My stomach hurts now from laughing so hard. I’m literally watching this in a doctor’s office, so he may think I have bad allergies because of my tears from this hilarity. 🤣🤣🤣
As one of the filmmakers of Unwelcome (VFX supervisor) - thank you! I enjoyed the hell out of the podcast, and I think you are spot on in your comments. The Redcaps were, indeed, mostly practical. We shot with a great team of normal-sized stunt performers, filmed either in double-sized sets, or on bluescreen. Some maths was involved in calculating cameras positions to make them appear small! Especially tricky, with a moving camera...They were also filmed sped up a little, to give them a creepy scuttling motion. In most cases, where you see a face - the face is all CGI. So really, it's a good mix of quite complex cutting edge digital work and old school physical work.
That's amazing! I loved the film and was very surprised when Jamie Lee O'Donnell played aisling, she's from the same town as me, which there is a very popular show here called derry girls, she was one of the main cast and she also was in the same class as my sister in school, absolutely lovely woman! If you ever get a chance to meet her you'll love her to bits 😂 glad to see she's doing well, also, fun fact one of her Co stars was patty in the god awful flash movie
Then Chelsea proceeds to try and talk more about the poop stick/poop knife and James trying to get the podcast back on track meanwhile Graessele is dying of laughter is the best. 🤣
As an Irishman I feel obligated to tell you James was right on how he pronounced Aishling. It's not pronounced the same as Ashley. That correction was painful to hear take place
Now I'm getting this image of the couple looking at house blueprints with all the Red Caps in construction worker gear, discussing the repairs that need to be done.
I'm going a class in college on Monsters and Magic, and we talk a lot about similar creatures across many cultures. A main constant in a lot of cultures is a boogeyman like figure, ghosts or spirits, dragonic creatures, and vampirism of some kind. It goes into kinda base fears of the dark, the dead, snakes/reptiles, the unknown, diseases, and a creature consuming you. Weird little guys are usually meant to explain things going missing or something like weird events or deaths. We haven't talked about Bigfoot like creatures yet as cryptids are later in the class, we're in the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance Edit: our prof mentioned we're talking about monsters in horror films and I offered my horror history books(she accepted) for her to scan and use for the class.
My culture has Haunchyville. Weird little people but they don't explain anything they cut your legs off from the knees down if you intrude into their village.
My dad helped write this movie (he is credited on one of the gravestones, Laurence Doherty, who I think is supposed to be the husband of Maeve) and this is so awesome. I’ve watched dead meat for years and this is pretty surreal because this movie is relatively personal
That part destroyed me lol as did the subsequent calling of the character “Ashley” 🫠 I love them all but mispronunciation frustrates me endlessly especially when it’s so easy to look it up instead of guessing 😅
The thing Chelsea says about how artifical the movie looks is one of the reasons i like Tim Burtons „Sleepy Hollow“ so much. Nothing in that movie looks authentic, except from the opening credits montage, but that somehow hightens the reality. Like in these fake woods it makes sense to be a headlless ghost hunting people.
@@robertwilcox5724That’s the movies! Everyone ignores the writer. 😂 (And to be fair, they have replied further below in the comments). Also, the VFX supervisor has also left a comment, and those folks get even less credit than the writers!😁
@@NeonPlanesYeap. In the uk there’s actually English, Irish, Welsh and Scottish Gaelic. I work at a school in Birmingham and we have two Irish teachers who are bilingual in English and Irish and have qualifications in Irish. My boyfriend is also semi fluent in Scots. There’s a lot of arguments about the nuance between other versions but there’s a language for each part of the uk. And they are on all duolingo.
@@NeonPlanesits not widely used. Its taught in school, signposts have it, official documents have an Irish version but almost everyone speaks english except for certain small rural areas known as Gaeltachs. It also doesn't really sound like english except for Bearlachas which is when an english word is adapted into like tábla, meaning table, instead of the more authentic bord, but which one is more wudely used depends on the canúint which is best decribed as an accent if accents actually changed grammar and vocab a bit. Some other words also are sorta half bearlachas like teicneolaíocht, meaning technology, where the tech bit has sorta been carried over from english but the rest follows how other similar words are formed.
@@NeonPlanesWelsh as a surname, ironically, isn’t really a Welsh thing, it’s more likely to be an Anglicised version of the German Welch/Welsch (and its variants). There’s a possibility that you had an ancestor who moved to England and was called ‘the Welshman’ so much the name stuck, but it’s not as likely (especially if you’re American/Canadian, much more likely to be a case of a German ancestor changing the name to be easier to spell for English speakers). Welsh/Wales are English words applied to the people/country. Back when surnames were becoming fixed most Welsh people would have spoken Welsh only, meaning they’d have been Cymry speaking Cymraeg in Cymru. Wouldn’t really have applied Welsh to themselves unless speaking to the English. The history of actual Welsh surnames is quite interesting, really, they were mostly based on patronymics, so you’d have “ap/ab (dad’s name)” for sons, and “ferch (dad’s name)” for daughters, so “Llewellyn ap Gruffudd” is Llewelyn son of Gruffudd, “Myfanwy ferch Morgan” would be Myfanwy daughter of Morgan etc. You’d also get people named after their nicknames a lot, so you might have Dai Goch to refer to a guy called David with red hair; Dai Fawr to refer to a particular large/impressive guy called David; Dai Saes to refer to a David who could speak/was part English. Sometimes the nicknames would be related to places important to the person, like someone from Glamorgan could be called Hywel Morgannwg; Owain Glyndŵr, the last real Prince of Wales, his surname means something like Valley of Water. Then you’d have people named for their profession, though I think we did that less than the English. That’s why most Welsh surnames are things like Morgan, Howell, Jones, Davis, they’re patronymics that were turned into general surnames when England decided that was a better system than the way we’d always done it. Then you’ve got names like Price, Powell, and Bowen, which come from squishing the two parts of the old style surnames together (ap Rhys became Price, ap Hywel became Powell, ab Owen became Bowen). So yeah, there’s a possibility that somewhere in your family tree you’ve a Welsh person who left the country and had everyone around them refuse to refer to them as anything other than ‘Welsh’, but it’s not what would traditionally be considered a Welsh surname.
I thought this film looked rubbish from the trailer, but watched it last night in preparation for the podcast. I actually thought it was pretty good! It wasn't at all what I was expecting. Regretting listening to this in the office. I nearly passed out trying to hold in laughter at the poop knife conversation.
This and The Last Voyage of Demeter really got me back into watching you guys! I love how cozy, funny, and informational this podcast is! I am excited for this October!
Now I'm slowly remembering about a cartoon show named Sanjay and Craig. They went to the punk rock siblings house. There was a poop knife in bathroom. I think it was implied that the poop knife was also the regular kitchen knife. I think dinner was meatloaf.
Do I remember Sanjay and Craig? Yeah Do I remember this specific joke? No Is that something that would get put in an episode of Sanjay and Craig? Abso-fuckin-loutely.
To be fair, O'Brien is the outlier when it comes to his roles. Nearly everything else I've seen him in has been as a heavy. Which he's really good at. Colm Meanie is like the Irish Margo Martindale.
RE: Universal folkklore/cryptids, sea serpents are another great example. Every culture with a hisorical access to large bodies of water has tales of localized sea serpents (like Nessie).
I started watching this podcast, then stopped to go watch the movie (I remember seeing the trailer for it years back but I never watched it)... Man, I needed to this episode to detox from that batshit crazy movie. It was good, but dark as hell. It's rare to see a movie with this unique a story anymore, but I was hooked when Colm Meaney *demanded* to be called "daddy" 😂Ending went a little off the rails for me, but still a thumbs up overall.
Can you guys return to the kaiju genre in some manner on the podcast, especially with Minus One having a lot of Dead Meat Award nominations and the new Godzilla X Kong movie coming in March?
I'm so glad that this movie is getting a podcast episode, I was hoping it would've been one of the nominees for best practical effects because those Goblins look amazing, and the Set design on their home was awesome I'd say this was one of the most underrated movies of last year it was so much fun and just one of those cozy Horror movies
so happy you guys are reviewing this movie, I think it’s an underrated gem from this year! while i was watching, i couldn’t help but thinking chelsea would love these little goblin goobers
I’m in my second viewing of this movie. I really like it. I very much appreciate practical effects. Also really like Hannah John-Kamen. She was great as Jill Valentine and I’m so happy she got so much screen time here. Douglas Booth will always remind me of Pride & Prejudice & Zombies.
In my head cannon, they track the attackers from the beginning down and anonymously invite them for a free trip. Queen of the Redcaps gets her revenge.
As a Star Trek fan. Yeah Colm played Miles, who is one of the loveliest, most put upon, characters in Trek. It actually results in like the reverse of James & Chelseas reactions to him playing a nice person. I see him so much as Miles, that even in a movie like this I can't hate the character because it's freaking Miles O'Brien.
Y’all should 10000% watch Derry Girls, it’s so good! And it’s such an easy watch as well! It’s only 3 seasons and they’re short seasons as well. I’ve literally watched it like 10 times ❤
39:40 "DO WE‽‽‽" The incredulity, shock, and gnawing horror in James' voice at the remote possibility that Chelsea has been harboring (and using) a possible Poop Knife in their home is what makes this scene go from hilarious to incredible.
Go anywhere north of Midland in Michigan and you'll see hundreds of thousands of the "New Deal Era" trees James mentioned. The CCC planted sooooo many, all in perfect rows, all super skinny but incredibly tall.
Right at like an hour in you guys randomly bring up the latest vhs movie, and then I'm reminded of how bummed I am you haven't covered them on the pod or a kill count yet! V/h/s series soon puhhhleeeaaase!
15:30 Universal Concepts across mythology: Dragons, Yetis, short a-holes, the afterlife, the list goes on. It is said that it is harder to find differences in beliefs than similarities because some uncanny valley type stuff
I loved this movie. Throughout the whole thing I got this same vibe, from start to finish. This movie feels like it was written and supposed to be made in the mid 80s, but for some reason, it was shelved. And then all these years later, they decided to make the movie. I had fun the whole time, the cinemas experience was great
Universal ocean cryptids are what keep me humble, everytime we go down there we seem to find something we thought not possible. I have no doubt that monsters lurk beneath those depths.
Here's why washing machines go in the kitchen: British houses for the most part do not have utility rooms. We have a kitchen, living room, bedrooms, bathroom. That's it. If you're very fancy, a dining room. There's no electricity outlet in the bathroom because water and electricity do not mix. And we don't have basements. The kitchen is literally the only place for them.
Colm Meany is the focal point of one of the most interesting premises for an episode of a tv show. During a mission, his character gets judged guilty for a crime by a society that injects memories of a lifetime of imprisonment as punishment. The entire episode is him dealing with the fallout of having these fake memories and what happens in them. Crazy, lovable guy in Star Trek. If in this, he's like in Layer Cake. Yup. He can be NASTY. He's got a bit of John Lithgow villain edge (as well as the range)
I love Irish horror movies, so I have to recommend Let Us Prey. It’s sooooo good and you can’t say no to a horror movie with Liam Cunningham. Also recently watched Moloch. Great Dutch folk horror on Shudder. I have no idea how I missed it.
I recommend two things! First, please play the Faith games on stream! They’re full of references and are so much fun! Second, the creator of Faith, Airdorf, would definitely come on the podcast!
the movie “looking fake” gave me the vibes of like mythological movies from the 80s that my high school mythology teacher would play when she didnt feel like teaching lol
This is random but for the Heinz beans. Go to World Market, they should have a location nearish you or you could get them delivered. I used to work there and they would sell the Heinz beans..I hated stacking them. Our British customers would buy them by the caseload. Also used to carry mushy peas and all the stuff they loved.
The main actress in this movie was in a show called Killjoys that I absolutely loved, now that I know her horror movie character gets a good ending, I'm definitely giving it a watch!
I would absolutely love to see y'all do a podcast about Clive Barker's Nightbreed. It's such an underrated horror film and I highly recommend it to anyone who is a fan of Clive Barker and/or Danny Elfman. Also the whole subject of poop knife had me laughing until I was slapping my knee and couldn't breathe.
I know it'd be tough and obviously late on the podcast but with how much it's gotten mentioned I'd love a Totally Killer podcast episode. It's a bummer that and this film didn't get nommed but I'm glad both James and Chelsea recognize them still.
I hope when the new season of survivor begins you guys give your thoughts on the episode a bit in the beginning cause I love hearing you guys talk about it
I loved this movie when it came out, I was lucky enough to catch the unlimited screening last year and I remember it becoming an instant favourite. I was looking for similar style movies and ended up watching The Hallow on Shudder which had a similar narrative but a completely different atmosphere/themes but still folkish which is worth checking out possibly😊
No joke, my friend had bad plumbing in her house growing up and they had an old kitchen spatula that lived in the bathroom. They called it the "turd cutter" 😂
i have not seen the movie but i like to think the little guys are going to help with the housework that the husband was like struggling to do idk. maybe the real treasure (the redcaps) was the friends (masculinity) we made along the way.
I like how they live in LA with so much great food at their door step, and Chelsea is trying to order some dank ass old can beans from the UK. Lol icon status.
The Jameses learning about poop knife lore on air is so funny im dying
@@NeonPlanesomg I thought I was the only one! I remember someone saying it’s like inflicting poison damage lol 😂😂
39:00 ish…. You’re welcome 😅
Gressel's (sp) reaction to it being a knife instead of a stick killed me
I guess sometimes you've gotta shank a turd.
My stomach hurts now from laughing so hard. I’m literally watching this in a doctor’s office, so he may think I have bad allergies because of my tears from this hilarity. 🤣🤣🤣
As one of the filmmakers of Unwelcome (VFX supervisor) - thank you! I enjoyed the hell out of the podcast, and I think you are spot on in your comments. The Redcaps were, indeed, mostly practical. We shot with a great team of normal-sized stunt performers, filmed either in double-sized sets, or on bluescreen. Some maths was involved in calculating cameras positions to make them appear small! Especially tricky, with a moving camera...They were also filmed sped up a little, to give them a creepy scuttling motion. In most cases, where you see a face - the face is all CGI. So really, it's a good mix of quite complex cutting edge digital work and old school physical work.
Such a well made film!
That's amazing! I loved the film and was very surprised when Jamie Lee O'Donnell played aisling, she's from the same town as me, which there is a very popular show here called derry girls, she was one of the main cast and she also was in the same class as my sister in school, absolutely lovely woman! If you ever get a chance to meet her you'll love her to bits 😂 glad to see she's doing well, also, fun fact one of her Co stars was patty in the god awful flash movie
Of course I met her. I was on set... working out how to get her disembowelled with a breadknife... She's great. ;)@@flawless_indica9661
Chelsea bringing up poop stick and it literally stopping the podcast in its tracks is so fucking funny 😂😂
Then Chelsea proceeds to try and talk more about the poop stick/poop knife and James trying to get the podcast back on track meanwhile Graessele is dying of laughter is the best. 🤣
That story, as gross as it is, was the hardest I laughed this entire week. The execution and reactions made it even better. 😂
@@victoriastark569 yeah that story was gross but same I laughed so hard with the guys like What!!!🤣
@@aarongaray2595 I laughed so hard I hurt myself. 🤣
I love that she goes "oh no its worse" when she realizeses she misremembered and it is actually a knife. God, it was so funny.
The poop knife detour was the best thing ever I'm dying at work right now 🤣
39:37 "You guys don't have a poop stick?"
SHE SAID IT! SHE SAID THE LINE!
James's pure outrage, and Chelsea's glee, at the poop knife story added a few years to my life 😂
James' face learning Irish is also a language was priceless 😭😭
Slightly offended XD
As an Irishman I feel obligated to tell you James was right on how he pronounced Aishling. It's not pronounced the same as Ashley. That correction was painful to hear take place
And the pronunciation of Whelan 😂
I love the name Aishling, and I cringed at that part 😅
i kept saying this like if i kept saying it they'd hear me i'd be able to relax and finish the video 😂😂
My friend group can't stop quoting "NO HITTING, SILLY BILLY"
I had to pause the movie I was cracking up too friggin much
57:01 Chelsea's little guy voice absolutely BROKE me!!
Love how there's always a certain cadence when Chelsea says "little guys". It's so cute and funny.
Now I'm getting this image of the couple looking at house blueprints with all the Red Caps in construction worker gear, discussing the repairs that need to be done.
I'm going a class in college on Monsters and Magic, and we talk a lot about similar creatures across many cultures. A main constant in a lot of cultures is a boogeyman like figure, ghosts or spirits, dragonic creatures, and vampirism of some kind. It goes into kinda base fears of the dark, the dead, snakes/reptiles, the unknown, diseases, and a creature consuming you. Weird little guys are usually meant to explain things going missing or something like weird events or deaths. We haven't talked about Bigfoot like creatures yet as cryptids are later in the class, we're in the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance
Edit: our prof mentioned we're talking about monsters in horror films and I offered my horror history books(she accepted) for her to scan and use for the class.
My culture has Haunchyville. Weird little people but they don't explain anything they cut your legs off from the knees down if you intrude into their village.
This is what I wanted to know, meanwhile half the comments are about goddamn poop knives. (Even though it is hilarious)
Coolest class ever
My dad helped write this movie (he is credited on one of the gravestones, Laurence Doherty, who I think is supposed to be the husband of Maeve) and this is so awesome. I’ve watched dead meat for years and this is pretty surreal because this movie is relatively personal
Obsessed with the energy Chelsea is bringing today
36:15 Aisling is pronounced Ashling, not Ashley
That part destroyed me lol as did the subsequent calling of the character “Ashley” 🫠 I love them all but mispronunciation frustrates me endlessly especially when it’s so easy to look it up instead of guessing 😅
also Colm is pronounced Collum
@@huimang94 what made me laugh is they got the difficult part right (ais ≈ ash) and screwed up the bit that follows English pronunciation 😂😂
God it hurt to hear them say it right and then get "corrected" lmao
I was screaming at my phone. 😂
I can't believe "poop knife" made it to air 🤣 I've never been so happy a conversation detour survived editing
The thing Chelsea says about how artifical the movie looks is one of the reasons i like Tim Burtons „Sleepy Hollow“ so much. Nothing in that movie looks authentic, except from the opening credits montage, but that somehow hightens the reality. Like in these fake woods it makes sense to be a headlless ghost hunting people.
“I thought the Irish just spoke English” James I wouldn’t drive your car for a few weeks 😭
😂
ah lads not again
The historically accurate warning is what did it for me.
Thanks so much for this, folks! Spot on analysis. Loved it. (I'm the writer!)
Im honestly shocked no one has really acknowledged the writer of the story commented on this
@@robertwilcox5724That’s the movies! Everyone ignores the writer. 😂 (And to be fair, they have replied further below in the comments). Also, the VFX supervisor has also left a comment, and those folks get even less credit than the writers!😁
The poop knife derail was legendary
36:40 “Irish is a language?” lmfaoooo I love honesty in this day and age!!!!
@@NeonPlanesYeap. In the uk there’s actually English, Irish, Welsh and Scottish Gaelic. I work at a school in Birmingham and we have two Irish teachers who are bilingual in English and Irish and have qualifications in Irish. My boyfriend is also semi fluent in Scots. There’s a lot of arguments about the nuance between other versions but there’s a language for each part of the uk. And they are on all duolingo.
This whole podcast had such good bits 😂
@@Pippa87 And Cornish, don't forget Cornish
@@NeonPlanesits not widely used. Its taught in school, signposts have it, official documents have an Irish version but almost everyone speaks english except for certain small rural areas known as Gaeltachs. It also doesn't really sound like english except for Bearlachas which is when an english word is adapted into like tábla, meaning table, instead of the more authentic bord, but which one is more wudely used depends on the canúint which is best decribed as an accent if accents actually changed grammar and vocab a bit. Some other words also are sorta half bearlachas like teicneolaíocht, meaning technology, where the tech bit has sorta been carried over from english but the rest follows how other similar words are formed.
@@NeonPlanesWelsh as a surname, ironically, isn’t really a Welsh thing, it’s more likely to be an Anglicised version of the German Welch/Welsch (and its variants). There’s a possibility that you had an ancestor who moved to England and was called ‘the Welshman’ so much the name stuck, but it’s not as likely (especially if you’re American/Canadian, much more likely to be a case of a German ancestor changing the name to be easier to spell for English speakers).
Welsh/Wales are English words applied to the people/country. Back when surnames were becoming fixed most Welsh people would have spoken Welsh only, meaning they’d have been Cymry speaking Cymraeg in Cymru. Wouldn’t really have applied Welsh to themselves unless speaking to the English.
The history of actual Welsh surnames is quite interesting, really, they were mostly based on patronymics, so you’d have “ap/ab (dad’s name)” for sons, and “ferch (dad’s name)” for daughters, so “Llewellyn ap Gruffudd” is Llewelyn son of Gruffudd, “Myfanwy ferch Morgan” would be Myfanwy daughter of Morgan etc.
You’d also get people named after their nicknames a lot, so you might have Dai Goch to refer to a guy called David with red hair; Dai Fawr to refer to a particular large/impressive guy called David; Dai Saes to refer to a David who could speak/was part English. Sometimes the nicknames would be related to places important to the person, like someone from Glamorgan could be called Hywel Morgannwg; Owain Glyndŵr, the last real Prince of Wales, his surname means something like Valley of Water. Then you’d have people named for their profession, though I think we did that less than the English.
That’s why most Welsh surnames are things like Morgan, Howell, Jones, Davis, they’re patronymics that were turned into general surnames when England decided that was a better system than the way we’d always done it. Then you’ve got names like Price, Powell, and Bowen, which come from squishing the two parts of the old style surnames together (ap Rhys became Price, ap Hywel became Powell, ab Owen became Bowen).
So yeah, there’s a possibility that somewhere in your family tree you’ve a Welsh person who left the country and had everyone around them refuse to refer to them as anything other than ‘Welsh’, but it’s not what would traditionally be considered a Welsh surname.
I thought this film looked rubbish from the trailer, but watched it last night in preparation for the podcast. I actually thought it was pretty good! It wasn't at all what I was expecting.
Regretting listening to this in the office. I nearly passed out trying to hold in laughter at the poop knife conversation.
Definitely better than what I was led to believe.. I enjoyed the film immensely.
This and The Last Voyage of Demeter really got me back into watching you guys! I love how cozy, funny, and informational this podcast is! I am excited for this October!
Thank you for the heart! I love you guys!
Now I'm slowly remembering about a cartoon show named Sanjay and Craig.
They went to the punk rock siblings house.
There was a poop knife in bathroom.
I think it was implied that the poop knife was also the regular kitchen knife.
I think dinner was meatloaf.
Do I remember Sanjay and Craig? Yeah
Do I remember this specific joke? No
Is that something that would get put in an episode of Sanjay and Craig? Abso-fuckin-loutely.
Can we get a moment to appreciate how much of a good dog Molly is? Good Girl!
As a Star Trek fan it's hilarious to hear what they said about Colm
To be fair, O'Brien is the outlier when it comes to his roles. Nearly everything else I've seen him in has been as a heavy. Which he's really good at. Colm Meanie is like the Irish Margo Martindale.
@@KentuckyKaiju even in his role for an episode of Doctor Who, (for the life of me I can't remember the character's name), he's the villain.
Chelsea continuing the tradition of talking about poop in the podcast, love it!
Her love of the human centipede continues to make more and more sense lol
I don't think I've ever seen James J. or heard James G. laugh so goddamn hard in my entire time being a fan. This was beautiful.
RE: Universal folkklore/cryptids, sea serpents are another great example. Every culture with a hisorical access to large bodies of water has tales of localized sea serpents (like Nessie).
39:15 the best poop conversation ever held on the podcast
I started watching this podcast, then stopped to go watch the movie (I remember seeing the trailer for it years back but I never watched it)... Man, I needed to this episode to detox from that batshit crazy movie. It was good, but dark as hell. It's rare to see a movie with this unique a story anymore, but I was hooked when Colm Meaney *demanded* to be called "daddy" 😂Ending went a little off the rails for me, but still a thumbs up overall.
As the aunt of young children, I now tell them "No hitting, Silly Billy " in the creepy redcap voice. It's hilarious.
Can you guys return to the kaiju genre in some manner on the podcast, especially with Minus One having a lot of Dead Meat Award nominations and the new Godzilla X Kong movie coming in March?
Agreeeeeeeeeddd!!!! 🦖🦖🦖
I feel like the problem is that there are only three clear-cut horror movies in the Godzilla series: the original, Shin, and Minus One.
@@weirdguy1495 1985, aka the return of godzilla, is also in the horror category imo
Holy crap there is so much to be excited about! A podcast with all 4 host of Dead Meat!!
I'm so glad that this movie is getting a podcast episode, I was hoping it would've been one of the nominees for best practical effects because those Goblins look amazing, and the Set design on their home was awesome
I'd say this was one of the most underrated movies of last year it was so much fun and just one of those cozy Horror movies
The Goblins are a mix of practical and CG.
The Oldest View by Kane Pixels! hearing yall talk about how this came to be would be awesome
I loved it up until the reveal of the thing, felt the same way with the backrooms. I just want to explore them!
so happy you guys are reviewing this movie, I think it’s an underrated gem from this year! while i was watching, i couldn’t help but thinking chelsea would love these little goblin goobers
And yes, Maeve was a deliberate choice. As was Maya (which means Mother).
Oh wow! The writer himself! I hope you enjoyed our loving (and sometimes unhinged) video on your great film!
I loved it. You totally got it. Thank you! Made my day. 😊
I’m in my second viewing of this movie. I really like it. I very much appreciate practical effects.
Also really like Hannah John-Kamen. She was great as Jill Valentine and I’m so happy she got so much screen time here. Douglas Booth will always remind me of Pride & Prejudice & Zombies.
Colm Meaney played Chief Miles O'Brien, the Most Important Person in Starfleet History.
Did you see the bit where someone interviewed him and told him of that scene? His reaction was so adorable.
"Finally someone got it right"
And a Union man, which James and Chelsea should appreciate!
Even as a statue he's chained to that console
I’ve never seen any of them laugh this hard. Especially James. I love that it was at fucking poop knife
LA James and Chelsea Rhodes. Love the energy you two, and thanks for all your content week after week, month after month, year after year!
As a massive knitwear nerd, I could not stop admiring Chelsea's sweater!
In my head cannon, they track the attackers from the beginning down and anonymously invite them for a free trip. Queen of the Redcaps gets her revenge.
James: let me talk to ya
Me : yeeeeaaahhhh
I was waiting for the yeah
I understood that reference
Two wrestling references before the 5 minute "mark" popped me
Thanks!
I love Chelsea so much and the poop stick story just added to it 😭😂
As a Star Trek fan. Yeah Colm played Miles, who is one of the loveliest, most put upon, characters in Trek.
It actually results in like the reverse of James & Chelseas reactions to him playing a nice person.
I see him so much as Miles, that even in a movie like this I can't hate the character because it's freaking Miles O'Brien.
Seeing him as the bad guy really threw me too, since I had only seen him in Star Trek.
The poop stick/knife bot had me on the floor DYING 😂😂😂 THISis why I love this podcast!
Y’all should 10000% watch Derry Girls, it’s so good! And it’s such an easy watch as well! It’s only 3 seasons and they’re short seasons as well. I’ve literally watched it like 10 times ❤
39:22 Poo Stick
40:52 detour for the win❤
41:15 James gets to learn
39:40 "DO WE‽‽‽"
The incredulity, shock, and gnawing horror in James' voice at the remote possibility that Chelsea has been harboring (and using) a possible Poop Knife in their home is what makes this scene go from hilarious to incredible.
Thank you sooooo much for the poop stick/knife detour! HAHAHAHA! Cleared up the depression for a bit ❤
Podcast: Occuring as normal
Chelsea and Poop Knife: hold my beer
Let's gooooo! Best move in recent times! You all are the best humans for making this podcast. Christmas 2024 came wayyyyyy early.
OMG ! I was really hoping you would do Unwelcome on the podcast - saw it last year, me and my byf were big fans🌟can’t wait to dig into this episode❤️
Go anywhere north of Midland in Michigan and you'll see hundreds of thousands of the "New Deal Era" trees James mentioned. The CCC planted sooooo many, all in perfect rows, all super skinny but incredibly tall.
Right at like an hour in you guys randomly bring up the latest vhs movie, and then I'm reminded of how bummed I am you haven't covered them on the pod or a kill count yet!
V/h/s series soon puhhhleeeaaase!
40:40 NONONONONO WE'RE NOT POOP-STICK DOOTOURING. WE'RE NOT TAKING A DETOUR FOR THE POOP STICK, HON! PUT THAT PHONE DOWN! - James A Janise, 2024
15:30 Universal Concepts across mythology: Dragons, Yetis, short a-holes, the afterlife, the list goes on. It is said that it is harder to find differences in beliefs than similarities because some uncanny valley type stuff
I loved this movie. Throughout the whole thing I got this same vibe, from start to finish. This movie feels like it was written and supposed to be made in the mid 80s, but for some reason, it was shelved. And then all these years later, they decided to make the movie. I had fun the whole time, the cinemas experience was great
The poop knife detour made me so glad that I decided to watch the pod today 😂😂😂 this is also my first time learning about poop knife
Gonna sit and enjoy this episode while hoping for a future one about Lisa Frankenstein 🙏
That's what I'm hoping. I loved the hell out of Lisa Frankenstein! It was such fun.
The random poop knife part was so funny omg! I laughed out loud!! I’m at work listening to this, I know someone heard me from my office. 🤣🤣🤣
I would honestly love to see them do a full podcast episode about totally killer. I feel like that would be a blast. That movie rocks
Universal ocean cryptids are what keep me humble, everytime we go down there we seem to find something we thought not possible. I have no doubt that monsters lurk beneath those depths.
Here's why washing machines go in the kitchen: British houses for the most part do not have utility rooms. We have a kitchen, living room, bedrooms, bathroom. That's it. If you're very fancy, a dining room. There's no electricity outlet in the bathroom because water and electricity do not mix. And we don't have basements. The kitchen is literally the only place for them.
Id love to see a Podcast episode on Run Sweetheart Run
I listened to this ep on Google podcasts but as soon as I got to the poop knife part I HAD to come here to see Jame's face during that conversation.
39:21 best part of the episode starts here
Colm Meany is the focal point of one of the most interesting premises for an episode of a tv show. During a mission, his character gets judged guilty for a crime by a society that injects memories of a lifetime of imprisonment as punishment. The entire episode is him dealing with the fallout of having these fake memories and what happens in them.
Crazy, lovable guy in Star Trek. If in this, he's like in Layer Cake. Yup. He can be NASTY. He's got a bit of John Lithgow villain edge (as well as the range)
The episode is from Deep Space Nine, btw.
P.S. he also plays a fun smaller character jerk in Con Air.
@@jeremyowens3319He also plays a recurring warlord in "Stargate: Atlantis".
I love Irish horror movies, so I have to recommend Let Us Prey. It’s sooooo good and you can’t say no to a horror movie with Liam Cunningham.
Also recently watched Moloch. Great Dutch folk horror on Shudder. I have no idea how I missed it.
I know this is late but you neeed to watch the hallow or hollow, I forgot what it’s called. It is an amazing Irish mythology movie
I recommend two things!
First, please play the Faith games on stream! They’re full of references and are so much fun!
Second, the creator of Faith, Airdorf, would definitely come on the podcast!
OMGGGGGGGG thank youuuu I was trying to remember this movie for the longest time so i can watch it
The poop stick sent me into orbit! when Chelsea was like “I’m sorry, it’s worse…it’s a knife” I lost it
“Poop stick” had me rolling. 😂
We now know what men are for since it’s an open question in Unwelcome. Lol
the movie “looking fake” gave me the vibes of like mythological movies from the 80s that my high school mythology teacher would play when she didnt feel like teaching lol
Omg I both love and hate when I forget to check up on DNDND. Got 4 episodes to listen to now so I can't wait to hear them 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉. Love the podcast
Thank you for the reminder ❤❤❤
39:56 the poop knife!! 😭
I need an animatic of that section STAT.
"Hey, can you get me the poop knife?" I'm dying!!!!
Thank you so much for the recommendation. I loved the movie!
This is random but for the Heinz beans. Go to World Market, they should have a location nearish you or you could get them delivered. I used to work there and they would sell the Heinz beans..I hated stacking them. Our British customers would buy them by the caseload. Also used to carry mushy peas and all the stuff they loved.
I have tears streaming down my face at the poop stick/knife section
The main actress in this movie was in a show called Killjoys that I absolutely loved, now that I know her horror movie character gets a good ending, I'm definitely giving it a watch!
Favorite line is when one of the redcaps says “No, Daddy, no!”
39:20 (the sheer chaos that came from this detour 😂😂)
I would absolutely love to see y'all do a podcast about Clive Barker's Nightbreed. It's such an underrated horror film and I highly recommend it to anyone who is a fan of Clive Barker and/or Danny Elfman. Also the whole subject of poop knife had me laughing until I was slapping my knee and couldn't breathe.
I know it'd be tough and obviously late on the podcast but with how much it's gotten mentioned I'd love a Totally Killer podcast episode. It's a bummer that and this film didn't get nommed but I'm glad both James and Chelsea recognize them still.
Love the podcast!
Could you guys do an episode on Interview with the vampire from 1994?
It's amazing how well that still holds up today
I hope when the new season of survivor begins you guys give your thoughts on the episode a bit in the beginning cause I love hearing you guys talk about it
I loved this movie when it came out, I was lucky enough to catch the unlimited screening last year and I remember it becoming an instant favourite. I was looking for similar style movies and ended up watching The Hallow on Shudder which had a similar narrative but a completely different atmosphere/themes but still folkish which is worth checking out possibly😊
39:20 for anyone wanting to rewatch the poop stick saga
Hero
No joke, my friend had bad plumbing in her house growing up and they had an old kitchen spatula that lived in the bathroom. They called it the "turd cutter" 😂
Maeve is the queen of the unseelie court of the fae, epitaph of queen of air and darkness opposite Titania the queen of the seelie court.
The Poop Knife detour is probably a new Entry in the top 20 best moments in Dead Meat history!
i have not seen the movie but i like to think the little guys are going to help with the housework that the husband was like struggling to do idk. maybe the real treasure (the redcaps) was the friends (masculinity) we made along the way.
I like how they live in LA with so much great food at their door step, and Chelsea is trying to order some dank ass old can beans from the UK. Lol icon status.
Heinz Beans cost a fortune over here now (inflation is out of control), the cost of an import would be insane!
I've just watched this movie now before the pod and knew nothing about it. Then the little guys from BG3 showed up and took me by surprise 😅
Please make the poop knife conversation a Dead Meat Short PLEASE!!!!!!