An hour-long chat about science fiction television and movies.
now there's a live dog. Did you watch Goodfellas back in 1990 and think “Hey, this should be a wacky comedy with Rick Moranis and Steve Martin”? If so, you're in luck. You're in so much luck.Like Goodfellas, My Blue Heaven is loosely based on the story of Henry Hill, the mobster who went into the witness protection program. Goodfellas ends with a vision of Hill standing in front of an dull suburban tract home, haunted and disappointed, an anonymous schnook. My Blue Heaven starts at that very moment, as Steve Martin's smooth criminal slides into suburbia like a streak of mercury. There, restless and bored, he meets his case handler, a buttoned-down bureaucrat played by Rick Moranis.From that point on the film becomes a perverse buddy comedy, as Martin teaches Moranis to loosen his buttons a bit, and Moranis teaches Martin… well, nothing really. But he writes an extremely entertaining book! Listen to Adam and Aidan talk about sartorial tips and merengue lessons below, or find us on your podmaker of choice.
True facts about Joe Pantoliano:He fought and defeated the last living dragon of the moorlands, but showed mercy at the last minute and spared its life. They're now good friends and have a time share in Palmdale.He once jumped back in horror and screamed “It's the ‘haint of Loch Gullmar!” at a passing vehicle.He had hair in the ‘80s, as evidenced in 1988's Midnight Run.He was cursed with invisibility in the seventeenth century by an ancient witch. What you see on screen is not Pantoliano but an ingenious moving matte painting that's actually part of the background..If you like these facts and want to hear more of them, try listening to Adam and Aidan talk about Midnight Run. Listen below or find us where the podcasts roam.
everybody cut, everybody cut. What if normal, but dancing? What if dancing, but really bad dancing? What if James Dean, but Kevin Bacon? What if Natalie Wood, but Lori Singer? What if Sal Mineo, but Chris Penn? What if John Lithgow?What if Foot… but Loose? Listen below, or find us where podcasts jump and twirl.
one dead lion, one live dog. There used to be a sports leagueThe A-A-G-B-P-G-L They used to play some baseballThey'd get out there and give them hellOkay, I'm too hungry to come up with more lyrics. Adam and Aidan put on their baseball pants and talk about the baseball that isn't Bull Durham. Penny Marshall's A League of Their Own is a lightly-to-highly fictionalized story about the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. Adam and Aidan discuss the film's choices and take time to bemoan the fate of the recent TV series. Listen below or find us on your podcaster of choice.
now there's a live dog (whoops, it's a dead lion) Filmmaker and YouTuber Patrick Willems once attempted to define what he called a “vibes movie”. A vibes movie, more or less, is a film that prioritizes atmosphere and filmmaking elements over a coherent plot. Willems lands on Tenet as the ultimate vibes movie, but if Tenet did not exist (And who's to say? Maybe it doesn't!), Legend would surely land that coveted spot. What else but a complete dedication to vibes could explain Tim Curry's enormous latex Beast outfit, Tom Cruise's tiny leaf tunic, or the allergy-inducing forest sets?This week, Adam and Aidan discuss Legend and all things Legend-adjacent. Listen below or find us where podcasts roam.
better to be a live knight than a dead hawk. DRAFT #1You know what they say: sometimes you hawke the lady, sometimes the lady hawkes you. That may not be the premise or the moral of 1985's Ladyhawke (the ‘e' is silent), but -DRAFT #2Few works of modern cinema adress the question of who hawkes the lady on the ladyhawke of world hawkeladies, but 1985's Ladyhawke -DRAFT #3Lady, every morn you glow and turn into a hawkeYou eat mice and stoats and hang out on my wristNight time, I become a wolfe (the ‘e' is silent)Sometimes I wonder if a wolfe and hawke can kisseYou know what, let's go with #3. Adam and Aidan watched Ladyhawke, the breezy medieval fantasy actioner where magic is real and every hawk gets an extra vowel. Listen below or find us on your podcast aggregator of choice.
did we learn nothing from zardoz? I don't know where to start with 2012's John Carter. Andrew Stanton's first foray into live action, adapting a work that inspired most of the science fiction pulp classics of the 20th century, did not go well. Mired in production troubles and studio tensions, John Carter (of Mars???) bombed at the box office and produced a crater in Disney's finances so deep that entire careers vanished into it.Adam and Aidan were hoping that John Carter was due for a reappraisal. It was not, unless you're of the select camp that enjoys a running joke in which Carter is repeatedly called Virginia. Listen below or find us your podcaster of choice.
a live woodbeast. Every so often, Adam and Aidan watch a movie that feels like the equivalent of someone trying to write a 20-page English paper at 3 a.m. without having read the text. On the other hand, sometimes that mix of Monster Energy and desperation produces weird bursts of genius. How else to explain War Rocket Ajax, angry Wood Beasts and combative football in the court of Ming the Merciless? Honestly, it's impossible to say whether Flash Gordon is any good or not (it's not). Listen below or put your hand inside your podcaster of choice.
In 1968, fans of science fiction movies had two options (please don't fact check this, there's no need): 2001: A Space Odyssey or Roger Vadim's Barbarella. Which movie was superior? Critics are still fiercely divided on the question (again, please don't fact check this), but I can tell you one thing: Stanley Kubrick never thought to shoot an entire film inside a lava lamp, which certainly seemed to be Vadim's ambition.The real question is: what did Adam and Aidan think of this splashy, groovy, junky, barely coherent but extremely entertaining Matmos of a movie? Listen below, or find us on your podspitter of choice.
a live dog pretending to be a canadian. Quick: who's the least Canadian man ever to walk this Earth? Who resolutely refuses to embody a single particle of Canadian-ness? If you answered with Elliott Gould, you'd be right. So who better to portray a mild-mannered Torontonian bank teller who runs afoul of a psychotic criminal, played by Christopher Plummer, aka The Least Criminal Man of All Time?That's the main appeal of 1978's The Silent Partner: watching two co-leads play so against type that the movie transcends its story and becomes a pure cultural object. Listen below as Adam and Aidan get into things, or find us on your podbeast of choice.
once a live dog, always a live dog The Warriors! The million-meme spawning, reality-adjacent adaptation of a 2,400 year old Greek poem, transformed into a carnivalesque vision of a New York City run by elaborately themed gangs straight out of a Lucy Sante book. Best known these days for David Patrick Kelly's “Warriors… come out to play-ay-yay” line, The Warriors feels like an elegy for something that never quite existed: an action movie with not much action, a musical that misplaced its score, a dystopia that barely redrew its map. Come listen to Adam and Aidan as they discuss this weirdo classic. Listen below or find us on your podmachine of choice.
some dead lions think they're live dogs. Capitalism! Dream states! The non-narrative oneiric space of fulfillment that may be a train, or it may be the celluloid strip of film itself! Oh yeah, and Tom Cruise is there. Join Adam and Aidan as they break down Paul Brickman's Risky Business. Listen below or find us on the podcasters of choice.
a live dog discovering that he doesn't want to be a dead lion. The year 1983 had its share of radical concepts, but perhaps none pushed the envelope quite like Mr. Mom, which dared to ask: what if a man… took care of his children? The answer, it turns out, is chaos and wackiness. Can a harried Jack Butler (Michael Keaton) figure out which ham to buy? How about keeping track of his kids in a grocery store? When his wife Caroline (Teri Garr) finds gainful employment, will the sexual lopsidedness of the arrangement completely unbalance the marriage? Will Jack ever figure out how to use the vacuum cleaner? So many questions - all of them tackled in this episode of Destroy All Culture. Listen below or find us wherever podcasts roam.
a buncha dead lions. There's something I need to clear up before I get to the end of this sentence: Young Guns, the movie, should be called Young People Who Use Guns. I thumbed this bad boy into my VCR, expecting a detailed treatise on the age of every gun shown in the movie (at the very least, a consideration of what constitutes youthfulness in a weapon). Instead, it's a thoroughly entertaining ‘80s-era take on Billy The Kid? Not what I signed up for when I pulled it from the shelves of The Beta Barn.*Look, the opening credits show every member of the main cast in closeup, certifying that they are in fact pretty young. Then they shoot their guns. A lot. What are they shooting at? Possibly the horizon. Are the guns themselves young? The movie never answers that fundamental question. A promise to us, the audience, made but never delivered. We were so shocked by this basic failure of storytelling that we didn't even address it in our discussion of the movie. We failed you, Young Guns failed you, the gods have turned their faces away in shame. Other than that, though, it was a fun film! Listen below or find us on your podcaster of choice.*The Beta Barn was a video rental store in my hometown. Not, as it sounds these days, a storage facility for insufficiently masculine farmhands.
two guys destined for a ride to the stars, or maybe just mars. (in which Adam and Aidan spend some time talking about the prequel to Waldo's Hawaiian Holiday) (diversions include embarrassing high school anecdotes, soundtrack enthusiasms, and the terror of a man with a disintegrating mind driving endlessly and aimlessly through Los Angeles in a Chevy Malibu, death and transcendence slowly fermenting in his trunk)
a dead lion and a live dog Upgrading. It's all anyone's talking about these days. Some people say you should upgrade, others say you should downgrade. The other day I heard someone make a convincing case that we should all degrade. How about that? People are wild these days, with all the talk about different styles of grading and the most appropriate prefix for the word. Someone came up to me the other day and said, “Mr. Destroyallculture, I like anterograde the best. I can't help it”. And you know what? I respect someone who enjoys moving forward through time.I prefer to leave it to the movies to tell me if I should upgrade or not. And let me tell you, Leigh Whannell's 2018 cyberthriller Upgrade makes a pretty convincing case for not grading at all. Sure, it seems like a pretty good bet at first when you have full control of your body and a voice in your head helping you solve the mystery of your wife's murder - hell, maybe you're the protagonist in one of those revenge thrillers that have been so popular over the last decade - but soon you're made to witness your own body perform a series of horrifically violent acts in the name of satisfying your desires. Maybe, you reflect, you haven't been upgraded at all. Maybe you've been downgraded and consigned to a kind of obsolescence. Darn. Should have stuck to fixing vintage cars and looking like Tom Hardy.Listen to Adam and Aidan discuss Upgrade below, or find us on your podmachine of choice.
the burden of civilization rests on these live dogs. What would you do if you woke up to find that 99.9% of life on Earth had turned to red dust, and the only who people who survived were screw-ups, mad scientists and introverts? If you're one of the Belmont sisters, the answer to that question is shoot guns, go shopping and save children from vampiric scientists. Along the way you'll learn the value of civilization, or something. Or maybe not.Night of the Comet is a strange creation, a hybrid of goofy Valley Girl comedy and Omega Man-style apocalyptic thriller. Its appeal and endurance rely on its the way it navigates between genres, ending up as a drama about a sibling relationship that just happens to feature murder-happy zombies and vampiric scientists. Throw in Chakotay from Star Trek Voyager as a love interest and you've got yourself a movie.Listen below or find us on your podmachine of your choice.
schrodinger's live dog/dead lion In recent years, the output of ‘90s-era Joel Schumacher has come in for reappraisal. His commitment to a maximalist aesthetic and gonzo production design now looks like auterist camp in comparison to the washed-out frames of digital filmmaking.Here at the offices of Destroy All Culture, it is our sincerest hope that Flatliners, Schumacher's gothbrat opera of transgression and redemption, never gets slated for reexamination. Flatliners is an immensely silly movie that features some of the most unintended comedy sequences of all time, including several scenes of Kiefer Sutherland get beaten up by a child.Here is a partial list of things that Flatliners wants to scare you with:childrenwomenchildren singing nursery rhymeschildren with hockey sticks (okay, that one's legit)women delivering pickup linesweird treesblue lightsoversized American flagsAnd more! Listen below for an in-depth discussion of the movie, or find it on your podthingy of choice.
eight live dogs. “I'll tell you. Nobody handles garbage better than we do.”Fun fact: if you listened to one episode of Destroy All Culture per day, then you started listening to this podcast exactly one year ago today! One entire year of our voices, piped into your ears on a daily basis. Frankly, we're a little concerned for your mental health.Anyway, today we're talking about the sheer perfection of a movie set in the town of Perfection, Nevada. It's Tremors, aka the Michael Gross Career Plan. Adam and Aidan talk about the effects, the script, and the ongoing appeal of the creature feature B-movie. Listen below or find us on your podcast machine!
the epitome of a dead lion It's the start of what we call Spooky Season in the Destroy All Culture house. To start, Adam and Aidan watched 1987's The Lost Boys, a movie that launched the careers of Kiefer Sutherland and Jason Patric, as well as instilling the notion of the Coreys as a kind of ‘80s pop gestalt entity. Topics discussed include: Lost Boys as a foundational ‘80s text; the time Aidan went to a Tina Turner concert and saw the oiled-up saxophone guy; the pleasures of seeing Dianne Weist and Edward Herrmann in a movie largely aimed at teens; and whether the whole bit with the Coreys worked.Adam's take: Edward Herrmann's vampire character actually survived this movie and ended up moving to Star's Hollow.Aidan's take: the Surf Nazis did not die in this movie. Instead, they were sent to a post-apocalyptic future where they ruled the wasteland (until they died).Note: during the podcast, Aidan wonders aloud about the identity of the punk girl who's briefly seen kissing a rat in the opening montage. According to the 80's Movie Rewind, the woman is named Carrie Stevens, a regular on the San Cruz punk scene. The rat was named “Rat-rat”.
Welcome to Part Two of our MoviesThat Happen to Star Aaron Eckhart miniseries (MTHtSAE II). Can you picture Aaron Eckhart as a gruff-but-loveable biker? Casting director Margery Simkin and director Stephen Soderbergh sure could! Throw a bandana and some muttonchops on that chiseled face and ta-da: movie magic?Fortunately for America, Eckhart's character is not the focus of Erin Brockovich. Instead, we follow Julia Roberts as Brockovich, a working-class single mother who stands up to the stuffy corporate lawyers (yay!) and the obese woman at her workplace (yeah?) and the snippy Black woman at her workplace (uh…) as she bravely fights for a settlement on behalf of victims of corporate pollution (yay again!). Of course, many of the plaintiffs received only a pittance, which is not mentioned in the movie (okay). On the other hand, we get to watch Brockovich being handed a cheque for two million dollars at the end (ffs).Honestly, this was an exhausting watch, an antiquated bit of proto-girlboss biopic-ery void of tension or dramatic movement after the opening twenty minutes. Soderbergh seems to know this, occasionally building out moments that challenge the protagonist, only to drop it in favour of the next sassy retort or deeply unpleasant insult delivered by a righteous Roberts who loves punching down just as much as up. Brockovich is the only real character in a world of ciphers and foils, and the few characters who assert any agency eventually leave. On the plus side, Roberts and Finney deliver great performances. And there's that one guy who looks like the most 2000s Mighty Mighty Bosstones fan of all time. We see you.
Look, this is what happens when you let the earth's magnetic field get out of hand [Morning at the Destroy All Culture house. Aidan is mumbling in his sleep, his forehead beaded with sweat, his eyeballs swivelling back and forth beneath closed lids. Adam enters.]ADAM: Aidan, are you okay? What are you saying?AIDAN: cuh… cuh… orrrre…ADAM: What's that? Caw-hor?AIDAN: cuhhhh…. orrrre…ADAM: Cuh-or?AIDAN: Core… core…ADAM: Core?[Aidan's eyelid flip up, his eyes glowing with the fire of Earth's depths]AIDAN: Core… core. Core! Core! Core!ADAM: Core! Core! Core!ADAM AND AIDAN: CORE! CORE! CORE!AIDAN: You know, we should talk about 2004's The Core, starring Aaron Eckhart, Hilary Swank, Stanley Tucci, Delroy Lindo, Richard Jenkins and even DJ Qualls.ADAM: I'll go put on some coffee.
three live dogs taking a break from slaying lions Never have there been more references to Saskatchewan in a feature film than 1977's Slap Shot, a sports fantasia disguising itself as a working-class drama. Listen below or find us on your podcast machine of choice.
Such dead lions, these two. In 2020, John Patrick Shanley adapted his successful play “Outside Mullingar” to a feature film, with results. Adam and Aidan have different opinions on the nature of those results.
Is there anyone on Earth who looks less like Apple founder Steve Jobs than Michael Fassbender? Scientifically speaking, no. Researchers have identified several species of paramecia that bear a greater resemblance to Jobs than Fassbender. Nevertheless, Fassbender radiates a kind of blinkered intensity that could only belong to a monomaniac on Jobs' scale. Pair that with Sorkin's script and it makes for a surprisingly gripping and focused portrait of obsession. Listen below or find us on your podcaster of choice.
a live dog who should have been a dead lion. Who would have thought to make a movie about Ray Kroc, a man with the personality of a Big Mac wrapper? The people who made The Founder, I guess.
sigh. Here's Adam and Aidan attempting to square their love of Aaron Sorkin with 1995's The American President, a movie in which Michael Douglas plays the very best president. He's almost brought low, but he fixes his problems by giving a big impromptu speech at the end, restoring America's virility in the process. Is this podcast an autopsy? Therapy? Listen below (or find us on your podcatcher of choice) and decide for yourselves.
a dead lion reborn in the body of a live dog Imagine a world in which Geena Davis became a bad-ass ‘90s action star. The Long Kiss Goodnight is like a dream of that world. And brother, it's a pretty good dream. Listen below, or find us wherever your podcasts roam free.
four live dogs in a galaxy of dead lions. One thing in the universe, besides death, is certain: there can be no final form of Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The story has existed as a radio play, a series of novels, a television show, and a feature film. The 2005 movie has its defenders (one of whom is named Adam P Knave) and mortal enemies (one of whom is named Aidan Morgan). Listen below as they gently push back at each other's opinions! If you're still undecided on the quality of the film, you can go and watch it for yourself - but Aidan would advise against it.
That's one live dog right there facing off with two virtual lions. Every so often, a movie comes along that so perfectly embodies the moment of its release that it should be taught in history courses as the purest emanation of a given age. Such a movie is Jason X, a movie so 2001 that Stanley Kubrick is lucky he never lived to see it. A space ship with an interior that looks suspiciously like a Laser Quest franchise, populated by hot people in improbable knitwear getups? Hell yes. It's the turn of the millennium, people. It's time to take our horror franchises into space on a reasonable budget. Listen below as Aidan and Adam enjoy the hell out of themselves.Also, there's a David Cronenberg cameo. I don't know what else you want from a movie.
she's fucked. she's so fucked. Spoiler alert: Karen Crowder (Tilda Swinton) is fucked. She's so fucked. Michael Clayton (George Clooney) isn't the guy you kill. He's the guy you buy. If this movie is about any one thing in particular, beyond the moral abyss of corporations and the ways in which community and meaning will pop up like connected air sacs on a sheet of bubble wrap, it's about the wisdom of proportionate response. You can't kill Michael Clayton because his kind is unkillable. He's an interchangeable part of the machine. And if you don't get that? If you push the Michael Claytons out of the moral abyss and leave him on the lip, casting his eyes around as he remembers the truth of humanity? Then you're fucked. You're so fucked.
It's time for Three Days of the Condor, Sydney Pollack's masterpiece of Cold War paranoia, a film which suggests that mild-mannered English majors can hold their own in a cat-and-mouse spy game - if they look like Robert Redford, that is. Listen to Adam and Aidan as they dissect the politics of their childhoods and place bets on how long they'd survive if Max von Sydow tried to murder them.
never has a live dog live dogged more. Hold on a moment. Did they make a decent Terminator sequel, at long, long last? Well, kind of. It's largely great! Linda Hamilton and Arnold Schwarzenegger are back, Mackenzie Davis is great as always, Diego Luna makes for a great robot. Even Natalie Reyes, who takes a bit of a back seat in the midst of all this nostalgic star power, acquits herself well.No amount of quality was going to rescue Terminator: Dark Fate, which tanked at the box office and seemed to hand reactionary fodder over to the Dipshitosphere. Nonetheless, we talk about the highs and lows as the Terminator story draws to a close. Until the next time someone tries to kick at this metallic can. Listen below or find us on your podmachine of choice.