Happy Howl ween, this week we jump into the Wolf men world.
The original Universal monster from 1941 and the Benicia
del Toro, Anthony Hopkins Emily Blunt master piece directed by Joe Johnston.
We go through all the Pixar feature films and give them our collective tier ranking.
Listening is fun but, for the first time ever, you can watch along on with video! Available on YouTube , tier ranking portion only, so you have to listen to the audio version for the preamble, or this is the perfect excuse to skip it!
We love us some Jane Austen.
We have not done a list in a while so here is one.
As a tribute to Mr Robert Redford we take a look at Tony Scott's Spy Game from 2001. Also talk Whitney and Dolly
We round off Subtember with a "comedy" from 1996 that actually captures the essence of a sub movie quite well, but doesn't exactly capture the essence of a comedy movie.
We continue Subtember with Hunter Killer. We also talk sneezing and food.
It's that time of year again, but I don't have to tell you, avid Line of Sight listener... it's SUBTEMBER!!!
We kick things off with a mashup of two movies featuring maybe the most famous submarine of all, the Nautilus. We watch for maybe the first time the 1954 movie 20000 Leagues Under the Sea, and the 2003 counterpart The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen for maybe the last time.
We finish off the Summer of Spielberg with a film neither of us had seen before. Enjoy and get mentally prepared for SUBTEMBER!!!
Doc sent Marty a letter...
The epic conclusion to the Back to the Future trilogy, and nearing the end of The Summer of Spielberg on Line of Sight.
Marty's back, back from the future.
We had no idea that Ice Cube was going to star in a new version of War of the Worlds this year, just after we recorded this, otherwise we definitely would have reviewed that one instead of this one starring Tom Cruise directed by Steven Spielberg.
0:00-23:00 min Film Junk Episode 1000 Talk
23:00 Mins Back to the Future
Next up for our "Summer of Spielberg" we are trading the shark for something much bigger, but not better. The Jurassic franchise is a cash cow, and much like the cow in the original movie it has been ripped to shreds.
We continue our Summer of Spielberg with one of his greatest achievements.
As the sudden and unexpected (we come up with the idea this episode) kick off of our Summer of Spielberg ™, we're easing in with a Spielberg-adjacent classic The Goonies . He has a story credit and is an executive producer, he is an uncredited editor and second unit director, and he gets his name right up top as "Steven Spielberg presents..."
Nathan's never seen it, so this could also be one of those "You've Never Seen...?" episodes we used to do.
But The Goonies just turned 40, so here we are either way.
They said it could not be done but we did it. We have finally finished the Star Wars features. Again Star Wars "expert" Steve joins us to finish off the saga.
Adams returns from Mexico, talk a little Mission Impossible, Jaws, The Brutalist, Cast Away, The Three Musketeers, Venom The Last Dance, Out of Sight, From Dusk till Dawn, Michael Clayton, Case Bonita Mi Amor, The Road to El Dorado.
It's a Wyatt Earp double (maybe triple) feature. With the passing of Val Kilmer we though it was time we talked about one of the most quotable Westerns ever, and its lesser counterpart that came out less than a year later.
*You'll see why at the end of the movie
**We're releasing this ahead of 260 because relevancy.
Everyone is loving Marvel's "return to form" with Thunderbolts, or are they? One or both of us may not think it's all it's cracked to be. Are critic and user reviews lying about this latest blockbuster, or have they been starved for some semblance of the former glory of the MCU that they will accept almost anything at this point?