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March 1, 2021 30 mins

Mini Crush #160 is back and you're gonna be in trouble.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to Movie Crush, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey,

(00:29):
everybody in and welcome to the Movie Crush Mini Crush
Monday with Charles W. Chuck Bryant. No, what are we
doing voices here? Sure? Hi? Whom the frog year for rock? Did?
I already did that one. That's the only way I
could do it. I just say the word frog. That's
my miss piggy. Impersonally, I can't say other words for frog, piggy.

(00:51):
We could piggy. That would be our show. Yeah, that's
our show, folks. Uh No, We're gonna get right into
it this because that's what we do. And we record
two episodes and this is too number two up two
and we're gonna go straight on over to the Movie
Crushers page where John kell k h L So, if

(01:12):
you want to search for this thread on the Crushers
page to search for that. And this was a good one,
he said. What was your most fun movie audience experience?
He said, mine with snakes on a plane on opening night.
Everyone was hissing at the screen. People were wearing toy
snakes around their necks, and the mother eff and snakes
on this mother evan plane line at everyone screaming with laughter,

(01:35):
so much fun. This is a fun thread, no hole,
because it reminds us of before times, Before times. I
saw Black Panther on opening weekend in three D and
people were just dressed up. It was a thing. It
was packed out. It was so exciting. People were just
like freaking out. Um, that's a good one. And then
I saw Mandy at the Plaza when it was like

(01:58):
because that movie kind of attained cult status very quickly
because it was released on demand. It actually didn't come
here in theaters, but then it did so well. People
loved it so much that it started getting picked up
in a little smaller run theaters. And so by the
time we I saw it at the Plaza, people have
already seen it. So they were like screaming about the
different parts that were happening as they were happening because
they knew it was coming and it was. I was
right there with it. It was so fun. That's great.

(02:21):
I've got a couple. I mean, I will say, um,
all of the newer Star Wars experiences have been a
lot of fun. That has been fun. When that first
uh back in the nineties, it was at nineties or
two thousand's when the first Whatever prequels came out, Phantom Planet. Yeah,
my brother was working at AMC Theaters at the time.

(02:41):
People really lined up to see that movie. We rented
a van and got um tickets and had all of
our friends in a van, like twelve of us, and
he got us in there early and we sat six
and six right in the middle of the theater, uh
in front and behind each other. And when the nerves
It's got let in, they so mad that we got

(03:03):
in there first, and we were stared at and made
fun of and people were mad at us, but we
we took it. So that was fun. And even though
the movie ended up sucking. But I'm gonna go with
my favorite Knoll and I'm about to talk to Trevor
uh In about forty five minutes about this movie. Um
Days and Confused. I saw the Georgia Theater and Athens,

(03:26):
which is a mainly a music venue, so they served
beer and it was a fucking straight up party, dude.
It was just like pre fire Georgia Theater. O g
beer lines running across the ceiling like Georgia Theater, and
it was amazing. People drinking and smoking weed in the
theater and it was just a party. Man. It was

(03:48):
one of the most fun movie experiences I've ever had
in my life. It was great. Days and Confused Wait
now wait, I always confused, Days and Confused and Fast Times.
Which one's got Spaccoli, that's fast time? Fast Times? Dais
and confused is the one that's link ladder correct? Got it?
Very cool movie? All right, We're gonna go here with

(04:09):
Christie Richardson says I saw Braveheart and Edinburgh backed to
the brim with rowdy cheering. Scott's it was perfect. That
was Sean's uh oh boy s c h b l
e y shbili shibli shibli. I'm sorry, Sean, like fine,

(04:31):
I'm sure you've been going through this year whole life.
But Shawn says I went to a screening of Scott
Pilgrim Versus the World and afterward they had a passable
live version of the sex Ba Bombs perform a concert,
like a fake version, but a pretty good one. I
love Scott Pilgrims so much. That was a movie. Like
my kid, she's gotten even more down this road, but

(04:53):
like for she has in the past few years started
being at that level where she doesn't like anything that
I recommend. Um, she's very headstrong and uh and totally
get it. But that was one we've we vibed over
because it has anime qualities to it. It has that
comic It is a manga or sort of I guess

(05:13):
it's American, but um, it is done in that style
and she totally got it and dug it. That's great. Um.
Phyllis Martin talent says Midnight showing a pulp fiction the
weekend open audience was really into it. We didn't know
what to expect. I remember the first time I saw that.
It was at a matinee and Athens, and me and
all my friends went because we were a big Reservoir
Dogs fans, and uh, that was a big one. It

(05:36):
certainly wasn't very crowded at the matinee, but the thirty
people that were in there were all big movie fans
in Tarantino heads already and it was great. Totally. Duffie Johnson,
the single time I saw Rocky Horror the midnight show
was a blast. That's good. I've never seen that at
the midnight movie. Can you believe that I haven't either. Um,
they do it weekly at Thelbum before at the Plaza.

(06:02):
You know, I've actually never seen Rocky Horror from start
to finish. I have. I've seen it a few times
on the old TV, but I should do that live
experience once. They'd be fun. Noah Hubbard says, likely Head
Vig and the Angry Inch. After it went to second
run theaters. People in Portland were really into it. That's
a fun movie to see with people in a theater.

(06:22):
That's one that, like, I don't know that I ever
recall that having a big first run theatrical release. That's
always one that I just noticed on the shelf at
the video rental store and thought it was intriguing looking
and then got into it because of that alone. Yeah,
I saw in the theater. I saw that New York.
That's when I was living up there. Well, that's New
York shock, I was. I saw it at the Angelica.

(06:44):
In fact, let me see here. Charles Martin, aaker's one
of our old pal, says, I love going to see
the Room midnight viewings worse. I'm sure that's a lot
of fun. I need to do that too. You know,
I told you when I was living in l A
that was out. That was when it was released and
and we just saw that. My friends and I saw

(07:04):
that billboard and we just I never knew what the
funk it was. I was just like, who is that guy?
And what is that about? I never knew and never
looked into it because it was kind of pre internet
smartphone days where you could just kind of look anything
up at any time. Wasn't that fun? I mean, you know,
obviously it's nice to be connected. I have access to

(07:25):
literally every bit of human knowledge that ever existed. But
there's there's a magic to like, you know, not knowing
kind of just being a little in the dark about
things and not being able to just google something immediately.
And then the people, the people that are good at
at like doing things like that now have a very
niche and special ability to like promote an event even

(07:47):
with the Internet and have it be still kind of
have some secrecy around it, or or a film or
a record or what have you. Yeah, yeah, I love it.
Tracy Millner says the sixth sense. I was sitting next,
said the cutest little old lady to full theater. When
the reveal came, the whole audience exploded. She leaned up
her and said, I don't get it. What happened? Uh
spoiler coming by the way, he said to her he

(08:09):
was dead the whole time. She says, who the kid?
I said, no, Bruce Willis. She said, well, I knew
that already. How did you all not figure that out?
Your dummies? That's funny. I love it. Grandma figured it out.
John D. Caldwell says probably returned to the Jedi Raiders
of the Lost Art or Purple Rain. I bet that

(08:31):
was fun. I didn't see Purple Rain in the theater.
I saw pulp fiction in the theater when I was
way too young. And I don't even know exactly logistically
how that was possible, um, because I seemed to remember.
I just went with a friend, like we were, like,
you know, in like fifth grade. Yeah, I mean, what
was that ninety bish or something. Yeah, and we like,

(08:52):
I don't know if we snuck in or if we
had apparent bias to tickets or what. But like I
remember that movie, there were things I did not understand,
let's just say, at the time about pulp fiction, like
the distinction between cocaine and heroin. It is really important
in that one scene, and also like what the gimp
was doing to Marsalis Wallace. I didn't understand, didn't It took.

(09:15):
It was years later before I realized he was like
sodomizing him. I did not have any understanding of that
at the time. So mad, oh boy, that's really cute,
that's adorable. What are our old friends? Jenne van valences

(09:40):
opening night of Blair, which when it was still a
whisper campaign. Was it real? Was it not? Packed theater?
The tension and excitement was palpable. No one ate or
drank their concessions. Everyone was just gluded the screen. The
whole room would jump at the same time. So much fun.
Uh and it was a moment in time that couldn't
be recreated, the perfect storm early enough in the days
of the internet and viral campaigns. Totally, Jenna, yep, I was.

(10:03):
I fell for all that stuff. I needn't fall for it,
and I thought it was real. But I just fell
for the whole experience. And I saw it at Uh,
what's the indie theater over there in the not in
the plaza, but the Midtown Arts Cinema, not Midtown Arts,
the classics La Fonta Terra, yes tera. Yeah, that's as

(10:25):
further out. Yeah, I don't think it's la Fonta anymore.
You know that story. George la font owned these small
indie theaters in Atlanta back when I was growing up. Terror.
He was a movie uh, retailer, retail you a movie
A interesting a theater man. Uh. And he had the

(10:46):
screening room which was over sort of near Buckhead. That's
not around Tara is still around Garden Hills, and I
think there was one more. All these little tiny indie theaters.
It was. It was great like Atlanta used to have those, Noel,
they don't anymore. I know the Terror is still around
though I've only seen one movie there. And the Midtown Arts.

(11:08):
But I like the Midtown Art No, I love it.
I love it. Let me see, what do you feel
comfortable going to a movie again, Chuck, after you're vaccinated?
Or are you like, do you need the rest of
the population to be vaccinated? Uh? I think fully double vaxed.
I would feel comfortable going to a movie theater with

(11:28):
a mask knowing that I won't get sick, right. Uh.
And they're now saying to CDC just said once you're
fully vaxed, they're saying, for at least three months, you
don't have to quarantine either. After exposure, but they're just
playing it safe, like it may be longer. But you know,
there's so much they don't know about how much you
can carry it after you've been vaccinated, and I think

(11:50):
they're all just trying to be very conservative and saying
still wear that mask. Ye, but yeah, I may go
to a movie once I'm double vaxed. Mh. I'm looking
forward to it, man, I'm looking forward to I mean,
obviously it's not just gonna be like boom, back to
normal business as usual, but I'm looking forward to the
little trickle of, you know, of normalcy that's gonna be

(12:13):
coming in. So I forget who it was. It was
on a podcast I was listening to me, but someone
was pointing out that, like when everyone's fully vax is
going to be like the Roaring twenties all of a sudden,
you know, like it's gonna be pretty fun and concerts
and movie theaters and vacation destinations. I mean, everything is
gonna be pretty packed, even though there's a lot of
people who are like, what I've been doing that this

(12:34):
whole time? Well that's also do you think it's going
to be like the run on? It is going to
create a supply and demand like a mismatch, and it's
gonna be only for the for the super has like
you gotta have, like you know, get the premium reservations.
And I don't think that necessarily, but I think it's
gonna be I mean the stuff you should know, performing live, Like,

(12:54):
we're gonna be fighting to get theater space because every
performer on the planet, it's gonna, oh that's a good
trying get back in there. So that's gonna be tight um.
And you know, we're gonna charge like two hundred dollars
a ticket just because people are gonna want to be
there so bad, we're gonna rip them off so good.
I can't wait. Did you hear about what the Flaming
Lips have been doing? Oh dude, it's so cool. They

(13:18):
they've been doing. They've been working on it for a
while and they had a couple of scheduled and then
they canceled it when the big spike happened again. But
they just successfully pulled off or I think it's still happening.
It's at this theater in Oklahoma City called the Oklahoma
like Vanguard. I can't remember, that doesn't matter, but they're
doing a concert where the band and the audience are

(13:38):
all in those giant inflatable bubbles. Yeah, he was performing
in those for a little while for certain songs and
then I did hear about that. Yes, I think they
sell a hundred of them, uh for the whole room,
and you can have the three people in your bubble,
and the front row a bubble costs four hundred dollars.
Every other row is only two hundred dollars. But if

(13:59):
he's put that up three ways, that's not that crazy
per bubble, Yeah, because they can only have a hundred
of them, and they have like a gritted out like
you know when you when you go to buy. Actually
went to the site and was looking at the ticket
uh purchasing you know interface, and there was a whole
map of like how the bubbles are laid out, and
like if you have to go to the bathroom, they

(14:20):
have people that will help you and unzip you and
take you to the bathroom. And it's like he's really
thought at all. I love Wayne in that way. He's
very uh He's always been very um innovative, you know
when it comes to like live stuff and forward thinking,
you know, and I think very fan friendly to big time,
big time. All right, now we're gonna move over to
Kelly Karns Brockington, uh rising star supposedly, that's what it

(14:44):
says here on the Facebook page, and the just designated
a top fan on the Movie Crushers page. I'm a
top fan. That's great. I can't even get verified on Instagram, Noll,
that's crazy, Chuck, I can't either have you done the thing?
Have you like sent your stuff? And I did? And
I don't. I don't really care. I don't think it
matters that much. But there is a person impersonating me

(15:06):
on Instagram already, Like they stole my Facebook or my
Instagram picture and it's a Charles W. Bryant page and
there's like thirty people following. So I reported that person,
but they haven't posted anything. It's just weird. But like it.
I'm not like worried about it, but it's just weird

(15:27):
to be a slightly public person and all of a
sudden someone's impersonating you. You know, Josh isn't verified either,
a little uneasy, it's a little weird. He may not
have tried. Who knows. Uh, Josh isn't really on instant
that much. Anymore. I haven't. He hadn't posted in a while.
He's more of a Twitter guy, is he, I think so?
I know, yes, why I'm I asking that. I think

(15:47):
he's really sick a Twitter too, though it's possible judging
from our recent conversations. All Right, Kelly Karns Brockington says this,
what's a movie that you like a lot, but it's
not well known and you find but you find that
it really still stands up? She says, for me, it's
a Club Paradise Robin Williams and Peter O'Toole. I remember

(16:07):
that movie and the movie Feds with Mary Gross and
Rebecca to Morning FBI comedy but not a farce. I
remember both those movies. I would say fairly little known
at the time for being, you know, movies with big
people in them. So we're gonna say this, Uh, John,
I haven't seen this movie yet, John at Lee Good Johnson.

(16:33):
There's a lot of I mean, that's I'm not sure
what that is Swedish or something. It's hard for me
to read your name. I'm sorry, says In a World
with Lake Belle Bleue under the Radar uh and Scorsese's
After Hours also deserves more intention both very good movies,
Gary Lee says, to Aussie movies likely not so well

(16:55):
known outside Australia, New Zealand, both starring Sam Neil, The
Dish and Death in Brunswick. For sure. I don't know
any of these movies that you just mentioned. These are
all alien to me. Alien. There's another one, Aliens good,
little known. Heidi Lammon says The Butcher's Wife. Yeah. Al

(17:16):
Peterson says, uh, Pootie Tang. Do you ever see Pootie Tang?
I know that Louis c K wrote it and and
didn't really get much. I've seen it. It's been a
long long time, as it's been a long long time,
but I need to I need to watch it. It's
pretty great. Yeah, it was before Louis c K was
much of a name. I'm with Mike Binder here, one

(17:37):
of our old friends. He says, Mystery Men. It's a
movie that wasn't very big, and even the people that
saw it, he says, even fewer like it. I think
it was. I think Mystery Men was pretty fun. I'm
on record. No, what do you think Tom Waits in that?
Make that up? You may have had a part in
that now that I'm thinking about it. Oh, yeah, he's

(18:00):
definitely in it. Yeah, it's been a while. He's like
my twister, is he Uh No, he's not. No, he's not.
He's like he's he's a he's a bit part. And
it looks like I haven't seen it. Who else? We've
got your Ben Stiller, we got your Janine Garoffalo, Paul Hankazar. Sorry,
it's good. He threw the forks. Yeah, he threw the forks.

(18:21):
And then we've got your William H. Macy, who I
also quite enjoy. Yeah, he had the shovel. I thought
that was a pretty fun movie actually. And there's a
lot of replies on there that I can't read right now,
but I think Mike is getting a lot of support
for Mystery Men. I think slightly misunderstood movie. Yeah, because
like I think, what, maybe people took a little too
seriously when it was meant to be a little more

(18:43):
tongue in cheek kind of maybe I think it was
seen as a misfire. I thought it was good. Okay,
I've got a lot of love for mystery Man. Brandon
enters and says, rad remember this movie, young Lori Laughlin.
I think I've seen this movie more times than anything else.
Lisa Fullers's Sneakers, the Robert Redford River Phoenix movie. Do
you see that? That was good? I remember it being like,

(19:07):
it's a little creepy, right, aren't they kind of cat
burglars or like home invaders? What? Why are they called sneakers?
I re think they were. It's a heist movie. Yeah,
it was a heist movie. I believe there was some
hanky panky in it, if I'm not mistaken. I seem
to remember either seeing the movie or seeing in the
trailer that there was like some some titillating activity going on. Okay,

(19:32):
uh Anna Mills says waiting with Ryan Reynolds, I didn't
see that it was a movie about a restaurant wait staff.
I should have seen that, because I Lord knows I
waited tables for many, many years old. Yeah, I never
waited tables. I worked in the kitchen though. Oh yeah,
I did that too. Well. You know, my first job, Nolan,
was when I was thirteen. I was a bus boy
at a barbecue restaurant, and then they moved me to

(19:54):
the kitchen to be the hamburger and French bread guy.
You would griddle the French spread. So I'm in the
bat grille at literally fucking fourteen years old. You were
a girlman. I was a grillman at fourteen. I've been
working ever since. I always wanted to make my own money. Oh,
of course I got a real early job like that too.
I think when I was about thirteen. Uh, my neighbors

(20:16):
who I you know, rode to school with the carportal
school with They owned a Chinese restaurant um in Augusta,
and they let me wash dishes during the summer, even
though I was like not old enough technically to get hired.

(20:36):
All right, we'll move on to Katie Rowland here unapologetic,
but I love this movie so much. The beginning always
kills me. It's so great. She's talking about Return to Me,
the movie with David mcovney and many driver. A lot
of people like that movie. Mike Emmick says, wonder Boys,
Michael Douglas should have been nominated for an Oscar. Awesome

(20:58):
supporting cast, Rand mcdormott, Robert Downey, jun Your, Toby McGuire,
rip Torn, Katie Holmes. Yes, Mike, is one of our
favorite movies here in this house, and I think it's beloved,
but wasn't some huge movie. So I see where you're
coming from with that. It's one of our comfort movies.
We can watch Wonder Boys any day of the week.
We talked about this recently and that director did other

(21:19):
cool stuff and he was uh Curtis Uh, he passed away.
He did eight mile Curtis. Oh, no, type of your
little fingers. I'm looking Curtis Hanson. Curtis Hanson. Is it
the writer then? Who was more like Curtis? I know
because Michael Chabon. It was based on a Michael Shabon novel.

(21:45):
Wonder Boys was great movie. Michael Schabon also wrote Spider
Man too. And John Carter Remember that massive flop John
Carter remember that screen fart? Yeah? Is that it was
like a Kanu impersonator. Oh was that guy from he

(22:06):
was from one of those Hailor kitch. Yeah. Yeah, that
movie was just like an egregious flop. I didn't see it.
I needed all right, that's good stuff. We're gonna move
on and finish up NOMA with stream this. Uh, you,
my friend, will be delighted to know that we finally
watched My neighbor Totoro, isn't it nice? And all week

(22:28):
we've been running around the house going to and Ruby
loved it. She watched it again the next day. Wonderful.
I love to hear that. And it's, uh, it is great.
It's just that there's something about it. It's just got
a bit of magic to it. Um lovely, lovely film.
Not what I expected. Emily loved it. It was just

(22:49):
really really lovely. Yeah, well, now you gotta watch Ponio
Panio Is. It's got to be next on your list
for the kid Eden at her age exactly almost was
just taken by this movie. It's one of the ones
where like there's some of the ghibli movies that are
a little um dark and and and get a little
kind of like over the top in like Nightmare Territory,

(23:11):
Nightmare Fewel kind of stuff. But it's it's a little dark,
but it's it's it's just on the line. I think
Ruby would dig it. Like Princess Mononoke has some like
beheadings and like serious violence. She's where she can She's
okay with that. Well, then you're good with all of
the prison. Mononoke too, is about a badass like wolf
girl who like you know, just slays. Literally it kicks

(23:34):
so much ass I gotta say the chuck um uh.
So there is a new studio Ghibli uh kind of
what do you call it? Like c g I kind
of you know, modeled animation that came out called Earwig
and the Witch is any good? No, it sucks really
and it's it's Miyazaki's son Goroh, and it's just like

(23:56):
it's got all of these like trying to touch on
teams from the classic Ghibli films, and it doesn't know
where it's going. It's it's it's charming in spots, but
then it just kind of ends and it's really ham fisted,
and just like what the funk was that? When it ends,
you're like really like it was a real real bad
miss step. Interesting. I think I've seen a couple of

(24:18):
other Ghibli fans on the movie Crushers page kind of
say that they didn't really like it either. That's too bad.
It was a real letdown. But I love Totoro uh
and I'll definitely check out Spirited Away. Ruby, even from
a young age, was like she always understood the difference
between real and make believe. In um has accidentally seen
me playing a couple of games with a couple of

(24:40):
bad things where I was like, yeah, like you're not
supposed to see that, and she's like, Daddy, kill him,
cut his head off, kill him all because and she
she just gets it. It's uh, you know, it is
what it is. But but I'm glad because I don't
want her to. I think that stuff is real and
to be you know, confused by it absolutely. How old
is she in four? Five? No, dude, she'll be six

(25:01):
in July. She's on our way the second time. Yeah,
that's perfect day. If it's been a lot of fun,
that's that's a real transition, as you know, at a
transition period two. Uh, you know, to to some more
self self care, like you know, she she'll get up
and go take a bath by herself now and stuff
like that. You don't have to run the bathwater for

(25:22):
you don't have to do all this stuff. So it's
it's great, it's really fun. Uh and then nol Uh.
I've been watching Search Party. I've heard good things with
h with maybe from Arrested Development. Yes, Eliah, shock Cat,
shock Cat. I believe it is really good. I like
it and I was delighted last night I was watching

(25:44):
one of my old friend Peter McNerney, uh, my friend
in real life from the Stuff You Know TV show,
popped up. It's always fun to see Peter pop up.
Oh ship. I had a call the other day with
a couple of dudes, one of whom was in the
Stuff You Should Know TV show and I can't remember
there named now hang on? Oh wait were they the brothers? No,

(26:05):
hang on a second, let me look at my my
calendar intro it was elliot. Wait a second, wait a say,
where the hell is it? Uh? No, as it was
a dude, they're they're radio guys. They and they were
pitching like a radio like a history show. I bet

(26:26):
you anything. There was one episode where we had a
softball team at work and we played a radio station
softball team and we got a real radio Atlanta radio
DJ to play the part of these kind of jerks
on the other softball team. That sounds about right, I

(26:47):
bet you anything. That's who that was. That sounds about
rad I'm having a hard time locating the calendar. And
he specifically mentioned having been on the show, and he
also told me I wasn't aware that it is streaming
now available on the Discovery streaming app. I know, and
I'm gonna show Ruby soon. I was kind of waiting
for the right time to be like, guess what daughter,

(27:07):
uh your dad was on a TV show, And here
it is. I'm gonna do it soon because I think
her mind will be fairly rocked by the whole experience. Um,
so we'll see. It's funny when she hears our show. Now, no,
she goes, is that Josh or Noble? That's sweet? She
can't tell you apart which is funny. That is funny.
And then finally no, all The movie I watched the

(27:28):
other night called The Kid Detective very good. It came
out sort of late last year. I think was not
a big movie because it was obviously just straight to
uh whatever, straight to streaming. A very good movie, a
very dark comedy. Um. I've been texting Hodgment about it

(27:51):
because it has the same premise as TV show that
is a child detective who solved mysteries all out Encyclopedia Brown,
who has now grown up, kind of washed up, and
gets a new case with some high school kids, uh,
current high school kids. And that is literally John's TV
show Dicktown. Um. Yeah, it's very interesting. How these things
can parallel thinking, Yeah it is, it is. You just

(28:15):
wonder how that works. And you know, I don't think
anyone stole anything from anyone. It's just weird, but highly recommend.
Kids Detective written and directed by first time Evan Morgan,
starring Adam Brody. Very fun kind of dark comedy, super
super clever and well written, smart funny movie. Quite enjoyed
it right on. What about You. I've been digging back

(28:39):
into a show that I liked a long time ago,
and it's one of these things, uh where like if
you're paying attention the whole time, you're like, oh god,
there was three years in between seasons, but since I wasn't,
uh and it just like it was all available there
for me, and I've I finished it. It's called Luther's
with in Dress Elba. He plays like a hard, hardened

(29:01):
London detective who kind of you know, plays it fast
and loose with the law and all that stuff. Um, yeah,
it's really good. It's got like you know, it's one
of these things where it's like just the gnarly ist
of the gnarly serial killer types, you know, psychopath like
nailing people to crosses and really fucked up seven type ship. Um,

(29:22):
really really fun. That's they's say fun. Yeah, you know, loosely,
but it's it's great and it's it's it's a really
good cat and mouse type thing. Um. They call it
a how catch them instead of who done it? Because
you know who the killer is and you're just seeing
how they go about catching them as opposed to like
figuring out who it actually is, which is a fun

(29:44):
little reversal of the norm. That's cool. I've heard good
things about that. I'll have to check that out, Luther.
I love that Idris elba Oh, he's great. And they
just wrapped season five again again. Apparently there was like
a three year gap between four and five and apparently
it ends with a really serious clip hanger. Um, and
they apparently are going to make a film for the
next jury and then they're gonna put it to bed.

(30:06):
Very cool. I hope they do that, all right, nol.
That's it for today, my friend. It was great to
see your and some bearded faces always and uh, and
I can't wait till we can hug it out soon,
my friend. Oh, dude, I was about to say sooner
than later. And also, look, get the kids together and Eden,
Can you know teach your daughter how to be a
moody goth? Oh, I can't wait. All right? Thanks to

(30:30):
you and thanks to everyone for listening, and we'll see
you next week. Yes. Yes. Movie Crash is produced and
written by Charles Bryant and Meel Brown, edited and engineered
by Seth Nicholas Johnson, and scored by Noel Brown here
in our home studio at Pontsty Market, Atlanta, Georgia. For
I Heart Radio. For more podcasts for my Heart Radio,
visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you

(30:52):
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