Hello, and welcome back to Movie Mike's Movie Podcast. I am your host Movie Mike and do you like eighties movies? Well, if so, I have the episode for you today, because coming up I'll be talking to Corey Feldman and Jamison new Lander there from the movie The Lost Boys which came out back in the day. And then in the movie review we'll talk about a new horror movie that just came out over the weekend called Smile and the
creepy marketing tactics behind this movie that I loved. And in the trailer park we finally got a teaser for dead Pool three which is coming and Hugh Jackman his back is Wolverine, so there's a lot to dive into. Their thanks for being subscribed. Shout out to the Monday Morning Movie crew for listening every single Monday. And now let's talk movies. In a world where everyone and their mother has a podcast, one man stands to infiltrate the ears of listeners like never before in a movie podcast.
A man with so much movie knowledge, he's basically like a walking I M. David which Glasses from the Nashville Podcast Network. Jesus movie movie about to get into my conversation with Corey Felman and Jamison new Lander talking about the movie The Lost Boys, which they played the Frog Brothers.
The movie came out back in nine seven and it is celebrating its thirty five anniversary this year, which The movie is about a family moving back into their grandfather's house in a California town nicknamed the murder Capital of
the World. The kid in that family is Corey him the other famous Corey from the eighties, and Corey's brother in that movie gets involved with the vampire gang and that's where Corey Felman and Jamison new Landers characters come into play, who work at the comic book store in town, and they are also undercover vampire hunters, so they helped Corey Jim's character save the rest of the town from
this vampire gang. Corey has been in movies like The Goonies where he played mouth stand by Me, Gremlins, and of course The Lost Boys where he and Jamison new Lander first met. The Lost Boys, I'm sure that fun horror energy of the eighties. So if you haven't seen this movie in a while, or you haven't seen it at all, it's actually available now on four K and digital.
If you want to go and watch it. We talk all about the behind the scenes of what they remember from making this movie, and we even talk about Corey him who him and Corey Felman were really good friends up until he passed away in And another thing I'll mention is, whenever I get to do these, they usually want me to stick to the movie they are promoting, which is The Lost Boys, and that's what I try to do. Sometimes I get notes back saying you gotta
stick on the movie. So I worked in questions to get them to talk about the movies they've been in without just going after it. But I knew the task at hand. I just know I couldn't bring you, guys, a Corey Felman interview without talking about the Goonies. That would be a disservice to you. I really love this conversation with an eighties icon. So here we go. Let's get into the interview with Corey Felman and Jamison Newlander. Hey, movie, Mike, how you do it? I am great. It's an honor
to get to talk to you guys. I gotta say I rewatched The Lost Boys over the weekend, in a movie that only took twenty one days to film. But here we are, thirty five years later talking about it. I wonder how often do you guys rewatch the movies that you've been in. Well, Corey's got a lot more movies to rewatch, to watch them a lot. I watched Lost, I watched I watched Lost Boys a lot. And you've been in four movies with me. Yeah, I've been a lot.
You know. I tend to like really look at myself, like I'm really sort of vain in that way, Like I just really look at myself again and again and again and and uh so I kind of obsessed about myself. So I watched my lot. At least he's an honest guy. You about you, Corey? Uh yeah, probably more than I'd like. Um, but I'm you know, I love watching the movie when it first comes out. I love to to criticize myself or criticize the whole thing, or appreciate it as well.
But you know, I have to say, after thirty forty times, love for the passion of it, you know, kind of wears off a bit. But you know, like for example, over the weekend, I did a convention. I've been on tour with my band all over America, over the last five weeks. One of those events that I actually performed at was a Lost Boys convention, which was strictly just for Lost Boys. Were doing another one actually on Halloween. They're doing a big Lost Boys event in Dallas, Texas
where they're showing the movie and I'm performing. Im gonna see if I can get you out there. But anyway, so you know, there's a lot of that with Lost Boys. And then like I just did a convention over the weekend where it was more centered on Goon East and they actually showed the movie in this giant, uh like theater for you know, plays like theater for the arts, and on the stage they had an entire orchestra. It was the it was the Utah Philharmonic and yeah, and
it was really cool. So so watching the entire movie scored in real life was to be awesome, I must say. So, you know, every once in a while, there's a little special attribute, like when Gooneys came out in four K had to watch Goodies and four K obviously I'm gonna want to watch this one in four k. Uh. So it's always nice to see, you know, the changes when they freshen it up and sweeten it up and stuff like that, but it's got to be something very special
to make me go watch it again. Well yeah, And also the thing about Corey is that it's like for me, I can watch my movies, like, you know, Lost Boys is big eighties movie for me, but it's like Corey's got Lost Boys, Goonies, you know, stand by Me, uh, you know, License to Drive, Gremlins. I mean, the list goes on, so you can't be watching those constantly or you're not gonna get anything else done. Yeah. I don't think my ego is big enough to handle that. You know,
I can only fit in so much. But you know, honestly, it's fun when, like I said, when it first starts, when you first see him, it's exciting. And then as time goes on and it dissipates and the thing is then it becomes kind of that thorn in your side of like, oh my god, don't make me watch this movie.
So like the organ thing was beautiful, but I stayed for ten minutes and then I was like, Okay, Jamison, you started to list all of Corey's movies and this was the first movie you ever did, right, the first big movie I've done some things here and there, but you were already in the Blob right when the Blob after So when you come into a movie like this and Corey has just been in all of these big eighties movies, how does that feel getting to work with
him for the first time and being cast as brothers. So it was a dream come true really because I was watching Corey. I was watching both cories. Actually, you know Corey and Goonies and and you know Gremlins and and you know him in like in in Lucas and things like that, so we're BULLI yeah, And so it's like for me, it was a dream come true. I was sitting there working with these guys, and you know what, they were all really sweet. They were all really nice,
great guys to work with, really giving on camera. You know, when we worked together, it wasn't like, you know, oh, you've only done a couple. It wasn't like that at all. They were just very welcoming. It was beautiful. That's why we're still friends. That's hazed him the old time. We hated him the whole time. He would never talk to all.
This beautiful friendship done and Corey, this was the first time that you worked with the other Corey was that like an instant connection of you guys just having that on screen chemistry as well as off screen. Absolutely, And and the interesting thing is that we were actually set up to be uh you know, kind of enemies or something like that, you know, Nemesis or something. Yeah, because uh, you know, the backstory is I was in love with
this girl. There's always a girl, you know. So I was with this girl, Robin Lively actually as a kid. Uh you know, like she was like kind of the apple of my eye because I met her at the Youth in Film Awards and right, and I became friends with her brother. You know, we became really close, Jason and I. Um, and so she started dating Corey. But to me, she was giving me the friend thing, you know. It's like, oh, we're just gonna be friends. Like you're so cute, we're so some Yeah you can give him
back like best friend in the world. You're like a brother to me. And then I like see like her getting all like swooning over this guy that I don't know who he is. She's like, Oh, Corey is so cute, he's so this, and he's so that. I was like, who's this guy? I'm right here. You know, you don't have to say Corey third person. I'm right here. But no, she was like, no, this other Corey. He's an actor too. He's so cute, he's so awesome, and so I didn't
know he was. And then when I was doing my wardrobe fitting for Lost Boys, Joel says, we've got the two Corries. It's gonna be a crazy and I was like, what do you mean? Wait? What two corries? Who are they? I mean, I'm here, but I'm just one person. So he's like, no, no, no, Corey Ham And I was like, there's that name again. Uh so you had met? Yeah, so that was the backstory why you know, we could have been rivals. But then I get a phone call. I come home from school one day and there's a
message on my answering machine. Remember those, you know, you play the list tape so anyway, you have linking life. So any way, so I come home and there's this message like, hey man, how are you doing buddy? It's Corey came. We're gonna be working together. I thought we should connect, you know, maybe you can like hang out, go to the beach whatever. And I'm like, wow, okay, now what I expected. Very friendly, very open. And the first day we met, we went to the beach together.
We had this great time. We went back to his place, we connected, we told stories. It was just it was like an immediate spark, an immediate best friend connection. And you know, it never changed, you know, it was throughout his whole life, you know, until the end. We were we were close. Jamison. Looking back on filming this movie, do you have a favorite picture from the set, like just hanging out or if it's like a promo picture,
what's your favorite picture from the movie. Well, you're saying like mental picture, me like like an actual picture like you maybe you have in your house somewhere, or just
one that you've kept over the years. I mean, um, that's an interesting question actually, because there's a bunch of pictures, and there are some nice candid pictures of of us hanging out outside the I'm a bookstore, Um, which I think probably will would be the ones that I don't even have them, I don't think, but I could probably track them down you're looking for them. I'm just just like where I was. I was in my groove then, you know, the comic book store. I was in my group.
Those scenes were about us and the work we've done was really paying off and everybody was loving it as we were doing it, and so, um so I think that's probably the those images of me just really being a part of the part of the crew and in
my groove. I think that's, uh, that's probably it. What about you, Corey, Um, you know, I was I was in a lot of transition, you know, working all the time, going from one movie to the next, and constantly doing photo shoots and paparazzi and all that kind of stuff that you know, you do the team magazines. You're literally doing like photo shoots every day. Um So, I don't think and I wasn't very good at saving stuff. You know. My mom didn't really teach me very well how to
be organized. So that's something that all came later in life as I matured and I grew up and I started to you know, actually saved things because they mattered. So I can't say that I saved a lot of stuff.
But there's certain things that I see in magazines or you know, they'll pop up from time to time on the internet, and I know that there's uh probably around the same thing that you're talking about there's some white photos of like us hanging out on the bikes, I remember, and there's like there's stuff that's just off the set, but on the set, you know what I mean, we're in we're in our character's clothing, but we're like smiling and laughing and hanging out and those are those are
nice pictures And I think it's probably the same set that he's talking about. What about the issue number one of Vampires Everywhere? Is that still in existence, the one you guys all signed. Not only is it in existence, but there's replica after replica replica, Like pretty much every time we do a convention, at least five people have got one of those, you know what I mean, Like there there's somebody out there that's like printing mass quantities
of them. And the interesting thing is they've even figured out what the pages were in between, because it's not just the cover. There's actually the the copy of the pages that were in the original, which is, you know, kind of a loosely illustrated vampire comic. But and and it even featured Keeper right that like Keeping. Yeah, so it was interesting. But yeah, I like to sign those prey. You never need to call us, you know, So you're telling me the one I got on eBay is a fake,
it's not the real one. Well, it depends on what you paid. I think the original real one. I don't know if that exists anymore. But not. So we're all real in a way, right, Well, they all look the same, and I, in fact, I've got one in my entry way sitting on my grandmother's piano, which is an antique piano. So you know it's there. And if you see us, well we'll sign it and that'll make it official. I won't sign it outside that. Well, I appreciate the time, honor,
get to talk to you guys. Thanks for being there. Moved all right, have a good one. All right, let's get into a movie review. Now. Let's talk about a movie called Smile. Its stars Kevin Bacon's daughter, Soci Bacon. It's from first time director Parker Finn, and the movie has done some very creepy marketing. Maybe you've seen during the MLB games there's just this girl standing there smiling. They paid her to do that. So I thought that
marketing was genius and top level. When you're trying to promote a movie like this, the only thought I had when I saw that was either this movie is going to be amazing and they just went above and beyond it their marketing to get everybody interested in this movie, or the movie was kind of bad and they needed some kind of viral moment or gimmick to get people to go watch this movie. So by the end of this review, I will tell you which one it ended up being. But before I get into the full review,
here's just a little bit of the Smile trailer. A patient in your God brutally in front of you. I need to find an explanation for what happened. I don't know twenty cases involving the nineteen victims of the direct line, linking them all together, he said, only nineteen. What is it that everybody else we've seen it is dead in your life? I've seen it too. The movie had my interest from the very first time I saw this trailer. It looked eerie, it looked creepy, and you pair that
with the marketing. I was excited for it, but I was also hesitant because anytime there is a tactic like that, it's either going to be something I love or something I just hate. And what ended up happening with smile is I would lean more towards on the side of hating it. So what this movie is about, it's this character named Dr Rose Cotter played by Kevin Bacon's daughter, soci Bacon. First time director Parker Finn, So maybe that has a little bit to do with the overall feeling
of this movie. But she witnesses this crazy, bizarre, traumatic incident at the very beginning of the movie, involving a patient. She works at this mental psychiatric facility as a therapist and trying to help all these people who come in with these unusual problems, and there is this patient who is trying to explain to her all of these things she can't explain happening in her life, involving some kind
of a demonic presence. And after that interaction with that patient, Dr Carter as well starts having all of these frightening experiences and then is going throughout the entire movie trying to get some answers. And this movie had a very promising start. It had an eerie feel in the beginning from that opening scene. It was a little bit hard for me to watch. And I don't get scared by horror movies. I love horror movies. I love blood and guts,
so that stuff doesn't really bother me at all. But I found myself early on being a little bit creeped out. I felt a little bit like I wanted to look away at certain points, but I was into it, and those first ten minutes really kind of got me hooked, and I was like, all right, this is about to be a really great movie. And then the movie really
really dragged. And I don't know why. Horror movies just tend to really want to set the stage too much for these characters really getting into Dr Rosecotter's life in a relationship. But I just wanted more action. I wanted more of all of these demonic presences, all of these interactions, because that was the best part of the movie. And the sad thing is a lot of those were in the trailer. So Luckily I hadn't rewatched the trailer going into this movie. I was trying to forget it a
little bit. But when I was going back and pulling a clip from it, they put all the best parts in the trailer, So if someone had just freshly watched that trailer, they really had the entire thing spoiled for them. Because that's what made the movie the most exciting, is when those things happened, and it was big and loud and kind of cheap jump scares, which is the real problem I had with it. The actual horror in this movie and the actual scary elements, they were all kind
of cheap. It was all just kind of out of the corner of your eyes, something comes out, big, loud, jarring sound, and that was the scare. What was actually on screen wasn't really that scary or novel. So I really love movies that explore that paranormal, explore any kind of demonic presence. I find that stuff to be the most scary thing, and the stuff that really, you know, would give me a nightmare after And that's kind of the level I look for when I watch a horror movie.
I want something that is going to give me nightmares, something that when I go home later I think about and when I go to sleep that night it's kind of lingering with me. But by about forty minutes in this movie, I considered leaving. I was unusually bored in a movie like this, and I didn't care enough about her character to figure out or want to figure or out what happens to her about forty minutes in. Already knew what was going to happen. I knew what the
final showdown was going to be. I knew what the twist was going to be. I just had it all figured out, so I wanted to be tested a little bit more as a viewer in the movie just felt very generic. It was almost exactly like The Ring mixed with a little bit of Insidious. It was those two
movies together, but very watered down. So I would dub this movie a diet horror movie if you are a big horror fan like I am, and you want something that's really gonna go there and make your stomach kind of queasy at certain points and be something that you want to tell your other friends who are also horror fans, to go run and watch. This isn't it. This is more if you aren't really a fan of horror movies, This is more probably your taste, because it's again just
a lot of quick jump scares, nothing too scary. There were some pretty good vision Jules there towards the end that we're interesting, but again nothing so unusual that I haven't seen done before. And by the time it does get to that point in the movie, you're kind of just wanting it to end. Hitting that. To our remark, this movie should have never done that. Should have been under ninety minutes easily. I felt like there was probably
just an episode worth of content here. It could have been a forty two minute black mirror episode maybe, but it didn't really warrant the entire runtime that we got out of it. Again, really great job promoting this movie. I think that's what movies have to do in this day and age, create some buzz around it. But in this case, it didn't really work out in its favor.
I would lean more towards hating this movie, and if I had to rate it, I would give it a two, but since it had that marketing, I'll give him a point five for marketing. So for smile two point five out of five smiles. I think unless you are are really wanting to watch something in theaters with maybe some friends or your family that will scare everybody, but you don't really have the bar set that high. If you
just need that thrill in theaters. If not, definitely wait until it's streaming and just kind of skip around through all the scary parts. Other than that, man, I really wanted to like this movie more, but it just didn't do it for me. It's time to head down to movie. I didn't think this would ever happen, and it is happening. Deadpool is officially coming into the m c U and we're getting Deadpool three. But not only that, Hugh Jackman
is back as Wolverine. This is huge. This is one of the biggest pieces in Marvel news I've heard in a very long time, and one that I'm really excited for. I think once we saw what happened with Spider Man No Way Home, it kind of blew the doors off of everything. That was a moment in movie history I never thought could happen. And it was after seeing that movie I realized that anything is possible if there is
money to be made. And in a world where we're trying to save movie theaters and bring back ticket sales as strong as possible, this is what you have to do. These are the links that studios are going to have to reach in order to get us all excited about. And this is the most excited I've seen a lot of em CU fans in a very long time, myself included. So let's start with this teaser that Ryan Reynolds released.
Here he is talking about Deadpool three. We've been working very hard on the next Deadpool film for a good long while now. I've had to really search my soul on this one. His first appearance in the m C you obviously needs to feel special. We need to stay true to the character, find new depth motivation, meaning every Deadpool needs to stand out and stand apart. It's been an incredible challenge that has forced me to reach down deep inside and I I have nothing completely empty up here.
But we did have one idea. Hey, Hugh, do you want to play Wolverine one more time? So this was a very Ryan Reynolds, a very Deadpool like announcement, and I love it. And why this is so important and why this is so noteworthy is Hugh Jackman said he was retired from playing Wolverine after the last movie Logan. And since this was such big news. I don't think this is a spoiler. I wouldn't classify it as a spoiler. But Wolverine dies at the end of that movie. That's
what happens. That's why he said I'm retiring from Wolverine. We thought we would never see him again. And now the other major part of this is that Deadpool is coming into the m c U. And if that sounds confusing, let's break it down for a little bit. So Deadpool was owned by Marvel, of course, but the movie rights went to twentieth Century Fox. Disney recently purchased twentieth Century
Fox and it's now just twentieth Century Studios. They completely in the liminated of the Fox part, so now they own Deadpool the Fantastic Four. So now all of those characters from The X Men and Deadpool and the Fantastic Four can now come over into Disney's m c U, which is where everything else exists, where all the Phases exist, where all the Avengers movies exist. It's now in the biggest Marvel world possible. And this raises a lot of questions.
Is the new Deadpool going to be R rated? Yes, And that is a big reason to the success of that movie is that it didn't have the restrictions of the m c U of being as family friendly. You could show more violence. So that is why I love the first Deadpool so much, because you can use naughty language and as kind of squeaky clean. Sometimes the ms to you feels it's kind of like a breath of fresh air to get a movie like that. I love
Deadpool one. Deadpool two. I thought it wasn't quite a step ahead to elevating the franchise, but I don't think it was a step back. Maybe just as good, just
a little bit not as good as Deadpool one. But now as they come over into the m c U, there's a lot more room to play around with of where is it going to fit exactly in the timeline which the movie is coming out on September SI, So time wise, Deadpool three would come out at the beginning of Phase six, followed closely by The Fantastic Four, which
comes out in November of that same year. So we're starting to get a big crossover from the Fox x Men universe into the m c U. So I'm really curious to where all this is going to fit into the big picture as we get closer and closer to those next Avengers movies. And the other question it brings up is what happened to Wolverine dying and how does he exist in this movie? And they also posted a follow up video answering that question. How is Wolverine alive?
Off to Logan, Logan takes place in totally separate thing. Logan died in Logan, not touching that what actually happens in our film is these two. And then they just play that song and re enact some scenes and dialogue and again very dead pull fashion, so it looks like in this movie, Logan hasn't happened yet and he is still alive, or at least that's just what they're saying
to calm all of our nerd brains. But I think that works, and especially because this is now the multiverse saga, where anybody can come back at any point in life, at any point in any different timeline, and everybody can just exist in a movie and we all accept it because these are all characters we've loved for a very long time. And just by looking at the poster that they released for this alone gets me excited because Wolverine is such a great character. Hugh Jackman as Wolverine is
very underappreciated. I think the X Men movies themselves don't get enough credit that they deserve of really laying down the groundwork in the early two thousands. Yes, they also made a lot of not so great X Men movies, but if we didn't have Hugh Jackman as Wolverine in the early two thousands, we wouldn't really have the groundwork laid for Robert Downey Jr. To be Iron Man in two thousand and eight all the way through the twenty tens, Like that is how much Hugh Jackman carried those movies.
And then you pair Hugh Jackman with his real life friend, Ryan Reynolds, and I think that's just going to be a very fun time on the screen of seeing that off screen friendship really shine on the big screen with them being two very dynamic characters, which Ryan Reynolds plays Deadpool perfectly. I feel like that is his iconic role, and it's also Hugh Jackman's iconic role. And it's not like we haven't seen the two of them together on
screen as these characters before. In the very not so great Wolverine Origin story, we did see a very weird version of Deadpool with his mouth sown shut, and that was probably one of the weakest introductions of a superhero character ever and one that has taken that long for him to kind of come back from. He really redeemed himself with Deadpool. But I think that movie left a lot of people with a bad taste in their mouths, so they're also coming for some redemption on that movie.
And then we also have to remember what happened at the end of Deadpool two and him being able to time travel so that easily plays into the multiverse, and him discovering Wolverine, so maybe they can even go back even further and erase that awkward moment of the first time they met. So I think we should feel good about this, especially because it provides us with some familiarity going into this new phase of the m c U
with a lot of new characters being introduced. It brings back some people that we already know and love, and it sets up for some very cool moments. I would completely freak out if we ever had a scene with Deadpool, Wolverine, and Spider Man together throwing the Incredible Hulk like that is kind of my dream. I remember playing the arcade game back in the day called Marvel versus Capcom, and I would love to see a scene from that video game happen in a movie. I would lose my mind,
just like I did in No Way Home. But again, that is Deadpool three coming out on September six. I guess I just gotta hope I make it to live that long. This makes edition of I Do want to get to a little bit more of movie news that has come across the old movie mi desk here in the past week. Also, Marvel related Black Panther Waconda Forever has released their run time of two hours and forty one minutes, making it one of the longest movies ever in the m c U. These are the top five
m c U run times as of now. At number five is Captain America Civil War at two hours and twenty seven minutes. Number four is Spider Man No Way Home with two hours and twenty eight minutes. At number three is Avengers Infinity War with two hours and twenty nine minutes, and at number two is The Eternals with two hours and thirty six minutes, So that one currently has the record as the longest running m c U
run time. That's not an Avengers movie, because at number one is Avengers Endgame at three hours and one minute with no post credit scene, and I think, out of respect of that movie, they should never make a movie three hours again. I can't see another movie warrantying that run time unless they do something amazing with the upcoming Avengers movies. I am actually currently rewatching all of the Marvel movies. I I don't know really why I started this.
I've watched them in all the different ways that you can imagine. And one of the questions I actually get a lot from people who have never seen a marm A movie is how should I watch them for the first time. I always recommend watching them in the order that they were released, the old school way, the way we all did, because I think that is the way I enjoyed them the most. Also, a lot of things change between all of the years. The c g I gets better, and then if you watch them and in
a different order, they change ages. So I say, if you're watching them for the very first time, just start from two thousand and eight iron Man all the way up until now, and it'll be like that roller coaster that we all went through. All the post credit scenes will make sense. So that is referred to as the release order. But if you google MCU movies in chronological order, you'll get the list of how they took place in
the timeline. So instead of starting with Iron Man, you would start with Captain America the First Avenger, but then you would go hop to Captain Marvel, which came out way later. That's why I don't recommend watching it that way. I think to go from Captain America the First Avenger to Captain Marvel, it just doesn't feel right to me. But the order I'm currently watching them in is just
lumping all of the solo movies together. So I started by rewatching all of the Avengers movies, which man rewatching Endgame kind of brought back some great memories for me. And then honestly, I'm just kind of jumping around of what I want to watch on Disney Plus, and I think eventually I'll do an episode of re ranking all
of the Marvel movies. But I watched all the ant Man's again, I watched all the Iron Man's and have some very different opinions on that entire series now, and I'm currently rewatching all of the Captain America's, so this may be a new order I recommend to people of watching all of the group movies together, and I decided to watch them that way because m c U movies are the only ones were watching all of these crazy orders. Normally, when movies come out you watch part one, Part two,
part three are for etcetera. So I wanted to see just how all of the trilogies or all of the two partners work together, and how those kind of stand on their own, so I can really rate and evaluate those as a whole, and how much each of those superhero stories really get told. So I'll update you later once I get through all of these movies, which I still have a ways to go, and I'll do an episode on that. But all right, that will bring us
to the end of another episode. But before I hop out of here, I gotta get my listeners shout out of the week. That's all you have to do is tweet me or d m me at Mike Destro on Instagram, or send me an email movie Mike d at gmail dot com. But last week I said I would be giving my listeners shout out to somebody who posted about
the episode in their Instagram story. So this week I am shouting out Jenna Day, who tagged me in her Instagram story listening to the Rating Films episode when they say the title of the movie in the movie, Jenna said, had to share this episode because I have the same excitement about this as my distro. She continued with saying, if you watched the movie with me where this happens, you've heard me yell. They said it in a movie. Not mentioned in that episode was where the Crawdads sing.
So shout out to you Jenna for listening and posting about that episode. And if you listen to this week's episode and made it all the way through, it is now time for the secret emoji. I do this every time I have an interview. If you enjoy the interview, go and comment on the video I posted from the Corey Felman interview on my Instagram or TikTok. And since we talked a lot about his movie, The Lost Boys, and also because it's Halloween and horror movie season, comment
with the vampire emoji. And then next week's shoutout will be from somebody who did that. Thanks again for listening to this week's episode, for being subscribed to the podcast, and until next time, go out and watch good movies and I will talk to you later
