AKAPAD the FILM BUFF Podcast
By AKAPAD
AKAPAD the FILM BUFF PodcastOct 30, 2019
#638 - Don't Worry Darling
Don't Worry Darling got the worst type of press before its release and what was lost was the general audience constructively looking at the film. In a different time the Olivia Wilde directed movie would have grown like wildfire throughout social media. Instead, we are left with AKAPAD THE FILM BUFF to rectify the situation and correct the course.
#637 Semi-Tough
1977's SEMI-TOUGH stars Burt Reynolds and Kris Kristofferson in a football comedy and shows off THE MAN of the sport, but it wants to be a bit more critical of marriage and see;f-help.This style of comedy would never be made today and because of that, we have to pay attention to this film.
#636 - Under The Silver Lake
Neo Noir is the filmmakers' playground and at times it's perfectly fine if it's weird, but if it's weird let it move and have all the right elements this however was missed by many critics. Under the Silver Lake is a fantastic fun movie by David Robert Mitchell that raises real questions about the world of LA and show business.
#635 - Number One - Charlton Heston
Charlton Heston stars as a New Orleans quarterback gradually approaching a mid-life crisis as his career nears its end. "Number One" didn't initially make AKAPAD's list of American Football films for discussion and review. However, this unexpected gem took him by surprise, delivering a compelling narrative possibly sponsored by the NFL itself.
#634- The Passenger - must be watched
Carter Smith has emerged as one of the premier young directors of our age. The Passenger is best described as a self-help movie dealing with the inflictions of the past portrayed through a violent depressing lens. The movie should be praised and heralded and because it's not mentioned in award season proves how broken this system is. AKAPAD the Film Buff champions this movie as pure cinema and nothing else.
#633 - We Are Marshall
We Are Marshall McG's 2006 overlooked Football powerhouse movie deserves attention not from a perfectly executed technical film but from what might be the most tragic plane crash scene ever put to film. We have an all-star cast in front of and behind the camera - this movie deserves your attention as it reveals that the sports genre unlocks what professionals can do in the film business.
#631 - North Dallas Forty - is the new GOAT Football movie
Once long ago Peter A DeLuca believed Oliver Stones' Any Given Sunday was the greatest football film of all time, North Dallas Forty has changed that opinion.
Killer Joe - has the greatest monologue of all time
Part of the Matthew McConaughey come back double feature (MUD being the other) Killer Joe showcases a dark hurt filled world with a small moment of hope. There are few movies like this.
#630 - The Martian
To AKAPAD The Film Buff The Martian solidifies Ridley Scott as the greatest filmmaker of all time. His career is long vast and winding. The Martian should not be as likable as it is, and that comes from the absolute skill of Matt Damon who deserved more attention for this role.
#629- Necessary Roughness
In 1991 the golden age of Football comedies ended this is a packed spectacle featuring some of the top young comedians of the day.
#628 - Rebel Moon
Do we live in an era where filmgoers have forgotten the slow-burn appeal almost every sci-fi movie has had?
#627 - The Creator
The Creator needed a bigger push at the box office and has not lit the internet on fire once it became available on HULU, why have audiences not adopted an original movie such as this?
#626 - Mission Impossible Dead Reckoning Part One
The greatest action movie franchise of all time is Mission Impossible and Dead Reckoning set's up the biggest one yet.
#625 - White Squall
White Squall is yet another film that showcases Ridley Scott's mastering of the elements and film production as a whole. When it comes to the difficulty of shooting at sea or replicating it White Squall is ahead of its time and never discussed when it comes to this point.
#624 - Godzilla Minus One
In this episode, AKAPAD the Film Buff answers the question should you go to see Godzilla Minus One?
#623 - Blue Beetle
James Gunn announced DC's Blue Beetle as episode one of the new DC Universe series. Finally, AKAPAD the Film Buff jumps into this movie with an open heart and open eyes. Is this the beginning of something much bigger?
#622 - The Other Guys - Thansflicking
The final film for 2023 that I'm thankful for is 2010's The Other Guys an absolute monster of a masterpiece.
#621 - Invincible for THANKSFLICKING
2006's Invincible introduced AKAPAD The Film Buff to the idea if a film needs to be great to be a well-directed movie. This thought is something not in any film conversation at all. Because of Invincible we now have to ask if only the great films are attached to the great directors.
#620 - 1492 Conquest of Paradise
1492 Conquest of Paradise solidifies an uncomfortable truth about Christopher Columbus. He is a monolith of heartbreak and tragedy. Ridley Scott directs an epic that missed the mark back in 1992 but today is far more impactful than ever.
#619 - Blackberry
Blackberry is one movie of a new Hollywood trend, the business bio-pic. As trends unfold we get a spectrum of styles, takes, and visions, we have intense performances in the depiction of a company that should have never gone away. Blackberry asks basic questions and speaks to the big picture. This is an ironic fiery piece that teaches as much as it rocks.
#618 - Varsity Blues - THANKSFLICKING
The second Thanksflicking film is here. Hear the hopes and dreams of the greatest high school football sage we have.
#617 - Last Of The Mohicans - THE BEST FILM OF 1992
Your Film Buff had an absolute crisis when watching the 1992 Michael Mann The Last of the Mohicans, this crisis exploded the fallacy of little attention this film received during Oscar season and that it has not resonated as a complete masterpiece.
MARVEL 616 - An MCU Rant
The Marvel Cinematic Universe is in trouble and the mainstream media has finally caught up to it. Here Peter A DeLuca AKAPAD dares to shed some light on the causes of the possible decline of the biggest film brand Hollywood has ever seen.
Reptile from Netflix
If Reptile were released in the early 2000's it would have taken over the box office for a month. Unfortunately, we live in a world of broken criticism and unrealistic expectations, which reveals the mission of Peter A DeLuca the Film Buff Podcast. To bring all of you a true take on modern cinema.
The Vampire Diaries - Day 31 of the 31 Days of Dread
With one of the biggest comebacks in Hollywood history The Vampire Diaries 171 forms Kevin Willaimson into legendary status. The appeal and execution of this show are to be studied and recorded.
Talk To Me - Day 30 of the 31 Days of Dread
Talk to Me (2022) is a perfect horror movie. With that said it is a road addition to the 31 Days of Dread and further proof that 2022 is the greatest year of Horror.
Insidious Red Door - Day 29 of the 31 Days of Dread
As a fifth installment Insidious The Red Door works fantastically as a time-jump sequel, to the first movie. Patrick Wilson comes in and directs a well-paced atmospheric struggle of father and son forgiving one another.
Five Nights at Freddy's - Day 28 of the 31 Days of Dread
Five Nights at Freddy's solidifies the birth of a new horror genre, the murderous musical animatronic creature movie, and most likely in this case a series of them.
Read here.
Five Nights at Freddy's movie brawl
https://news.yahoo.com/watch-brawl-breaks-during-early-220242387.html
Casper - Day 27 of the 31 Days of Dread
Casper might be the most overlooked big-budget film that came out of the 90's.
Dracula's Draughter - Day 26 of the 31 Days of Dread
Dracula's Daughter is one of the greatest sequels of all time.
Frankenstein Meets Wolfman - Day 25 of the 31 Days of Dread
Frankenstein Meets Wolfman - Day 25 of the 31 Days of Dread
Man-Thing - Day 24 of the 31 Days of Dread
Man-Thing is an overlooked straight-to-video superhero horror film that the entire film-going world has forgotten. Well, it's a good thing Peter A DeLuca AKAPAD the Film Buff is here to shed some light on this flick.
Swamp Thing - Day 23 of the 31 Days of Dread
Swamp Thing was once DC Comics' crown jewel of adaptations the tragedy is that the character never shattered the mainstream.
Goosebumps - Day 22 of the 31 Days of Dread
There is no greater horror franchise than Goosebumps, but that does not mean adapting R.L. Stine's powerhouse is an easy task.
Monster High - Day 21 of the 31 Days of Dread
2022's Nickelodeon Monster High is so freaking fun and cute it forces you to want more and makes you ponder where this film lies on the Mount Rushmore of great toy line adaptations?
Scream 6 - Day 20 of the 31 Days of Dread
Jason Voorhees went to the big city, now it's time for Ghost Face to have some action in the city.
I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer - Day 19 of the 31 Days of Dread
I Know What You Did Last Summer proposes an interesting question when it gets two sequels? How do we take this concept further? I'll Always Know answers that question with a pivot that turns off the audience......but is that the real problem?
Slotherhouse - Day 18 of the 31 Days of Dread
Matthew Goodhue delivers a super fun self-aware creature feature with the right amount of social commentary making it an absolutely worthy edition of the 31 Days of Dread.
Winnie the Pooh Blood and Honey - Day 17 of the 31 Days of Dread
Winnie the Pooh Blood and Honey breaks the mold on an idea that can excite the internet. the overall expectations of this movie may have killed the initial reviews but that's their problem, here on the Film Buff's podcast we look at movies with a critical eye.
Corrections:
* I misspoke of the title of this film and referred to it as "Blood Honey" and not Blood and Honey
** The budget for this movie is 100k
Sleepaway Camp - Day 16 of the 31 ays of Dread
Psycho inspired the twist horror ending but did it perfect it? Sleepaway Camp makes a real argument on what is horror's greatest twist ending.
Prom Night - Day 15 of the 31 Days of Dread
Prom Night spends a ton of time building up the characters and relationships before the slaughter. This is a well-directed movie from the early days of slasher films.
Frankenweenie - Day 14 of the 31 Days of Dread
Frankenweenie is the greatest feat in stop-and-go animation we have seen. Tim Burton shocks in this forgotten animated masterpiece.
Frankenweenie 1984 - DAY 13 of the 31 DAYS OF DREAD
In 1984 Tim Burton may have directed the greatest short film ever and Disney fired him for it.
Pet Sematary Two - Day 12 of the 31 Days of Dread
Pet Sematary Two may be guilty of trying too hard.
Pet Sematary - Day 11 of the 31 Days of Dread
Pet Sematary 1989 is the gold standard of Stephen King adaptations. This story is as imaginative as scary and isn't afraid to smash ideas together resulting in a film that sticks to you. This movie is everything that makes horror so much fun to watch.
Drive Angry - Day 10 of the 31 Days of Dread
Drive Angry comes to use from a movie boom we all have forgotten. The 3D movie era inspired by James Cameron's Avatar produced an insanely fun, violent, sexual, and flat-out poignant. Drive Angry's intent is rich and meaningful, the point of this movie is something to be studied.
Highway to Hell -Day 9 of the 31 Days of Dread
1992's Highway to Hell was an absolute education and a delight for AKAPAD The Film Buff. This film was only slightly remembered, even before his viewing the movie's title escaped him, and he only remembered the Zombie Cop villain. Highway to Hell is one of the most visual movies left out of the great things you can do with 8m conversations.
Munchies - Day 8 of the 31 Days of Dread
This path of enlightenment is Gremlins, Critters, Munchies. This is your trinity of 80's little horrible monster fun.
Critters - Day 7 of the 31 Days Of Dread
With its clear inspiration from Gremlins, Critters is a clear front-runner of the genre of horror it inspired. Critters is a film of its own and deserves all the attention it gets.
Mightnight 1982 - Day 6 of the 31 Days of Dread
Movies like Midnight 1982 challenge how we look at them. Meaning what must we expect if we are to expect anything at all? For time and money spent where is the level of entertainment we sit down to receive?
Midnight 1982 is available here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LB3Xvr3PX3A&t=1368s