.

That’s all about to change, as Head of Xbox Phil Spencer has just taken to Xbox Wire to admit that “We’ve not always lived up to our aspiration of keeping gamers at the center of everything we do when it comes to the experience they’ve had on Windows,” and to reveal a few ways that they plan to make the Windows gaming experience even better.

The biggest announcement is a specific Xbox Game Pass for PC, a new subscription service that will launch with a selection of over 100 games, from publishers like Bethesda, Deep Silver, Devolver Digital, Paradox Interactive, SEGA, and more. Spencer also notes that “it is our intent to include new games from Xbox Game Studios in Xbox Game Pass for PC the same day as their global release, including titles from newly acquired studios like Obsidian and inXile,” so just like Xbox players, Xbox Game Pass for PC subscribers are about to save a lot of money on Microsoft titles. The company is working with over 75 developers and publishers on the service, so I imagine we’ll see a massive variety in the titles offered from day one.

No games were revealed in today’s announcement, but Microsoft notes that more information will be announced during Microsoft’s E3 briefing on June 9th.

On top of the Game Pass for PC announcement, Microsoft has also revealed that they plan to bring more Microsoft Studios published titles, like Gears 5 and Halo: The Master Chief Collection to Steam, giving gamers more choice as to where they play their games, and also that full support for Win32 titles is coming to the Windows store.

In any case, if exciting news like this is being revealed before E3, I cannot wait to see what’s announced during it.

Look for a special E3 recap episode of our newest gaming podcast, Xbox Game Passengers, which focusses on a randomly-selected Xbox Game Pass game each episode shortly following Microsoft’s presentation! For now, you can listen below to our newest episode, in which Horror Movie Night’s Matt Kelly and I discuss the lauded walking simulator, ‘What Remains of Edith Finch’.

If you like what you’ve heard, here’s where you can subscribe to the show:

Anchor
Apple Podcasts
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Castbox
Google Podcasts
Overcast
Pocket Casts
PodBean
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Stitcher
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TuneIn

Analog Jones and the Jersey Ghouls go hunting for killer apes! Get ready for cartoon accents, a smoking/drinking gorilla and sesame cake in our Congo (1995) VHS Movie Review! 



Congo (VHS) VHS Movie Review

Quick Facts
Directed by Frank Marshall
Produced by Kathleen Kennedy and Sam Mercer
Screenplay by John Patrick Shanley
Based on Congo by Michael Crichton
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date: June 9, 1995
Running time: 109 minutes
Budget: $50 million
Box office: $152 million

Starring
Laura Linney as Karen Ross
Dylan Walsh as Peter Elliott
Ernie Hudson as Captain Monroe Kelly
Tim Curry as Herkermer Homolka
Grant Heslov as Richard
Joe Don Baker as R.B. Travis
Bruce Campbell as Charlie Travis

June 1995 Movies
1 Batman Forever $184,031,112
2 Apollo 13 $172,071,312
3 Pocahontas $141,579,773
4 Congo $81,022,101
5 The Bridges of Madison County $71,516,617
6 Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers $38,187,431
7 Judge Dredd $34,693,481

Trailers


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Get your black hair dye and leather pants out! Then listen to the boys talk about how freaking awesome this 90’s film is with our The Crow (1994) VHS Movie Review.



Quick Facts
Directed by Alex Proyas (Dark City)
Produced by Jeff Most, Edward R. Pressman and Grant Hill
Written by David J. Schow and John Shirley
Based on The Crow by James O’Barr
Production company: Dimension Films
Distributed by Miramax
Release date: May 13, 1994
Running time: 102 minutes
Budget: $23 million
Box office: $50.7 million

The Crow (1994) VHS Movie Review

Starring
Brandon Lee as Eric Draven
Rochelle Davis as Sarah
Ernie Hudson as Sgt. Albrecht
Michael Wincott as Top Dollar
Bai Ling as Myca
Sofia Shinas as Shelly Webster
Anna Levine as Darla
David Patrick Kelly as T-Bird
Angel David as Skank
Laurence Mason as Tin-Tin
Michael Massee as Funboy
Tony Todd as Grange
Jon Polito as Gideon
Bill Raymond as Mickey
Marco Rodríguez as Torres

The Crow (1994) VHS Movie Review

VHS Box description
“Spectacular!” -Chicago Tribune
“Thrilling!” -Los Angeles Daily News
“Action-packed!” -WBAI Radio, New York
“A Triumph!” -Playboy
“Brandon Lee Is Sensational!” -Rolling Stone

The Year’s Most Talked-About Film!

Catch the explosive, action-packed hit that thrilled moviegoers and dazzled critics everywhere! Brandon Lee (Rapid Fire) plays Eric Draven, a young rock guitarist, who, along with his fiancee, is brutally killed by a ruthless gang of criminals. Exactly one year after his death, Eric returns-watched over by a hypnotic crow-to seek revenge, battling the evil crime lord and his band of urban thugs, who must answer for their crimes. Loaded with intense, nonstop action and a hot #1 hit soundtrack, The Crow delivers exhilarating, fast-paced entertainment!

Also included, the exclusive featurette of Brandon Lee’s last on-camera interview including never-before-seen footage, conducted shortly before his untimely death!

“The Best Movie of it’s kind since the original Batman!” -Chicago Tribune

Top 5 Box Office Results in May 1994
1 The Flintstones $130,531,208
2 Maverick $101,631,272
3 The Crow $50,693,129
4 Beverly Hills Cop III $42,614,912
5 Crooklyn $13,642,861

How to find Analog Jones

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Welcome to Geekscape’s newest gaming podcast, Xbox Game Passengers.

Every other Wednesday, host Derek and a guest will dissect and discuss one game available on Microsoft’s Game Pass service, which was chosen for them completely at random.

Whether it’s a magical or a horrible experience, they’ll force themselves through it, share their thoughts, and let you know whether or not the game is worth your time! At the end of each episode, they’ll also randomly select the game for the following show.

Mikaela returns for episode 2 to chat about the incredibly challenging racer, MotoGP 17. The game allows you to ” Enjoy maximum entertainment with all the bikes, teams and tracks of the official Championship,” and to “Try the new Managerial Career mode and put yourself in the shoes of a team manager, trying to make the right choices both on the track and off it.”

Nothing can prepare you for the adrenaline of the 2017 MotoGP™! Except maybe listening to this show…

Listen below to find out how things went, and if you’ve like what you’ve heard, here’s where you can subscribe the the show:

Anchor: https://anchor.fm/xboxgamepassengers
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/xbox-game-passengers/id1460683080
Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/xbox-game-passengers
Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy81MDA2MzRjL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz
Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1460683080/xbox-game-passengers
Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/lg22
PodBean: https://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/kzkie-8f0ae/Xbox-Game-Passengers-Podcast
RadioPublic: https://radiopublic.com/xbox-game-passengers-8gKOon
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5JSshr8x6CIGIBt7wTWMWs

We’ve had a blast making this show so far, and we really hope that you’re enjoying it too! If you have any feedback for us, we’d love to hear it at derek@geekscape.net. Anything you listeners can do to help spread the word about the show would be immensely appreciated — from sharing it on social media like Facebook or Twitter, to taking just a few seconds to leave us five stars (or even a review) on Apple Podcasts (you can do that right here), to sending it to a single friend, it can all make a massive difference! Thanks again for coming along on this ride!

First, sorry about the audio, Skype hates us. Second, yes, another Avengers: Endgame movie review. We know everyone talked about it last week, but sorry, we are slow. ENJOY!



Quick Facts

Directed by Anthony Russo and Joe Russo
Produced by Kevin Feige
Screenplay by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely
Based on The Avengers by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby

Avengers: Endgame Movie Review

Starring 
Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark / Iron Man
Chris Evans as Steve Rogers / Captain America
Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner / Hulk
Chris Hemsworth as Thor
Scarlett Johansson as Natasha Romanoff / Black Widow
Jeremy Renner as Clint Barton / Hawkeye
Don Cheadle as James “Rhodey” Rhodes / War Machine
Paul Rudd as Scott Lang / Ant-Man
Brie Larson as Carol Danvers / Captain Marvel
Karen Gillan as Nebula
Danai Gurira as Okoye
Bradley Cooper as Rocket
Gwyneth Paltrow as Virginia “Pepper” Potts
Josh Brolin as Thanos
Benedict Wong as Wong

Production company: Marvel Studios
Distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
Release date: April 22, 2019 (Los Angeles Convention Center) and April 26, 2019 (United States)
Running time: 181 minutes
Budget: $356 million
Box office: $2.273 billion (and still rising)

How to find Analog Jones

Discuss these movies and more on our Facebook page.

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Welcome to Geekscape’s newest gaming podcast, Xbox Game Passengers.

Every other Wednesday, host Derek and a guest will break down and discuss one game available on Microsoft’s Game Pass service, which was chosen for them completely at random.

Whether it’s a magical or a horrible experience, they’ll force themselves through it, share their thoughts, and let you know whether or not the game is worth your time! At the end of each episode, they’ll also randomly select the game for the following show.

To kick things off, Geekscape’s own Mikaela Maxwell joined Derek to tackle Disneyland Adventures. The game “allows fans of all ages to explore Disneyland park, enjoy adventures based on 18 popular attractions, engage in 100 challenging quests, and interact with 35 beloved characters. Disneyland Adventures is your ticket to the magical world of Disneyland right in your living room.”

Listen below to find out how things went, and if you’ve like what you’ve heard, here’s where you can subscribe the the show:

Anchor: https://anchor.fm/xboxgamepassengers
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/xbox-game-passengers/id1460683080
Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/xbox-game-passengers
Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy81MDA2MzRjL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz
Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1460683080/xbox-game-passengers
Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/lg22
PodBean: https://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/kzkie-8f0ae/Xbox-Game-Passengers-Podcast
RadioPublic: https://radiopublic.com/xbox-game-passengers-8gKOon
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5JSshr8x6CIGIBt7wTWMWs


It’s good to be back.

Geekscape’s long-running video game news, reviews, and opinion podcast, Geekscape Games, met its bitter end back in November of last year. A stellar one on one conversation with my good friend and world-record holding classic game speedrunner Ryan (aka Sidetrakkd) would unknowingly bookend the series, which released more than 175 episodes over more than four years. Its end was a whirlwind of shock and heartbreak, and so I decided to take a break from things while I figured out what to do next.

https://soundcloud.com/geekscape-games/bonus-level-getting-sidetrakkd-with-ryan-schultz

That break has lasted a little longer than anticipated. I had a blast covering Emerald City Comic-Con, along the odd thing here and there for Geekscape, but as our brand continues to evolve I also spent some time trying to figure out just what was the next step in my Geekscape journey.

In the months following the end of Geekscape Games, gaming itself often felt challenging for me. I spent time playing a number of acclaimed titles, but it often felt as though they simply couldn’t keep my attention for more than an hour or two. The only game in the last five months that really, truly enamoured me was 4A Games’ unbelievable Metro: Exodus back in February.

It took some time, but I slowly began to realize that as important as experiencing the games themselves is, what often truly drove me to play was the opportunity to talk about those games with my friends. When looking back on my time with Geekscape Games, the sections that stood out the most to me (and I’m sure not only to me), was not the detailing of current news or controversy or upcoming releases, but the actual discussions and thoughts and questions that arose of the games we were playing. These conversations felt real and organic, and I think said a lot of each host not only about who we are as gamers, but who we are as people.

Long story short, I realized that at this point in my life, I just really wanted to talk about video games with my friends.

Anyone who listened to the old show also knows just how much of a fan I am of Microsoft’s Xbox Game Pass service. The subscription really is an incredible value (to the point where I’m actually subscribed through next year to anticipate that monthly cost inevitably going up), and has saved me hundreds upon hundreds of dollars as I’ve played through games on Game Pass instead of buying them at retail. Some of my favourite games from last year, like Rare’s own Sea of Thieves captivated me for weeks and weeks (read my review here) when it released on Game Pass… the exact same day that it hit store shelves (and you bet that the upcoming story and anniversary updates will bring me back). That’s because with Xbox Game Pass, every Microsoft Studios published game that releases also hits Game Pass on day one, effectively saving you nearly $100 a pop (I live in Canada) whenever a new first-party game releases.

As incredible as the savings have been, they’re not even my favourite part of the service. The diversity of the games on Game Pass have led to some absolutely incredible gaming experiences that I would have never had had the service not existed. For example, I don’t play many driving/racing games. Forza Horizon 4 looked very pretty, but there’s no way that I would have dropped that cool hundie on it. That said, I’d totally download it as part of the subscription I’m already paying for… And I did, and I spent dozens of hours on it, and it was an absolutely beautiful gem of a video game that I would have completely missed out on otherwise.

I’ve had some phenomenal experiences with a multitude of titles on Xbox Game Pass, but what am I still missing out on? What potentially hidden gems am I overlooking for one reason or another each and every time that I scroll through the ever-growing list of Game Pass titles?

What if the control was taken away? What if I was simply a passenger, forced to play whatever random game was selected for me?

Welcome to Geekscape’s newest gaming podcast, Xbox Game Passengers. 

Every other Wednesday beginning on May 1st, a guest and I will break down and discuss one game available on Microsoft’s Game Pass service, which was chosen for us completely at random.

Whether it’s a magical or a horrible experience, we’ll force ourselves through it, share our thoughts, and let you know whether or not the game is worth your time. At the end of each episode, we’ll also be randomly selecting the game for the following show.

There are really just a couple of rules to the selection and discussion process (at least for now), and those are:
1. If the game selected is a story-heavy sequel, and the first game in the series is also on Xbox Game Pass, then the hosts will play the first game instead.
2. Hosts do not discuss their thoughts prior to recording, so they can hear each other’s impressions live on air.

To kick things off, Geekscape’s own Mikaela Maxwell joined me to tackle Disneyland Adventures. Look for this first episode wherever you get your podcasts next Wednesday, May 1st, with new episodes releasing bi-weekly following that!

You probably want to subscribe (and share with your friends!) to the show already, don’t you? Here’s where you can find Xbox Game Passengers:

Anchor: https://anchor.fm/xboxgamepassengers
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/xbox-game-passengers/id1460683080
Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/xbox-game-passengers
Google Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/GamePassengersGoogle
Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1460683080/xbox-game-passengers
Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/lg22
PodBean: https://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/kzkie-8f0ae/Xbox-Game-Passengers-Podcast
RadioPublic: https://radiopublic.com/xbox-game-passengers-8gKOon
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5JSshr8x6CIGIBt7wTWMWs

Missing your platform of choice? Drop me a message on twitter, or email me at derek@geekscape.net and let me know where else you’d like to see the show!

Analog Jones tries to survive all the adrenaline and sex appeal in this high octane film, enjoy our Point Break (1991) VHS Movie Review!



Quick Facts
Directed by Kathryn Bigelow
Produced by Peter Abrams and Robert L. Levy
Screenplay by W. Peter Iliff
Story by Rick King and W. Peter Iliff
Production companies: Largo Entertainment and Levy/Abrams/Guerin Productions
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date July 10, 1991 (Westwood, California) and July 12, 1991 (United States)
Running time: 122 minutes
Budget: $24 million
Box office: $83.5 million

Point Break (1991) VHS Movie Review

Point Break (1991) Cast 
Patrick Swayze as Bodhi/”Ronald Reagan”
Keanu Reeves as FBI Agent Johnny Utah
Gary Busey as FBI Agent Angelo Pappas
Lori Petty as Tyler Endicott
John C. McGinley as FBI Director Ben Harp
James LeGros as Roach/”Richard Nixon”
John Philbin as Nathaniel/”Jimmy ll Carter”
Lee Tergesen as Rosie
Bojesse Christopher as Grommet/”Lyndon B. Johnson.”
Julian Reyes as FBI Agent Alvarez
Daniel Beer as FBI Agent Babbit
Vincent Klyn as Warchild
Chris Pedersen as Bunker Weiss
Dave Olson as Archbold
Anthony Kiedis as Tone
Christopher Pettiet as 15
Sydney Walsh as Miss Deer
Peter Phelps as an Australian surfer
Galyn Gorg as Margarita
Tom Sizemore as DEA Agent Deets (uncredited)

Point Break (1991) VHS Box

VHS Box Summary 
“People will have a hard time finding a more entertaining thriller.” 
-Roger Ebert. “Siskel & Ebert”

To prepare for his role, Keanu Reeves spent time with real FBI agents, learned how to handle firearms at the L.A.P.D. target range and underwent football training from UCLA quarterback coaches. Patrick Swayze, an accomplished skydiver, actually took part in the film’s spectacular free-fall ensemble maneuver.

Relentless action, breathtaking surf, and sky-diving cinematography, and the multi-layered performances of Keanu Reeves and Patrick Swayze make “Point Break” a high-adrenaline, visually spectacular thriller.

Young FBI agent Johnny Utah (Reeves) goes undercover at the suggestion of his partner (Gary Busey) to learn if a group of wild surfers is actually a gang of bank robbers. He soon comes under the dangerous spell of the surfers’ charismatic leader Bodhi (Swayze), a mystical mastermind who’ll do absolutely anything for a thrill and expects his followers to do the same.

Behind the Scenes
Development of Point Break began in 1986 when W. Peter Iliff wrote an initial treatment for the film. Bigelow soon developed the script with then-husband James Cameron, and filming took place four years later. It was shot across the western coast of the continental United States and had an official budget at $24 million.

Point Break opened to generally positive reception, with critics praising the relationship between Reeves and Swayze. During its theatrical run, the film grossed over $83.5 million and has since gained a cult following. After the film’s success, Point Break had a re-release on Blu-ray on June 14, 2011; it also spawned a remake in 2015.

The film came close to production in 1986, with Matthew Broderick, Johnny Depp, Val Kilmer, and Charlie Sheen all considered to star in Point Break playing the character Johnny Utah with Ridley Scott directing. However, production fell through.

Point Break was initially called Johnny Utah when Keanu Reeves was cast in the title role. The studio felt that this title said very little about surfing and by the time Patrick Swayze was cast, the film had been renamed Riders on the Storm after the famous rock song by The Doors. However, Jim Morrison’s lyrics had nothing to do with the film and so that title was also rejected. It was not until halfway through filming that Point Break became the film’s title because of its relevance to surfing.

Originally the movie’s plot was wrapped around skateboarding and not surfing.

Patrick Swayze broke four ribs while surfing during production.

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Listen to Analog Jones explain this one-joke film in our Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid (1982) VHS Movie Review.



Quick Facts
Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid was released May 21, 1982, on a budget of $9 million and had a box office return of $18,196,170 million.

Top 5 Films in May 1982

  1. $124 million, Rocky III
  2. $57 million, Annie
  3. $39.5 million, Conan the Barbarian
  4. $23.6 million, The Road Warrior
  5. $18.2 million, Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid

Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982) VHS Movie Review

Director: Carl Reiner
Producers: William E. McEuen, Richard McWhorter, David V. Picker
Writers: Carl Reiner, George Gipe, Steve Martin
Production Company: Aspen Film Society
Distributor: Universal Pictures

Cast
Steve Martin as Rigby Reardon
Rachel Ward as Juliet Forrest
George Gaynes as Dr. John Hay Forrest
Reni Santoni as Carlos Rodriguez
Adrian Ricard as Mildred
Carl Reiner as Field Marshal Wilfried von Kluck
Francis X. McCarthy as Waiter
Gene LeBell as Hood

Archive Footage
Alan Ladd as The Exterminator (from This Gun for Hire)
Barbara Stanwyck as Leona Hastings-Forrest (from Sorry, Wrong Number)
Ray Milland as Sam Hastings (from The Lost Weekend)
Ava Gardner as Kitty Collins (from The Killers & The Bribe)
Burt Lancaster as Swede Anderson (from The Killers)
Humphrey Bogart as Philip Marlowe (from The Big Sleep, In a Lonely Place, and Dark Passage)
Cary Grant as the Handsome Guy (from Suspicion)
Ingrid Bergman as F.X. Huberman (from Notorious)
Veronica Lake as Monica Stillpond (from The Glass Key)
Bette Davis as Doris Devermont (from Deception)
Lana Turner as Jimmi Sue Altfeld (from Johnny Eager & The Postman Always Rings Twice)
Edward Arnold as Jimmi Sue’s father (from Johnny Eager)
Kirk Douglas as Lead Thug (from I Walk Alone)
Fred MacMurray as Walter Neff (from Double Indemnity)
James Cagney as Captain Cody Jarrett (from White Heat)
Joan Crawford as Margaret (from Humoresque)
Charles Laughton as The Fat One Who Sweats A Lot (from The Bride)
Vincent Price as Rice (from The Bride)

Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982) VHS Box

VHS Box Summary
As the private eye of private eyes, Steve Martin is Rigby Reardon. He’s tough, rough and ready to take on anything when Juliet Forrest (Rachael Ward) appears on the scene with a case: her father, a noted scientist, philanthropist and cheesemaker has died mysteriously. Reardon immediately smells a rat and follows a complex maze of clues that lead to the “Carlotta Lists.” With a little help from his “friends,” Alan Ladd, Barbara Stanwyck, Ray Milland, Burt Lancaster, Humphrey Bogart, Charles Laughton, etc., Reardon gets his man. An exciting, action-fun packed film the way 40’s films used to be!

Trailers
None

Critical Reception:
Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 78% based on reviews from 23 critics.

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Listen to Analog Jones try to solve the mystery of how William McNamara went from the most annoying character in Surviving the Game to a strong actor in Copycat.

Quick Facts
Copycat is a psychological thriller that was released into theaters on October 27, 1995, on a budget of $20 million and made $32 million in the box office.



Top 5 Films in theater in October 1995

  1. Get Shorty
  2. Powder
  3. Vampire in Brooklyn
  4. Copycat
  5. Now and Then
Harry Connick Jr. as Daryll Lee Cullum in Copycat

Director: Jon Amiel
Writer: Ann Biderman and David Madsen
Producer: Amon Milchan and Mark Tarlov
Production Company: Regency Enterprises
Distributor: Warner Bros.

Cast
Sigourney Weaver as Helen Hudson
Holly Hunter as Inspector M.J. Monahan
Dermot Mulroney as Inspector Reuben Goetz
Harry Connick Jr. as Daryll Lee Cullum
William McNamara as Peter Foley
J. E. Freeman as Lt Thomas Quinn
Will Patton as Det. Nicoletti
John Rothman as Andy
Shannon O’Hurley as Susan Schiffer

Copycat (1995) VHS Movie Review

VHS Description
“Crackling good. Nail-bitingly tense. Tautly directed.” -Janet Maslin, THE NEW YORK TIMES

The best-reviewed thriller of 1995 is Copycat, a sensational adrenaline pumper about the desperate hunt for a mass murderer with an elusive m.o.: he copies serial killers of the recent past.

He’s out there but who is he? When, where and how will he next strike? An ambitious San Francisco homicide detective (Academy Award winner Holly Hunter) and a noted criminal psychologist (Sigourney Weaver) piece together a jigsaw puzzle of crime as they close in on a fiend with a knack for staying a step ahead…and leaving a body behind.

Jon Amiel (Sommersby) directs “the smartest and most gripping thriller since The Silence of the Lambs” (Jack Mathews, Newsday). Dermot Mulroney, William McNamara, Harry Connick, Jr., Will Patton, and other co-stars bring extra heat to the film’s feverish race against time. For the ultimate in suspense and excitement, choose Copycat. But remember: he’s out there.

Trailers
None

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Listen to Analog Jones try to solve this mystery and not get turned into a couple of porn addicts. 

Listen to our podcast of 8MM starring Nicholas Cage

Quick Facts
8mm was released into theaters on February 26, 1999, on a budget of $40 mil and made $96.6 mil worldwide.

Nicolas Cage and Joaquin Phoenix in 8MM Eight Millimeter (1999)

Production Company: Global Entertainment Productions
Distributor: Columbia Pictures
Director: Joel Schumacher
Producers: Gavin Polone, Judy Hofflund, and Joel Schumacher
Writer: Andrew Kevin Walker

Starring:
Nicolas Cage as Tom Welles
Joaquin Phoenix as Max California
James Gandolfini as Eddie Poole
Peter Stormare as Dino Velvet
Anthony Heald as Daniel Longdale
Myra Carter as Mrs. Christian
Catherine Keener as Amy Welles
Norman Reedus as Warren Anderson
Amy Morton as Janet Mathews
Torsten Voges as Stick
Luis Saguar as Manny
Chris Bauer as George Anthony Higgins / Machine
Jenny Powell as Mary Ann Mathews

8MM Eight Millimeter (1999) VHS Movie Review

VHS Description
“Devastating! Thought-Provoking! Mind-Blowing!” -Lynn Blades AP-TV

Academy Award winner Nicolas Cage (Best Actor 1995, Leaving Las Vegas) stars with Joaquin Phoenix and Catherine Keener in an electrifying thriller from the writer of Seven. Directed by Joel Schumacher (The Client, Batman Forever, A Time to Kill), this dramatic story follows one man’s obsessive search for the truth about a six-year-old crime–and his ultimate discovery of the truth about himself.

Come back next week for another Film Noir VHS Movie Review.

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Email us at analogjonestof@gmail.com with any comments or questions!

Rollerball (2002) VHS Movie Review

Analog Jones tries to survive this full-tilt action sports film in our Rollerball (2002) VHS Movie Review starring Chris Klein, Jean Reno, LL Cool J, and Rebecca Romijn-Stamos!



Quick Facts
Rollerball (2002) is a Sci-Fi action film that was released into US theaters on February 8, 2002, from MGM and Columbia Pictures. Rollerball had a budget of $70 million and had a box office return of $25.9 million. Rollerball was competing against Collateral Damage, Big Fat Liar, Black Hawk Down, Snow Dogs, The Count of Monte Cristo, A Beautiful Mind, I am Sam and The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. Rollerball finished 3rd in its first weekend at $9 million, trailing Collateral Damage at $15.1 million and Big Fat Liar at $11.5 million.

Rollerball (2002) is a remake of Rollerball (1975) starring James Caan as Jonathan E., team captain and veteran star of the Houston rollerball team in a future dystopian society.

John McTiernan and Rebecca Romijn in Rollerball (2002) VHS

Directed by: John McTiernan (Predator, Die Hard and The Hunt for Red October)
Produced by: John McTiernan, Beau St. Clair, and Charles Roven (American film producer and the president and co-founder of Atlas Entertainment. He is known for producing the superhero films The Dark Knight Trilogy, Suicide Squad, Man of Steel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and more.)
Screenplay by: Larry Ferguson (Beverly Hills Cop II) and John Pogue (US Marshals)
Based on: “Roller Ball Murder” by William Harrison and the 1975 screenplay Rollerball by William Harrison

Starring:
Chris Klein as Jonathan Cross
Jean Reno as Alexi Petrovich
LL Cool J as Marcus Ridley
Rebecca Romijn as Aurora “the Black Widow”
Naveen Andrews as Sanjay
Mike Dopud as Michael “the Assassin”
Kata Dobó as Katya Dobolakova
Lucia Rijker as Lucia Ryjker
Oleg Taktarov as Oleg Denekin
Paul Heyman as Sports Announcer
Janet Wright as Coach Olga

The film features cameo appearances by Pink, Slipknot, Carroll Shelby, and Shane McMahon.

Trailers on Rollerball (2002) VHS
MGM “Means Great Movies” Promo
MGM.com promo “Come See What the Roar is About”
Stargate SG-1 TV Series and Jeremiah TV Series Promo
Pumpkin with Christina Ricci
A Rumor of Angels
Hart’s War with Bruce Willis
No Such Thing with Helen Mirren

Rollerball (2002) VHS box front and back

Rollerball (2002) VHS description
From the director of Die hard comes this high-octane thriller that “roars along at a…breakneck pace” (Los Angeles Times)! Starring Chris Klein (American Pie), Jean Reno (Ronin), LL Cool J (Charlie’s Angels) and Rebecca Romijn-Stamos (X-Men), Rollerball goes full throttle with excitement from its death-defying opening until its explosive end!

Jonathan Cross (Klein) is the newest recruit in the most extreme sport of all time…where his fast moves and killer looks make him an instant superstar. But Cross’ life in the fast lane collides with reality when he learns that league’s owner (Reno) is orchestrating serious on-court “accidents” to boost ratings. Now Cross plans to take down the owner and his ruthless sport…before the game puts an end to him!

Box Quotes
“Turbo Charged! Body-slamming action!” -The Washington Post

“Full-tilt action!” -Houston Chronicle

Jean Reno as Alexi Petrovich in Rollerball (2002) VHS Movie Review

Trivia
-Although the first draft of the script was considered by many to be very good and even superior to the original film, director John McTiernan didn’t like it because it focused more on social commentary, while he thought that the audience would like to see more of the Rollerball scenes. The social commentary is why he had the original script completely re-written several times and made sure that it focused more on WWE-like showmanship, including crazy costumes and stunts.

-McTiernan’s first cut, which was over two hours long, was test screened in Las Vegas around April or May 2001 and got a very negative response from test audiences. The release date was then pushed back from May to 13 July 2001 by MGM to test the movie again, hoping that they would find the right audience for it.

-On orders from the studio, around 30 minutes were cut out of the original rough cut of the film and the entire ending was re-shot and changed. Some of the cuts were made because MGM thought that the movie was “too Asian.” In the original ending, Petrovich gets killed by Sanjay and Jonathan and Aurora fly back to the US, during which Jonathan says that he will continue playing the Rollerball game in the US, and how he is now part owner of the game.

-The original score by Brian Transeau was also removed, purportedly because it sounded “too Arabic,” and was replaced with a new score by Éric Serra. Also, some of the other music was changed or removed from the first cut of the film.

-Rebecca Romijn was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award as Worst Supporting Actress, where she lost to Madonna for her cameo in Die Another Day.

-The creator of Rollerball, science fiction author William Harrison said: “I’ve never watched the 2002 incarnation of Rollerball, and have no interest in it.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDFgfZJvkbA

Come back next week for another sports-related VHS Movie Review.

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I first met comedian, actor and pro wrestler Jay Washington when we were both guests on Screenjunkies News. Since then, we’ve travelled in similar geek circles with Jay appearing recently on one of our LA Comic Con live episodes! But there’s a LOT more to know about Jay… so I asked him onto the show! Now, you can also hear about Jay’s tough childhood, losing both of his parents before he was 30 and how he almost died last year (honey doesn’t always make things better)! We’ll also talk a little about ‘Avengers: End Game’ and the upcoming slate of superhero movies! Enjoy!

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Terry and Steve take on the “biggest and most ambitious Christian film ever made” with their Left Behind (2000) VHS Movie Review. Can Kirk Cameron save their souls or will they get LEFT BEHIND?!?


Quick Facts

Director: Vic Sarin
Producers: Joe Goodman, Paul Lalonde, Peter Lalonde, and Ralph Winter
Writers: Joe Goodman, Paul Lalonde, and Alan B. McElroy
Based on Left Behind by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins
Budget: $4 million
Box Office: $4.2 million
Release Date: October 31, 2000 (video) and February 2, 2001 (theatrical)
Distributor: Cloud Ten Pictures

Cast
Kirk Cameron as Cameron “Buck” Williams
Brad Johnson as Rayford Steele
Gordon Currie as UN Secretary-General Nicolae Carpathia
Janaya Stephens as Chloe Steele
Clarence Gilyard Jr as Bruce Barnes
Chelsea Noble as Hattie Durham
Colin Fox as Chaim Rosenzweig

Left Behind (2000) VHS Movie Review

Left Behind Summary 
On an overseas flight to London, journalist Buck Williams (Kirk Cameron) and pilot Rayford Steele (Brad Johnson) are caught in the middle of the most incredible event in history. Suddenly, without warning, dozens of passengers simply vanish into then air. But it doesn’t stop there. It soon becomes clear that millions of people are missing from around the world.

As chaos and anarchy engulf the world, both men set out on vastly different paths in a desperate search for answers.

Based on the New York Times best-selling novel, Left Behind is overflowing with suspense, action and adventure. This riveting motion picture will take you on a spellbinding journey through the most mysterious book of the Bible – The Book of Revelation.

Trailers
Revelation with Jeff Fahey
Tribulation with Gary Busey
Judgment with Corbin Bernsen

Post Credits
Left Behind Film Project with Kirk Cameron
Midnight Cry Music Video by All-Star Choir

Trivia
-According to the “Making of…” documentary, Chelsea Noble (Hattie), who is married to Kirk Cameron (Buck), was reading the book in bed. Kirk was asleep, but Chelsea was so excited about the idea of turning this into a movie, she started slapping Kirk on the leg to wake him up, and said, “I want to play the role of Hattie!” Kirk and Chelsea then started farming out the idea to find out who might produce the film.

-Left Behind was released directly to video in 2000, copies of the film came bundled with a free pass to watch the movie in theaters when it was later given limited release in early 2001.

-Most of the cast were volunteers from local churches.

-The character of Ivy (Krista Bridges) was created specifically for the films. Ivy does not exist in the novels.

-Author Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins originally sold the rights to producer Ralph Winter after he pitched a big-budget, mainstream blockbuster adaptation that would remain faithful to the source material. Winter hired writer Alan B. McElroy to produce a script treatment for such an adaptation but was ultimately unable to generate enough interest from potential financiers or distributors. Winter sold off the rights to independent production company Cloud Ten Pictures, who had previously produced similarly-themed films, thereby ending his and McElroy’s involvement in the project. However, both were still credited in the finished film, possibly to generate publicity and add legitimacy to the film.

Come back next week for another VHS review!

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Listen to Matt and Steve’s 2018 Top 10 Films!

 

Steve’s Honorable Mentions
Won’t You Be My Neighbor?
Halloween 2018
BlackKklansman
Dead Ant
Annihilation
Black ’47

Matt’s Honorable Mentions
Cam
Strangers: Prey at Night
Soft Matter
Permission

Steve’s Top 10

Avengers Infinity War
10. Avengers Infinity War
The Avengers and their allies must be willing to sacrifice all in an attempt to defeat the powerful Thanos before his blitz of devastation and ruin puts an end to the universe.

Mission Impossible: Fallout
9. Mission: Impossible – Fallout
Ethan Hunt and his IMF team, along with some familiar allies, race against time after a mission gone wrong.

Searching
8. Searching
After his 16-year-old daughter goes missing, a desperate father breaks into her laptop to look for clues to find her.

Hereditary
7. Hereditary
After the family matriarch passes away, a grieving family is haunted by tragic and disturbing occurrences, and begin to unravel dark secrets.

A Quiet Place
6. A Quiet Place
In a post-apocalyptic world, a family is forced to live in silence while hiding from monsters with ultra-sensitive hearing.

Revenge
5. Revenge
Never take your mistress on an annual guys’ getaway, especially one devoted to hunting – a violent lesson for three wealthy married men.

Blindspotting
4. Blindspotting
While on probation, a man begins to re-evaluate his relationship with his volatile best friend.

Deadpool 2
3. Deadpool 2
Foul-mouthed mutant mercenary Wade Wilson (AKA. Deadpool), brings together a team of fellow mutant rogues to protect a young boy with supernatural abilities from the brutal, time-traveling cyborg, Cable.

Upgrade
2. Upgrade
Set in the near-future, technology controls nearly all aspects of life. But when Grey, a self-identified technophobe, has his world turned upside down, his only hope for revenge is an experimental computer chip implant called Stem.

Sorry to Bother You
1. Sorry To Bother You
In an alternate present-day version of Oakland, telemarketer Cassius Green discovers a magical key to professional success, propelling him into a universe of greed.

 

Matt’s Top 10

The Dark
10. The Dark
An undead teenage girl befriends a blind boy that she meets in a forest she haunts and hunts in. Both have been victims of unimaginable abuse, and each finds solace in the other. There may be a chance of light at the end of their tunnel, but it will come with a body count.

Anna and the Apocalypse
9. Anna and the Apocalypse
A zombie apocalypse threatens the sleepy town of Little Haven – at Christmas – forcing Anna and her friends to fight, slash and sing their way to survival, facing the undead in a desperate race to reach their loved ones. But they soon discover that no one is safe in this new world, and with civilization falling apart around them, the only people they can truly rely on are each other.

Overlord
8. Overlord
A small group of American soldiers find horror behind enemy lines on the eve of D-Day.

Halloween (2018)
7. Halloween (2018)
Laurie Strode confronts her long-time foe Michael Myers, the masked figure who has haunted her since she narrowly escaped his killing spree on Halloween night four decades ago.

Eighth Grade
6. Eighth Grade
An introverted teenage girl tries to survive the last week of her disastrous eighth grade year before leaving to start high school.

Mega Time Squad
5. Mega Time Squad
A small-town crim finds an ancient Chinese time-travel device that can help him pull off a heist and start a new life-but he may not survive the consequences of tampering with time. The Castle meets Looper, Mega Time Squad is a study in high-meets-low, combining elements of the sci-fi, the crime thriller and the comedy to make a comedy heist film with a time-traveling twist.

Mid 90's
4. Mid90’s
Follows Stevie, a thirteen-year-old in 1990s-era Los Angeles who spends his summer navigating between his troubled home life and a group of new friends that he meets at a Motor Avenue skate shop.

Love, Simon
3. Love, Simon
Simon Spier keeps a huge secret from his family, his friends and all of his classmates: he’s gay. When that secret is threatened, Simon must face everyone and come to terms with his identity.

A Simple Favor
2. A Simple Favor
Stephanie is a single mother with a parenting vlog who befriends Emily, a secretive upper-class woman who has a child at the same elementary school. When Emily goes missing, Stephanie takes it upon herself to investigate.

Upgrade
1. Upgrade
Set in the near-future, technology controls nearly all aspects of life. But when Grey, a self-identified technophobe, has his world turned upside down, his only hope for revenge is an experimental computer chip implant called Stem.

Matt and Steve’s Funny Bad

Gotti
Gotti
The story of crime boss John Gotti and his son. Travolta is CREEPY!

Acrimony
Acrimony
A faithful wife, tired of standing by her devious husband, is enraged when it becomes clear she has been betrayed.

Do you disagree or agree with our list? Let us know on our Facebook group or email us at analogjonestof@gmail.com.

You can also listen to us on iTunesPodbean, and Youtube!

 

Get ready to fly with a middle-aged Peter Pan in our Hook (1991) VHS Movie Review.

 

Hook Quick Facts
Hook is a Fantasy Adventure film that was released into US theaters on December 11, 1991. Hook was produced by Amblin Entertainment and distributed by TriStar Pictures. Hook had a budget of around $70,000,000 and grossed about $300.9 million in the box office.

Director: Steven Spielberg (E.T., Jaws)
Producers: Kathleen Kennedy (Jurassic Park, Star Wars: The Force Awakens), Frank Marshall (Poltergeist, Raiders of the Lost Ark) and Gerald R. Molen (Schindler’s List)
Screenplay Writers: Jim V. Hart (Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Muppet Treasure Island) and Malia Scotch Marmo (Polar Express)
Story Writers: Jim V. Hart and Nick Castle (Escape from New York, The Last Star Fighter)

Hook’s Cast:
Robin Williams as Peter Banning / Peter Pan
Dustin Hoffman as Captain James Hook
Julia Roberts as Tinker Bell
Bob Hoskins as Mr. Smee
Charlie Korsmo (Dick Tracy) as Jack Banning
Amber Scott as Maggie Banning
Maggie Smith (She was 57 at the time) as Wendy Darling
Gwyneth Paltrow as teenage Wendy Darling, at 19 years old
Caroline Goodall as Moira Banning
Dante Basco as Rufio

Hook (1991) VHS Movie Review

Hook Back of the Box Description
A high-flying adventure from the magic of Steven Spielberg, Hook stars Robin Williams as a grown-up Peter Pan and Dustin Hoffman as the infamous Captain Hook.

Joining the fun is Julia Roberts as Tinkerbell, Bob Hoskins as the pirate Smee, and Maggie Smith as Granny Wendy Darling, who must convince the middle-aged lawyer Peter Banning that he was once the legendary Peter Pan. And so the adventure begins anew, with Peter off to Neverland to save his two children from Captain Hook. Along the way, he rediscovers the power of imagination, of friendship, and of magic. A classic tale updated for children of all ages, Hook, nominated for 5 1991 Academy Awards including best visual effects is “a 10. A film that will entertain generations, generations from now.” Gary Franklin, KABC-TV

Back of the Box Quotes
“Get ready for adventure. Steven Spielberg has scored another triumph.”
—Gen Shalit, The Today Show

Hook Trivia
-Spielberg had a personal connection to Peter and Jack’s troubled relationship because it echoed his own life.
-Spielberg considered directing it as a musical with Michael Jackson in the lead. Jackson wasn’t interested in the adult version of Peter Pan forgetting his past.
-This movie almost went into production in 1985 with Paramount Pictures.
-Malia Scotch Marmo rewrote Captain Hook’s dialogue, and Carrie Fisher went uncredited writing Tinker Bell’s dialogue.
-The original budget was set at $48 million but ballooned to $70-80 million after the movie ran 40 days over schedule.
-Spielberg’s on-set relationship with Julia Roberts was troubled, and he later revealed in an interview with 60 Minutes, “It was an unfortunate time for us to work together.” In a 1999 Vanity Fair interview, Roberts said that Spielberg’s comments “really hurt my feelings.” She “couldn’t believe this person that I knew and trusted was actually hesitating to come to my defense . . . it was the first time that I felt I had a turncoat in my midst.”
Hook had Action Figures and here’s the commercial.
Hook also came out as a SNES Game and here’s the long play of the game.
-The film was nominated for five categories at the 64th Academy Awards. This included Best Production Design (Norman Garwood, Garrett Lewis) (lost to Bugsy), Best Costume Design (lost to Bugsy), Best Visual Effects (lost to Terminator 2: Judgment Day), Best Makeup (lost to Terminator 2: Judgment Day) and Best Original Song (“When You’re Alone”, lost to Beauty and the Beast).
-Hoffman was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy (lost to Williams for The Fisher King).
-John Williams was given a Grammy Award nomination for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media.
-Julia Roberts received a Golden Raspberry Award nomination for Worst Supporting Actress (lost to Sean Young as the dead twin in A Kiss Before Dying).
-In a 2013 interview on Kermode & Mayo’s Film Review Show said this about Hook: “I wanna see Hook again because I so don’t like that movie, and I’m hoping someday I’ll see it again and perhaps like some of it.”

Come back next week when we review another listener submitted film.

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In their most controversial episode, hosts Jacqueline Lopez and Jennifer Zhang take on the most controversial episode of STAR TREK: VOYAGER, “Retrospect”!
When on-board borg Seven of Nine gets triggered during a trade negotiation, Janeway and the Voyager crew find themselves face to face with a case of assault. Join us as we unpack this episode and see how the Star Trek writer’s room dealt with the subject of #metoo in 1998. It’s a timely sandwich with a side of conversation you don’t want to miss!

You know what’s not controversial? A little inbox love from you! Hit us up at: engage@sevenofwine.com.

Let’s take a bite out of listeners submission month with our Critters (1986) VHS Movie Review. Get ready for some Chiodo brothers love!


Quick Facts

Critters is a 1986 monster/comedy horror film made on a budget of $2,000,000 by New Line Cinema. Critters grossed $13.6 million during its release in the United States and spawned a Critters franchise with three sequels.

Director: Stephen Herek (Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Mighty Ducks)
Writers: Domonic Muir (Gingerdead Man, Evil Bong as August White), Stephen Herek and Don Keith Opper (Has writing credits in all four Critter films)

Critters (1996) VHS Movie Review

Critters Cast:
Dee Wallace (E.T. and Cujo) as Helen Brown
Scott Grimes (Band of Brothers and The Orville) as Brad Brown
Billy “Green” Bush (Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday) as Jay Brown
Nadine van der Velde (Munchies and is now a TV Producer) as April Brown
M. Emmet Walsh (Blood Simple and Missing in Action) as Sherriff Harv
Don Keith Opper (Critters Franchise and born in Chicago) as Charlie McFadden
Billy Zane (Titanic, Demon Knight and born in Chicago) as Steve Elliot
Ethan Phillips (Star Trek: Voyager) as Jeff Barnes
Terrence Mann (Stage actor) as Ug/Johnny Steele
Jeremy Lawrence (Stage actor) as Reverend Miller/Preacher
Lin Shaye (Insidious, There’s Something About Mary and is Bob Shaye’s sister) as Sally
Corey Burton (Voice actor and plays Dale from Chip n Dales: Rescue Rangers) as the voices of the Crites/Critters

Critters (1996) VHS Movie Review

Critters Back of the Box Summary
“Both thumbs up!” said Ebert and Siskel about CRITTERS, a horrific story of carnivorous aliens who come to Earth in a feeding frenzy for human flesh. It’s no picnic for the Brown family when a lethal litter of Krites arrives unannounced at their Kansas farm. Trapped in a deadly nightmare, the terrified Browns fight for their lives against the attacking bloodthirsty monsters. But, it’s a losing battle until two intergalactic bounty hunters arrive determined to blow the hellish creatures off the planet! It’s an alien adventure, full of action and just crawling with CRITTERS!

Fun Facts
-The Krites voices were a combination of French and Japanese elements and voiced by Corey Burton (Dale from Chip n Dale Rescue Rangers).
-Although Critters was released two years after Gremlins, director Stephen Herek states that the script for Critters was initially written by Dominic Muir far before Gremlin’s entered production; Gremlins did, however, serve as an incentive to greenlight Critters. Herek unsuccessfully attempted to sell his project to several studios, but it was only after the release and success of Gremlins that New Line Cinema was willing to produce it. Herek thus had to heavily adjust Muir’s script to reduce the similarities between the two films.
The Chiodo brothers — Charlie, Steve, and Ed — got the job of creating the Krites. The design and construction of the Krites cost $100,000 of Critters $2,000,000 budget.
-The main puppets were full-sized 13″ models, with radio-controlled eyes and blinking eyelids, cable-controlled faces, arms, and claws, as well as bladders in the throat and chest to mimic breathing. For the Critters’ eyes, clear plexiglass spheres were coated with reflective Scotchlite material in the back.
-The giant Krite at the end was a 4-foot tall suit to be worn by a little person. The Chiodo brothers didn’t have much time or money to build the suit. “They didn’t give us the time or money to do it,” Charlie said. “The costume was just a quick, throwaway thing; they wanted to show something big. It looked alright, but there were no mechanics budgeted for the face; it didn’t move.”
-Sugar Apples inspired Krite eggs.
-Jordan Downey made a 6-minute fan film for a Critters web series that never got off the ground, but his short is rad.

Come back next week for another listener submitted movie!

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Get ready to chase down tornadoes and watch Phillip Seymour Hoffman go crazy in our Twister (1996) VHS Movie Review!

 

Twister Quick Facts
Twister is an action/disaster film from Amblin Entertainment. Twister was released on May 17, 1996. Twister had a budget of $92 million and grossed almost $500 million in worldwide sales.

Director: Jan de Bont (Speed)
Writers: Michael Crichton (Jurassic Park) and Anne-Marie Martin, Joss Whedon (Avengers), Steve Zaillian (Schindler’s List), and Jeff Nathanson (Rush Hour 2 and Rush Hour 3) were brought in for rewrites.
Producers: Ian Bryce (Speed), Michael Crichton, and Kathleen Kennedy (E.T.)

Twister (1996) VHS Movie Review

Twister Cast:
Bill Paxton as Bill “The Extreme” Harding
Helen Hunt as Dr. Jo Harding
Jami Gertz as Dr. Melissa Reeves
Cary Elwes as Dr. Jonas Miller
Phillip Seymour Hoffman as “Dusty” Davis
Alan Ruck as Robert “Rabbit” Nurick
Jeremy Davies as Brian Laurence
Lois Smith as Aunt Meg Green

 

Twister (1996) VHS Box

Twister Back of the Box Description
The house rips apart piece by piece. A bellowing cow spins through the air. Tractors fall like rain. A 15,000-pound gasoline tanker becomes an airborne bomb. A mile-wide, 300 miles-per-hour force of total devastation is coming at you: Twister is hitting home. In this adventure swirling with cliffhanging excitement and awesome special effects, Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton play scientists pursuing the most destructive weather front to sweep through mid-America’s Tornado Alley in 50 years. By launching electronic sensors into the funnel, the storm chasers hope to obtain enough data to create an improved warning system. But to do so, they must intercept the twisters’ deadly path. The chase in on!

Twister Box Quotes
“A Gale-force Movie! The special effects are spectacular!”
-Janet Maslin, The New York Times

Taglines
The Dark Side of Nature
Don’t Breathe. Don’t Look Back.
Go for a ride you’ll never forget!
The Beautiful yet Destructive side to life

Twister VHS Trailers
Space Jam
Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
Twister Soundtrack Promo
Bugs Bunny and Taz WB Intro

Fun Facts on Twister
-Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt were temporarily blinded by bright lights used to dim the sky. The lights sunburnt both their eyeballs and caused them both to miss a couple days of shooting.
-The sound of the tornado got the crew nominated for an Academy Award for best sound. How did they do it?

“To make new and different wind sounds, they constructed a box filled with chicken wire, stuck a microphone inside, and placed it on top of a car,” author Keay Davidson revealed in his book, Twister: The Science of Tornadoes and the Making of a Natural Disaster Movie. “Then they rolled the car downhill — turning the engine off so that it wouldn’t interfere with the sound recording.

“They also reviewed recordings of camels and noted that these creatures emit sounds that are ‘wet and lugubrious and nasty.’ As he [supervising sound editor, Stephen Hunter Flick] listened to the camel recordings over and over, Flick turned down the pitch, and the camels’ sounds developed a moaning, ‘cavernous’ quality that, he felt, nicely captured the eerie vastness of a tornado.”
-Director Jan De Bont was very unpopular on set. Entertainment Weekly claimed more than 20 crew members walked off the set after De Bont pushed a camera assistant into the mud after he got in the way of a complicated shot. The
-Bill Paxton wanted to direct a sequel but sadly it never happened before his death.
-Two of the stars in Twister have passed away. Phillip Seymour Hoffman died on February 2, 2014, of an accidental drug overdose. Bill Paxton died on February 25, 2017, due to complications from surgery.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltdy_5SqG0s

Come back next week for our listener submission month of January.

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It’s time for a different Ian to cohost on the Geekscape podcast! Meet Ian Raney, one of the OG Geekscapists, who now lives in Austin, Texas and is one of my Best Friends on Pokemon Go! But there’s a lot more to Ian than that, as you will learn when Ian talks about his journey from San Diego to Austin, the ups and downs of post-graduate life and his life reaffirming brush with death. We’re not afraid to go to some emotional places on this episode… but don’t worry. We also tell you that ‘Bumblebee’ was worth seeing!

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Eye of the Tiger (1986) VHS Movie Review

Eye of the Tiger (1986) VHS Movie Review

 

Get ready for sand, sweat and exhaust smoke! Gary Busey stars in Eye of the Tiger and fights a motorcycle gang from hell.

Eye of the Tiger Quick Facts
Eye of the Tiger was released to your local video store on November 24, 1986, with a mystery budget.

Director: Richard C. Sarafian
Writer: Michael Thomas Montgomery (as Michael Montgomery)

Eye of the Tiger Cast:
Gary Busey as Buck Matthews, a Vietnam veteran that returns home after getting out of prison and finds his town overrun by a drug running motorcycle gang.
Yaphet Kotto as J.B. Deveraux, a cop that works under a corrupt Sheriff and is good friends with Buck Matthews.
Seymour Cassel as Sheriff, he secretly gets paid off by the motorcycle gang to turn the other cheek.
William Smith as Blade, the leader of the motorcycle gang.

VHS Box Art (Japanese and US)

Eye of the Tiger (1986) VHS Movie Review

Back of the Box Synopsis
Buck Matthews (Gary Busey) fights the system and, with the support of an old friend (Yaphet Kotto), becomes the lone symbol of justice in a small Texas town, riddled with the corruption of a ruthless sheriff. Out of prison for a crime, he didn’t commit, Buck returns to his hometown, hoping to settle down with his wife and daughter. But this is not to be. When a sadistic gang of drug-running bikers murderously violates the sanctity of his home, Buck is forced into an escalating battle of violence and action. Now, vengeance must be his, or all will be lost!

Box Quotes
‘Nam was hell…
Prison unbearable…
But Coming home meant murder.

“Busey’s back in top form” Keven Thomas, L.A. Times

Eye of the Tiger Trailers
A unknown Japanese Anime Trailer
Montage Trailer of Eye of the Tiger

Highlights
Motorcyclist flies through a wall.
A Motorcyclist gets decapitated by Buck.
Buck’s dead wife is dragged in her casket down the street.
Bingo Hall speech!
A badass truck with missiles and machine guns!
Dynamite is shoved up a guys butt.
J.B. jumps into a plane and drops bombs like the Red Barron.
Sheriff gets boo’d up!
Blade the leader is killed with COCAINE.

Come back next week for our last Busey movie for our Very Busey Christmas!

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Predator 2 (1990) VHS Movie Review

Analog Jones continues A Very Busey Christmas with a bizarre sequel, Predator 2 starring Danny Glover and Gary Busey.

Predator 2 | Podbean

Predator 2 Quick Facts
Predator 2 was released on November 21, 1990, with a budget of $35 million and made $57 million in cumulative worldwide gross.

Director: Stephen Hopkins (Lost in Space, A Nightmare on Elm Street 5)
Writers: Jim and John Thomas (characters and script)

Predator 2 Cast:
Danny Glover as Lieutenant Michael “Mike” R. Harrigan, an LAPD Officer who is investigating rival Jamaican and Colombian drug cartels. He is very stubborn and often is criticized by the superior officers for not obeying orders.
Kevin Peter Hall as The Predator, a member of a warrior race which hunts aggressive members of other species for sport, uses active camouflage, a plasma weapon and can see in the infrared spectrum. Hall also played the Elder Predator, the leader of the Predators at the end of the film.
Gary Busey as Special Agent Peter Keyes posed as a DEA agent leading a special task force investigating a drug conspiracy as a cover for his attempts to capture the Predator.
Ruben Blades as Detective Danny Archuleta, a member of Harrigan’s team and a long time friend of his.
María Conchita Alonso as Detective Leona Cantrell, an LAPD cop involved in the Jamaican-Colombian gang wars.
Bill Paxton as Detective Jerry Lambert, an LAPD cop, transferred from another precinct into Metro Command. His role is often that of comic relief.
Lilyan Chauvin as Dr. Irene Richards, the chief medical examiner and forensic pathologist of Los Angeles. She aids Harrigan, in spite of being completely cut out of the official investigation by Keyes’ team.
Robert Davi as Deputy Chief Phil Heinemann.
Adam Baldwin as Garber, a member of Keyes’ task force.
Kent McCord as Captain B. Pilgrim, an LAPD cop and Harrigan’s boss.
Morton Downey, Jr. as Tony Pope, a journalist who reports the gruesome and murderous homicides left by the Predator. The police constantly criticize him for interfering with investigations.
Calvin Lockhart as King Willie, the boss of the Jamaica Voodoo Posse. He appears to be psychic because of his voodoo beliefs.

Predator 2 VHS Box Art Front and Back

Box Synopsis
It comes from a distant world to hunt people for sport. Invisible, and armed with powerful weapons unlike anything we know, it stalks its human quarry mercilessly, leaving mangled corpses in its wake. Late time, it landed in the jungle. This time, it’s chosen, Los Angeles.

Ravaged by open warfare between rival drug gangs. L.A. is the perfect killing ground for the Predator, who is drawn by heat and conflict. When the police find mutilated bodies, Lieutenant Mike Harrigan (Danny Glover) thinks it’s the work of the feuding gangs. Then a mysterious government agent (Gary Busey) arrives and orders him to stay off the case. Instead, Harrigan sets out to learn what’s really going on and comes face to face with the savage alien in a climactic, electrifying confrontation.

Co-starring Ruben Blades and featuring superb special effects from Stan Winston. PREDATOR 2 is a suspenseful action thriller.

Predator 2 VHS Trailers
None, BOOO!!!!

Highlights:
Columbians and the cops get into a block war with exploding cars and everything.
Columbians do coke and get destroyed by the Predator.
King Willie gets his head chopped off.
Bill Paxton tells a lot of bad jokes.
A Voodoo soul stealing ceremony gets broken up by the Predator.
The Pred attacks a subway car full of armed cops and passengers.
Danny Glover chops off the Predators arm.
The old woman in the apartment building is parts hilarious and weird.
Gary Busey gets chopped in half.
Danny Glover gets a pirate gun.

 

The Making of Predator 2

Come back next week for our surprise Busey movie for a “Very Busey Christmas”!

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Surviving the Game (1994) VHS Movie Review

It’s the start of a VERY BUSEY CHRISTMAS! The first VHS this December is “Surviving the Game” from 1994. Get ready for the most dangerous game, hunting humans, and a bunch of dudes hamming it up in the woods!

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Surviving the Game was released into theaters on April 15, 1994, from New Line Cinema on a budget of $7.4 million, and it had a box office return of $7.7 million. It was in theaters the same time as D2: The Mighty Ducks, Major League 2, Bad Girls and Four Weddings and a Funeral.

Directed by Ernest R. Dickerson
Produced by Fred C. Caruso
Written by Eric Bent

Surviving the Game Cast includes:
Ice-T as Jack Mason
Rutger Hauer as Thomas Burns
Charles S. Dutton as Walter Cole
Gary Busey as Doc Hawkins
John C. McGinley as John Griffin
F. Murray Abraham as Derek Wolfe Sr.
William McNamara as Derek Wolfe Jr.
Jeff Corey as Hank
Richard Blackwell as “Tiny”

Check out the Surviving the Game Trailer

Surviving the Game VHS Cover

Surviving the Game (1994) VHS Cover

Surviving the Game VHS Trailers include:
Above the Rim (1994)
Bitter Moon (1994)
The Mask (1994)

Surviving the Game Plot:
Jack Mason is a homeless man that losses his only friends, Hank an older homeless man and his pet dog, on the same day. Mason attempts suicide but is saved by Walter Cole. Cole promises him a job as a hunting guide that pays well if he can handle it.

Mason passes the test given from Thomas Burns and is flown to a remote cabin in Oregon. Once at the Cabin, Mason meets the hunting party that paid $50,000 each to be included in this particular hunt. The party consists of Thomas Burns, the founder of the hunt, and super weird guy. Doc Hawkins, a psychopathic psychiatrist who specializes in psychological assessments for the CIA. Walter Cole, the locator, he finds the perfect prey. Texas “oil man” John Griffin or Dr. Cox who is grieving over the murder of his daughter. Wealthy executive on Wall Street, Derek Wolfe Sr. and his son Derek Wolfe Jr., who is at first unaware of the actual purposes of the hunt.

The first night all the men are eating a pig feast and engaging in conversation (Also chewing as loud as possible). Mason receives a pack of cigarettes from Hawkins and learns a little history about his birthmark. Gary Busey gives a monologue to die for about his bulldog, and a must watch.

The next morning Mason is woken up with a gun to the face and is told to run for his life! The group finish breakfast and then begin the hunt. Mason is forced to protect himself and survive at any means possible. Will he survive?! Let the hunting start!!!!

Highlights:
A dog dies within 10 minutes; actually, that sucks.
A brutal story of the killing of Prince Henry Stout by Gary Busey (this film hates dogs).
Heads in jars, always a treat.
Gary Busey is served up extra crispy.
Dr. Cox gets shot IN THE FACE.
An exploding ATV that leaves a man legless.
An annoying young man falls to his death, and the whole audience is better for it.
Rutger Hauer dresses up as a priest and GETS BLOWN UP.
Bonus points, Ice-T can’t stop saying quotable lines! Example, “I would run to Alaska for twenty dollars.”

Come back next week for our surprise Busey movie for a “Very Busey Christmas”!

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You’ve Got Mail (1998) VHS Movie Review

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You’ve Got Mail was released into theaters on December 18, 1998, on a budget of $65 million and made $250.8 million at the box office.

Directed by Nora Ephron who also directed When Harry Met Sally (1989) and Sleepless in Seattle (1993).

Nora Ephron also produced this film and co-wrote the screenplay with her sister Delia Ephron. This movie is based on the play Parfumerie by Miklós László.

You’ve Got Mail Cast
Tom Hanks as Joe Fox
Meg Ryan as Kathleen Kelly
Parker Posey as Patricia Eden
Jean Stapleton as Birdie Conrad
Greg Kinnear as Frank Navasky
Steve Zahn as George Pappas
Heather Burns as Christina Plutzker
Dave Chappelle as Kevin Jackson

You’ve Got Mail VHS Trailers
You’ve Got Mail Soundtrack promo

You’ve Got Mail Plot
Before the movie begins, we are treated to an astonishing 90’s opening credits of dial-up internet sounds and early 3D rendering that made my heart swell with joy. Kathleen Kelly is involved with Frank Navasky, a leftist newspaper writer for The New York Observer who is always in search of an opportunity to write for the underdog. While Frank is devoted to his typewriter, Kathleen prefers her laptop and logging into her AOL email account. Using the screen name “Shopgirl,” she reads an email from “NY152”, the screen name of Joe Fox, whom she first met in an “over-30s” chatroom. As her voice narrates her reading of the email, she reveals the boundaries of the online relationship: no specifics, including no names, career or class information, or family connections. These opening scenes are an overload of 90’s sounds from the internet loading to the AOL robot voice of “You’ve Got Mail.”

Joe belongs to the Fox family that runs Fox Books a chain of mega-bookstores. Kathleen runs the independent bookstore The Shop Around The Corner that her mother ran before her. The two are shown passing each other on their separate ways to work, revealing that they visit the same neighborhoods in the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Joe arrives at work, supervising the opening of a new Fox Books in New York City with the help of his best friend, branch manager Kevin. Kathleen and her three store assistants, George, Aunt Birdie, and Christina, open up her small shop that morning.

Following a day with his 11-year-old aunt Annabel and 4-year-old half-brother Matthew, Joe enters Kathleen’s store to let his younger relatives experience story time. Joe and Kathleen have a conversation that shows Kathleen’s fears about the Fox Books store opening around the corner. He withholds his last name and makes a sharp exit with the children. At a publishing party for New York book business people later that week, Joe and Kathleen meet again where Kathleen discovers Joe’s true identity. She accuses him of deception and spying, while he responds by disparaging her bookstore.

The Shop Around the Corner slowly goes out of business. Kathleen enters Fox Books to discover the store is friendly and relaxed yet without the same dedication to or knowledge of children’s books as her shop. Her employees move on: Christina goes job hunting, George gets a job at the children’s department at the Fox Books store, and Birdie retires.

When the two finally decide to meet, Joe discovers with whom he has been corresponding. At first, he chooses not to meet her but then joins her without revealing his online identity, leading them to argue once more. Joe later resumes the messages, apologizes, and promises to tell her why he stood her up eventually.

After both quietly break up with their significant others, Joe realizes his feelings towards Kathleen and begins building a face-to-face relationship, still keeping his online identity a secret. He plans a meeting between his online persona and her, but just before she is to meet her online friend, Joe reveals his feelings for her. When she is waiting for “NY152” at the meeting spot, she sees Joe and his dog, realizing he was “NY152” the whole time.

Come back next week when we start our “Very Busey Christmas” where we give each other Busey movies we must watch!

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Now and Then (1995) VHS Movie Review

 

Now and Then was released into theaters on October 20th, 1995 on a budget of $12,000,000 and grossed $37,591,674 in the box office. The film is a coming-of-age film that follows four women who recount a pivotal summer they shared in 1970 as adolescents.

Directed by Lesli Linka Glatter and she’s best known for her TV work on Homeland and the West Wing.

Written by I. Marlene King and she’s best known for her TV work on Pretty Little Liars.

Produced by Demi Moore and Suzanne Todd, Todd is the owner of the film production company Team Todd and has produced hits for nearly every major studio.

Now and Then Cast
Gaby Hoffman/Demi Moore as Samantha Albertson
Christina Ricci/Rosie O’Donnell as Roberta Martin
Ashleigh Aston Moore/Rita Wilson as Chrissy DeWitt
Thora Birch/Melanie Griffith as Tina “Teeny” Tercell

Supporting Cast
Bonnie Hunt as Mrs. DeWitt
Cloris Leachman as Grandma Albertson
Janeane Garofalo as Wiladene
Brendan Fraser as a Vietnam Veteran
Hank Azaria as Bud Kent

Now and Then Trailers
Movieline Magazine Promo
Now and Then Soundtrack Promo
Theodore Rex Trailer
Bed of Roses Trailer
Mortal Kombat Coming Soon to VHS Trailer
The Mask Now on VHS Trailer
Dumb and Dumber Now on VHS Trailer
Certified Original Macrovision: In order to ensure that the program you are about to watch is an original, and of the highest quality, this videocassette incorporates the exclusive Macrovision encoding process.

Now and Then Plot
In 1991, four childhood friends reunite in their hometown of Shelby, Indiana.

Samantha Albertson (Demi Moore) Science-Fiction writer who narrates the story. She was played by Gaby Hoffman and was the “weird” girl who liked to perform seances.

Roberta Martin (Rosie O’Donnell) She’s now a doctor and was played by Christina Ricci, a tough tomboy whose mother died when she was four-years-old.

Chrissy DeWitt (Rita Wilson) She’s about to give birth to her first child. , and she was a naive child that was over-sheltered by her mother (Bonnie Hunt).

Tina “Teeny” Tercell (Melanie Griffith) is a successful Hollywood actress; as a child (Thora Birch), she had always dreamed of fame. Teeny and Samantha have not visited their hometown in ten years.

The story flashes back to 1970 when the girls had two goals: saving enough money to buy a tree house and avoiding the Wormer brothers. One night, they sneak out to the cemetery to perform a seance. A cracked tombstone convinces them they have resurrected the spirit of a young boy identified only as Dear Johnny, who died in 1945 at the age of twelve. Intrigued, they search for information at the library but find nothing. Roberta, on the other hand, sees the true story of her mothers death.

While heading for the library in a nearby town, they bump into the Wormers and steal their clothes while they swim. At the library, Roberta discovers an article about her mother dying in a car accident. Samantha finds a story about Dear Johnny and his mother tragically dying, but a part is missing, leaving the cause of their deaths a mystery.

The girls meet a Vietnam veteran (Brendan Fraser) while riding their bike. He is now a hippie that travels from town to town. The girls then visit a local psychic Wiladene (Janeane Garofalo) who determines he was murdered with tarot cards.

Samantha meets her mom’s boyfriend Bud Kent over dinner and storms out to Teeny’s place where she is watching a drive-in movie. Samantha tells Teeny that her parents are getting a divorce. Teeny breaks her favorite necklace in two and makes them both friendship bracelets. On their way home during a thunderstorm, Samantha loses her half of the bracelet in a storm drain. When she climbs down to get it, the water rises, trapping her. Crazy Pete, a homeless man, pulls her out. Thankful, the girls now see him differently. At the same time, Roberta is playing basketball in her driveway when Scott Wormer suddenly arrives. They kiss on the porch.

The next day, the girls ask Samantha’s grandmother about Dear Johnny’s death and discover from a newspaper article that he and his mother were murdered. Roberta becomes upset and angry that two innocent people were killed and also by the realization that her mother died brutally, opposite to what she was told. Samantha announces that her parents are divorcing, and the four make a pact to always be there for one another, no matter what.

To put Dear Johnny’s soul to rest, the girls go to the cemetery to perform another seance. Johnny’s tombstone suddenly rises surrounded by bright lights. A figure appears from behind, but it is only the groundskeeper who explains that the stone was damaged and is being replaced. The groundskeeper explains he was the one who cracked the tombstone on accident. While leaving, they notice Crazy Pete, and Samantha follows him back to Dear Johnny’s grave. Realizing that he is Dear Johnny’s father, she comforts him, while he advises her not to dwell on things. After all this, the tree house is finally bought, and Samantha narrates, “The tree house was supposed to bring us more independence. But what the summer actually brought was independence from each other.”

The film returns to 1991, and Chrissy goes into labor and gives birth to a girl. Later, in their old tree house, it is revealed by Roberta that Crazy Pete had died the previous year. They then discuss how happy they are in life and make another pact to visit more often.

Come back in two weeks for You’ve Got Mail from 1998 to finish our ladies month.

Discuss these movies and more on our Facebook page.

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Heart and Souls (1993) VHS Movie Review

 

Heart and Souls was released in theaters on August 13th, 1993 on a budget of $25,000,000 and had a gross of $16,581,714.

Directed by Ron Underwood, the same guy who brought us Tremors, City Slickers, and Mighty Joe Young.

Produced by Sean Daniel, this guy is an excellent creative producer, his career spans four decades, was the youngest president of production at Universal Pictures. During his tenure, he shepherded such hits as Back to the Future, Animal House, Brazil, Sixteen Candles, The Blues Brothers and Field of Dreams.

As a producer, his films have grossed more than $2 billion worldwide. They include The Mummy franchise, Dazed, and Confused and Tombstone. He helped start Mythos in 2018, a production company that just signed a mega-deal with Amazon.

Screenplay by Brent Maddock and SS Wilson, these two make another appearance on our show, the first was for Wild Wild West.

Hearts and Souls Cast
Robert Downey Jr as Thomas Reilly (Iron Man)
Eric Lloyd as 7-year-old Thomas Reilly (Santa Clause trilogy)
Kyra Sedgwick as Julia (The Closer TV series)
Alfre Woodard as Penny Washington (12 Years a Slave, Captain America: Civil War)
Tom Sizemore as Milo Peck (Saving Private Ryan, True Romance)
Charles Grodin as Harrison Winslow (George Newton in Beethoven)
Elisabeth Shue as Anne (Adventures in Babysitting, Leaving Las Vegas)
David Paymer as Hal the Bus Driver (City Slickers and Mr. Saturday Night)

In 1959 We are introduced to 4 people:
Penny, a single mother, she regrets working the night shift and leaving her three children at home.
Harrison, a would-be singer, that suffers from stage fright.
Julia, a waitress that moved to the city to experience city life and to avoid getting married to her boyfriend John.
Milo, a small-time thief and tough guy that conned a young boy out of his grandfather’s stamps. He tried to steal them back got beat up by the guy who hired him.

They all ride the same bus that night and die because their bus driver Hal can’t keep his eyes off a sexy pair of legs. The 4 souls of Penny, Harrison, Julia, and Milo all enter Thomas Reilly while he is being born in the family car. Hal for some reason gets a pass and accends to heaven.

As the years pass Thomas is the only one you can see his ghost and they all form a deep bound. As the boy ages, he has problems because people think he’s weird. Thomas’s mother and father almost have him committed but the ghosts realize they are harming his life and make themselves invisible to Thomas. The abandonment causes young Thomas to avoid close relationships for the rest of his life, fearful that they, too, will leave him.

Twenty-seven years later we meet Thomas, now a ruthless foreclosure banker who refuses to open up to his devoted girlfriend Anne and lives on his car phone. Hal returns with his trolleybus. Because his irresponsibility ended four innocent lives, Hal has been condemned to convey spirits to the next life, and he has now come for his former passengers.

They reveal themselves to Thomas and he crashes his car. He wakes up in a hospital and he attempts to check himself into a psychiatric hospital, where a schizophrenic patient can see his ghost. This convinces Thomas that the spirits are real, but he is still angry with them for their abandonment and refuses to help them. The quartet convinces him by leaping in and out of his body during an important meeting and threatening further public humiliation until Thomas reluctantly agrees to help in order to finally be rid of them.

One by one the ghosts solve their unfinished business.
1. Milo steals back the stamps and gives them to the grown-up kid. However, after the burglary, a nervous Thomas encounters a police sergeant (who is ticketing his illegally parked car) and accidentally gets himself arrested, forcing Anne to bail him out.
2. Harrison uses Thomas’s body to sing the national anthem at a B.B. King concert. Anne is in the audience and gets mad at Thomas for skipping their date.
3. After which Thomas is arrested again by the same police sergeant, who Penny suddenly recognizes as her son. Thomas tells Billy the location of his long-lost sisters, and Billy is so overcome that he lets Thomas go with a warning after hitting his car.
4. Finally, Thomas and Julia write a letter to Julia’s boyfriend John in which she confesses her love for him, only to learn that John died several years before. At the same moment, the trolleybus returns to take Julia. Thomas protests that Julia’s business is still unresolved, but Julia realizes that her true business is Thomas, who is making the same mistake with Anne that she made with John. Thomas promises her that he will tell Anne his true feelings before it is too late, allowing Julia to depart.

Thomas invites Anne back to his apartment, where he tells her his fear of abandonment and his love for her. He gives her a heart-shaped keyring containing all his personal keys. Anne takes him back, then the two of them dance under the night sky were four new stars twinkle to show that Penny, Julia, Harrison, and Milo are finally at peace.

Come back next week when we review Now and Then from 1995 to continue our ladies month!

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The Rage Carrie 2 (1999) VHS Movie Review

 

Every podcast thinks terrible thoughts and this week those terrible thoughts are about The Rage: Carrie 2. Analog Jones is joined by The Jersey Ghouls to review this over the top 90’s horror film.

The Rage: Carrie 2 was released into theaters on March 12, 1999. The budget was $21 million, and the movie made $17.8 million in the box office.

Directed by Katt Shea
Produced by Paul Monash
Written by Rafael Moreu
Based on Carrie by Stephen King

The Rage: Carrie 2 Cast
Emily Bergl as Rachel Lang
Jason London as Jesse Ryan
Dylan Bruno as Mark Bing
J. Smith Cameron as Barbara Lang
Amy Irving as Sue Snell
Zachery Ty Bryan as Eric Stark

The Rage: Carrie 2 Trailers
The World is Not Enough (James Bond)
The James Bond 007 Collection
The Mod Squad (1999)
Blast From the Past
Rocky Marciano
The Lesser Evil
The Corruptor

The Rage: Carrie 2 Plot
Barbara Lang has schizophrenia and is locked up in a mental institution called Arkham Asylum. Rachel has to live with foster parents.

Years later, Rachel talks with her best friend Lisa, who has lost her virginity to Eric, a football player. The football players have a game where they sleep with girls and receive points. After Eric rejects her, Lisa commits suicide. Her death ignites Rachel’s dormant telekinetic powers.

Rachel discovers a photo of Lisa and Eric. She tells school guidance counselor Sue Snell and Sheriff Kelton that Lisa and Eric slept together. Kelton looks into charging Eric with statutory rape.

Walter, Rachel’s Basset Hound dog, is hit by a car, but Jesse drives by and takes the dog to an animal hospital. They have coffee while Walter is recovering.

Eric, Mark and several other football players learn that Rachel had a photo of Eric and Lisa together and gave it to Sheriff Kelton. They pay Rachel a visit at her house to intimidate her into not talking, but her powers stop them.

Sue Snell meets with Rachel and learns Rachel is telekinetic. Snell shows Rachel the original high school from Carrie (1976) that she survived, but 70 people died in the fire that Carrie White started.

The Senior D.A. covers up the statutory rape because of the political influence of the wealthy families. Encouraged, Mark plots to humiliate Rachel for what she did to Eric. He apologizes to Jesse and offers his parents’ cabin so Jesse can spend the night with Rachel. Rachel loses her virginity, both unaware that a hidden video camera is filming them.

Rachel goes to a party, and the popular kids reveal their sex game that she is a part of, which triggers Rachel’s telekinesis and unleashes the rage in her. Rachel closes the doors, kills most of the party goers, including Sue Snell in a horrific display of power. Rachel gets crushed by a piece of the house, Jesse says he loves her and she saves him.

A year later, Jesse is at college, sharing his room with Rachel’s dog, Walter. Jesse dreams Rachel approaches him in his dorm. When he walks towards her, she shatters into pieces in a very odd ending.

Behind the Scenes of The Rage: Carrie 2
Original the script was titled The Curse and was stalled for two years. When the film started to shoot in 1998 it was retitled to Carrie 2: Say You’re Sorry.

A few weeks into production the first director Robert Mandel quit over creative differences, and Katt Shea took over.

Buy the double feature with the 2002 TV version of Carrie and The Rage: Carrie 2 by Scream Factory.

Come back next week when we review Heart and Souls (1993).

Discuss these movies and more on our Facebook page.

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Email us at analogjonestof@gmail.com with any comments or questions!

Join Courtney, Derek,  and Jake as they discuss the last week in video games!

THIS WEEK:

Courtney tells you all about her magical vacation, but still can’t explain what’s the point of “Don’t Starve” despite the 100 hours she put into it. Derek waxes poetic about WWE 2k19 for Derek amounts of time. Jake had a chill week with fast cars and figuring out how not to die in “Don’t Starve Together”. Then everything sort of falls apart and we talk about lizard dicks and horse balls for longer than is healthy. And Shane wasn’t even here.

All this and more ONLY! on the Geekscape Games Podcast!

Games we played:

Courtney – Clawbert, Devious Dungeon, Diablo 3, Don’t Starve Together

Derek – WWE 2K19, Elder Scrolls Legends, Mario Party

Jake – Forza Horizon, Don’t Starve Together, Diablo 3 Season 15 (Double Bounties)

 

GIVEAWAY INFO:

We will be giving away two prize packs with assorted goodies from PAXWest 2018!

  1. Join our Facebook Group  and comment with a screencap of your favorite album art
  2. Fill out the giveaway form 

The contest begins at midnight 10/24/2018 and ends at midnight 10/31/2018. Winners will be announced 11/7/2018 on the podcast!


Geekscape Games Theme Song: Winter Frosts – MmcM

Outro Song:  Lizard Squad Song – Bitcoin Baron

 

Join Derek, Josh and Josh’s Smoke Detector as they discuss the last week in video games!

THIS WEEK:

The boys are banging with Bang Dream. Telltale is still falling apart. Overwatch Halloween costumes are ready to go. Project xCloud brings your Xbox games anywhere.

Geekscape Games Theme Song: Winter Frosts – MmcM

https://soundcloud.com/geekscape-games/level-173-apparently-we-can-only-manage-two-hosts-these-days

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