Sunday, November 26, 2023

THE FANDOM ZONE 283: "Glorious Purpose (2023)" Is Up!

 
"Most purpose is more burden than glory, and trust me, you never want to be the guy who avoids it, 'cause you can't live with the burden."
"How do you live with it?"
"Scar tissue."
-- Mobius M. Mobius and Loki Laufeyson, Loki -- "Glorious Purpose (2023)"

Hello again, everyone! We're back for another new episode of The Fandom Zone Podcast!  This time, DJ Nik and I discuss "Glorious Purpose", the final episode of Loki Season 2, featuring Tom Hiddleston as Loki Laufeyson, Owen Wilson as Mobius M. Mobius, Sophia Di Martino as Sylvie, and Jonathan Majors as Victor Timely!

In this episode, DJ Nik and I talk about things like my wife and I moving ten minutes down the street, Nik's Inter Milan team taking a break for the Nationals, the Loki Season 2 finale title being the same as the Season 1 premiere title, hoping some of the Loki supporting characters appear elsewhere in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Loki quoting T.S. Eliot's poem "Little Gidding" and William Shakespeare's Richard II, Loki making my Top 10 Series Finales list, our hopes that the Loki creative team does more MCU projects, more on Loki's transformation from the God of Mischief to the God of Stories, Loki's Yggdrasil-like tree connecting all the various timelines, Loki sacrificing his friendships and personal happiness to save time and space as the new He Who Remains, wondering if this will be the last we see of Tom Hiddleston as Loki, Loki and He Who Remains having a sit-down to discuss the destruction of the Time Variance Authority, Loki's realization that he has to be the one to go out and face the Temporal Loom instead of Victor Timely, Loki's sacrifice being similar to Disney's Hercules, wondering if Tom Hiddleston will replace Jonathan Majors as Kang, running down the epilogue with the TVA, Revenge of the Jedi changing its title to Return of the Jedi, how Mobius can continue with his life as Don, wondering if Sylvie went back to Broxton, Oklahoma to work at McDonald's, some speculation for what Ravonna Renslayer saw off-camera in The Void, more of what Physical Media still matters in the age of streaming services, our favorite quotes of the episode, missing the Loki and Mobius bromance, Warren Beatty's Dick Tracy movie adaptation, my needing an echo sound effect for our upcoming Echo discussions, and more!

You can now check out episodes of The Fandom Zone using...

Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Google Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct Download MP3s/Libsyn
 -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
The Fandom Zone on Facebook -- RIGHT HERE
The Fandom Zone on Twitter -- @FandomZoneCast
The Fandom Zone on Instagram -- HERE

And if that isn't enough for you, you can pick up an officially official Fandom Zone Podcast t-shirt that all the cool kids are wearing from TeePublic HERE as well! Feel free to post a picture on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back in January when DJ Nik and I discuss the first episode of Echothe next Marvel Cinematic Universe TV series, featuring the return of Alaqua Cox as Echo/Maya Lopez and Vincent D'Onofrio as The Kingpin/Wilson Fisk, on The Fandom Zone Podcast!

Thursday, November 23, 2023

DOCTOR WHO: 60 Years of Time and Space

 
And to think, it all started in a junkyard.

Sixty years ago today, on November 23, 1963, Doctor Who premiered on the BBC, becoming the world's longest-running science fiction TV series. The very first episode, "An Unearthly Child", launched in the shadow of President John F. Kennedy's assassination in Dallas the day before, forcing a repeat the following week. The first four-part serial introduced the world to the enigmatic time-traveler known only as the Doctor (then called "Dr. Who" in the closing credits), his granddaughter Susan Foreman, and Susan's teachers from Coal Hill School, Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright. It also introduced the world to the TARDIS (short for Time And Relative Dimensions In Space), the definitive time machine ever imagined, somehow bigger on the inside and still stuck all these decades later in the shape of a 1960s British police box.

After an incredibly strong first episode that began the adventures in space and time, the remaining three episodes in that first black-and-white serial were rather dull and plodding, with our first TARDIS team encountering a tribe of prehistoric cavemen who defined their leader simply by whomever could make fire. The second serial, "The Daleks", was considerably more interesting, a seven-parter from writer Terry Nation that took us to the planet Skaro for our first encounter with the Doctor's most popular enemies, you guessed it, the Daleks. The army of blobby aliens piloting miniature metal tanks with an egg whisk on one arm and a toilet plunger on the other became insanely popular with British kids, who went around "Exterminating" their classmates on the playground. Even better, Doctor Who's ratings from the first serial had nearly doubled by the end of "The Daleks", and lo, a science fiction legend was born. The show became a pop culture hit, even spawning two feature films -- Dr. Who and the Daleks and Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 AD -- starring Peter Cushing as a version of the Doctor with very few similarities to William Hartnell's First Doctor.

The rest of Doctor Who's infancy in the 1960s continued to lay the foundation for the series, when Susan became the first of the Doctor's companions to leave in the tenth serial, "The Dalek Invasion of Earth." Ian and Barbara soon followed, with only star William Hartnell continuing on as the Doctor with a number of replacement companions, until his deteriorating health affected his ability to remember his lines and ultimately forced him to leave early in Season 4, in the serial "The Tenth Planet" that also introduced another group of popular villains known as the Cybermen. At the end of that story, the show discovered an amazing way to continue on whenever the lead actor left the role of the alien Doctor, by having them "regenerate" into a brand-new incarnation played by another actor with a different persona. Patrick Troughton became the new Second Doctor, making his full debut in "The Power of the Daleks" and soon won over Hartnell's fans, ensuring the show's survival. Troughton, along with actors Frazer Hines (Jamie McCrimmon) and Wendy Padbury (Zoe Heriot), left the series at the end of Season 6, as Doctor Who closed out its original black-and-white era.

In 1970, the show began airing colorized episodes, with Jon Pertwee debuting as the Third Doctor as the Doctor began an exile on Earth, forced upon him by his people, the Time Lords. Pertwee's first story, "Spearhead from Space", paired the Doctor up with UNIT, a fictional military organization that investigated the strange and unusual, introduced in a previous Troughton serial. Pertwee's era showed the Doctor could be a James Bond-esque man of action in addition to a scientific genius, with his main enemy and fellow Time Lord, The Master, introduced as the Professor Moriarty to the Doctor's Sherlock Holmes. This era also gave fans the definitive companion in the form of Elisabeth Sladen's Sarah Jane Smith, who continued with the series as Tom Baker took over the lead role in 1974's "Robot". As the mad, eccentric Fourth Doctor, Baker took the series to a new height in popularity over the course of seven seasons and became many fans' favorite of the four lead actors, at least for the following thirty years.

In 1981, Tom Baker left the role in "Logopolis", paving the way for Peter Davison's younger, more handsome Fifth Doctor. Like Troughton, Davison had the challenge of winning over the previous Doctor's fans, but proved up to the task over the course of the next three seasons, including the 20th anniversary special, "The Five Doctors", that teamed the First, Second, Third, and Fifth Doctors, with the Fourth Doctor excluded (apart from old footage from the then-incomplete serial "Shada") due to Tom Baker's refusal to return. Davison exited the series in 1984, which happened to be around the same time that my 15-year-old self discovered Doctor Who on PBS in America, with Tom Baker's "The Keeper of Traken" being the serial that made me a Whovian, even after all these decades later.

Sadly, the rest of the 1980s was not as kind to the series, as Colin Baker's arrogant Sixth Doctor proved unpopular with fans. Ratings declined, and then-BBC1 controller Michael Grade expressed his disapproval of the series, slashing the show's paltry budget even further. In an attempt to salvage the series, Colin Baker was fired and in 1987, Sylvester McCoy was brought in as the more Troughton-esque Seventh Doctor for the show's final three seasons, which showed a marginal improvement in overall quality but failed to restore the show's ratings. At long last, Michael Grade did what many of the Doctor's enemies couldn't, and Doctor Who ended in 1989's with McCoy's final serial, the ironically-named "Survival."

The 1990s became Doctor Who's "wilderness years", with the only new episode being a TV movie in 1996 that introduced Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor after McCoy reprised the role for an early regeneration scene. The TV movie was intended as a backdoor pilot for a new American-produced revival of Doctor Who to continue the series instead of rebooting it, but pilot became the victim of the FOX network's poor scheduling that delivered unsurprisingly poor ratings, and Whovians' hopes (especially mine) were quickly dashed. The end of the '90s provided one bright light, however, when Big Finish Productions secured the rights to produce brand-new Doctor Who audio adventure stories starring Peter Davison, Colin Baker, and Sylvester McCoy as their respective Doctors, along with some of their companions. For many fans, this was the best we could imagine during this otherwise dark time. Even better, McGann agreed to reprise the Eighth Doctor for Big Finish, officially continuing Doctor Who (albeit in audio form) with 2001's "Storm Warning."

In 2003, we finally found light at the end of the tunnel. Just as Doctor Who fans tried to wrap our heads around Richard E. Grant voicing a new official "Ninth Doctor" for the first (and only) webcast Doctor Who series, "Scream of the Shalka," the BBC surprised everyone by announcing that Doctor Who would return in 2005 for a brand-new TV series with a brand-new Ninth Doctor, quickly relegating Richard E. Grant's webcast Ninth Doctor to obscure Doctor Who trivia night. Fandom resurged in anticipation, with US fans being forced to use this newfangled thing called "the Internet" to watch these new episodes due to having no American distributor for the new series.

On March 26, 2005, Doctor Who returned to television with "Rose," the first episode of Series One that introduced Christopher Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor as pop-singer Billie Piper as his new companion, Rose Tyler. New showrunner Russell T Davies used key elements from "Spearhead from Space" in his revival debut, (including bringing back the serial's villains, the Autons) but here was a redecorated Doctor Who...and fans did like it. Greater production values, improved special effects, solid acting, fun dialogue, and most importantly, it was the same damn show. Everything we loved about Doctor Who was featured in "Rose" and while the episode may not have been perfect, it was only the start of the revival that's lasted to this day.

As fans were over the moon with the return of our favorite show, a bombshell dropped just days later that Eccleston was already leaving the show after only one season for reportedly "fear of being typecast". What? WHAT?! WHAT?!!! Mercifully, David Tennant was soon announced as incoming Tenth Doctor, becoming an instant fan-favorite for Series Two through Four...and several assorted Specials because Tennant (himself a diehard Whovian) didn't want to go. Tennant's era during the rest of the 2000s turned Doctor Who into a global phenomenon, with Tennant himself becoming arguably even more popular as a Doctor than the sainted Tom Baker. 

Also, for the first time, the family-friendly series Doctor Who was now popular enough to have TV spinoffs, with Modern Era companion Captain Jack Harkness getting his own series, Torchwood (Yes, an anagram of "Doctor Who") for older viewers, and Elisabeth Sladen returning for more kids-friendly series, The Sarah Jane Adventures. With Davies having his hand in both series, it truly felt that Doctor Who had expanded its fictional universe, with Doctors and companions criss-crossing all three series to everyone's delight. Our little cult TV show whispered about in dark corners had grown up for all the world to enjoy.

And even when RTD announced he was leaving along with Tennant after "The End of Time, Part Two", we were reassured that Doctor Who would be in safe hands with popular writer Steven Moffat taking over as the new showrunner. At the age of 27, Matt Smith became the youngest-ever actor to take on the role, younger than Peter Davison was when he started and was considered by some foolish mortals to be "too young for the role." When Smith debuted in 2010's "The Eleventh Hour" as the new Eleventh Doctor, the first episode in the new Steven Moffat era, he quickly put such fanboy snobbery to rest. Moffat quickly put his mark on the series, crafting some delightfully complex scripts that pushed the boundaries of what the series could do with time travel. 

A perfect example of this? "The Day of the Doctor", Doctor Who's 50th Anniversary Special in 2013, which not only brought Tennant back as the Tenth Doctor, but also introduced Sir John Hurt as the War Doctor, a "secret" Doctor never revealed before now that was developed as a replacement character for Christopher Eccleston, who declined to return as the Ninth Doctor for personal reasons. Anyone else getting Tom Baker vibes? The Doctor's home planet of Gallifrey, once thought destroyed as part of RTD's Time War idea to get rid of the Time Lords, was suddenly back in play again and a new Doctor was right around the corner. And there were more 50th Anniversary treats, including the long-awaited TV return of Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor in a mini-episode entitled "The Night of the Doctor" and the docudrama An Adventure in Space and Time, scripted by Doctor Who actor and writer Mark Gatiss and starring David Bradley as William Hartnell.

It was around this time in 2014 that Southgate Media Group's Rob Southgate approached my longtime friend Jesse Jackson about doing a Doctor Who podcast and much to my surprise, Jesse asked me if I was interested in co-hosting it with him. I'd never hosted a podcast before, let alone listened to any, but the idea was far too tempting for me to resist. On August 3, 2014, we recorded the first episode of Next Stop Everywhere: The Doctor Who Podcast, devoted to exploring all eras of Doctor Who, Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures (I mean, Everywhere is right there in the title), with me as the longtime Whovian and Jesse as the noob who got into New Who through Torchwood. Over nine years and three hundred episodes later, we're still recording as I continue Jesse's education of all things Who and we share our love of everything timey-wimey.

After a couple of "prologue" episodes, our first review was "Deep Breath", Peter Capaldi's first story as the new Twelfth Doctor. A much older actor than Matt Smith, Capaldi (another longtime Whovian like Tennant) remained in the role for Series Eight, Nine and Ten, despite some declining ratings and Moffat getting some criticism for trying to be too clever with his often overly-complicated story ideas. Capaldi and Moffat both ended their Doctor Who runs with 2017's "Twice Upon a Time", another multi-Doctor story with the Twelfth Doctor meeting the First Doctor (now played by David Bradley) during events from Hartnell's final story, "The Tenth Planet." It was time for the show to change again, this time Torchwood showrunner Chris Chibnall taking the helm from Moffat.

And change the show did. For the first time ever, a woman was selected for the lead role, with Jodie Whittaker becoming the Thirteenth Doctor. Right from the announcement trailer, a segment of Doctor Who fandom turned to hating the very same series they once professed to love, openly and trollishly campaigning for its cancellation simply because Chibnall dared to let someone with two X chromosomes play the Doctor. Ratings continued to suffer as some fans continued to pine for their Space Boyfriends, David Tennant and Matt Smith, and Chibnall often proved himself to be not as nearly as talented with scripts as Davies or Moffat. To his credit, Chibnall introduced some interesting story ideas, such as another "secret" previously unmentioned Doctor, this time another woman (and black no less, gasp!) called the Fugitive Doctor. In the process, he teased the divisive concept of the Timeless Child, a possible amount of unknown Doctors sometime before William Hartnell's First Doctor left Gallifrey with Susan all those years ago. Oh, and Gallifrey and the Time Lords? They're gone again, this time wiped out by Sacha Dhawan's incarnation of the Master.

Regardless, Jodie Whittaker got her three seasons as the Thirteenth Doctor, albeit the last two truncated due to complications resulting from the COVID pandemic. Whittaker and Chibnall made their exit with "The Power of the Doctor", arguably Chibnall's finest story during his and Whittaker's era, which brought back many Classic Era companions that Davies and Moffat somehow failed to do during their times as showrunner.

Speaking of Davies, a deal was made for him to return as showrunner for the show's 60th Anniversary with the announcement that Ncuti Gatwa would become the next Doctor and the show's first black actor in the lead role. (I know, gasp!) Of course, with Davies, nothing is that straightforward, so David Tennant has returned again, this time as a mysterious Fourteenth Doctor who recalls the teeth he had from his tenth incarnation. So here we are, three 60th Anniversary Specials with David Tennant, followed by Ncuti Gatwa at Christmas as the Fifteenth Doctor with Millie Gibson as his new companion Ruby Sunday.

What happens next? Who knows, eh? Who. Knows.

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

THE FANDOM ZONE 282: "Science/Fiction" Is Up!

 
"So, you're traveling to a place that doesn't exist anymore. It's equally impossible, and therefore it's something you might be able to do."
"Sure, excellent. Yeah. Makes total sense. Doesn't sound like science."
"No, but it does sound like fiction."
-- A.D. Doug and Loki Laufeyson, Loki -- "Science/Fiction"

Hello again, everyone! We're back for another new episode of The Fandom Zone Podcast!  This time, DJ Nik and I discuss "Science/Fiction", the fifth episode of Loki Season 2, featuring Tom Hiddleston as Loki Laufeyson, Owen Wilson as Mobius M. Mobius/Don, Sophia Di Martino as Sylvie, and Ke Huy Quan as Ouroboros/Dr. A.D. Doug!

In this episode, DJ Nik and I talk about things like Nik rocking his Inter Milan jersey, some comics background on Verity Willis, some real-life background on Frank Morris and the June 1962 Alcatraz escape attempt, Loki's worst nightmare, Loki needing a sense of belonging, Sylvie narrowing Loki down on his main issue, Mobius being a loser jet-ski salesman named Don in his real life outside the TVA, why Mobius is reluctant to return to his real life, Casey's surprising revelation that he was an escaped convict from Alcatraz in real life, Ouroboros being a failed science fiction writer in real life, my sympathy for A.D. Doug trying to sell his science fiction books, A.D. Doug becoming obsessed with creating a prototype TemPad, my offer to ghost write the real-life versions of A.D. Doug's books, why Sylvie remembered Loki when none of the TVA staff did, Sylvie helping Loki achieve his big psychological breakthrough, the great sequence of Sylvie listening to "Oh! Sweet Nuthin" by the Velvet Underground, Loki returning to the moment just before Victor Timely becomes spaghettified, my theory that Loki will become the next He Who Remains, Loki potentially having a new way to relate to Thor, our favorite quotes of the episode, Nik joining me on Next Stop Everywhere to discuss the upcoming Doctor Who 60th Anniversary specials, hoping the Loki Season 2 finale sticks the landing, and more!

You can now check out episodes of The Fandom Zone using...

Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Google Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct Download MP3s/Libsyn
 -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
The Fandom Zone on Facebook -- RIGHT HERE
The Fandom Zone on Twitter -- @FandomZoneCast
The Fandom Zone on Instagram -- HERE

And if that isn't enough for you, you can pick up an officially official Fandom Zone Podcast t-shirt that all the cool kids are wearing from TeePublic HERE as well! Feel free to post a picture on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week when DJ Nik and I discuss "Glorious Purpose (2023)", the final episode of Loki Season 2, on The Fandom Zone Podcast!

Friday, November 17, 2023

NEXT STOP EVERYWHERE 300: "An Unearthly Child" Is Up!

 
"Let me get this straight. A thing that looks like a police box, standing in a junkyard, it can move anywhere in time and space?"
-- Ian Chesterton, Doctor Who: "An Unearthly Child"

Hello again, everyone! My partner in time Jesse Jackson and I are back with our big 300th episode of Next Stop Everywhere: The Doctor Who Podcast! In this celebration of Doctor Who's 60th anniversary, we're joined by special guest DJ Nik to discuss "An Unearthly Child", the very first Doctor Who serial from Season One in 1963, introducing William Hartnell as the First Doctor, William Russell as Ian Chesterton, Jacqueline Hill as Barbara Wright, and Carole Ann Ford as Susan Foreman!

In this episode, Jesse, Nik and I discuss things like Jesse holding off on watching his Texas Rangers clinch the World Series to record our 300th episode, my saving "An Unearthly Child" for a special episode, our 300th episode being in the same month as Doctor Who's 60th anniversary, Jesse Jackson being the Godfather of Podcasting, a Next Stop News Flash about finally getting the airdates for the 60th Anniversary Specials and the six Tales of the TARDIS episodes, Nik joining us to discuss the 60th Anniversary Specials, some background on Doctor Who's creation, the show's launch being overshadowed by the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy, the original character description of the Doctor as a "suspicious and malign character" with a "secret intention to destroy or nullify the future", the actors who almost played the First Doctor, the original versions of the Doctor's companions, the original plans to open with a serial titled "The Giants", Nik's dad pointing out that the formula on Ian's blackboard was wrong, Ian and Barbara worrying that the Doctor was someone keeping Susan prisoner in his junkyard, the first episode of the serial being so much better than the remaining three episodes, the central mystery of why the Doctor and Susan left Gallifrey in a stolen TARDIS still being unrevealed after 60 years, Susan's characterization being poorly written by male writers in the 1960s, the introduction of the Doctor as an angry and abrasive figure, the Doctor mocking Ian for being close-minded about time travel, Za really wanting to make fire because he really wants to be leader of the Tribe of Gum, the Doctor smoking a pipe for the first and only time, the Doctor easily tricking Kal into revealing his bloody stone knife, Susan tricking the Tribe with flaming skulls, our favorite quotes of the serial, new feedback from Sandi from Oregon, Dave Proctor and Holly Mac, our thanks to everyone who have supported us for 300 episodes, and more!

If you'd like to check out our latest episode, you can find us on...

Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Google Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Next Stop Everywhere's Facebook page
Next Stop Everywhere's Twitter account
Next Stop Everywhere's Instagram account

We have a Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt with our previous logo, which you can find on TeePublic right HERE!  This spiffy shirt looks great when you're listening to your favorite Doctor Who podcast and travelling through time and space!  Or your could order all sorts of cool Next Stop Everywhere merch there as well!

And hey, if you'd like to pick up our classic logo Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt, you can also find it on TeePublic right HERE!  Help support the show and feel free to post pictures on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back toward the end of November for the next episode of Next Stop Everywhere as Jesse and I are joined once again by special guest companion DJ Nik as we discuss "The Star Beast", the first Doctor Who 60th Anniversary Special, featuring David Tennant as the Fourteenth Doctor, the return of Catherine Tate as Donna Noble, and the final appearance of Bernard Cribbins as Wilfred Mott!

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

THE FANDOM ZONE 281: "Heart of the TVA" Is Up!

 
"It would just be easier to burn this place down and start from scratch!"
"Sure, burn it down, easy. Annihilating it, easy. Razing things to the ground is easy. Trying to fix what's broken is hard. Hope is hard."
-- Sylvie and Loki Laufeyson, Loki -- "Heart of the TVA"

Hello again, everyone! We're back for another new episode of The Fandom Zone Podcast!  This time, DJ Nik and I discuss "Heart of the TVA", the fourth episode of Loki Season 2, featuring Tom Hiddleston as Loki Laufeyson, Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Ravonna Renslayer, Jonathan Majors as Victor Timely, and Tara Strong as the voice of Miss Minutes!

In this episode, DJ Nik and I talk about things like Nik celebrating his 41st birthday, my inventing the word "spaghettification", Miss Minutes' parting shot that Victor Timely will never be He Who Remains, Loki being the Gold Standard of the MCU TV shows, Ouroboros giving an homage to Doc Brown in the Back to the Future trilogy by apologizing for his models, Victor Timely's Throughput Multiplier being the prototype for Kang's time ship, Ravonna being revealed as He Who Remains' peer during the Multiversal War, He Who Remains having Miss Minutes wipe Ravonna's memory, confusing General Dox with General Zod, Ravonna being a control freak by nature and wanting her free will at the expense of everyone else's, Ouroboros' great line about a snake eating its own tail, Victor Timely being amazed by a hot cocoa vending machine, the loss of Loki and Sylvie's romance in Season 2, Sylvie calling out Mobius for not bothering to look into his real life outside of the TVA, Loki noticing the change in Thor after being exiled on Earth, the great cliffhanger of Team TVA being helpless to prevent the temporal wave coming right at them, wondering how much the temporal reset will affect the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Homer Simpson traveling through time using a broken toaster in "Time and Punishment", our favorite quotes of the episode, and more!

You can now check out episodes of The Fandom Zone using...

Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Google Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct Download MP3s/Libsyn
 -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
The Fandom Zone on Facebook -- RIGHT HERE
The Fandom Zone on Twitter -- @FandomZoneCast
The Fandom Zone on Instagram -- HERE

And if that isn't enough for you, you can pick up an officially official Fandom Zone Podcast t-shirt that all the cool kids are wearing from TeePublic HERE as well! Feel free to post a picture on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week when DJ Nik and I discuss "Science/Fiction", the fifth episode of Loki Season 2, on The Fandom Zone Podcast!

Saturday, November 4, 2023

DRUNK CINEMA 053: "Halloween (1978)" Is Up!

 
"It was the Boogeyman..."
"As a matter of fact, it was."
-- Laurie Strode and Dr. Samuel Loomis, Halloween (1978)

Hello again, movie fans!  My wonderful co-host Xan Sprouse and I are back with a new episode of Drunk Cinema! This timewe're watching Halloween, the 1978 slasher horror film directed by John Carpenter, introducing Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode, Donald Pleasance as Dr. Samuel Loomis, and Nick Castle as Michael Myers!

This time, Xan and I discuss things like Xan's father passing away, the worst thing about the Rob Zombie remake of Halloween, Donald Pleasance as the villain in The Pumaman, all the Halloween movies Jamie Lee Curtis has appeared in, Nick Castle directing The Last Starfighter, Annie Brackett begging to be killed in this movie, Charles Cyphers as Charlie Donavan in Major League, Halloween (1978) making $70 million from a budget of just $325,000, the terrifying opening credits pumpkin, the opening prologue with 6-year-old Michael Myers stabbing his sister Judith with a kitchen knife, wondering when Michael Myers learned how to drive a car, Xan's stance against bringing boys over to have sex while babysitting, Laurie turning a corner from dry streets and sidewalks to wet streets and sidewalks, how sunny California was made to look like Illinois in October, Rob Zombie and Eli Roth not having a lot of subtlety in the work, Tommy's stack of fake superhero comic books, wondering why no one bothers to turn on the lights when they enter a room, Annie honking the horn instead of opening the driver's side door, Dr. Loomis creeping on kids from the bushes, the Friday the 13th movies killing teenagers for having sex, Laurie's asshole neighbors that refuse to open the door and help her, Loomis knowing that shooting Michael Myers wouldn't be enough, both of us watching Moonlighting episodes on Hulu, our upcoming third anniversary of Drunk Cinema, paying tribute to Xan's father by watching The Maltese Falcon, and more!

If you'd like to check out our podcast and subscribe to us, you can find us on...

Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Google Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Drunk Cinema's Facebook Page
Drunk Cinema's Twitter Account

Be sure to come back in two weeks as Xan and I pay tribute to Xan's father by watching The Maltese Falcon, the 1941 film noir directed by John Huston, starring Humphrey Bogart as Sam Spade, Mary Astor as Ruth Wonderly/Brigid O'Shaughnessy, Peter Lorre as Joel Cairo, and Sydney Greenstreet as Kasper Gutman!