Retour

Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Reel Talk w/ Al the Movie Lion

Plongez dans la liste complète des épisodes de Reel Talk w/ Al the Movie Lion. Chaque épisode est catalogué accompagné de descriptions détaillées, ce qui facilite la recherche et l'exploration de sujets spécifiques. Suivez tous les épisodes de votre podcast préféré et ne manquez aucun contenu pertinent.

Rows per page:

1–19 of 19

TitreDateDurée
A Very 90's Christmas09 Jan 202602:51:34

We grade four 90s Christmas films with friends who know their stuff, weighing nostalgia against craft and calling winners, near-misses, and one spectacular lump of coal. Humor, heart, and hard takes on plot holes, perfect scores, and why Die Hard still glows.

• Home Alone’s brisk pacing, tonal split, and a key phone logic gap
• Joe Pesci’s balance of menace and comedy, Culkin’s star power
• John Williams’ score as the film’s secret engine
• Muppet Christmas Carol’s practical sets, miniatures, and lighting craft
• Michael Caine’s grounded Scrooge, Gonzo and Rizzo’s meta narration
• Songs that warm the story without bloating it
• Jingle All The Way’s hollow satire, clumsy morals, weak VFX
• Casting strength vs thin characters, an unlovable must-have toy
• Die Hard’s contained-action blueprint and romantic spine
• Rickman vs Willis, glass-as-stakes, crisp holiday sound textures
• Final scoreboard and where each film lands for rewatch value

Keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.reeldigital.media
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble for all our Real Talk merch

POST Wrestling: https://www.postwrestling.com/

Christina's Work: https://christinadobre.com/

Lakesha's Work: www.cinefuryproductions.com

Support the show

Adaptation, Barton Fink, And American Fiction | Written About the Screen24 Dec 202501:53:31

We honor Rob Reiner, then dig into three films that wrestle with voice, identity, and the cost of creating for an audience. We grade Adaptation, Barton Fink, and American Fiction across plot, performance, visuals, sound, and theme, comparing where each film bends and where it holds its line.

• adapting form to theme in Adaptation
• twin dynamics as creative conflict
• third‑act pivots and genre conventions
• hotel as psyche in Barton Fink
• production design as character
• authenticity, market taste, and satire in American Fiction
• jazz score as cultural texture
• close‑ups that carry emotional weight
• integrity vs opportunity without easy answers
• final grades and why they differ


If you work for a brand or agency producing content, keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.realdigital.media to see how your next campaign can come in ahead of schedule and under budget!


Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble to see all our A+ gear

Matt's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MattSomerstein

Øcean's site: https://www.oceanvashtijude.com/


Please leave a 5 star review of the show and thanks for listening!


Support the show

Greta Gerwig - From Little Women to Barbie: Scoring Greta’s Directing Work02 Oct 202501:34:50

We grade Little Women, Lady Bird, and Barbie through story, performances, visuals, sound, and theme, tracing how Greta Gerwig turns ordinary moments into emotional gut-punches and playful spectacle. We argue about casting swings, cry over silence, and unpack why identity—not perfection—wins.

• Little Women as a restrained, seasonal family epic
• casting highs and lows, with accent talk and timeline stretch
• visual portraiture, warm vs cold color logic, and the letter gaze
• silence as sound and where the score stays out of the way
• Lady Bird’s pink innocence, mother–daughter humility, and edit rhythm
• era nostalgia vs licensing limits for needle drops
• Barbie’s play-physics worldbuilding and self-aware parody
• Margot, America, and Gosling anchoring identity and belonging
• musical beats that act like monologues, especially “I’m Just Ken”
• final scores tallied and where our grades diverge

Leave a like, subscribe, and hit the bell icon to be notified when Real Talk drops twice a week


Support the show

Gunslinger Cinema: 2007's Western Revival29 Sep 202501:39:35

We dive into the Western renaissance of 2007, exploring three masterpieces that revitalized the genre for modern audiences. These films showcase how the Western continued to evolve while maintaining its core DNA, delivering complex characters and powerful themes.

• 3:10 to Yuma with guest Joe Belcastro, examining James Mangold's straightforward yet compelling remake that balances action with character development
• Russell Crowe's performance as the charismatic outlaw Ben Wade creates the perfect counterbalance to Christian Bale's principled Dan Evans
• No Country for Old Men with Jimmy the Toucan, discussing how the Coen Brothers created a contemporary Western with unforgettable tension and performances
• Javier Bardem's Anton Chigurh represents one of cinema's most chilling villains, bringing terror through his matter-of-fact approach to violence
• The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford with comedian Billy Wayne Davis, exploring Andrew Dominik's meditative take on celebrity and obsession
• Both No Country for Old Men and Jesse James benefit from Roger Deakins' masterful cinematography, each with distinct visual approaches
• All three films scored impressively with our reviewers, with No Country earning the highest average at 96.5/100

If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a like, subscribe to the channel, and hit the bell icon to be notified when Real Talk drops twice a week. Join us next time for Episode 8 when we explore Greta Gerwig's work including Ladybird, Little Women, and Barbie.


Support the show

Guillermo Del Toro: The Art of Storytelling Through Monsters25 Sep 202501:40:39

Guillermo del Toro's masterful storytelling transforms monsters into metaphors and fantasy into profound human commentary across three of his most celebrated films.

• Pacific Rim elevates a "cheesy genre flick" about giant robots fighting monsters into something surprisingly entertaining
• The non-Kaiju characters provide the most color and entertainment in Pacific Rim, with the cast knowing exactly what type of film they're in
• Pan's Labyrinth achieves something truly unique as both expert cinema and an evolution of human storytelling techniques
• The film's unrelenting approach to violence leaves nothing to the imagination, potentially making it unwatchable for some viewers
• The Shape of Water blends Cold War spy thriller, creature feature, and unconventional romance into a beautiful adult fairy tale
• Sally Hawkins delivers an extraordinary performance conveying complex emotions without speaking a word
• The theme of empathy runs throughout The Shape of Water, showing how powerless people can find courage to stand against oppressive systems
• All three films showcase del Toro's visual mastery, with The Shape of Water achieving stunning results on a modest $20 million budget

Leave a like, subscribe, and hit the bell icon to be notified when Reel Talk drops twice a week. Join us next time for episode 7 featuring reviews of 3:10 to Yuma, No Country for Old Men, and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.


Support the show

LEGO, Barbie & Transformers | Why Big Toy Movies Rule | Reel Talk Ep. 522 Sep 202501:33:11

Al the Movie Lion explores big toy movies with a panel of guests who bring their unique perspectives to three cinematic adaptations of beloved plastic franchises.

• Jennifer Tyson shares her fraught relationship with Barbie dolls and analyzes how the movie addresses female empowerment
• Analyzing Barbie's success at balancing humor with meaningful social commentary
• Sid the Cinema Sloth critiques Transformers' focus on military spectacle over meaningful character development
• Discussing how Michael Bay's approach to the franchise prioritized visual effects over storytelling
• Wei Ting from Post Wrestling examines how The Lego Movie brilliantly captures the essence of creative play
• Exploring the surprising depth of The Lego Movie's themes about creativity, conformity, and parent-child relationships
• Comparing the visual storytelling approaches across all three films and their effectiveness
• Final scores reveal Barbie and The Lego Movie as standout examples of the toy movie genre

Check out our merch shop on Redbubble by following the link in the description to support the show and get your hands on exclusive Reel Talk gear.

Support the show

Camera as Weapon: How Spike Lee Changed Cinema18 Sep 202502:12:52

We explore the revolutionary filmmaking of Spike Lee, diving deep into three of his most iconic films: "She's Gotta Have It," "Do the Right Thing," and "Malcolm X."

• "She's Gotta Have It" (1986) launched Spike Lee's career with its experimental style and bold portrayal of female sexuality
• Jimmy the Toucan joins to review Lee's debut, discussing its black and white aesthetic, jazz soundtrack, and themes of self-love
• "Do the Right Thing" (1989) examines racial tensions in a Brooklyn neighborhood during a sweltering summer day
• Lara Benario helps analyze how Lee uses visual elements like color, canted angles, and music to build tension
• "Malcolm X" (1992) features Denzel Washington's transformative performance in this epic biographical film
• Professor Timothy Richardson and Nate Milton discuss the film's powerful themes of growth, betrayal, and cultural trauma
• All three films receive high marks, with "Malcolm X" scoring a nearly perfect rating from all reviewers

If you work for a brand or agency producing content, keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.realdigitalmedia.com to see how your next campaign can come in ahead of schedule and under budget.


Support the show

Friendship on Film 🎬 Lost in Translation to Dumb & Dumber15 Sep 202501:17:17

Friendship reveals itself in the most unexpected places—whether it's a chance encounter in a Tokyo hotel, a cross-country road trip with your dim-witted best friend, or the unlikeliest of bonds formed behind prison walls. In this episode, I dive deep into three cinematic masterpieces that showcase how human connection can transcend any circumstance.

Sofia Coppola's "Lost in Translation" captures the ephemeral beauty of temporary friendship. My guest Lila the Sugar Glider and I explore how Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson's characters find each other precisely when they need connection most, despite being at completely different life stages. We dissect how the film's visual storytelling mirrors their emotional journey—Tokyo transforms from cold and alienating to vibrant and meaningful as their relationship develops. What makes this friendship so poignant is its unspoken acknowledgment of impermanence.

The conversation shifts dramatically when Director Dan Stewart joins me to analyze the Farrelly Brothers' "Dumb and Dumber." Behind the relentless physical comedy and visual gags lies a surprisingly nuanced portrait of friendship. Jim Carrey's Lloyd and Jeff Daniels' Harry may be "dumb and dumber," but their loyalty to each other ultimately saves them both, often without them even realizing it. Dan brilliantly describes it as "the Batman Begins of slapstick"—a grounded, realistic approach to outrageous comedy that never loses sight of its emotional core.

Finally, Post Wrestling's Neil Flanagan helps me unpack "The Shawshank Redemption," perhaps cinema's most celebrated friendship story. The bond between Andy Dufresne and Red develops over decades within prison walls, becoming a vessel for hope, resilience, and ultimately redemption. We examine how Roger Deakins' masterful cinematography reinforces these themes—from the warm golden light of the rooftop beer scene to the oversaturated freedom of their beach reunion. The film's patient storytelling allows this friendship to develop believably across years, making their eventual reunion one of cinema's most satisfying payoffs.

Whether fleeting or enduring, these cinematic friendships remind us that human connection is our greatest salvation. Subscribe now and join our conversation about the films that show us we're never truly alone.

Support the show

Denis Villeneuve Deep Dive | Sicario, Prisoners & Arrival | Reel Talk Ep 211 Sep 202501:29:31

🎬 Denis Villeneuve’s Dark Trilogy Explained | Prisoners, Sicario, & Arrival 🎥
Discover how Prisoners, Sicario, and Arrival form a gripping moral trilogy that redefined modern cinema. We break down the visuals, themes, and unforgettable performances that made Villeneuve a master storyteller.

Support the show

United 93, Air Force One & More | Reel Talk Ep. 1 The Best Airplane Movies?08 Sep 202501:11:38

From Character’s Welcome on YouTube the hilarious Justin Tyler scores 1970's Airplane, Writer/ Director/ Producer Lakeisha Jackson grades United 93, and Syd the Cinema Sloth scores 1997's Air Force One. 


Support the show

Welcome to Reel Talk!07 Sep 202500:00:44

Hi I'm Albert and thought I'd take a second to introduce myself.

Support the show

Wrestling On Film, From Beyond The Mat To The Iron Claw To The Wrestler09 Dec 202502:04:51

Three films pull back the curtain on wrestling’s spectacle and cost, from Beyond the Mat’s quotable grit to The Iron Claw’s family tragedy to The Wrestler’s aching final leap. We weigh authenticity, ethics, performance, and the economics that make pain profitable.

• how Beyond the Mat “works” the camera while catching real consequences
• Foley’s chair shots vs family fallout, and why the footage still stings
• Vince, control, and the line between creative and cruelty
• WWE’s late-90s valuation compared with TKO’s multibillion market cap
• Iron Claw as generational trauma and the danger of inherited dreams
• strong performances vs flat in-ring cinematography and tight budgets
• The Wrestler’s noir lens on loneliness, love of the pop, and choice
• Rourke and Tomei as parallel performers in exploitative markets
• indie tiers, cameos, and how sound sells every bump
• final grades for all three films and what the ring takes in return

Please leave a nice comment or five-star review and subscribe or Reel Talk is powered by Reel Digital
If you work for a brand or agency producing content, keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.reeldigital.media to see how your next campaign can come in ahead of schedule and under budget
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble to see all our A+ gear. 

Support Brandon Thurston at https://wrestlenomics.com

Follow @RosenbergWrestling on YouTube to see SGG and the entire crew https://www.greghydelaw.com/about https://www.youtube.com/@RosenbergWrestling

If you haven’t left a review by now, you might as well, and subscribe to the channel on YouTube as well as hit the bell icon to be notified when Real Talk drops!


Support the show

Silver Linings, Planes, Trains, And Knives Out28 Nov 202501:46:44

We grade three modern and classic crowd‑pleasers with a Thanksgiving lens, weighing plot, performance, and visual craft while asking what these films say about family, luck, and the American story. A sugar‑sweet guest brings cookies, a director brings fresh eyes, and a comedian brings knives and candied yams.

• Silver Linings Playbook as messy romance about mental health and hope
• why the middle sags but the parlay and dance stick the landing
• Lawrence’s breakout presence against Cooper’s restless drive
• camera moves that thrill and distract in equal measure
• soundtrack choices that frame trauma and momentum
• themes of addiction, superstition, and generational silence
• Planes Trains And Automobiles as slow‑build empathy engine
• Candy–Martin chemistry balancing annoyance and grace
• visual gags that date and delight, with savvy reveals
• sound and score as time capsule rather than showpiece
• sticktoitiveness, thankfulness, and choosing fellowship
• Knives Out as a portrait of privilege, class, and kindness
• production design dense with clues and metaphors
• metacasting: Bond, Captain America, and the American dream
• Anna de Armas grounding a mansion full of big choices
• final scoreboard with A‑range winners and honest B’s

Keith Kennedy: https://keithkennedy.me/
Matt Somerstein: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwRlAEqZ8QsICJ6NjuY3Z9g
If you work for a brand or agency producing content, keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.reeldigital.media.
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble for all our Reel Talk merch.
Let us know what movies you’d like to hear us score on Reel Talk.


Support the show

Bong Joon Ho: When Corporate Hypocrisy Meets Class Survival21 Nov 202501:42:54

We grade Okja, Mickey 17, and Parasite across plot, performances, visuals, sound, and theme, calling out where Bong Joon Ho soars and where the gears grind. Expect sharp takes, laughter at the absurd, and a scoreboard that might sting your favorites.

• Okja’s tone swings and ethical lines in activist tactics
• The Mija–Okja bond as the film’s emotional anchor
• The gold-pig finale and lost tension
• Mickey 17’s premise vs delivery and identity crisis
• Performances: Pattinson’s doubles, Ruffalo’s caricature
• Creature design, soundscapes, and world-building
• Parasite’s house as character and visual metaphor
• Rain, silence, framing, and how class reads on screen
• Themes of hypocrisy, survival, and corporate power
• Final grades and where each film lands on our scale

Please leave a nice comment or five-star review and subscribe to save the life of one magical pig hippo
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble to see all our A+ gear
FamiliarDesignStudio.com for site and branding help
Visit JeremyMcDaniel.com to book him for your next shoot

Thank you to JoeBelcastro.com 
Let us know what movies you’d like to hear us score on Real Talk


Support the show

Carpenter Scores, Slashes, and Satire12 Nov 202501:32:56

We grade three John Carpenter films with friends who don’t pull punches. One of us calls Halloween overrated, another crowns The Thing near-perfect, and They Live sparks a debate on satire versus spectacle and what “waking up” really means.

• how our rubric scores plot, performances, visuals, sound, themes
• Halloween’s pacing, thin character work, iconic camera language
• boogeyman myth versus desire for deeper lore
• They Live’s satire, wrestlers to actors, action drift mid-film
• corporate control, media manipulation, sellout culture
• The Thing’s ambiguity, practical effects, tension by design
• Dean Cundey’s cinematography across Carpenter’s work
• Morricone and Carpenter’s scores shaping genre sound
• final grades for each film and why they differ

Please leave a kind comment or review and subscribe so we know you're not an extraterrestrial
If you work for a brand or agency producing content, keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.realdigital.media to see how your next campaign can come in ahead of schedule and under budget
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble to see all our A Plus gear
Let us know what movies you'd like to hear us score on Real Talk


Support the show

Robert Eggers: From Folk Horror To Gothic Mastery03 Nov 202502:03:43

We grade three Robert Eggers films through plot, performance, visuals, sound, and theme, tracing his consistent style and evolving ambition. From folk horror to maritime madness to a lavish vampire tale, we show how light, language, and restraint turn fear into art.

• The Witch as blueprint for Eggers’ voice 
• Pride, paranoia, and repression fueling family collapse 
• Anya Taylor-Joy’s arc from shame to agency 
• Visual grammar: natural light, candle glow, symbolic frames 
• Sound as dread rather than melody 
• The Lighthouse as portrait of madness and limbo 
• Dafoe and Pattinson’s power swings and unreliable truth 
• Mythic threads: Prometheus, Proteus, sirens, Icarus 
• Nosferatu’s ensemble strength and expressionist lineage 
• Lily-Rose Depp’s physical performance and Orlok’s menace 
• Desire, control, and consequence as shared theme 
• Final grades and why “perfect” isn’t “for everyone”

See Christina's work at https://christinadobre.com/
Keep it reel by setting up a consultation at www.realdigital.media 
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble for all your Real Talk merch 
Dive into Joe Belcastro’s imagination at Joebelcastro.com


Support the show

Jordan Peele - When Horror Mirrors Us: Class, Race, And The Stories We Tell25 Oct 202501:44:50

We grade Jordan Peele’s three features in reverse, arguing where the films soar and where they sag. Sid questions coincidence-as-theme in Nope, Joe challenges the twist engine in Us, and Dom reframes Get Out through lived experience, shifting our scores in real time.

• reverse-order review of Nope, Us, Get Out
• plot logic versus genre tension
• visual symbols that promise payoff
• performances elevating thin characterization
• sound design as mood and motif
• the Sunken Place as a power metaphor
• class, race, and coded dialogue on screen
• when ambiguity earns mystery and when it doesn’t
• final letter grades and scoreboard

Quick, like this episode and send it to any lovers or haters of Jordan Peel
If you work for a brand or agency producing content, keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.realdigital.media to see how your next campaign can come in ahead of schedule and under budget
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble to see all our A gear
Please tell me what you graded each film in the comments, as I genuinely want to know
If you haven't left a like by now, you might as well and subscribe to the channel, as well as hit the bell icon to be notified when Real Talk drops each week


Support the show

How Shrek, Fast And The Furious, And Iron Man Set The Blueprint For Modern Blockbusters17 Oct 202501:31:39

We grade three franchise starters with fresh eyes: Shrek as a sharp fairy-tale remix, Fast and Furious as a hollow time capsule, and Iron Man as a grounded superhero blueprint that still hums. Scores fly, jokes land, and “family” gets put on trial.

• Shrek’s satire, performances, and message of self-acceptance
• DreamWorks visual style and pop soundtrack “rub”
• Fast and Furious plot holes and Point Break parallels
• Bravado, sincerity, and the thin “family” theme
• Time-capsule visuals, sloppy ADR, and dated songs
• Iron Man’s casting wins and Pepper–Tony chemistry
• Practical effects vs CGI in suit evolution
• Responsibility, guilt, and legacy as core themes
• Final scores and why they matter for franchises

Now, quick, leave a like, subscribe, and do you know the Muffin Man?
If you work for a brand or agency producing content, keep it real by setting up a consultation at www.realdigital.media
Want to stay in the loop? Just search Post Wrestling on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts and hit subscribe
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble by clicking the link in the description and see all our gear
If you haven’t left a like by now, you might as well, and subscribe to the channel as well as hit the bell icon to be notified when Real Talk drops every week


Support the show

From Accidental Comedy to Arctic Grit: Anaconda, The Revenant, and The Edge09 Oct 202501:34:28

Three films step into the wild and reveal how spectacle, myth, and morality reshape “man vs. nature.” We laugh through Anaconda, revere The Revenant, and wrestle with The Edge, then lock in scores that show where craft and theme truly land.

• accidental comedy value in Anaconda and why it still entertains
• representation and seeing Ice Cube in a mainstream jungle adventure
• CGI weight, POV choices, and ADR misses in Anaconda
• Voight’s camp villainy vs J‑Lo’s underwritten lead
• The Revenant as modern Western myth, nature as a spiritual force
• DiCaprio’s endurance and Hardy’s menace anchoring the arc
• long takes, focus pulling, and contrast imagery as visual grammar
• immersive natural sound, subtle gripes on foley and subtitles
• The Edge’s tight survival set‑pieces vs uneven third act
• class notes, over‑foreshadowing, and a morality play that wobbles
• final rubric scores and letter grades for all three films

Leave a like, subscribe to the channel, and hit the bell icon to be notified when Real Talk drops twice a week
Follow Platinum Plastic on Redbubble for Real Talk merch: “Platinum Plastic on Redbubble”
Set up a consultation at www.realdigital.media to keep your next campaign ahead of schedule and under budget
Tell us your grades for each film in the comments


Support the show

© My Podcast Data