I actually don't have a cold open. Yeah, how dare you. I know. How dare you deprive our listeners of their cold open. I know that's what they tuned in for. I. Know. I'm assuming. So welcome to Imported Horror.
This is the podcast that brings you the very best of creepy mannequins, kaiju that I don't recognize, and really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really bad movies that I shouldn't have watched and I knew I shouldn't have watched, but I let the intrusive thoughts win from beyond the Shining seas. I'm Marcus and I have intrusive thoughts, and I'm here with one of my co-hosts who may also have intrusive thoughts. I don't know.
I probably, I'm not a hundred percent sure what interests of thoughts are. This is Grady, by the way. Melissa, sadly, she was on a plane and she had a nightmare and the plane landed and there was nobody else in the airport. And then these weird serial ball looking things that came and gobbled up the entire known universe. So unfortunately she will not be joining us tonight. I recognized that reference. I was. Trying. To come up with something she's, it's shiny.
Let's find wacky Stephen King stuff and Yeah, exactly. The Shining, there you go. The romantic comedy that we didn't know we needed. Yes, I know it's from the Laniers. I'm not so funny story about Stephen King.
I don't know why, but for some, well, I can guess, but because I think I looked up some random fact about Stephen King while I was at work, and my phone is the only time I ever use a web browser without any sort of incognito mode or ad blocker or anything that keeps Google from invading my algorithms and sending me targeted ads and whatnot and doing. The Google thing. Yeah, what a few searches I do on my phone, Google just latches onto like a lifeline.
So now every time Stephen King farts and tweets about it, my phone lets me know. I mean, fun fact. Do you know what his favorite Netflix was two years ago or one year ago? I think. A year ago or two years ago. It is a movie that we've reviewed on the podcast. Oh, Netflix. Okay. I was going to say he was a big fan of the first season of Stranger Things. I don't know. The first season was really good. It kind of maybe got a little bit too big for itself after that.
This is a movie from France that we've discussed. Please. Tell me, please tell me. It's Girls With Balls. Please tell me that. Stephen King's secret obsession. I doubt. It. That would be amazing. But it's under, oh, well good. I could see that under Paris is the movie from Netflix that Stephen King really liked and actually tweeted positive things about, or muska positive things about a year. Ago. Well, I think it was still tweeting back so shameless. It might've been.
Yeah, I got off it. I'm just as glad. But Under Paris was so shameless, it knew what it was. And. It leaned into it so hard and that confidence is really an important part of horror movies, I think really any movie, but. It has my favorite movie ending of any shark movie ever. And I will fight anyone that says otherwise. See, my favorite isn't actually a movie, but you would love it. There is a shark video game called Man Eater. Oh yeah, yeah.
Where is basically Grand Theft Auto, but you're a shark and. That should be the whatever the video game equivalent of Letter Box's review of that game because that is a perfect description and it would make everyone that this game is targeting want to play it immediately. It's Grand Theft Auto, but you're a shark five stars.
It's set up a fake basic cable like nature show, sort of like an ancient aliens type of thing, but with Shark, and it's narrated by Chris Parnell who just owns it and just leans all the way in. And it's not New Orleans. They call it something else, but it's New Orleans, and if you're from the south and you get all the redneck jokes,
it's even better. They're definitely laughing with us, not at us, but the ending of that, I haven't played the expansion, but the ending of the video game, its Jaws, but also it's just got an extra layer of Louisiana that just absolutely perfect, fantastic, and a great way to just waste a Sunday just swimming around. Just eating people was great. Statistically speaking, all of these people were more likely to die in an airplane crash. Have you played it. Or did you just watch me play some of.
It? I've just watched you play it, but the parts that I watched you play have stuck out in my brain because they were amazing. Yeah, I loved it. I loved it. I need to play the expansion. It's sort of a summer type of thing. I don't know how Roz would react to that. Roz is getting to the point where she understands to what's on the tv and we have to be careful about what we have on the TV when she's in the room. She's what, 27 months, 28 months, something like that.
And I don't know how much nuance she would get, but a shark running around chomping on swimmers who are screaming. I think that might leave an impression. She would identify at least some of that. She's pretty. Smart. Yeah. I mean, whether that would be bad news for her or bad news for whatever preschool she's going to is completely up in the air. And honestly, if I could absolutely guarantee that it'd be the latter or not the former, I'd be like, yes, show her the shark thing. That would be.
Funny. I think it would probably wind up being both, but it would be funny. I will admit. So this week we wouldn't have that much to talk about, even if we were fully staffed. And Melissa's fine by the way. The Lel ears got her, but other than that, she's fine. She'll be back. Yeah. She'll wake up in medieval times and become the queen of every, I'm confusing the Angier with Dr. Who, but she'll be fine. It feels like a crossover. We didn't know we needed though. I kind of like that.
But this week, as best I can tell, we've got nothing. This is the 14th of March through the 20th of March, and hardly anything horror wise is dropping, let alone imported. There's stuff coming in the rest of March on the 21st and on the 28th is one I'm really excited about because it's got John Lithgow and Jeffrey Rush in it, and I don't even need to see the trailer. I already know I'm going to watch that because it's got the High Commander and
Jeffrey Rush in it. But yeah, other than that, in the meantime, there's not much at all. I know I promised last week that I would give myself a pep talk and watch a real movie, not a movie film for theaters. And I regret to inform that. I to the surprise of no one have reneged on that promise, flaked on that commitment and watched a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad movie on Haya. At least it wasn't.
This time you're at least branching out into different streaming services that have bad movies. And tubi, we're going to call that. Progress. Tubi just gets everything sort of indiscriminately, at least has a niche just you could tell there's sometimes hurting for content because that niche isn't huge. And I have to bring this up. Every time we bring up Haya, that niche has baby assassins, which single handedly justifies Hay's existence.
I cannot stress so, and I do enjoy hay up. I do really like it. Just this was not a good, so I'll just get this one out of the way if that's cool. Go for it. I let the intrusive thoughts win while Raz was napping and I pulled up Desert Monster from China. This was bad. I feel like we did the trailer for it in a coming soon, and we kind of had the, are we going to ever touch this discussion? And I think Mad Spider Sea was a not too distant memory at the time and we agreed on no. Yes.
So really you only have yourself to blame for this. Yes, this is absolutely true, but it's only 76 minutes long. And I was worried that if I waited until the evening or sometime I knew she was asleep, then I wouldn't get through an entire movie. And it's spring break and Roz has spring break at the same time I do, which is great because otherwise childcare would be a bitch, but it does mean I've been chasing her around all week and been a little extra
tired. But Desert Monster is from China 2022. IMDB has very, very little about it. So I'm just going to go to Letterboxed And I don't want to dunk too much on this description because I think translation errors and issues were part of it, but even so I'm just going to, it's a roller coaster. In the early years of the Republic of China, the Institute of Biology of the Northwest Science Society received a mysterious letter learning that there were mutant creatures investing the
Sandy Sea. So they sent an exploration team to the biology laboratory, but they were almost wiped out Mxi, sorry if I'm mispronouncing those. And Wan escaped as survivors with the samples. What samples? I don't know. And I watched the movie, your Guess is as good as mine, but they meet the Each In Sand Dune Town, the name of the place, sand Dune Town. I think that's an actual place in New Mexico. The samples were damaged and decoration and parentheses rescued.
Don't know what that means. I think there were some typing errors here. The two of them found that almost only old, weak, sick and disabled were left in Sand Dune town on account of the desert monsters and outside the town, the monster, there's more than one by the way, seemed to have heard something and was quietly approaching Sand Dune Town. Now there are a whopping two reviews of this movie on Letterboxed. One of them is mine. Oh, good. So you have a plurality on Opinions of Desert Monster.
It would appear there were more people who have given a rating and just two, it looks like maybe four. Wow. Yeah, maybe six. Yeah, not a lot. Okay. Okay. Anyway, the highest review, two stars feature length screeching, which frankly I think is generous mine. There are lots of terrible monster movies with amateur CGI. Most of them are better than this one. It is. A grim diagnosis. It is, it. Is. And I've been trying. Turn it over. In my head, worse than Mad Spider Sea. Give me a baseline.
Maybe a smidge better If only because it was shorter. I will do. Mad. Spider Sea I think went on for a little while and it was trying to do a lot more this and failing. So I guess the asylum movies and Sharknato and all the rest of 'em, they had a sense of humor about it. They knew they were bad and they sort of leaned into that. And maybe some of that sense of humor gets lost in the cultural
divide and translation and everything. But even so, this movie seemed like it was taking itself way the hell too seriously for a ridiculous low budget CGI heavy monster movie. And that pretension is really what drilled it down, but also just it being confusing. And there wasn't a great Fox molar moment of Yes, this is ridiculous and we're cool with that.
Favorite example of that is Blood Lake, where they're like, yeah, I mean technically Lampre do all the things that we're saying they do, but what if maybe they do. And even with the benefit of Jeremy Wade and Christopher Lloyd and Shannon Daughtry and all the real rock stars in that movie. It's a masterpiece. But I'm. Going to agree with you to move this conversation along. I don't know, even cultural translation issues, notwithstanding this seemed like it really thought it was something and it
wasn't, and it just didn't do it for me. And Water Monster did that was ridiculous. They leaned into it at one point. The water monster is running on all fours across the surface of the water and it's laughable and it's great. And this didn't have that sense of humor. That's when the bad movie takes itself seriously. And not in a hilarious try hard way, but just if it's a hilarious try hard way, that gives you something to latch onto.
But if it's just in a six out of 10, they just didn't, they just played this seriously. It would not for comedy and didn't do anything else with it kind of way. That's a bad movie. Yep. Guess how many IMDB ratings there are of it. Three. Marcus is holding up a zero for the benefit of our listeners who I feel like I must constantly remind the both of us can't see us. Yeah. No rating. So yeah, I feel like this is one that Haya was like, okay,
we really need some volume here. Okay, screw it. Let's just get that one. This is the movie equivalent of when Spotify creates songs wholesale from AI and puts them in your playlist. Yes. You cannot convince me they don't do that. So well. Yeah. No, I would say hard pass on Desert Monster. If you're in a hiya mood, watch Water Monster instead. Or really anything on Hiya. If you're looking for horror on Hiya,
you got limited selection. If you just want to watch Kung fu, they got lots of good choices. Yeah, I feel like Hi, ya's Niche maybe doesn't necessarily perfectly aligned with ours. So if it seems like we bag on Haya too much, keep in mind our genre is very secondary to Hay's mission statement. And I like talking about it because I feel like the Venn diagram of people that like horror movies and who kung fu movies, there's a big chunk of overlap there.
I feel they share some DNA, but their Differe differences are enough that it's difficult to, and all the really good horror movies, they're going to go to Shutter First, or I don't know, I guess Guess Shutter's still the main one. I think AMC's done bending it over and I'm going to stop that sentence right there. No, but not going anywhere good. I was worried about Shutter for Yes. Yeah, no, I was, and I dunno. I like it. And Tubby will take anything.
Netflix, I feel like a big part of the reason the coming had as much lately is Netflix really isn't focusing on horror as much as they used to. They were on. A real big international horror kick like a year ago, and it feels like that's just not where their algorithm's steering them anymore. Maybe they didn't get as many new viewers in Indonesia as they were hoping, or new subscribers in Indonesia. Or maybe it's, we were coasting on the pandemic for a long time because. Also that.
Netflix needed content and there was a backlog of international content and other studios like in South Korea opened a lot sooner than the US did. So that momentum had to run out sooner or later. And it's been five years now, but I don't know. I don't know. But it dawned on me that Emily and I don't even watch that much Netflix anymore. The occasional show here or there we're doing their.
Anime selection is surprisingly good. And There's actually an anime, I'm not prepared to talk about it yet because I kind of want to get my thoughts in order a lot. But there's a anime that came out last year called Danda Dan, which is a very good poor anime that I am absolutely going to give a shout out to on the podcast once I finally have time to watch all the episodes And get my thoughts in order on it.
We watched Two episodes when we were all over for New Year's and you were with the maybe, and I may have accidentally scarred Dan and Melissa for life because the first episode is a lot, but I Dunno, it's worth talking about. I'll get to it eventually. Yeah, no, I just looked it up. I'll check it out too. I'm all for. The first episode is a. Lot. I don't know if I've said this to you in full or if I've said it on the podcast, but I was kind of a snob about anime in college and that's my
bad. I don't even know why you had no reasons. Did. I mean, they weren't necessarily great reasons, but for an 18 to 21-year-old being out in the real world world for the first time, they were sufficient reasons enough that I didn't press too hard. And in fairness, there were also some really obnoxious anime fans in college that didn't help my case. Okay, fair. I'll give you that. Yeah, fair. It wasn't nearly as mainstream as it is now, All that, I mean, well, the fans,
yeah. Yeah. Part of being a geek is being excited about your interests, sharing those interests with other people. You got to read the room sometimes, guys. Well, I can relate to that. Or at least at almost 40. I was kind of a punk ass in college, but. Yeah, we all were. Yeah. Yeah, fair. But I decided to stop with the monster stuff. So every day since that RA goes down for a nap, I've been knocking out an episode of Monarch legacy of Monsters, which is the Godzilla show on Apple tv.
And I'm only four episodes in. And so if it's. Like other Godzilla things that aren't movies, you have not actually seen Godzilla yet. I have briefly, and there've been other Kaiju, at least one of whom, if it's named, I don't know the name. There is a bunch of 'em. And I wouldn't know all of them either. Well, and this one might be like a recent invention. I don't know if this is one that they pulled from the Toho archives or whatever,
but I like it for the most part. But it is, the ratio of talkie to Monster is still a little high and they're clearly building towards something. But the coolest part about it, they've got Kurt Russell who I will watch pretty much anything with Kurt Russell in it. And he's playing the same character as his son Wyatt. And they look identical. And maybe there's some makeup and some CG going into that too, but just they look like you totally believe that it's the same guy.
Just one of them is in the fifties and one of them is in 2015. It is seamless. And even in the opening credits, they've got Kurt Russell in the role of Lee Shaw, and then they change Kurt to Wyatt in this really fun, they make a big deal out of it. Yeah. It's the kid. It's the same. I love that.
And I know people complain about Nepo babies and all like that, but come on, if you have a chance to help your kid get started in an industry that you've spent your life in, of course you're going to, of course, people are going to support that. Some of them, not nearly as many as there are, but some percentage of them are actually perfectly good actors in your room, in their room. And you should give them a shot. Not nearly enough of them, but some of them.
Well, and at least so far by universal monsters or I guess they're not universal, but by Godzilla standards, why it's holding his own. So it's kind of a messy narrative. They pinball back and forth between the fifties and 2015 and the seventies at one point. But it's holding together well enough. I feel like I can follow it for the most part. I just don't want to say too much because I haven't gotten to the end yet. Yeah.
Yeah, that's right. And it is American, but also it's Godzilla, so I think it counts. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, the only American Godzilla that absolutely does not count for the podcast under any circumstances is the Roland Emrick one. Any other Godzilla thing, fair game to talk about on our show? Other Godzillas have respected the source material enough that they merit discussion. Absolutely. Absolutely. He says bravely have not seen all of the American Godzilla things.
I'm probably going to eat my words in a few weeks. I mean, the recent Godzilla movies were all right, maybe they weren't great, but I liked them. I loved Kong Skull Island. That was just a good monster movie that just worked for me really. 10 out of 10, that was great. And maybe the recent Godzilla, the American as good by comparison. But even so there's still, it's Godzilla. Of course, you're going to watch it.
And I mean, I feel like we talked about this, I think the last time we talked about Godzilla, the ratio of Taki talkie to Smashy smashy. That's an annoying thing that's consistent across the Kaiju franchise. But it is also something I understand from a pacing standpoint is if you've got a 90 minute movie and Godzilla is just smashing things nonstop for 85 minutes, you're not going to have a Tokyo left.
Or at least it's really going to stretch the suspension of disbelief that there's a Tokyo left. It's tricky. It's tricky. Yeah. So let alone 10 45 minute long TV episodes. But I like it so far. It's a hell of a lot better than Desert Monster, I tell you that. There you go. Ever. You watch better than Desert Monster. Hey, the key to life is to have, imagine that on the back of the citizen KDVD case. Reasonable expectations, people. That's what life is all about.
And parenting, is the kid still alive? Yes. Good parenting wind for today. You did it. Your child doesn't have cholera yet. Yay. Or measles despite. Anyway. Hashtag getting political. You believe in vaccinations, you are fine. End hashtag political. Yes. Yes. So you watched a good movie this week and I was going to watch it, and then I didn't, but I want to. No. Fair. Fair. Yeah. So yes, I watched Oddity. It is on shutter. The IMDB summary is woefully lacking.
It is one very short, very misleading sentence. So I am going to very quickly try to improvise my own. This is why I need to look up IMDB summaries before we start recording.
A year after her sister's murder blind Clear Voyant Darcy Ello visits the spacious home of her widowed brother-in-law and his new girlfriend, which was also the scene of said sister's murder When the brother-in-law leaves because he is a massive douche, the Blind clairvoyant woman and the girlfriend are forced to spend the night in the dark spooky house together.
And also there's a golum that they keep calling a mannequin because the douchey husband and the girlfriend are too uninformed to know what a golum is. And the blind psychic woman is certainly not going to tell them because she kind of hates them and spooky things happen. Nice. So not much of a fox Mulder moment. I take it. There is not really about the mannequin, but there are twists. I feel like this movie telegraphs those twists kind of heavily,
but I still don't necessarily want to spoil them. Yeah, Fair enough. There's a Murder mystery element with a kind of obvious answer, but it is about the journey, not the destination. And this movie does that well, and there are some legitimately spooky elements set design for the creepy old house. It looks almost like a small Scott Irish castle more than a house, which is interesting and it's sufficiently spooky. The Golum, I refuse to call it a mannequin, is sufficiently spooky when it's
not moving. When it's moving, it admittedly looks like the Putties from Power Rangers. See, I find there is one instance of mannequins where they are terrifying. And I know you have encountered them, and I know they have scared you too. And that's when Skyrim bugs out and the mannequins that are supposed to be stationary. Decorations suddenly start twitching and just flying all over the walls of your house and making those unsettling thumping noises. Yes. Yes, yes.
Or chasing just kind of glitching out in this twitchy sort of way. And you don't expect it. Adopted digital daughter's pet Fox as it runs around the room. Yeah. Yes. And especially if it's late at night and you're just playing it to decompress and you walk into your house and you see that that will get you, you need to go to bed. But other than that, I can't think of a time that mannequins are scary. Golum. Yes. Mannequins may be not so much.
There are some legitimately scary things about, I'm actually, despite my complaining about the golum effects just now, I am probably going to give this a very high motion picture, tariff scale rating, because there were some parts of this movie that skewed me out. So it, so the husband is a psychiatrist or a doctor, I think psychiatrist. But either way, he works the night shift at an insane asylum. Nice. And That comes into play later on in the Movie. I don't feel uncomfortable.
I don't feel uncomfortable swelling that because if you have a guy working a night shift at an insane asylum in a horror movie, obviously you are going to have horror happening at an insane asylum at night that is a chekhov's gun that you are obligated to fire. Fire. Yes. Yeah. No, it'd be weird if you. Didn't. And there is one scene that legitimately spooked me.
We've got a character tied to a bed like the beds in insane asylums of the leather straps like you see in the old school, scary asylum kind of things. And. I can hear Melissa cackling and going in a very different direction with that. Yeah, yeah. Kind of a strange She's not here. And the villains leave the door unlocked And let some particularly dangerous inmates loose.
And one of them's coming in And The whole thing is from the perspective, like the first person perspective of the guy on the bed. So you see the door slowly open And you hears some shuffling and he looks away and he looks back and there's a face. Now, admittedly, what that face does causes it to immediately stop being scary and start being funny because it comes across a little sillier than I think the writers intended, but that buildup genuinely got me. Yeah. Well. And the POV stuff is.
Hard. May or may not be where the foot thing came in, but anyway. Nice. I mean, POV is hard to do, especially outside of found footage. I think the last time we encountered it was the snake cam in that God awful movie. And I did like the snake cam, the quicksand. Yes. Snakes do you like? We do blurry. Well, so what made you gravitate to this one? I was looking for something to watch, and I clicked onto Shutter,
and this was on their homepage. And a quick Google search advised me that, yes, this is foreign. That'll do it. I love the minimalism of the approach that will absolutely. Work. Some days I am in a mood for something specific and I actively look for things. I do my research. Sometimes I'm just like, oh crap, I have to watch a horror movie this week and throw it Art at the wall. And this was a, it works Art at the Wall movie, but it was a good one. I will admit something.
I pulled it up on IMDB every time I see this because I'd heard about it. It was in limited theaters. You're not the only positive review I've heard of it, but I thought that was Tilda Swinton. When you're going through Shutter and you see the, I got that vibe too. The woman. Yeah. She was going for a Tilda Swinton vibe. You can see that in the performance as well.
Which I mean is great. Tilda Swinton can do whatever she wants, but I was surprised that it wasn't her when I pulled it up on IMDB and I totally expected to see Tilda Swinton and I didn't. And the other kind of creepy thing about this movie, this has one of the, and here I may start dangerously getting close to spoilers, but I'll try to keep it as vague as possible. This movie has one of the more convincing portrayals of a
sociopath that I've seen. Nice. And it gets surprisingly creepy once the pieces start to fit together and this character starts being Sociopathic nice. I mean. You got to love a good sociopath, and it's kind hard to pull that off weld. Yeah. This isn't like a Hannibal Electric sort of thing. This guy seems perfectly normal if a boat stilted until suddenly he's not. Well, that's awesome. It's been on my list ever since it hit shutter. I need to get to it. I recommend it.
Where would you put it to hear you say it actually scared you? Don't say that often. No. Going by the scariest scene, not taking the somewhat weak payoff of it into account just going on, how much that tense buildup scare me. I would be tempted to give it a four. With everything else in the movie, I feel a little bit obligated to knock it down to a three.
Fair. Which again, the way that I usually classify motion picture teske for me, one, it's either not trying to be scary or it's failing massively at it. Two didn't scare me, but I could see other people, three actually scare me and four really scared me. And five, I will never watch voluntarily ever again. Which is a short list. But I love it. And quality enjoyment. I'm going to give both of 'em. Fours. Nice. Okay. Okay. I am definitely going to check it out.
I need to spend more time with Shutter. This monster Dumpster dive has got to stop. Now to set some realistic expectations here. This is the first horror movie I watched after the birthday, so its score may be inflated a little bit, but I do still think it's a genuine, I don't think it would cause birthday bias would cause me to call a bad movie. Good. I think it's a legitimately good movie. Just as a warning, I may be overhyping it ever so slightly. You did not like the birthday. No.
I need to troll the letterbox reviews. See, I feel like it was, the ones I did see were pretty polarized. Either loved it or you. I'm pretty sure I am not the only person to compare Cory Feldman's performance to Little Nikki, so that makes me feel better. Yeah. Yeah. No, I mean, that's very specific, especially for our age group. I feel like I'm the only person in our age group that's ever voluntarily sat through Little Nikki, and it's kind of a relief. If that's not the case.
Maybe that's not. When we watched in college. I would not have subjected y'all to that in college. No. This is a high school. Grady with too much time on his hands doesn't know the difference between good comedies and bad comedies. Time Filler Palooza. Now, you. Know who, and I. Can still quote from them, mostly from memory, despite knowing that it's a terrible movie, and absolutely ruining my credit as a critic by being able to quote most of it for memory. Well, you to fly.
And go into that little circle. You know who would die on that hill with you, Emily? Really? Yes. So big Adam Sandler fan defended Mr. Deeds, which is not a terrible movie. Oh no, that's not the worst movie Adam Sandler did by a long shot. And I say that as someone who voluntarily sat through Little Nikki several times as a kid. Well, I could be confusing. I'll double check with her, but I'm pretty sure she has said Little Nikki is fantastic.
I'm pretty sure she puts that in the S tier of Adam Sandler movies. Okay. I will maybe agree that it's a little over hated compared to some of Adam Sandler's streaming era output. But I dunno, I'm not quite ready to go to bat and say it's a good movie. Maybe just not the horrific dumpster fire that Mike Nelson from MST three K says It is. I feel like Mike Nelson, he's a funny dude and he knows his bad movies, but I feel like sometimes he overstates things for the sake of a cheap joke.
And this may have been one of those times. I mean, they can't all be, what was it, Halloween Town, the really terrible one that he did after. Yeah, I saw dead minutes of that and gave up. Yeah, it's on Netflix. He didn't get an Oscar nomination for Uncut Gems. And in all fairness, he deserved one. But he said that if the Academy ignored him, he was going to retaliate by making the worst movie he possibly could. And. That is a. Give the man credit.
A dire threat from the man that made eight crazy nights. Yes. Well, they called. He wasn't bluffing. They called his bluff and he was not bluffing. So yeah, that was a good God. At least 20 years before, or 20 years after Little Nicky, give or take, I ish. I don't know. The years all start to blur together. But anyway, that's all I got. I dunno about you. Yeah. I mean, we started talking about Adam Sandler movies instead of imported horror.
So I think that's kind the point where the music starts playing. Usually. That's our cue. Well, if you're still listening, go watch Little Nikki and we'll have a deep dive discussion of it next week. And you don't have to letterbox, don't do it, do it. Do it it. Follow us on letterbox. Email us at imported [email protected]. We're on threads. I'm not doing much with the threads right now, partly because the coming Soons this month have been a little few and far between, but we are on there.
So give us a shout out and tell your friends about us. We're cool most of the time. I know a dear sweet man, Henry Winkler covered in bees.