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Kevin Burns And William Tuttle Podcasts

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Mixed Review

Kevin Burns and William Tuttle

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A biweekly review show tackling movies that split critics, split the audience, or split one from the other featuring movie-themed mixed drinks and pseudointellectual ponderings posited under the influence of said movie-themed mixed drinks.
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Social distancing means we're all spending more time at home, so it's a perfect time to watch a few movies about domesticity interrupted. In Hider in the House (1989), Gary Busey takes up residence in Mimi Rogers' attic and in The Vagrant (1992), Bill Paxton finds his new home to be insufficient protection against an evil drifter.…
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So it's come to this. Favreau vs. Black. Norrington vs. Mangold. Raimi vs. Watts. Titans clash. Franchises fall. Only one can stand above the rest. Will The Avengers win in a landslide? Can anything else possibly be as awesome as Blade? Wait, Iron Man 2 beat Black Panther? With only two no. 1 seeds remaining, the final battle has finally arrived.…
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As we continue our quest to crown the greatest Marvel movie of all time, we bully Blade: Trinity, demolish Daredevil, harass Howard the Duck, eviscerate Venom, and massacre the only two superhero movies Marc Webb will ever be allowed to make. Plus, we hand out a very special no-prize to the worst performance we witnessed along the way.…
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This it it - all 68 Marvel Movies, ranked, sorted, and tossed aside like so many cardboard Hugh Jackman movie theater standups. From X-Men to The Avengers, from The Incredible Hulk to just Hulk to The Incredible Hulk again, from The Fantastic Four to Fantastic Four to Fant4stic - this is every theatrically-released movie based on a Marvel Comics pr…
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With the release of Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood and its retelling of the Manson murders dredging traumatic history back into the public eye, we sat down to watch three movies released in the decade following the horrifying and world-changing events of August 1969. Two of them are horror movies using Manson figures as catalysts…
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You will believe a shark can roar. You will believe Dennis Quaid can find gainful employment at SeaWorld. You will believe a shark is trying to kill every member of your immediate family for reasons only a shark can understand. In this episode, we cover Jaws (1975), Jaws 2 (1977), Jaws 3-D (1983), and Jaws: The Revenge (1987). Full episode credits …
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Ignored upon released, rediscovered on video, and blithely discarded in the trash bin of late '80s animation outliers, The Brave Little Toaster retains a cult following of grown adults swearing up and down its superiority to Toy Story, an actual cinematic achievement. But is there still something to be said for these anthropomorphized dumpster appl…
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After the double successes of Night of the Living Dead and Dawn of the Dead, George A. Romero returned to the salt mine to unearth an unholy vision of the American apocalypse: Day of the Dead. Roundly dismissed by critics in 1985, its offbeat charms have generated a whole new cadre of admirers. Does it deserve its new devotees? Or should it CHOKE O…
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Kalifornia and Natural Born Killers, released one year apart, star Juliette Lewis and feature a journalist attempting to document and define evil. One is a thriller, the other a barrage of images, a cacophony of sound, a prescient nightmare of oppressive finality. One is forgotten, the other too controversial to embrace. Drunk on shandies, we try t…
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Move beyond the lungs, peer past the kidneys, climb down the ribcage and behold ... there's a little man inside our livers! Telling us to drink more! A few of us become audibly intoxicated during a throaty discussion of three science fiction films that take place inside the following: a random Russian guy (Fantastic Voyage, 1966); Martin Short (Inn…
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In 1939, Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None set a new standard for mystery novels. 60 years later, some beer-swilling Yanks began producing Americanized retellings in the form of Identity (2003), Mindhunters (2004) and Sabotage (2014), three brainless thrillers featuring excessive gore, foul-mouthed arseholes, and absolute creative bankrupt…
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Whether it's cleaning up street scum with a harpoon gun, cleaning up street scum via vehicular homicide, or cleaning up street scum by proxy through Sondra Locke, Clint Eastwood makes it look cool as ice. In this extra-extra special 51st episode of Mixed Review, we drag our feet through the remainder of the Dirty Harry movies: Sudden Impact (1983) …
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Whether it's chewing a hot dog in DIRTY HARRY (1971), blowing up Hal Holbrook in MAGNUM FORCE (1973), or claiming that women are unfit for police field duty in THE ENFORCER (1976), Clint Eastwood makes it look cool as ice. In this very special 50th episode of Mixed Review, we immediately alienate the Dirty Harry franchise's core audience by denounc…
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It's a science fiction double feature when we experience twin rock operas: Brian De Palma's Phantom of the Paradise (1974) and Richard O'Brien's Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), each featuring outlandish characters and situations and each appealing to very different audiences.By Kevin Burns and William Tuttle
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On a very special extra-intoxicated episode, we take a look back at the death and failed resurrection of Harrison Ford's career as a leading man on the first, and hopefully only, Harrison Hate Watch. If you've ever wanted someone to explain the plots of Hollywood Homicide and Firewall to you amidst a smattering of giggles, drop everything and slam …
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There are many Christmas Carols. Some are good. Some star Jim Carrey. To find out which are worth you and your family's time this holiday season, Kevin and William took an ill-advised swim in the deep end, watching no less than nine Carols and duking it out March Madness-style to see which adaptations get buried with a sprig of holly in their heart…
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In celebration of the most commercial time of year, we visit the surprisingly libertarian utopia of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol by watching three adaptations: A Christmas Carol (1984) starring George C. Scott, Scrooged (1988) starring Bill Murray, and The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) starring Michael Caine and a whole bunch of singing Muppe…
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Our series on the Halloween franchise concludes with our dissections of Jamie Lee Curtis' long-awaited returns to Haddonfield (Halloween: H2O (1998), Halloween: Resurrection (2002), Halloween (2018)) and a final word on the movies as a whole, including a rundown of which to seek and which to skip and a comparison to the Friday the 13th films.…
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After each falling into a comatose state, the four of us awaken exactly one week later, tattooed with the Mark of Thorn, to discuss Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (1988), Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (1989), and Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995).By Kevin Burns and William Tuttle
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An attempt by directors John Landis, Steven Spielberg, Joe Dante, and George Miller to update the classic TV series with 1983's Twilight Zone: The Movie results in three accidental deaths and charges of manslaughter. 25 years later, we discuss how its legacy has changed Hollywood and wonder whether Spielberg should be imprisoned for directing "Kick…
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