Every other Friday, Doug McCambridge and Jamie Lorello discuss a film from the 1980s. Some are films we haven't seen since we were kids and offer a fresh perspective. Others are films we've never seen before but probably should have. Do they hold up? Are they classics? Or would these films just be better off having been lost to time?
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Every other Friday, Doug McCambridge and Jamie Lorello discuss a film from the 1980s. Some are films we haven't seen since we were kids and offer a fresh perspective. Others are films we've never seen before but probably should have. Do they hold up? Are they classics? Or would these films just be better off having been lost to time?
On the latest episode of the podcast, Doug wants listeners to understand that he's a good person before he describes the domestic violence in this movie as 'funny', Jamie saw the 'Playboy Productions' in the credits and braced for some serious smut that never made it on screen, and we both agree that you probably shouldn't introduce a man to your kid on the very first date. Tamp down that Canadian accent, try not to show up to your first day at work soaked in sweat, and join us as we wonder just how little dialogue a movie can have in it and still be called a movie as we discuss, Heavenly Bodies!Heavenly Bodies is a 1984 film directed by Lawrence Dane and starring Cynthia Dale, Richard Rebiere, Walter George Alton, Laura Henry, Patricia Idlette & Joel StoneVisit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
Good Times Great Movies
Every other Friday, Doug McCambridge and Jamie Lorello discuss a film from the 1980s. Some are films we haven't seen since we were kids and offer a fresh perspective. Others are films we've never seen before but probably should have. Do they hold up? Are they classics? Or would these films just be better off having been lost to time?