Hey, it's Earl Passlam, and this is 70 millimeter, a podcast for film fans just like you with me is always is my close friend and artist, Danny
Haas. Hello. And our close friend and sex magic expert for the Lexus on 70 mm. We love to talk about a range of topics, including menswear,
dummy work, rising film stars, French new wave cinema. But this week we are focusing on two of our most favorite topics,
women and other.
Every episode is connected to a theme for that month. And this time it's fem timber, final name, still in progress.
We're only covering movies directed by women. So Proto's pick this week is at a billers the love which from 2016.
And you can use the chapters in your podcast app to skip right to that discussion or anywhere in the episode if you want.
K Rose left a review from our community.
Watch this a few weeks ago and forgot to log it feels kind of appropriate that it was my 69th movie of the year.
Let it sing.
Nice.
A Soca episode for the big news this week. We'll get into it in the uncut episode. We're not going to get into it in the show.
The uncut supporter only we're going to go hard on a Soca episode four in the uncut.
I do want to point out there's a lot there's a lot of stuff coming soon. You know, next episode is my pick. Yeah, going to announce it at the end of the show.
But we will be going back to the Patreon comment. Well, last time I think we did. We made a post like what's
what was it was a theme idea? Was it May May the 4th be with you May the 4th be with you. So there is another week this month for femtember.
So stay tuned patrons by the time this episode is out. It will probably be live. But we'll be looking in the comments for some suggestions for the final movie of the month.
And we will be choosing one of those movies. One winner.
Art already typing in Yantle. If he types Yantle art, we will give you a time out so fast on Patreon comments.
We've already also picked our our next audio commentary episode. We hashed out the DMs today. I think we were just told what we were doing.
I thought I'm like, we were. We were reduced.
So we got to do. I saw it. I saw it come through it. I'm like, I don't remember talking about this, but I have a terrible memory. So I'm just going to go with it.
I'm very excited for it though. Yeah, be to it though. Yeah, right now we're hashing out the date of which we're recorded. I proposed a date. The DMs went radio silent.
Anytime I propose a date, it's like three hours go by and no one responds until we change topics later in the afternoon because we know your
finger is hovering over the Google calendar in invite. And then any if we say any never fails, it never fails.
Also, there's some there's a survey. We're going to we're there's a lot happening. We're doing a survey for Patrons is patron heavy at the start of the show.
So anyone who doesn't care. Sorry, you can skip ad.
The new surveys coming out. We're going to be talking about the upcoming months.
Giving some news like here's what to expect this month. Yeah, as a patron. So a lot of lot of cool stuff coming.
Stay thin. Let's get into over the garden wall.
Let's just get into it right now. Okay.
Then you watched it this watch.
First time ever. Yeah, it was the first time ever for me. And I so I did comic book conventions in artist Ali for what feels like my entire life at this point.
And I've always seen over the garden wall either art being produced in artist Ali or people just dressed up as cosplay.
And for me, I had assumed that I missed the boat for this cartoon like a sponge bob or something that a generation before me was in love with that I didn't think I'd connect with.
So I just kind of ignored it for a bit.
And then recently on TikTok, someone who did like a montage of like fall vibe cartoons or something and I saw this pumpkin head thing combined.
I'm like, what is this pumpkin head from? And it's from this. I think the second episode where he goes to that pumpkin town village.
And I'm like, oh, I might need to watch this like I for whatever reason, I thought over the garden wall was a movie.
So I went to the letter box and lo and behold, it's logable on letter box.
Proto with the five star rave about this movie. And I heard the show, what I thought was movie, then I realized it was a show.
And I'm like, well, I got it. I got to see this. I got to see this now.
Sadden, I just been I just benched it's it's easily bingeable this one season binge job and it's so easy to fall in love with these two characters, the animation.
And I did I caught that I saw what everyone else saw in this show and I fell in love with it right away easily, easily fell in love with it. I'll watch it now probably every fall.
Then I write when I write when all of my oldest daughter got home from school, I'm like, I'll love you need to watch one over the garden hall over the garden wall.
And so she did she bench it she loved it. So now we're going to have like this BR will watch it every fall together memories being made.
And I didn't realize how much in the like adventure time vein it kind of is that that kind of vibe. I really thought it was a different vibe. That's why I kind of avoided it forever.
But like I was like a former storyboard artist and I think producer on adventure time for a few seasons, the guy who made.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So happy to have seen it.
Any chance that I get I'm going to try and do some art for it reach out to some galleries on the hey, do you want some art?
Because I really want to do art for it, you know, in that time I have to do things.
Yeah, you got plenty of time, which by the way I should remind people the stores back up. We did it. Not wait, Danny did it.
The stores back up joint effort over there for emotional support. Thank you.
For how can you didn't suggest this for pilot season when we did pilot season for patrons over the garden wall.
Yeah, and then like you trick us into watching the whole thing.
I think this is one of the shows you need to find on your own.
I don't want to force anybody over the garden wall.
So what was your experience with that slum?
I did make a sarcastic comment in my review.
I wasn't sure how to take that.
Because I have heard of this shit, this show for years.
I've seen it in comics as well, like trades or never.
And then I'm like, what is this? What is this over the garden wall?
And I don't know, I feel like it was harder to track down for a period of years.
I was like, wasn't on Hulu or whatever.
I originally just tried to start watching it on Max.
Watch the first episode and then it goes to episode three.
And I'm like, wait, let me look at all the episodes.
There's only two episodes on Max and it's episode one and three.
I watched it on Hulu.
Zazlov.
Please.
So then I went over to Hulu and watched it on Hulu.
Hilarie says, unfortunately, still no good blue ray.
Interesting.
I think the main thing is I was surprised that it's one season.
And as you watch it, some of that stuff makes more sense.
But yeah, I loved it.
I was trepidaceous because starting a new animated series with Amanda is 50-50.
But we stuck it out.
We liked it.
I was chuckling at so many lines.
That was really well done.
Apparently, some other folks in chat have also not ever heard of it.
Give it a shot.
It's like short apps, 20 minute apps.
No, 11 minute.
11 minute apps.
So it's pretty easy to give it a shot.
109 minutes?
Is that real?
It's only 1010 11 minute apps or something.
Get in there.
You do the math.
It's easy.
Easy bench.
So much fun.
Elijah Wood.
Yeah.
Elijah Wood plays the main brother.
Shocking.
Turn of events.
But you didn't watch anything else this week.
Did you, Danny?
Did I?
No, but I will plug.
Because I watched.
Drawn to perfection, which is the Dave Stevens documentary about the comic book artist
that created the rocketeer.
And so next week I'll be recording a rocketeer episode with Escape Hatch.
And we'll be talking rocketeer and a little bit about the
Drawn to perfection documentary about Dave Stevens.
Whoa.
So by the time this episode is out, will that episode be out?
No.
Oh, wait, am I?
I don't know.
No, I'm recording the day after this comes out.
But it'll be soon.
So I did watch Drawn to perfection.
And I think if it's streaming right now on Amazon Prime.
And if you like the rocketeer, then watch that.
If you're a comic book fan, this is a must see in my opinion.
So if you like comics, if you like comics from, you know, 80s and 90s, that kind of
watching someone come up through the comics and, you know, that kind of grind, it's
a great little documentary.
And it's, it gets you in the end.
It's a little bit emotional.
What did Dave, so Dave Stevens wrote and drew the rocketeer.
And we talked about it in the rocketeer episode.
I like, I even had some of those like large trades or whatever you call them magazine size.
Did he do like other stuff in other industries for design?
Like he didn't do just comics, right?
Oh, no, he storyboarded a lot of Raiders of the Lost Ark.
And that's how we kind of got in with Spielberg.
And when he was pitching with the writers of the rocketeer movie, this screenplay, so many
places turned him down.
Spielberg caught wind of it and said, and he was just about to get a Disney Spielberg
got wind of it and said, if Disney doesn't do it, I'll do it, direct it.
And when Disney found out that Spielberg was going to direct it, they jumped on it and
took it kind of out of his hands.
Anyway, so he's done tons of things outside of comics.
And really the documentary kind of focuses on how much of a perfection, perfection to see
as an artist.
And it's, it's incredible to watch.
All right.
Got to add this.
That's my watch list.
Cripes.
Beautiful stuff.
Part of you had a week in quite a, you had quite a week on your letter box account.
Can we get into it?
Please.
Wow.
Where to start?
I guess.
Well, I think it was a, I think it was on Saturday, my first big watch, or no, I think
it was actually Labor Day.
I think it was Monday.
I watched Kogunata's Columbus goodness gracious.
We covered one of his movies on the show after Yang, everyone remembers that, Slim Pick.
And I didn't really connect with that movie so much.
I'd like to revisit it now after watching Columbus, because Columbus was, wow, this movie
was, I connected with this movie, an incredible performance is Haley Lou Richardson's in this
who queen.
She was in season two of White Lotus, which is great.
He's amazing.
John Cho is, I mean, watching him, he might, I don't know, I mean, he's really incredible.
Like I'm trying to say it, just saying it, I don't know what I'm trying to say, but what
I feel like is that John Cho, we haven't even seen his, the best work from him yet.
We haven't even scratched the surface of John Cho.
We haven't even scratched, okay?
This guy, yeah, I think he could do some really incredible stuff.
And him paired with Kogunata, there was a, there was a quote, I was looking around at
just different stuff.
And he had a quote about Kogunata where he says that he is an artist and he made me feel
like an artist.
And something about like, there's like a purity of the way he makes movies.
This story was just incredible.
And the feel and vibe of it were something special.
He just, the way he makes movies is so unique.
So I loved it.
Yeah, that's a great movie.
Fantastic movie.
The one John Cho movie that I like that maybe you should add to your watch, let's part
out.
It was a recent one.
Don't make me go.
2022, terminally ill man and his teenage daughter embark on a road trip from California
to New Orleans for his 20th college reunion.
While there, he secretly hopes he can reunite with the mother who left them long ago.
So that's another kind of like, let the actor do some work movie.
He'll do the work through the work.
What was next?
Well, I got back on the A.O.F.I. journey and I watched on Toobie in the heat of the
night.
Oh, gosh.
This stars Sydney Portier from 1967 and directed by a boy, Norman Joensen, who directed Fiddler
on the Roof, which we covered earlier in the year, I think this movie, I get five stars.
This movie is a classic.
I felt like it was in the same vein as something like Malcolm X, like the picture of racism
in this, out in this.
It feels like historic, like this should be a part of like the historical record.
And it's like terrifying.
Like this movie made me, I feel like it really put me in the shoes of what it would, what
it could feel like at the time to live as a black person in this house.
Like in some ways, this movie is a horror movie.
Like it's terrifying that there are people who live through the, some of the scenarios
that play out in this movie every day of their life.
It's just, it's, it's really well done.
Sydney Portier is amazing in this.
It has amazing hands.
Oh, excuse me.
That's one record.
Yeah.
You get a lot of close-up of his hands in this.
Beautiful skin.
His vibe in that movie is, it's like unmatched.
Yeah.
He's so cool in that movie.
Everything he does is cool.
And him paired with the police chief, there's great chemistry between them too.
Yeah.
You got to watch the sequel.
They call me Mr. Tibs.
Yeah.
I want to.
I saw that.
I think that popped up on Toobie.
It was like, do you want this next?
Well, and I, I had heard that line.
Of course, it's homage in the Lion King.
They call me Mr. Pig.
But I didn't know it.
I didn't know it was from this movie, or maybe I did, but I just like, I forgot.
And when it happened, it was, it was pretty shocking, but great.
They call me Mr. Tibs.
I've wrote my review, maybe the worst sequel in movie history.
Like, it's awful.
And I guess I can see it like, what if we make a franchise around this character?
That like makes sense.
There's a third one that I didn't realize, maybe I forgot, where I was just so off
the trail, but it's 3.1 on Letterbox, the organization.
And he plays Virgil Tibs in that one.
That's also on Toobie.
Wow.
You still have time.
Holly would ask to try to make a sequel out of it in the middle of the night.
What about the deer hunter?
I've been holding it.
I've been holding it in my thoughts.
Is this the biggest week in, in Proto Letterbox log?
I can't hold it in.
I was planning on saving this one for one of my last movies to watch, but, um,
I've been listening to that.
Do we get to win this time podcast series on the big picture podcast feed?
And I know Slim and Dale have are listening to it as well, but they were talking about
deer hunter and it just kind of got me feeling like it's time.
It's time to finally watch this movie.
And, uh, Danny, remember how when we covered the Godfather, yeah, you kind of felt like,
I can't believe I got this far in life without seeing the Godfather.
I was having those same feelings when you leave your hunter, uh, and it might be because
I think Michael Chimino reminds me so much of like the way Francis Ford Coppola makes
movies.
Like it feels like the Godfather, like if I didn't know who directed this, I would have
thought it was Coppola, um, yeah.
And this, I wasn't, I'm not really that familiar with the story before I saw it.
But the first hour of this movie is just something, something incredible.
I can't wait to do this movie.
Should we just do it?
Should we just do it?
Should we just go to the deer hunter?
There's a guest.
It's a guest.
It's a guest.
There's a guest to see it.
We can do whatever we want.
Yeah.
No one can tell us we can't do the deer hunter.
Okay.
you like you may have not seen, you may have not seen yet Robert De Niro's best performance.
That's insane. I have to see it.
Mosh in chat. I've had the deer hunter on my shelf for years and still haven't seen it.
Is there a 4K? It's on Netflix right now. I know that. Yeah, there is a 4K.
The links are popping up. This was a West Coast video watch for me and I don't think I've watched
it since then. So it's been 20 years since I've seen it. We have to go back.
It's been de-tember. I always get this one confused with deliverance. I think both of them unsettled
me in different ways. But yeah, I'd love to re-watch this.
There's so many movies in that podcast that I was like, man, I'd love to go back and watch this.
But then I'm like, I have like 10 Vietnam War movies in my head that I want to go back and re-watch.
This sounds like the worst week ever. I would not be able to do this.
So I'll just continue watching my dopey Stephen King TV movies.
Every week we give out a free year of letterboxed patron.
Get through it of ads. You can have a fancy backdrop on your profile and your reviews.
On your lists. You can set up your favorite streaming services to see when
movies hit them so you can just stream them up when they're available.
Just tag your reviews 70 mm pot if you want to be entered to win. Diana left a review for the love
which three stars. Unfortunately, I'm not a Lana Del Rey girl, but I'm sure they love this.
Wish we got more story with Elaine and Trish, especially when Elaine finds Trish towards the end
of the movie. So Diana, you just want to for a year. We can talk. There's
Mosh wants to hear about this shining 1997 rewatch here. As maybe everyone knows,
I want to Stephen King journey right now. You just started it.
I started it as a joke just because I watched one Stephen King movie and then I started saying it was
King Timber. And then I was like talking to my wife and man, I was like, what if we just start
watching Stephen King movies? And the first one we did, we started watching graveyard shift.
Just sucked. Give it a star and a half. But like, I don't know, these are like the perfect.
It's six o'clock. We just had dinner. We're sit on the couch. Let's put on a Stephen King movie.
You know, that's like the dream. When I was a kid, I'm living my dream to just put on these random
horror movies. And some of them are going to be crap. So then we watched thinner,
thinner with that like poster, great poster. This guy in a fat suit gets cursed by a gypsy,
you know, the old story. And he starts losing weight and he's trying to like get himself out of it.
I gave that one three stars. Like, I've already seen maximum overdrive. I thought that one was
trash. I know people love. There's like a cult following for maximum overdrive. But I'm not in
that cult following. What else did I watch? Pet cemetery rewatch. I actually, I feel like this,
I watched this yearly three stars. That's the famous one. Do you remember that one? We're like
Danny, have you ever seen pet cemetery? No, no, no, I haven't. Proto? No. Famous one where
like this new, this family moves into a new town. And their neighbor, Judd,
has this thick main accent tells them about this like pet cemetery nearby. So their cat dies.
And Judd is like, oh, there's an old pet cemetery around here. Let's bring you a dead cat over
that. And they like bring the cat back to life because it's on like an Indian burial ground
essentially. So the cat like comes back. And this is not, I mean, I'm not spoiling anything,
but their little kid gets hit by a tractor trailer outside the house. So, but they move into this
house and they're like, there's no fence. And the thing with this town is tractor trailers go
by at 80 miles an hour. It's like you see at the start of the movie. And right off the bat,
you're like, day one, let's put a fence in probably our next move. They don't do that.
They're flying a kite. This kid starts running through their field. They're having a picnic.
And the kid gets far away enough that the mother's like, oh my god, get her son. He's like running
towards the street. And the husband's like sprinting through the field. Doesn't make it there in
time the kid gets obliterated. There's a shoe, a bloody shoe goes flying. So anyway, he tries
to bring the kid back using the pet cemetery. Doesn't go well. But there's sequels that I'm interested
in watching. I'd rather you just tell me pet cemetery than watch it. Don't try to bring us on back.
I should never have showed you that pet cemetery. So then I watch storm of the century.
That was a, that was a misclick.
Get your finger off the bell. So then I was like thinking to myself, I started getting these
memories that Stephen King used to do TV miniseries when I was growing up. Like it was a big thing to
have like the Stephen King TV adaptation on television when I was like 13, 15 and older. So then
I saw one that's streaming on Hulu that I had never seen. But I had heard of it was called
Storm of the Century. So it has like these TV actors like Tim Daly from Wings. Remember he did
the voice of Superman and the enemy in series. So this one is when a blizzard hits a isolated town,
a mysterious stranger appears and terrorizes the town for a sinister purpose. So this one I actually
like really enjoyed. I was shocked how much I enjoyed it. It's three episodes, 90 minutes long,
and afterward I was like, man, do we need to go back to this formula? Because then I started
comparing it to the Blyhouse Netflix series. There's like 10 episodes, an hour, 20 minutes long,
each episode. Really? Well, they're long. Some of them are like 45 minutes, some of them are an hour,
it depends on whatever they want to do. But then, which I liked that stuff, but then I thought he
overindulged himself on that like, was the calf like one that came out a couple years ago with
a priest. On to church. I don't know. I don't know. But so
haunting of church house. So, but that one like flanagan just leaned in on like, what if I just do
one episode where two characters talk and it'll blow your mind? And he just did that like too much
and it sucked. I thought so like these episodes, they're 90 minutes, they took place over three nights
and these were like events when I was growing up. So I had a great time watching Storm of the
Century. I thought the ending was kind of haunting. So then I was like, the shining. I'm not sure
if everyone remembers this, but they did a TV movie version of the shining in 1997.
But that sink in, speaking of which, that's a phrase that I had blocked on Twitter for years,
like, couldn't stand people said that in a tweet. But the backstory is apparently Stephen King
really did not like the movie adaptation that Kubrick did, which I think we talked about in that
episode. So when his TV movies were like popular, they're like, maybe I can do the stand again,
the way I want to do it. Yeah, the shining, sorry. And apparently, the Wikipedia said that
Kubrick would only allow it to happen if Stephen King promised in writing to stop taking a dump on
the show. So apparently that's what they did. And maybe like part of the dream was he could
only disparage Jack Nicholson's performance and nothing else. I don't know how much true this is.
I didn't see like a reference link from it or read or whatever, but we'll last Stephen.
We'll get Stephen on the horn, King Cast. So this one unfortunately, I know that does.
At the time, I remember people actually really loving this version of the shining because it's
more true to the book. It like follows it really closely and it gets four and a half hours,
you know, essentially to breathe. Unfortunately, I did not love it. I thought it was just a drag.
It's too long. Stephen Weber who plays Jack Tarns, I feel like it's just kind of miscast.
But and finally enough, the Wiki also says that like critics are agreeing that over the years,
it's actually not good and that people were just like wrong at the time. So
what can you do? You know, what can you do? Well, it's TV miniseries. I'm a mistake. Yeah,
already going back on my thoughts on storm of the century. How do you demand to choose what you
got to watch next? Do you like give her a rundown of a few available and then you kind of hash it
out? Or do you just put something on? Usually I do it pretty sarcastically and I I'm like
turking tin from on sem and I'll like come into the room and be like, it's movie time and she'll
just kind of like groan loudly. So I usually ask her like, what are you in the mood for? You
want to watch TV or are you crocheting? Can I put a movie on like, do you care? She's like,
just put on whatever. That's generally what kind of happened. So like I said, dream scenario
to young me. We're gonna get a video. And that's generally how it is. Yeah, she really did not
like the shine. The kid who plays daddy torrents was super annoying. She was actually just like
making fun of him for four hours doing his voice. So, you know, on to the next one, I'm hoping the
stand is next because I want to watch the stand a lot. What's the stand about? If I remember correctly
the stand is like when the devil comes to town or something. Oh, I don't know. Like it sounds
exactly what I just like almost like when I just watch time. But that's all I remember. It's
all I want to know of it. I just want to go in, you know, blind. Pretty much. Remember,
it's so good talk right around the corner. We're so close. Big time. Oh, well, I guess
we dropped our ponio app this week. Oh, yeah. What an app. Great time. Great conversation.
Thank you. I'm on real art. Yeah. Casey made me make a wallpaper for her phone.
Do you do you want that out that you're making wallpaper for the art?
How many people are going to want to drop down this just like wallpaper and they can
download that. Just copy the Instagram image. Actually, we're already getting some
votes for wallpaper versions of the art and chat. It's got the stream shows over.
Okay. So main course, it's femtember, the love which partos pick and a billar.
This movie swept the baton spider nation in 2016. Part of what is this movie about?
Alain Parks is a sociopath who will systematically seduce men, drug them with a concoction of alcohol
and hallucinogenic herbs, meet their needs sexually with and with perhaps a fine-staked dinner,
and then leave them to die a slow agonizing death while they feel their feelings on a level
never before reached. Alain is a love witch, specializing in potions, dancing, and sex magic.
After her husband Jerry dies, she relocates and begins looking for love with mixed results.
Can Alain find love that lasts? Can she find a man that can handle being loved?
Will she be convicted of desecrating corpse? I love much.
You get that onto a chair. No, right with the wallpapers.
It's coming very soon, folks. Stay tuned. Right on the corner.
Danny, what's your history with the love which? Is there any history for you?
My only history with it is whenever I would see a dear friend from the show, a Chuck
Forzman, on any sort of zoom feed, there was a poster behind him of the love witch.
And other than that, that's all I knew about it.
Yeah, that's it, and our dear friends at the movie Mix taped it an episode on it.
Oh yeah. It's not a... Hey, producer, I executive producer that showed some amazing art for that episode.
Yeah, that's all I knew about the love witch. Can I just read Chuck Forzman's review?
Because I love his review for the love witch. It has no stars, and it just says,
heart for me to write about this movie. It's too important to me.
I love just his passion for this movie. This came out in 2016.
He saw it in 2021, our friend Chuck, and I saw it two years ago.
So yeah, I had no idea this movie existed until a few years ago, and finally got around to it,
and it was delighted, my first viewing. Chuck, I think Chuck and Dale from the Baton
Sweater Podcast might have been the first of our group to watch it and alert us to it,
because I think I watched it also around the same time after Chuck was, you know,
I just saw this movie, and then we saw screenshots, and we're like, what is this
thing? It looks cool. I could have sworn they'd already done it up on it too.
That's what I thought. Did we just dream that? Why didn't they? That's a good question.
Not enough nudity, maybe. I've never reached the Baton Sweater bar.
So there was like some smoke in our discord this week, you know, as people started watching it,
and then maybe doing some research on the director Anna Biller. So if he gone Anna's wiki,
you'll see a section talking about her potentially being a turf and transphobic.
So what the heck is a turf? Maybe people are wondering.
Turf means trans exclusionary radical feminist. So we'll talk about that. We'll talk about the
feminist angle as we get into the movie. But turf's essentially, it's like a label for
people for feminists that don't believe that trans women or women, they don't agree with any
trans legislation. So you might have heard that term with like JK Rowling. It's probably
the most popular. I'll say her name, you know, it doesn't, it doesn't give her any power.
We say her name. No. So maybe like, why am I bringing this up? I didn't want anyone listening
to this episode of being like, why aren't they, why aren't they bringing it up? So I asked
members of our discord to kind of like help like is Anna Biller a turf? Like, you know, what's
this all about? So Kenzo, who was on her speed episode, co-hosted the Awesome Danger podcast,
says yes. I think she is a turf. Her partner Rachel also said yes. So they both mentioned her
talking about in tweets from like 2018 about the title of a woman or womanhood being like stripped
away from her in her tweets. And that's generally a potential red flag for being kind of like in
that group of feminists. So some problematic views if you do some poking around it. It's not as
like explicit as someone like JK Rowling. But enough question marks that make your eyebrows raise.
So we're not experts. But we have the capacity to desire to learn. So that's what we're trying to
do. So with like stuff like that, maybe just keep it open mind, learn, listen and do some reading
if you can. So I just wanted to talk about that at the top of the show. Top of the segment anyway.
Thank you. So we generally write three things down. As we watch these movies, we'll take some
notes. We'll go round table. I'm sure lots of our notes overlap for our top three probably.
But this is Proto's pick. So why don't you lead us off?
I think the thing I have to talk about first is just the, I think the master class in recreating the
look and feel of a movie from the 1960s and the way that it's handled in this. I was, I think the
first time I watched this, Jenna, my wife came in at one point and was like, what are you watching?
And she was like, and I think it was the scene where they're like in the strip club and she was
like, all right, I'm out. She started making you a steak dinner and you started sweating.
What's this rainbow coach? So the same thing happened where I'm like halfway through this movie
and she comes in and she starts watching it with me. And I'm like, I can turn it off. We don't
have to watch this because you kind of, you know, you're not vibing with it or whatever. And she's
like, no, you can keep it on. And then she's like, what? All over again. And I'm explaining to
it. I'm like, you know, it's amazing. This movie, just like the way it looks, you know, right?
Like it looks like a movie from the 60s. She's like, yeah, sure, whatever. And then there's
like something from modern time comes in like a car or yeah, I forget what it is. And she's like,
wait, what? When was this movie made? I'm like, it was made in 2016 and she couldn't believe it.
So and of course, she's, you know, Jenna, she doesn't watch a lot of movies. But just to her,
like seeing it, it, it, it's convincing with the eye test for almost anybody to think that this
movie is actually, you know, 60 years old, rather than five or whatever. I guess almost 10 now.
Yeah. I remember seeing, I think I saw the trailer. Maybe when Chuck first logged it and I watched
the trailer. And that's when I was like, wait, when was this movie made? It's filmed in 35 millimeter.
It looks gorgeous. Like the way that she filmed this Annabelle or like edited shot it,
wrote it, did everything cost you opposed it. And like literally every credit is pretty much
her name going through the front of the movie. But man, right from the gecko, the visual vibes
are off the charts. Like you're kind of like buckled up already like hell yeah. Let's, let's see,
I want to see more of this world. Danny, what do you think? When Elaine is pulling up in that
Mustang, I'm just like, well, I'm just going to letterbox and give him this five stars now.
The vibe right away, I'm like, oh my god, yes, please, all of it. Her apartment,
I, it was really funny to me that the story of her apartment was done by the other lady.
She decorated it for her. Right. Yeah. Can you imagine getting that call? This is how I need this
apartment decorated. And it's nothing but a cult kind of art. And it was just the vibes in that
apartment were incredible. Everything about anything that Elaine was doing. Her potions,
the painting, I just kind of loved looking at it. It was just gorgeous. Like the use of color,
if you use color well, you've won me over. Like it's just the way that she used it in this film,
even down to just her blue eyeshadow was just, I was vibing hard with that. Like she just looked
incredible. She looked incredible. The sets look incredible. And I just, I really
dog that about that this year. Yeah. Yeah.
Art. Just posted a psychotic Photoshop.
Where did that photo even come from? I've never seen that photo posted. How is art, art
finding this image? I'm loving imagining art at work on his phone. Like at his desk and he's
like turned to the side and he's pinched zooming, dropped the PNG images. Oh, what's that bus? No,
sorry. He's like fumbles his phone and goes flying in the air. Love what starts playing in the
yeah. My, my first point is Samantha Robinson, who is the lead, right? That's Samantha Robinson.
The lead in the movie, it's like you, it's like impossible to not be transfixed by her the way
that she is shot and her costumes, her makeup, the way that the camera just like sits on her face.
Like every shot on the TMDB of like the backdrops are beautiful. Like her wearing the pink outfit
at the T place or whatever. Insane. It's literally absurd how gorgeous that is. Every time she's
moving around, almost like the way that it's conveyed that she's a witch and her gaze can almost
like entrap you, it works. Like remember, she's in the park and she locks eyes with that teacher
and he just like stops talking to the woman he was talking to and just walks over to her.
There are so many beautiful shots. This needs a 4k release. Like I'd love to see this in 4k with
those with like Dolby Vision popping. It would be nuts. But yeah, Samantha is, you know, at the
core of all of that. And I was like, every time I was, this is the second time I've seen this,
but it's still blown away on this watch. Yeah. I love her line delivery. Just the way she carries
herself is just so funny. I just like kept writing lines down as it was happened because it,
like they feel like iconic. Like just I'd love to love. Just everything that she says,
it just comes off and her personality just fits it so well, especially with how the story ends,
I think, because you kind of, as it goes further and further, you're like, all right, this woman,
there might be something wrong with her, you know. Right, right.
Danny, what's your number one?
My number one is it really was kind of talking about how it looks. I have, I have an issue with
this movie. Let it out. I hated that it wasn't in the 70s. I'd really dislike
being pulled out of a scene when they bring something modern in. So like, when she's driving
the Mustang gorgeous, I'm like, yes, we're in the 70s, 60s, et cetera. The modern cop car pulls
up. I'm like, why? I don't like this. And then it's like, okay, whatever. Then she pulls up to
the house and then the BMW pulls up behind her. I'm like, I don't, why are we doing these amazing
70s vibes and keeping it modern? But every time, every time something happened where we would
be spent so much time in her apartment and with the lane and she's doing her thing and it's just
like, incredible vibes. And then something modern comes and I'm like, whooshed out of
enjoying myself in this film. I really just did not like, I really didn't like that aspect of it.
But I really wish it was either the whole film in the 70s or no 70s vibes and it's a fully
modern film, like even what she was wearing in dress. There's something about the disconnect
between that kind of those two different kind of eras where she stuck in the past and were in
the modern times. It just really, I didn't, it didn't work well for me and it really took me out
every time it happened. Robert in discord suggests it could be a smart commentary on how things
haven't changed. That's why certain aspects were like 70s-ish while the rest were modern day.
I agree. I remember like, I forgot on this watch, I was like, oh yes, 70s vibes, 60s, 70s.
And then I forgot that the police car was modern day and I was like, I crap.
And then like the BMW. And then someone like used an iPhone at some point in the movie.
Yeah, it is a very strange decision. I can see that being like, maybe it's budgetary reason.
And like maybe add a bit of such as effort. I'll do whatever with what I have.
What do you think, Proto? I don't, I don't really mind it that much. It does create
really confusing visual though when you see it. And I don't know if it's because it looks so
authentic, you know, being shot in 35 millimeter. It looks almost like the BMW and the BMW
first shows up. It looks like it was almost like Photoshopped into the movie. It looks so out of
place. It really does. But I kind of agree with what Robert was saying is that I think it might be,
you know, like commentary and how things haven't changed. And I would buy that because
Annabelle seems like a very cerebral kind of director in that way. Like she's kind of like,
she's doing many things at once in her storytelling. I think I would buy that more if the movie had
better writing. And it was kind of not overtly. It just felt like it almost felt like we ran out of
money. Like we couldn't afford to do this instead of like, this is on purpose. I think actually a
lot of the aspects of the movie felt like that like two and a half star in coming. No. It just,
it just felt like nothing felt fully fleshed out. It was just always like, did they run out of money
or did they get rushed for time with this or something? Like there's something about that that
it just, it just didn't feel like it was on, at least on purpose, in my opinion.
Yeah, I wonder what this would look like with almost a sort of director that doesn't have the
wherewithal to do 90% of the production and also make it look amazing. Like I wonder what this
would be from someone else. Like would they not have any of the modern cars, would they do
different things? Because I mean, she literally did everything on the movie. So everything kind of
falls to Annabelle or her decision-making. Part of what's number two?
Number two, I love how she flips the script and makes men look like babies and like objects that
can be very easily controlled and manipulated. She has a lot of great lines about it. Early on,
she says, according to the experts, men are very fragile and like, you have to just give them
what they want and then you'll get what you want out of them. What would you say? Give them total
freedom to to to whatever they want to do or be. And I love the different ways that it plays out
in the movie. Like at one point, she has like narration over all of this and at one point,
she says, like, most men haven't even seen a use of tampon. And then when the two cops dig it
up, they're like, what the hell is this? They're like, I've never seen anything like that before.
That's funny. Yeah. Yeah. I love her interactions with Trish about like finding love and
I think one of her quotes also is like giving men sex is a way of unlocking their love potential.
So many things like that where the character of Elaine is like so focused on
getting things that she wants. And I think a lot of the commentary on the movie, at least at the
time when it came out was like flipping the script on what a femme fatale is. What if we made it
so that she essentially was trying to subvert, you know, feminist quote expectations at the time
and today. So seeing like these men like fall on over her and then have like emotional breakdowns
afterward, like it was cracking me up. I know I saw a lot of reviews that some folks were like
expecting a horror movie. And we're kind of like taking it back that there wasn't any of that
really. And it was I thought I still think the the movie is very funny. Like so many lines from her.
There's one scene I wish I wrote down the whole quote. Oh yeah, it was it was the teacher
or whatever. I wrote in my line, this dude ain't doing jack shit on these drugs. Like when he was
trying to like, I guess like make love to her or whatever. And she's reached counting the story.
I think she ends the story with what a pussy. What a pussy. He's like dead. I was cracking up.
And part I guess maybe my second point is connected to that. Like I love the 60s 70s
still did low budget delivery from like her and the dudes. Like the cop their cop conversations
when he comes out of his office. And the one woman cop is talking to him. It's so bad. It's like
so uncomfortable. And then he's talking to his partner. Like that stuff is cracking me up.
Like I at least in my viewing of the movie, I viewed that as just very comedic and satirical
of the 60s and 70s low budget, you know, kind of I guess, you know, not exploitation, but like
maybe something where the woman would have been doing something totally different in that in
that film. So I was I was cracking up like the the husband when he's like sobbing. Remember,
he's shaking his head at like for the last five minutes. When this dude is like sobbing because
he can't be with a lane. I was taking so many photos of my TV in the basement of like him.
So yeah, that stuff I I adored like I love this stilted aesthetic. Danny, maybe you had different
opinions. It just you know every every like intro to those scenes where he comes out of his
office and the lady cop talks to him or even like any and like it just felt like it just was like
bad like it's almost um stereotypical like early like porn writing like I'm just a witch in a
new town looking for love. What can I find? And it's just it just and then she's like what do you
do the night for dinner? And it's just so like set it's like every every scene felt like a set
up for porn. And it was that's how it felt the entire time like it was just it I don't know if
it made me laugh. I'm just like what is happening? Who wrote this film? It was just like I don't get
it like I'm not getting this. I wasn't getting like any satirical vibe with it because it just
felt like bad writing and bad acting to be honest. Double threat. Oh, I wrote this insane
line down. You sex magic to destroy his sphere of view and it will open the floodgates of love
only then will he see you as a human being. There's a lot of Pisces bashing in this movie too.
If I have one critique it would be the the bashing of Pisces. I should have known he's a Pisces.
Danny number two. Did they not have a budget for any hot male actors?
Were there any male hot actors in the 60s? In the 60s? I don't know. These guys were in
modern times. Where are the hot men? I couldn't get over how ugly these guys were that she was
going after. She wanted to like fall in love and marry these guys and I don't it was just
amazing to me. I couldn't get it. I couldn't understand. All they had the budget for was
Elaine, one hot actress, no hot men in this. Not enough hot people in this. That's so
funny. One guy doesn't even have eyebrows. The dead husband. Every time the dead husband appeared on
screen with that hair. Jump scare. Every time we repulsive hair. The smile. It was good
with me like twin peaks vibes. Oh yeah. That's a good call out. Part of what would you?
A lack of hot men in this movie. I don't see that's a thing like I feel like it was perfect.
Like it was pitch perfect. These dudes like they look like shlubs, right? It's like
and maybe this is really how all men look. That's true. We're all shlubs at the end of the day.
But yeah, I don't think I would want hot guys and I think it would kind of break the vibe.
It's funnier to see these guys die when they do. Part of number three.
Oh, we got to talk about the ending because I had completely forgotten what happens at the
end of this movie. Here's Griff. I don't think I've connected the dots the first time I saw this,
but that scene at the end where he gives her the male gaze and like stares her down and that she
starts to like cower in fear. It's so great. But as a guy, I'm watching this and you're falling in
love with Elaine and you're thinking, you know what? She's got a point. She didn't really kill
any of these guys. It's just the potion was maybe a little too strong. She wants to be with them.
She loves them. She's doing all the right things pretty much. You know, so I'm buying into the
Elaine, you know, maybe if I met Elaine, maybe I would date her. You know, that's what I'm thinking.
You're all in. I'm all in on Elaine at this point. Like what's not to love about a witch?
A lot of upside. But then she goes and kills Griff, you know, really just to cover her tracks.
And in that moment, I feel like it kind of like the walls like fall down. It's like, all right,
she really is like a sociopath who is going to she doesn't she's not oblivious to what she's
doing. She's doing it intentionally. And she's going to kill this guy to cover up. And it kind of
and I feel like in that moment, you're like, oh, man, I felt like I bought into Elaine. Even
though she clearly kills a few guys, I'm thinking like she's not all that bad. So I just love how
this movie kind of like does that and get you to buy into her. The potion worked on you as you
were watching the movie in a way. Yeah, I've totally forgot about the ending too. When she sees,
doesn't she see the card too? Doesn't she? Yeah, the tarot card. And then when she like looks
back at him, it's just like that skull. Yes. Looking back at her. And also, she has that like,
you know, magical fairy tale ending, the wedding or whatever. I mean, how about their drip at that
fair, the horse riding drip that they had where in the white dress shirts and the parachute pants,
whatever you want to call those things. Unreal. Unreal. Yeah. Yeah, I was shocked by the end. I
couldn't remember what that happened until this rewatch. I thought it was interesting that she
mimicked her painting that she had started at the beginning of the movie. Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Let's see. One of my points was, I mean, we talked about the visuals, but the hallucinations
sex with that beardo. Like, that whole scene is wild. Like with the rainbow stuff. The frisums?
The bar is on. Man, that guy was hooked up. Lord, I wouldn't have been able to walk, let alone
what they did together. Yeah, I'd be face down on the floor, probably steak pouring out of my mouth.
Based on something. I did want to bring up my wife and I went, I can't
remember if I told the story on this show or not, but we went to a ghost hunt a couple years ago
in Gettysburg. There was like an Airbnb where we go with other couples and we at this old
building in Gettysburg that was like a hospital during the war. So this ghost hunting team
puts up this event. You do a seance. You do some walk through the land with some electrical
equipment and stuff. But two of the women there were witches. So a man and I sit down, we're
like introducing the couples and we were just like sitting listening to these women talk.
Like, this is real life. There are there are witches out there today. Okay, folks.
So I'll link, I ended up doing a podcast about it. I think we had this conversation about the
witch stuff. But at that time, I was like a man and I were like eyes darting across the room.
Like, are we both hearing this at the same time? Because I had never had any like, you know,
encounter like that in my life. So I just wanted to call that out. That it's real. It happens.
Danny, final point. Oh. Well, this is in the vein of what you were just talking about with the
witches and stuff. Does our love witch Elaine do any witchcraft in this entire movie?
Or is she just poisoning people with tea? I mean, I think a lot of the witch stuff is like those
concoctions and potions. Is that what a lack of a better word? I'm wanting like she rolls out like
those voodoo dolls at one point. I'm like, okay, here we go. Witch stuff. And they just kind of get
wrapped back up and put away. Like, I was wanting way more witchcraft in this film than just
here drink some tea. I'm going to flash my coat. And then you're going to get
shroomed up and we're going to have sex. And you're going to love me forever. Like, I was, I was,
I don't know if I wanted a horror more horror out of this, but I definitely was expecting more
witch stuff. I couldn't get over how little witchcraft we got in a movie called The Love Witch.
I mean, I don't even remember. And I don't even think we got enough love for for this movie.
Like, I don't know, not enough with not enough love. And for what every time I heard like,
this is a horny movie, et cetera, et cetera, it didn't go far enough. There was not enough horn in
this movie. There's pornier movies that I've seen on this podcast. It was just, it was amazing.
I couldn't get over. There was very little witchcraft on, I don't know. It just was interesting to me.
Well, remember, at one point she describes witchcraft. And she says that witchcraft is just your
ability to exert your will to get what you want. So I guess maybe in the traditional sense,
we think of witchcraft as having some kind of spiritual or paranormal effect, where for her,
it's just all very practical. And it makes you think like, man, if witches weren't so suppressed
in our culture, how much could they have done? I mean, a lot of the non, you know, movie witch
stuff is like stones, herbalism, tarot cards, and some psychic stuff. That's like modern real
life witchery. So I think it does that pretty well in the movie. I mean, there is the herbalism
stuff used tampon. You know, I don't know if actually which is used tampons in there.
A lot of the double check that. Which not Google searching that at all to confirm, but
it just did it just I was I just wanted something more. I thought we were going to get it a little
bit, but it just felt so it almost felt like the witchcraft felt like an afterthought. G rated,
G rated witchery. Yeah, I needed our rated witchery. Fair. Proto final thoughts. Honorable mentions.
Honorable mentions.
I love the lighting in this. There's so many shots of like they have like the strong red and blue
lighting coming on the characters. And it's not that it looks good or realistic. It just feels so
fitting to the vibe that's being established in the movie.
God, Wayne was so good. Oh, in the bar, there was the one character. I think he was like a local.
I think his name was Lyle where he would just kind of kind of look like still yelling guy.
Yeah, the guy would yell and he would just kind of be like, there's witches in this town.
I think the witches killed him. He was great.
How about that guy that looks like Tim Burton that like dude, which
Oh, the dude, which was so disgusting. Oh my gosh. That guy always
screened Elaine's mentor. Is that like the dream? That whole coven. He was gross.
All hot women know hot dudes. This was a dude who was like 85 kneeling down. What are we doing?
Fallen asleep in that circle. Miner gross.
The scene where Griff, the cop gets in a fight with his partner Steve. They're like disagreeing
and he's saying like, you know, Elaine's a witch. She probably killed those dudes and Griff is
caught in the web already. He does. He's not seeing it. And then he gives a punch to Steve.
That punch. That punch knocks in the office. Yeah, I could believe what I was watching.
If I wasn't watching it for this podcast, I would have turned it off right there. Oh my god.
It almost felt like a little like love tap. Like Steve's reaction of fall and back.
Didn't ever make sense. But I feel like I feel like you could give a friend like a hit like.
I feel like next time I see Slim, I could like just be like him.
The amount of people that would love to punch me in the face. I mean, just a little to love tap,
you know, just to connect. You know, it won't hurt. It should be like soft connect here.
We should reenact that. I'm down. I'll take the punch too. You be Griff. I'll be a
lane. Next 70 mm summit. Oh, the scene at the end where Trish dresses up as a lane. Oh man.
And this covers the the voodoo dolls and her husband's picture with the framed pictures.
Like talk about regret. Maybe I shouldn't have dressed up in her clothes and underwear
at this revelation. Like this doesn't really look good for me right now.
Yeah, and then she's on top of her and she says, bitch, you killed my husband.
Like while she looks exactly like her and like punching her. Amazing. Amazing moment.
Yeah, I had a great time rewatching this. I love this movie. I think it's hilarious.
I think it's gorgeous. I love the context and the commentary of everything involved.
So I'm not still at four stars for the love witch.
The love witch.
There was one my honorable mentions. Oh, did you notice when the cop was at his desk
and his monitor is like barely off screen. There's a printout that covers the monitor.
It's almost like a printout of a computer desktop and it's like taped to the monitor.
There's zero budget in this movie. It's like they didn't have the budget for the power
cords of these monitors that they probably found at the scrappy art. I mean,
honestly, pretty smart idea. Just make it work. Evan, Chuck, can we talk about that last
T-scene with Trish? Yeah, when Trish is like grieving in black and she's telling her about how like
she's going to marry the cop and all that stuff. Yeah, rough, rough term of events for Trish.
What is a furniture convention? Do you notice that Trish was going to a furniture convention?
She's a weird designer. That sounds like a made up convention.
Jenna went to one of those earlier this year.
I need photo evidence, Jenna, if you're listening.
In Texas, I think it's in Texas, there's like the furniture capital of the world.
That's like all these furniture constraints go there.
I forget what it's called. You cut the stream. God, I'm going to find it.
Half we can do about tampons. We'll Google about the furniture king of the world.
I still really enjoy this movie. This viewing, I started to feel like, yes, it is maybe
a little bit too long. It's two hours. I think 90 minutes would have been fantastic.
You cut that rent fair out. That rent fair is long. It's a long scene.
Cut that whole thing out. You'd have yourself a quick little movie. So I'm lowering my rating.
I'm at four stars for the love pitch for this go round.
Yeah, for me, I didn't enjoy this film at all. There were the bits that I loved,
which had to really just kind of do with visuals. Her apartment, her look, the color.
But man, everything about each aspect of this film never felt fully realized for me.
Everything felt like, not even like budgetary constraints. The story just didn't connect with me.
I every actor just kind of felt a little bit over the top, not a lane. I thought she was great.
But nothing felt fully realized. Everything just felt boring-ish kind of
blah. Truthfully, if I wasn't watching this film for the podcast, I think it would have been
the enough for me. I really was bored. It really was just boring. And I think I expected
way too much out of it. I expected for something unrated. I was like, man, we're going to get some
blood and sex. It had some considerable hype in our circles. It really did. I think it
definitely was overhyped a bit. But I can trust my friends to love a movie and
me love it back. But there was just something I don't know. I expected too much. My
bar was raised too high, I think. But then again, I was still just bored. I really just didn't
have a good time. So I'm at two stars for this film. We're working through this.
We're working through it. We'll come out stronger. We always come out stronger at the end of these
episodes than we were before. That's a fact, Jack. Okay. It's finished. We made it through.
We're stronger than ever. I don't want a 4K of us.
They're asking for artwork in the chat. It'll be there in two shows.
If folks are listening to this right now, you can see the art in the podcast app and it's
glorious. Two shicks. Danny Dutters again. Every movie deserves five stars. That's my motto.
Oh my God. It's a great slogan. All right. What is the name of this month?
Femme Timber. We haven't landed on that.
September is continuing. Next week is my pick. I'm about to reveal it right now.
Talk to us. Talk to us about your journey to the process. Oh my god. What a journey.
I'd still love to do my other options. I feel like I have some great options here.
But you've landed. You're locked. You don't want to talk to those options with us.
Here's one that didn't make the cut. Well, first of all, I picked a movie that none of us
have logged. That was the main motive. It's a great motive. Love it.
Um, but the honorable mentions that didn't make it, Agnes Vardes Le Bonne here. 1965 was in the running.
Only a woman could dare to make this film. That was the tagline?
Through married, though married to a good-natured beautiful, Teresa, young husband and father
Francois finds himself falling unquestionably into an affair with an attractive postal worker
streaming on Criterion Max. Very close to choosing this one. I watched this for a letterbox
show. I don't have ratings. This movie shocked me. It's all I'll say.
And again, we're going to be posting a Patreon post. We're going to ask people for their comments
about what they want us to cover. Maybe some of these movies you want to see post in the comments.
Comments. Another one of them in the running.
From Claire Denny, 1999, Bo Trevail. Probably one of the most famous posters I've ever seen in my
life. Excuse me? Look at this in my watch list for years. Look at these. Look at this poster.
You have to click through, obviously, but Farron Legion officer Gallup recalls his once glorious
life leading troops into the Gulf of Djibouti. His existence there was happy, strict, and regimented,
but the arrival of a promising young recruit plants the seeds of jealousy in his mind.
Really want to see this one. I've seen this on like every list ever.
My number two pick. What's left? This was the one between this one and my pick.
It was past lives. Oh my God.
Celine Song. This is a rental. I almost picked this. Again, we'll have a Patreon post,
put in the comments what movie you want to see us do. But I saw it already. That was I came
to this pick. Ninety minutes long. Oh, actually, no, I'm sorry, 82 minutes.
Do you believe this five stars? Celine Siamma, back on the show, 2011,
Tom Boy streaming on the Criterion channel. I almost picked this for the last, I think,
women focused month. I can't remember what I chose over. There was a reason why it maybe it
wasn't streaming at the time. There's a new kid in town, a French family with two daughters,
ten-year-old Laurie and six-year-old Jean moved to a new neighborhood during the summer holidays.
With her Tom Boy waves, Laurie is immediately mistaken for a boy by the local kids and passes
herself off as Michael. I've been waiting to watch this movie mainly for the podcast.
Excuse me. 82 minutes. This is exciting. Streaming on the Criterion.
Celine, back on the show. Dang. My absolute queen. We're back.
We are so back. It reminds me. I forgot to talk about that gun-wielding chimp from Lawnmower Ball.
Tom asked movie. Gosh. That's it. Now we have our week planned out. We got a lot of Patreon
posts coming to help us select the last video. Movie? Part of any closing thoughts.
Maybe we should all look into witchcraft a little bit. After I watched this movie the first time,
I thought maybe women are on something. Maybe they should be in charge. Maybe this whole
witchcraft thing. Maybe there's something there. Maybe our world would be a better place with more
witchcraft. Just got the things that can't be measured by science. The things you're feeling
in your gut that you know to be true. You're intuition. Men don't have much intuition.
That's why we discount these kind of things. But I mean my daughter, 10, she could tell you,
she could look at you and she knows what astrology sign you are. It's incredible. The other
night she told me all of her friends she knows their sign. She's in deep. I don't even know how
she got there. But I think there's something there. So I think we all just have to continue to
keep an open mind to these things. Keep an open mind always. We'll see you right next week.
Tom Boy streaming on the Craterian channel.
Seventy millimeter is a tape deck production featuring original artwork provided by Danny
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