Mini Crush #142 - podcast episode cover

Mini Crush #142

Oct 26, 202033 min
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Mini Crush #142 closes out our month of horror.

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Speaker 1

Welcome to Movie Crush, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey everybody, and welcome to Movie Crush. If you hear weird sounds, do you hear that? Well, there's weird sounds on my end too. It sounds like you hear that sounds like a seal? Oh no, you what is that? Well? We have across the street there was a water main that burst and they're out there working on it. So I think my pipes are just making noises. I have a small child making noises, and those baby noises and

old I love it. Ye, give me more, I got him, Give me crying, give me coop ing, give me all that good. She's about to be three. She's not a fully baby town. She's a delight. I think I've talked about this. My daughter has a sort of like a work day on Wednesdays to do homework and outdoor activities and stuff and um my ex uh and dear friend is um in a work transition thing where she's having

to work on Wednesday. So my daughter watches her baby sister on Wednesdays now while I'm working, and then when I'm off, I kind of go out and hang with them and we eat lunch and stuff. But it's really really sweet. I kind of forgot what what I really like little kids. Little kids are the best, all right. No, we're short on time, so we're gonna get cranking here. This is our final spooky mini crush of the season.

We're going to wrap it up with some Halloween horror content and we'll see how much time we have here. I definitely have time for two segments, or you have time, but uh, let's just go ahead and dive in. I asked the movie crusher is very plainly nol. I want to know about a scene or a movie in general that truly disturbed you, like way beyond scared, movie that really got under your skin in a in a disturbing way. And I'll let you think on your answer while I

go with jennevan Valen the original pet Cemetery. Old man gets down on his hands and knees to look under some furniture. Little kid slices through his heel with a blade. Makes me cleasy just remembering it. I haven't watched it since I was a teenager, and I still can't shake it. And Jenna got the most uplis and hearts and replies, yeah, yeah, she said the heel makes me gag, and I never gag,

is what Jenna follows up with. It's also a close up, like you just it's just it's that, it's that that tendon, it would like disconnect so much shit in your body that would just render you like jelly like or something, you know. And then he falls down and then the little kid choose his throat out. And I just saw that movie way too young, way too young, uh and it really messed me up. Uh LEA Mitchell come in and said that I'd never let my feet dangle when

I'm on the bed for this exact exact reason. Not about to get cut by a baby zombie. Alright. One of our old friends, Austin Handler, says, it's not a horror movie, but Pink Floyd's the Wall when I was in high school, fucking terrified me. Even thinking about the music and the vocals from the courtroom scene still gives me Willie's thirty years later. That's such a cool scene and that that piece it's called the trial good morning,

Yes exactly, it's so good. Like the judge looks like a giant butthole kind of you know, like very much. It's intense, man, Gerald Scarf animation on that is it's next level weird. Tyler Peters says, when I was young, the scene that truly horrified me was the beatle crawls under the guy's skin and the mummy had nightmares for years about that one interesting, not when I think of as like a super shocker, because it's sort of a PG. Thirteen, but that that is a little creepy. A lot of

people have bug a versions too. I could see that. Old friend Caroline Emily says everything about the Doppelgangers characters in US uh specifically, I never know how to pronounce her last name Lupida. Is it Niano niongo? I believe yes, her voice right. Yeah, she says that her Doppelganger character had nightmares for a week. Yeah, she was creepy. I mean all of the doop Doppelgangers were good, but their movements in the way they kind of handled themselves as

all very well done. I like that movie. I thought it was good. I liked it too. I think it got unfairly slagged because it wasn't to get out at all. It was a little it was it was different in the in where it went, and I thought it was. I thought it was a lot of fun and scary. It felt like a Twilight Zone episode in terms of the twist, you know what I mean. But I loved it.

I very enjoyed it well. And now that we know a little bit of his background and he's doing the Twilight Zone, now that he's clearly like a fan of that kind of uh, that genre, which I am as well, very old school been at Duckworth was disturbed about the dead baby and train spotting. Uh, And haven't viewed it since, And now that I'm a parent, I don't plan to. Probably a good idea been it that was fucked up? Chuck.

We've talked about stuff where you're you kind of turn a little bit when you become a parent for things that maybe you were okay with or could have given a past too. Now it's sort of like off the table. Yeah, I mean absolutely, Uh. Josh and I did an episode on a on a disappearance and stuff you should know of a of a young girl that we had. I didn't want to do it. I didn't want to do it, and I did it anyway, and I was pretty not

into that episode. And it's pretty clear, I think afterward because We even had people that wrote in and said, Chuck, you clearly weren't into that episode. Why did you do it? Um? So that wasn't my best effort. I should have risen above it. But it's about a girl who disappeared, and then I have a really hard time with that stuff. Now we not that that's great. Oh well what I imagine really totally Yeah, as as you can imagine with stuff that I want you to know. We do all

kinds of grizzly stuff like that. And we recently did an episode about a child murder in Europe and it was, you know, the guy they've found to have done it ended up having like all of these crazy polaroids of children like in his van, and it was just I had to stop midway through and kind of collect myself a few times. So yeah, it's tough. Uh. Emily Simon says this movie is not well known, but the woman very disturbing and creepy film, more psychological horror than supernatural.

I think it's worth a watch if you're interested in something outside the box, but fair warning, it's pretty gory. And Danny Michael commented and said, Emily that movie is fucking bonkers. The woman. Yeah. I think it's about like a a feral woman that's kept in like chained in a basement or something like interesting. That's like Stormton's you know, insane kind of thing, you know. Yeah, yeah, do you hear that ceiling here? Huh? Oh, my goodness, do you

hear that? I do. I actually don't hear it on my end because I have the HIG headphones kind of low that the listeners will hear it. A little treat for you real life everyone. Uh and a Sir Jon or Sir Jean says the bathtub scene from Nightmare on Elm Street, I only caught part of the movie. Is a young kid, I can only take showers for several years after seeing that. But then you got Psycho fucking you up? So what are you just gonna not bathe? Bathtubs are ruined? Showers are ruined. I used to be

scared there was a shark in the pool. Yeah, when I was a kid. That's pretty common. It's that vulnerability, something about the water and the unseen thing beneath the surface that that would be triggering and make you feel really vulnerable. For sure. I can what kind of pools are you swimming? Well? No, not in the pool situation, but definitely in the bathtub or the ocean. You know, like the ocean has always kind of freaked me out. Yeah, I think a lot of people get freaked out by

the ocean. I love swimming in the ocean, but when you're swimming in the ocean and something bumps up against you, always a little bit like, uh, I swim Lake Studental. I'll swim in anything Chuck likes to swim. I just like getting in bodies of water, natural bodies of water, no matter how cold they are. It's exhilarating. It's like the guy in My Octopus teacher is free diving and

without a wetsuit and very very cold water. And he said, there's something that happens after a couple of minutes, your body adjusts and then it becomes a different thing entirely. And I totally agree. You just gotta get through that initial blast of cold. Uh. Keith Workman says I could not handle the scene where Tony Collette was banging her head against the ceiling and hereditary. I thought I was going to have a heart attack. I was genuinely concerned

for my health. That's interesting, and I know that a lot of people had very visceral reactions to that movie, and I did, certainly. We've talked about it because of the child angle. Not to spoil anything, but there is something about that animalistic performance that she gives in that film that is just very uh, it gets you somewhere deep. Yes, yeah, yeah, for sure. Our old friend Amanda Caron says the opening scene with the parents in midsummer to build up and

seeing the sister truly disturbing. You know what, No, I know, you and I both kind of agree about that movie. I'm gonna give it another go soon. I'm gonna give it a shot and see what I think, because I've heard other people say I didn't love it the first time, but I really liked it better the second time. I would also like to do that. And again, I think Chuck, we didn't like hate it, No, we we just there was some parts about it that we're left us a

little cold. But I think we both had things about it that we liked for sure. Yeah, and I might even be down even though I had problems with the link with that director's cut if it's out, because I don't know. I usually think director's cuts are the way to go, so I'll give it a shot. Joshua Lagunas is right on the money. No, well, when he says the scene from Bone Tomahawk one of those moments where you think, certainly they won't show it, and they did.

I won't spoil it. If you haven't seen that movie. It's a great, great movie and a fucked up scene. I've seen the scene in question just as a YouTube pool. You haven't seen the movie. I haven't seen the whole movie, but the movie is great. Yeah, that's what I hear. It's yeah, it's tough and yeah, I guess is that on YouTube the scene is. Yeah, the just type in if you want, just type in Bone Up Tomahawk scene scene,

it's the one that's. Sean McFarland, top fan of Old Pal, says, the tape that is circulated in the movie The Ring, it's totally fucked me up. Nothing really scary, just incredibly creepy and disturbing. When the woman in the tape locks eyes with you, my god, it gave me chills. It's well done, very well done. Yeah, a movie back in the day, and that was one that was one of the rare examples where like an American remake of a

Japanese horror was actually better than the original. Typically I don't find that to be the case, but the original Ring Goo is okay, but the remake is like it kind of takes it to the next level in my opinion. Yeah, uh, new pal, Welcome to the show. Matt des Barbo. He says something about the movie The Strangers where he pushes that knife so slowly into one victim that's tied up. Didn't like that one bit. Yeah, a very slow That was a very slow stabbing in ex Machina as well.

That was very effective. And stabbings get me, I know they get you, they do, and the slow one in particular. I was watching a follow a bunch of schlocky horror type pages on Instagram, and there's one movie called Curtains from like the eighties. I know that movie. I didn't see it, but I know it. I saw a trailer for it and there's a there's a slow stabbing just in the trailer, and it gave me the willies for sure. Yeah. Absolutely. Dogs are now barking at the workers sealas squeaking it happens.

This is really great. We're working live here folks. Uh, let me see here. Leonard Countryman, great name, says sinister. When the kid starts them ower and runs through the rain in the dark and his parents heads are sticking out of the ground gets me every time. The Bully, Well, there are spoilers in here. I guess we should have said that at the beginning, but surely people know we're talking about specific movie scenes. Yeah. Uh. Michelle Kendrick says this, No,

the movie Don't Breathe and the Turkey Baster. I didn't foresee that twist, and I thought about it for a few days afterward. Let's just leave it at that. Did I see that? Was that the one where they break into the House of the Blind Man? Yeah? I thought that was a pretty well done. It was great. Yeah, it was really good. I liked it. Who was that? That was the dude who did the The Evil Dead remake? Right? I think that's right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, he'll be doing

something again soon. There's so many great new horror film directors and noll uh new masters, from Ari Astor to Robert Egger's you might throw in the horror genre and Jennifer Kent, my god, who did the Baba Duke One? Of the scariest movies I've ever seen, really great, great people work in a minute since the Baba Duke, has

she's done anything since? I don't think so. And you know what I haven't seen is, uh The Nightingale, which is another movie that she did, which is supposed to be really scary, but I have not seen that one yet. I think it's so interesting when like it's someone picks a genre so specifically like that, you know, as a as a new filmmaker. Yeah, I mean it makes sense. I guess that, you know, people get obsessed with genres and stuff. But um, I did think it was interesting

that Ari astir So sort of didn't choose horror. He just sort of like decided to pivot the script that he'd already written into horror, and now he's sort of this horror guy. But I wonder if he'll stick with that or if I'll just like do like a period piece or something that's not horror at all. Maybe Actually Nightingale was after Bob a Duke, set in the penal colony of Van Demon's Land present day Tasmania. A young female convict seeking revenge for a terrible act of violence

committed against her family. Oh I'm gonna see that one. Oh my goodness, I didn't know she had to follow up. Yeah that sounds great. Yeah, way down, way down with that. Uh let me see here another vote for pet Cemetery. H Alia Ferrier says, I will be forever afraid of my kids near any kind of road thanks to pet Cemetery. Yeah, it's kind of how it opens up, right, it is. Well, now the road is like that's the whole big twist

where not the twist, but like the it's a big crusher. Uh. That that leads to some of the action of the movie. But uh Fred Gwynn, who plays don't go in there, don't go into the road, loss, don't go on to the road loss. Uh. Sam comber Old Pal says seven when they find Sloth tied to the bed, skin and bones, mouth open, teeth exposed, presumably dead for a while but spoiler alert, spoiler alert, nope, gasp for air and he's alive. Yeah, that was pretty pretty creepy moment. Seven was Seven was

a good movie. I liked it, great movie. I haven't seen it in a long time, But I ain't feeling that it holds up because it was so It was such a like edgier version of the types of thrillers that were out there. Was there was a big run on creepy serial killer game type movies, you know, where there's like a cat and mouse thing, but that one

really took it to the next level. I think, yeah, yeah, totally. Uh. Nathan ven Zeal says top fan in Old Pal says the scene from One Hour Photo that it's revealed that Robin Williams has been keeping the families pictures for a very long time. The pan up to the wall is truly unsettling. That was pretty good movie. It was Yeah, nice little creepy indie. UM appreciated Robin Williams being willing to go that route, knowing that he was sort of this beloved comedic goofy guy and the need he certainly

had some some range. Yeah, absolutely, alright. P Marty Willis says this Welcome to the show, Marty. The decapitation scene in high tension. I think it was within the first five minutes too. Yeah, did you see that in al Uh? Yeah, it wasn't it with like a band saw or something, or like a like a buzz saw or was it a wire? I don't remember I did see the movie, but um, it was, it was. It's a great movie. It hasn't come up yet, Chuck, but it's it's certainly been.

It was a topic on the Crushers page. I don't remember what context I referenced it, but we were talking about the movie Audition Sure at Takashi mik movie. That's that's. That's that for me, because the movie just shifts so hard from this one thing to this other really intensely severe kind of traumatic horror that it catches you off guard and you're not prepared for what you're about to see.

And there's a scene of dismemberment that is so creepy and uh, subverting the typical rolls of what you would think of as being like a torturer and the torture e. And it's done with this gentleness that makes you just want to die. The woman that's doing it, he's saying like deep deep deep deep deep deep deep deep deep. Oh I got But some people were talking about on the Crushers page. Somebody was like, what did you make

me watch? Nol. Yeah, it's a good movie. Now. That one made me get up and walk out of the room. When I first saw it. Yeah, all right, let's finish up with this. Wesley Doyle the Nightingale, Uh, speaking of and for Kent Boom, he just says the baby scene. Won't even describe it, so, oh my god, I don't know that's I did want to see it, but be on the lookout for a baby scene. Baby stuff is tough. All right. Now we're gonna move on to our second

and probably final segment here. Um. I wanted to know what people think is the best overall horror franchise as a whole, And you've got to include everything, all iterations, remakes, reboots, sequels. You can't say, like, well, the original Friday thirteenth, but I didn't like the remakes. I want to know what people think is the best all time horror movie franchise. Do you have one? You know? I'm not so much

a franchise guy. Like, I mean, I think some of them are fun, Texas Chainsaws fun, but the first one is its own thing and then the rest of them are kind of become something else. Same with Nightmare in Elm Street, Like the first one is genuinely pretty scary, and the rest of them pivot to be in this kind of like goofy one liner Freddie making dark humor jokes and stuff. It's tough for them to hold up. And it doesn't have to be a huge like it can be like a two or three movie run and

that counts as a franchise, you know. But I think with Horror, they they know they can print money, so they just keep keep going till they get bad, and then they reboot them and those may not be great, but you know what, I'm gonna go with nol I'm gonna go with Halloween because the original Halloween's were really good. The season of the which was really interesting kind of through modern eyes, odd choice, but very does hold up

in an interesting way. I think the rob zombie stuff was okay, and then I think the reboot that they just recently did was really good. So as a big package, I'm gonna go with Halloween. I mean, this is maybe too Satira call are on the comedy side, but Evil Dead all of those well yeah that's sort of a different animal kind of you know. Yeah, but you're right, those are all great. And even though I didn't watch I only watched a few episodes of the TV show,

I enjoyed that. I just sort of fell away from it. It happens, but we're gonna start out with our oldest of friends, the wonderful and win some Stellin Carlson, he says, I would say hell Raiser because even the lesser sequels treat the franchise with some respect, i e. They don't turn the villain into a cartoon character. I'm looking at you, Freddie and Chucky, but I'm by since we baldise with one thousand needles on our faces, got to stick together. So Stelen is uh as many many piercings and uh

on his beautiful face. And uh, that's very funny, Stellen, I love it. You gotta stick together, Uh, Lennya Barnett's one of our old palaces, final destination and I will die on this hill. First one is a truly great horror movie, but with every sequel it gets goofier and more over the top. Uh, And I just love them so much. Yeah, I think there's something to be said for that. I haven't seen those movies, but I like if it's I think that's the direction you can go

in horror and still maintain your integrity. Is just to get goofy and weird and fun you know, absolutely, yeah, no. And then that's the thing, Like I mean, we were

talking about Evil Dead. The first one, you know, there's this can be debated, but the first one I think was trying to be a genuinely scary movie, and then they realized that what made it succeed was the fact that there were parts of it that were kind of over the top and goofy, and then they really leaned into that for for two and three, and that's what makes us love it. I think two is people's favorite. One is sort of like an afterthought. Three is probably

second favorite. Yeah, love Army and Darkness. And Matt Beaman chimes in, Thanks Matt for saying Evil Dead hands down. Love all the movies, even the reboot for being a reboot and not a retread. Even the TV series is great. I did not see the reboot, the one we were just talking about, I did not see that. Now that's again, that's that's them trying to make it real scary, right you know. Yeah. Uh. Sean McFarlane, one of our oldest

of friends, says, I really love the Soul movies. Another latter sequels went off the rails a bit, but I'll of how inventive. The Murder Contraptions were. That's why, that's the only reason anybody ever cares about those movies, Like, what what are they gonna come up with this time? You know? The first one, I think genuinely has a cool twist and there's a cool story, and then it just becomes the Murder Machines the movie. Yeah, Ian Bowers

always chimes in with Evil Dead by the way. Eve Elizabeth Lee, one of our top fans and old pal, says The Exorcist. Yeah, the second one is coofy, but the awesomeness of the other to cancel it out. Nothing for real, nothing creeps me out like Mercedes mccambridge's voice. Some great acting in the third one to Brad Dorriff motherfucking George C. Scott. Yeah, I knew we could. A vote for Nightmare the Nightmare series. Cat gim Bruno says, Nightmare on Elm Street. The third movie, Dream Warriors has

a dock and song beat that other franchises. That's true with the Dream Warriors. Oh, custom for the movie. Yeah, you don't know that's last No, no, not at all. Yeah, it was custom for the movie. That's amazing. Another vote for Evil Dead from Joshua Edman, but he also says this for pure horror, the ring pretty much helped. UH is pretty much the gold standard. Despite the most recent entry in the American franchise, are they still making those? I guess it's been a minute. I didn't think there

were more than two, but maybe there are. I don't know. Uh they could be doing straight to UH V O D type of things now, you know. Maddie Baldwin says, I love all things Scream. The slight comedic tone combined with the slasher movie is just perfect. And yes, I love all the sequels. Yeah, the screen movies are pretty good. Michael Ormond agrees Scream might have gone off the rails a little bit, but the Scream series was always great. Yeah. Again,

though that's like that that's that's it's so meta. It's like it's it's definitely satire. At least the first one super hardcore, and then after that it becomes like a cash in. But you like the second one, I believe quite well. Yeah, Scream too was fine, and then the third the most seemed forgettable. But the first one is just it was very unique at the time. Where's any race when we need her. Oh God, yeah, uh, here

we go. Someone agrees. Nathan L. Rombolski says the Halloween franchise a couple of duds and some complicated timelines, but the series holds up. I agree. Probably helps that I'm in the process of an October rewatch of all of them. It's fun to revisit these movies every year, and didn't all it is. I I don't have too too much nostalgia for that kind of stuff. I'm more like to discover new things. I know a lot of people like

do these, you know, rewatches around this time of year. Um, but it's definitely I also like watching just like garbage, schlock ones like Phantasm and uh, you know, the Puppet Master, things like that. I'm a big fan of that stuff. Yeah. Absolutely, I'm watching for Friday, and I think that this will be Yeah, just had come out before this is released. But Return of the Living Dead a movie you haven't seen before with a great Joe Garden. We're going to

talk about that one tomorrow. The Mall one, I don't know. I haven't seen it. Kenneth Hannon. One of our old palace is the Universal monster movies of the thirties and the forties. He said it counts as a franchise because they tied it all together and Abbott Costello meet Frankenstein. Okay, I'll buy that. Steve Devris agrees about Final Destination franchise took a turn that was so delightful and goofy. I need to see those at some point. I guess a lot of Evil Dead fans in here. Good good. I'm

glad I wasn't off base and including that. It's weird like it's like I said, it's not pure horror, but it's it's got horror. It's definitely horror. Yeah. But yeah, our old pal the danger of and Gail Kuntz says, stupid, obvious choice put the Halloween franchise. I said that too, Gale. Does some of them suck major butthole? Oh, Coon's what are you doing? Such filthy language. I'm gonna send me some soap, some Emily soap, put in your mouth. Sure they suck major butth hole, she says, But for me,

it's an ultimate must watch, all of them. Yeah, I agree. I'm just giving you a hard time. Boys, screaming Evil Dead are winning the day all in a big way. Yeah, because it's because of the consistency of the quality. In my opinion, I think that's why my mind went to Evil Dead because so many of these, like oh, the first two are cool, but a lot of times the second one of a big hit first movie sucks because they ram it through like they try to make it

like Jaws too. Not good, you know, because they just tried to ram it through Jaws one obviously class. Yeah. What I haven't seen in here yet is a Friday because those are so wildly all over the place. No one's down with the us. Even the first one not like a great movie, you know, not it's it's definitely a b to Halloween's a you know. And I think part two was. I mean, I think Friday the thirteenth. I haven't seen them all. This is where we need like Joe, uh Joe in here. But and Ramsey I

think has seen all those. But I think the first like three or four of those were pretty good. Robert Paulson One of the World FRIENDSS Dracula is always great, even camp. No, it's not a series, but the booking character has been done so many times. Yeah, that's I'd say that counts. Paulson, Anna our old friend and a shress says, people are saying conjuring, and I have to agree it gets a little too sentimental times in the endings are kind of meth. But overall solid and scary movies.

I don't I think I might have seen the first conjuring. Is that Lily Taylor the actor? Yes, I don't know her super well, um, but I really enjoyed it. Someone was asking on the Crushers page about horror movies to watch with like a youngster that's trying to get into horror, and I think I recommended that only because it's PG thirteen, But so many of those PG thirteens are still damn scary. Uh, and probably not for for the youth always, But yeah,

really great. Great one conjuring was not Lily Taylor, by the way. That was that. Other one conjuring was Vera patrick asnevera for Mega. I think I did see the conjuring. Oh no, she isn't it. Sorry Lily Taylor. Stop screaming at your radios. Everyone, your transistor radios. Uh. Jesse Groom says the Child's play movies. Joshua Ramsey agrees with Stelen says hell Razor. Yes, I even enjoyed the later Crummy

Ones Guilty Pleasure. Oh here we go r old pile Zack Pointer says Friday because of the campiness of it all. Uh yeah, I knew someone would would get in there at some point. Charles Ogan says, the Living Dead movies all have something good in them. Let me see the Hangover. Oh come on? Uh leny h Kella Marris is the IT franchise? Okay, interesting, I guess that would count the the TV the Tim Curry version. Yeah, for counting all iterations,

which you thought was silly, right. Well, that being said, I think I've also talked about the fact that when I was a kid, it kept me up nights, like it absolutely wrecked me. But I rewatched it with my daughter a couple of years ago, and it just does not hold up. She thought it was comical, like she's just literally laughing and pointing at the screen the whole time, and there's nothing even remotely scary about it. Um, it

just does didn't age well. But I don't know, do you consider that part of the Yeah, I guess it's a reboot. Well, I mean, I said all iterations must be counted, that's right. You cannot two of the new one was just so messy, so messy, it felt very rushed through, and uh, I didn't really hate it, but it was also kind of like, Okay, let's get to the point. I still haven't seen that. Yeah, the one

with the kids. The first one was was fun and pretty well done in my opinion, but the second one was just a bit of a slog I guess I have to see it, don't I? Yeah, you have to. It's required Another vote for a Friday thirteenth from Steiner. Christopher Steiner, one of our old friends, says ranges from horror to comedy. Some of them are very laughable. I think if you have fun with it, then you know,

doesn't have to be the scariest in the world. Steven Stephen Crabtree, one of our top fans, says Mr Vampire Hong Kong's premier hopping vampire film series that culminated in God's must be Crazy crossover. What I've never heard this? No, that sounds why this exists? That's what he said, Mr Vampire. How can I cross over with the gods? Must be crazy? That is crazy? This is the point. The producers must be crazy. Um yeah, I've never even seen that Gods

Must Be Crazy? Is that the one? Like? What is this sort of like a faux documentary kind of or Gods Must Be Crazy was a very small movie in the eighties. I want to say where I think, like a coke bottle falls out of an airplane somewhere in Africa and they end up worshiping this thing. It maybe interesting, Yeah, I remember, remember the coke bottle. All of that's ringing, ringing a bell. I don't know that I ever watched the whole thing, but but I was aware of it.

I guess, alright, Noel, Well we lose you in two minutes, so that means the show is over. It's a short one everyone. But I do want to say we did not get to uh favorite all time best Halloween costumes movie related costumes that you've gone as And I'm gonna leave that up because people have posted a lot of great ones. And then on the movie Crushers page, um, the thread was started that could allow pictures. I can't. There's something about a quote unquote fan page that you

can't have people comment with photos. I don't know why. Nothing I can do. I don't like have a switch I can turn on and off. So someone started that threat on the movie Crusher stage, Joe. And there's a lot of great photos of the Crushers in their movie

related Halloween costumes over the years, and they're great. I like it when a new franchise really takes hold and you start to see like group costumes like I saw a good one for Midsummer actually, where people are wearing the dresses absolute flowers and holding the mallets and stuff. You know, totally, it's it's it's a lot of fun every Halloween because for that very reason people pick up on the new stuff. I would love to see one

of those dresses. That's a good chance for creativity right there. Agreed, So thank you everyone. This has been a fun, scary Halloween month. Uh, Noel, I think you might be hopefully going to sit in on one more round table that we haven't yet recorded. Also, but this is it for the minis for Halloween, and uh and I look forward again to next year. These are always a lot of fun diving down the horror thriller terror aisles of the

horror hole, the horror hole, the murder hole. So thanks to you, buddy, and then uh, thanks to you guys for listening we'll see you next week. 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 iHeart Radio. For more podcasts for my heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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