There’s a movie podcast I love to listen to called the “Podcast on Fire.” Kenny B and his various co-hosts focus on Asia, especially the films of Hong Kong and South Korea. They have a large back catalogue, and I’ve been catching up on their episodes related to South Korean horror. In the middle of a show on the WHISPERING CORRIDORS series, co-host Paul Quinn mentioned THE CALL, a film that was released on Netflix during the pandemic. I’m usually not a consumer of freaky horror, but his enthusiasm for the film proved infectious, so I decided I’d check it out when I got home from work.
THE CALL centers on two 28 year old women. There’s Seo-yeon (Park Shin-hye), who’s visiting her childhood home in the country when she receives a series of phone calls from 28 year old Young-sook (Jeon Jong-seo). They soon realize that Young-sook is calling Seo-yeon from the same house… just from 20 years in the past. Both with severe mommy issues, the two ladies initially seem to form a friendship. They even use their knowledge of events in the past to help each other in ways that change the future. But as you might guess, these changes come with severe consequences, and the story eventually turns into one of bloody survival!
I wasn’t expecting it, but I kept thinking of one of my favorite movies, FREQUENCY (2000), while watching THE CALL. In FREQUENCY, an adult son is able to talk to his deceased dad from 30 years in the past on their family’s old ham radio. We may not really understand the science behind it all, but we just accept it. Their discussions start out as heartwarming, and their actions that change the future seem good at first, but then eventually bad things happen. That’s pretty much what takes place in THE CALL, with the exception that these ladies are not family and the radio has been replaced by one of those late 20th century cordless phones. The heartwarming early moments eventually devolve into a lot of crying, screaming, and gaping neck wounds.
While the concept has been done before, the filmmakers do a good job of building genuine suspense. It’s one of those movies where the stakes keep getting raised, and when you think they’re as high as they can go, they’re ramped up another notch. There are a few effective jump scares here, but the primary tension is in the growing sense of dread concerning how the actions in the past will affect the present. Let’s just say that some of the characters in the present aren’t allowed to enjoy their newfound health and well-being for very long.
I wasn’t familiar with either of the lead actresses going in, but they’re both excellent. In the present time, Park Shin-hye invests enough vulnerability in her character of Seo-yeon that you can’t help but pull for her, especially as her world is continuously turned upside down. And I can’t say enough about Jeon Jong-seo, who gets the showier role in the past timeline. Her character starts out as sympathetic, but she doesn’t stay that way. It’s an unnerving character and performance.
At the end of the day, I had a good time with THE CALL. It’s been awhile since I watched a film from South Korea, so it was fun for me to jump back in. If you enjoy a good horror-suspense-thriller, this one’s an easy recommendation!
As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in a few weekly live tweets on twitter. I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday, I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday, and I am one of the five hosts of #MondayActionMovie! Every week, we get together. We watch a movie. We tweet our way through it.
Tonight, for #ScarySocial, I will be hosting Daybreakers! This vampire film co-stars Sam Neill!
If you want to join us on Saturday night, just hop onto twitter, start the film at 9 pm et, and use the #ScarySocial hashtag! The film is available on Prime! I’ll be there co-hosting and I imagine some other members of the TSL Crew will be there as well. It’s a friendly group and welcoming of newcomers so don’t be shy!
This is a song that I first heard when I first watched Palo Alto.
Ever since then, it’s a song that has randomly popped into my head at certain times, usually whenever I’m possessed by the melancholy spirit that always seems to follow me around this time of year. It’s a song that always makes me feel better, despite what happened in Palo Alto.
Today, the Shattered Lens wishes a happy birthday to director Paul Verhoeven. This scene that I love is from Verhoeven’s 1997 sci-fi epic, StarshipTroopers. Over-the-top, satirical, and violent, this scene epitomizes the aesthetic of Verhoeven’s American films.
4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking.
It’s Paul Verhoeven’s birthday and that means that it is time for….
4 Shots From 4 Paul Verhoeven Films
Robocop (1987, dir by Paul Verhoeven, DP: Jost Vacano)
Total Recall (1990, dir by Paul Verhoeven, DP: Jost Vacano)
Showgirls (1995, dir by Paul Verhoeven, DP: Jost Vacano)
Starship Troopers (1997, dir by Paul Verhoeven, DP: Jost Vacano)
No, I’m not talking about the Gladiator with Russell Crowe. I’m talking about a film that came out in 1992 that starred James Marshall and Cuba Gooding, Jr. as two teenagers who get caught up in the lucrative world of street fighting. Robert Loggia plays a trainer.
As was typical of films of the era, the soundtrack featured cover tunes by glam metal bands who were suddenly affordable due to the rise of Nirvana and grunge. This video is for Warant’s cover of Queen’s We Will Rock You. The video itself is split between footage of Warrant performing and footage taken from the movie. So, if you’ve forgotten this version of Gladiator, consider this to be a refresher.
There are certain albums that feel less like recordings and more like seismic events, cultural detonations that change the very fabric of rock music overnight. Appetite for Destruction by Guns N’ Roses is exactly that kind of artifact. Dropped in the sweltering summer of 1987, it didn’t just arrive on the scene; it crash-landed with a leather-jacketed sneer, a bottle of Jack in one hand, and a middle finger permanently extended toward the polished, synth-pop wasteland of the mid-eighties. To talk about this record is to talk about a perfect storm of sleaze, desperation, genius, and raw, unadulterated fury. It’s an album that sounds like it was recorded in a dumpster behind a strip club, and I mean that as the highest possible compliment. From the opening rev of a motorcycle engine to the final, fading feedback, Appetite doesn’t ask for your permission—it takes your ears hostage and doesn’t let go for fifty-three glorious, grimy minutes.
Let’s get the obvious out of the way first: the opening one-two punch of Welcome to the Jungle and It’s So Easy is arguably the most ferocious start to any debut album in rock history. Welcome to the Jungle isn’t just a song; it’s a thesis statement, a mission brief, and a warning siren all rolled into one. That iconic, descending guitar riff from Slash, paired with Duff McKagan’s pulsating bass, creates this atmosphere of predatory tension that practically drips with sweat. And then Axl Rose comes in with that whisper-to-a-shriek delivery, painting a picture of Los Angeles as a concrete zoo where you’re either the hunter or the prey. The way the track builds, drops, and explodes is pure cinematic chaos. It’s easy to forget now, after it’s been played in a million stadiums and movie trailers, just how genuinely threatening and unhinged that song felt in 1987. It didn’t sound like a band trying to make it; it sounded like a band that had already survived the jungle and was now documenting the scars for the rest of us.
But what makes Appetite truly immortal isn’t just the aggression—it’s the staggering versatility that the band displays without ever losing their core identity. Take Sweet Child O’ Mine, for instance. That song is the ultimate bait-and-switch. It opens with that ridiculously beautiful, arpeggiated guitar line that Slash famously wrote as a joke, a warm-up exercise that accidentally became one of the most recognizable riffs on the planet. It’s a power ballad, sure, but it’s a power ballad with fangs. Axl’s vocal performance is nothing short of otherworldly; he goes from a fragile, almost pleading croon to that shattering, high-octane wail in the bridge, all while the rhythm section of McKagan and Steven Adler locks into a groove that’s as tender as it is thunderous. It’s the song that got the girls into the band, but it never feels like a sellout because the raw emotion is so palpable. It’s not a calculated radio hit; it’s a genuine love letter that happens to have a guitar solo that sounds like a soul ascending to heaven.
Then, just when you think you’ve got them figured out, they hit you with Nightrain. This is the dirty, drunk, punk-rock heart of the album. It’s a tribute to a cheap fortified wine, and it grooves with a swagger that the Rolling Stones would kill for in their prime. The chorus is pure, fist-pumping nihilism, and Slash’s solo is a molten, bluesy meltdown that feels like the last call at the end of the world. The production, handled brilliantly by Mike Clink, is key here. It’s raw and live-sounding, but it’s not muddy. Every instrument has its own filthy space, from Izzy Stradlin’s rhythm guitar chug to Duff’s melodic, punky bass lines. You can practically smell the stale beer and cigarette smoke bleeding out of the speakers. The album never loses that bar-band energy, even when the songwriting gets incredibly sophisticated.
And this is where the band’s secret weapon really shines: they somehow managed to attract every single rock subculture under the sun without alienating a single one. Think about the landscape of 1987—you had the hair-metal posers with their teased manes and lipstick on one side, the thrash-metal heads in their battle vests on another, the punk purists sneering from the dive bars, the hard-rock traditionalists worshipping at the altar of Led Zeppelin, and the blues-rock nerds obsessing over every bend of a B.B. King string. Guns N’ Roses walked into that fractured scene and said, “We’re all of you.” The hair-metal crowd heard It’s So Easy and Rocket Queen and latched onto the sleazy, glam-adjacent swagger, the gutter-sex appeal, and Axl’s pirouetting, bandana-flailing stage presence that fit right in with the Sunset Strip circus. But then the punks heard the raw, breakneck fury of Out ta Get Me and the sneering, three-chord nihilism of Anything Goes, and they recognized kindred spirits who’d rather spit on the floor than bow to radio executives. The heavy-metal contingent got their fix from the galloping, double-bass-driven assault of Paradise City’s thrashy finale and the down-tuned, Sabbath-esque crush of My Michelle, which rumbles with a darkness that made Bon Jovi sound like a children’s choir. Hard-rock traditionalists, meanwhile, found their holy grail in the swaggering, arena-filling anthems like Welcome to the Jungle and the grooving, fist-in-the-air defiance of Nightrain, tracks that could have sat comfortably beside Aerosmith’s Rocks or AC/DC’s Highway to Hell. And the blues-rock purists? They got Slash. That man plays like he sold his soul at a Mississippi crossroads, and nowhere is that more evident than in the extended, crying, bottleneck-inspired solos on Sweet Child O’ Mine and the achingly slow, gospel-tinged breakdown in Rocket Queen, where his Les Paul weeps and moans with a feel that’s pure Delta mud mixed with L.A. smog. The band was a living, breathing jukebox of rock’s entire lineage, and they wore those influences on their ripped sleeves without ever sounding like a tribute act. They synthesized punk’s attitude, metal’s power, blues’s soul, hard rock’s hooks, and even hair metal’s theatricality into something that felt wholly original—a grimy, beautiful mongrel that refused to be boxed in.
Lyrically, Axl Rose was operating on a level that most of his contemporaries—especially the hair-metal frontmen—couldn’t even comprehend. While the posers were writing about partying and chicks in a cartoonish, bubblegum way, Axl was penning dark, psychological character studies and social commentaries that appealed to the punk and metal crowds’ appetite for grit. Mr. Brownstone is a prime example—a track about heroin addiction that somehow manages to be both deeply sinister and weirdly funky. The riff is a slinky, rolling groove that hooks you immediately, but the lyrics are a stark, unflinching look at dependency and apathy. Lines like “I used to do a little but a little wouldn’t do it, so the little got more and more” are delivered with a grim, knowing smirk that makes the whole thing chilling. It’s not glorifying the drug; it’s just stating the bleak reality of the Sunset Strip scene with brutal honesty, a rawness that appealed as much to punk’s confessional nihilism as to metal’s fascination with darkness. That kind of authenticity was their secret weapon. They weren’t posers; they were survivors, and every track felt like a page from a very tattered diary.
Of course, we have to talk about the elephant in the room—or rather, the monster in the alley: Rocket Queen. This is the epic, the magnum opus, the sprawling, seven-minute closer that ties the whole chaotic experience together with a dirty bow. It starts with a swaggering, funky riff that’s pure rock and roll sleaze, the kind of groove that hair-metal bands would kill for, complete with the infamous, uh, “studio ambiance” that Axl recorded with Adriana Smith. It’s shocking and provocative, sure, but the real genius is how the song completely transforms halfway through. It drops into a slow, soulful, almost gospel-tinged breakdown, with Slash laying down one of the most emotional, heart-wrenching guitar solos of his career—a solo that owes everything to blues-rock legends like Eric Clapton and Joe Perry. Axl’s vocals shift from lustful grunts to a pleading, vulnerable cry, and the outro is pure catharsis, building into a heavy-metal crescendo that would make Judas Priest nod in approval. It’s the sound of a band laying every single card on the table—the filth, the tenderness, the rage, the longing—all in one track, pulling from every corner of rock’s spectrum without breaking a sweat. It’s audacious and slightly perverse, but it’s also breathtakingly ambitious, and it’s the perfect end to a record that refuses to be pigeonholed.
Looking at the deep cuts, Out ta Get Me is a paranoid, thrashy anthem about persecution that still hits with the force of a sledgehammer, its punk-rock speed and metal crunch making it a mosh-pit favorite, while My Michelle is a brutal, harrowing portrait of a real friend of the band’s tragic life, set to a riff that sounds like a carnival from hell—pure hard-rock horror with a bluesy underbelly. Even Anything Goes, which is probably the weakest track on the album, still has a nasty, infectious groove that would be a career highlight for most other bands, with a sleazy, hair-metal vibe that’s impossible to resist. The secret sauce isn’t just Axl’s incredible vocal range or Slash’s iconic top hat; it’s the rhythm section of Duff and Adler. Duff’s punk-rock bass lines are the melodic anchor, giving the heavier tracks a propulsive, Ramones-like energy, while Adler’s swing—often overlooked in favor of flashier drummers—is what gives these songs their hips. He plays with a loose, almost jazz-meets-blues feel that keeps the music from becoming too stiff, which is why you can actually dance to Paradise City despite its breakneck speed. That rhythmic foundation allowed the band to flirt with thrash tempos, blues shuffles, and hard-rock stomps all within the same album, making it a unifying force for fans who normally wouldn’t share a beer.
And Paradise City, what a monster that is. It’s the ultimate showstopper, starting with a slow, country-tinged blues-rock intro that sounds like it belongs in a dusty roadside bar, then building into a galloping, thrash-metal finale that’s pure adrenaline. The juxtaposition of the sweet, nostalgic chorus with the ferocious, double-time verses is pure genius, seamlessly bridging the gap between the melodic hooks of hair metal and the raw aggression of underground punk and heavy metal. When Axl screams “Take me down” at the end, it’s not just a vocal performance; it’s a primal exorcism that could only come from a band that digested every riff and every attitude that came before them. The album ends with Rocket Queen, but in a way, Paradise City is the grand finale, the song that encapsulates everything great about this record: the beauty, the ugliness, the speed, and the sheer, unapologetic volume.
What’s truly remarkable about Appetite for Destruction is its timelessness and its role as a great unifier. Sure, the production has a distinctly 80s reverb on the snare, and the lyrical content is deeply rooted in the hedonism of that specific era, but the emotion is universal. It’s the sound of young, hungry, and dangerous men who had nothing to lose and everything to prove. They were the antidote to the fluffy pop-metal that dominated the radio, injecting a dose of raw, dangerous rock that owed as much to Aerosmith and the Rolling Stones as it did to the Sex Pistols and the New York Dolls, while simultaneously delivering the crushing weight of Black Sabbath and the theatrical flair of Mötley Crüe. It was a melting pot of punk, blues, hard rock, heavy metal, and hair-metal sleaze, and it never felt forced because those genres weren’t costumes for them—they were the very fabric of their upbringing. In the decades since, Guns N’ Roses imploded, reformed, and became a nostalgia act, but Appetite remains untouchable. It’s not just a great debut; it’s a great album, full stop, precisely because it gave every tribe within rock music a reason to nod their heads. It’s one of those rare records where the hype is not only justified but perhaps undersold. Every single track contributes to a cohesive, nasty, beautiful whole, and it stands as a testament to the fact that sometimes, the most dangerous bands—the ones that refuse to pick a lane—make the most enduring art. So crank it up, pour a drink, and let the jungle swallow you whole. It’s a ride you won’t forget, and honestly, you won’t want to.
(Editor’s Note – With Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey being an Event Level film, this probably won’t be the only post/opinion on it. Expect multiple viewpoints to come over time and enjoy!)
It’s been a long time since I read anything on Homer’s The Odyssey. Perhaps sometime in Junior High or High School. I only remember bits and pieces, but earlier this year, I watched the 1997 2-Part Miniseries with Armand Assante(who can do no wrong, despite how some may feel about 1993’s Fatal Instinct) to refresh my memory. That is also a great miniseries, which I recommend. Theoretically, there’s nothing to spoil here, but I’ll try to say little.
2026 has been somewhat amazing when it comes to film. We’ve seen fresh young filmmakers like Mark Fischbach and Kane Parsons take what little resources they had and make some magic in Iron Lung and Backrooms, respectively. Of course, Corey Barker’s little indie/Inde film, Obsession, continues to amaze and break records thanks to Navarette’s and the rest of the cast’s unforgettable performances. It’s a great sight to behold. On the other end of the filmmaking spectrum, we have big pitch films like Project Hail Maryand Christopher Nolan’s version of The Odyssey, showcasing what we can pull off with the advancments in film technology or just great writing.
Most IMAX movies have that label stating “Filmed with IMAX cameras”, which usually means that key scenes were recorded in the format. My first IMAX experience was back in 2003 with The Matrix Revolutions in the AMC Lincoln Center IMAX (which is still by far the best NYC hotspot for a classic big screen experience), but that was remastered to fit the screen. Most of Nolan’s works were filmed with IMAX cameras for key scenes as of 2008’s The Dark Knight. It’s commonplace now to see a film shift from the old square 4:3 (1.33:1) ratio to a 2:35:1 letterboxed widescreen. The intro to Richard Donner’s Superman is one of my favorite examples of it. 2001’s Moulin Rouge! did something similar, though the boarders weren’t exactly visible. If you watch a movie on Disney Plus or HBO Max filmed with IMAX cameras, you can often see the change in aspect ratio, either abrupt or with a smooth transition. Large Format Screenings aren’t anything extremely new. My Dad once drove the family out to Long Island to see a 70 MM showing of The Empire Strikes Back.
What makes The Odyssey so amazing is that Nolan filmed it entirely with IMAX cameras. There are tons of documentaries shot this way, but it’s rare for a feature film to do so. According to an interview with ABC News, Nolan and the crew went through 2 million feet of IMAX film, shot in 3 minute intervals because the cameras would use up the roll in that amount of time. Imagine setting up a shot, getting everyone on their marks and then letting them know you’ve 3 minutes for the actors to get to where they need to be in the scene and nail it. Academy Award Winning Cinematographer Hoyte Van Hoytema, who worked with Nolan since Dunkirk, captures some beautiful vistas and landscape shots that are just majestic regardless of the format you choose to watch the film in. If you can catch the film in the IMAX 70MM, you’re getting the best possible picture, though the Regal RPX I watched wasn’t a slouch by any means. I’m hoping I can catch it in IMAX before the run ends.
The film acknowledges that that the setting is in an age of magic, and as such, some things may be a little beyond the pale. I have to wonder how Ray Harryhausen and Stan Winston would feel about some of the visual effect choices in The Odyssey. There are some pretty wild elements of horror here, which is surprising coming from Nolan. They’re still practical, everyday things, but I had a few whispered “Wow” or “Oh crap!” moments.
The Odyssey is the story of Odysseus (Matt Damon, Interstellar, Oppenheimer), King of Ithaca and loyal servant to King Agememnon (Benny Safdie, Oppenheimer, The Smashing Machine). set on a quest to claim the city of Troy. The film jumps between Odysseus in various phases of his journey. Through his actions, he defies the gods and is sent (along with his men) far from Ithaca. Back home, his wife, Penelope (Anne Hathaway, The Dark Knight Rises, Interstellar) observes Zeus Law of hospitality to strangers. This, however, has brought many suitors who overstay their welcome and wish the claim both her hand and the throne in Odysseus’ absence, among them being the scheming Antinous (Robert Pattinson, Tenet, The Drama) and Polybus (Corey Hawkins, The Last Voyage of the Demeter). Her son, Telemachus (Tom Holland, the upcoming Spider-Man: Brand New Day) believes his father is still out there, but knows little of him. Can Odysseus find redemption? Can he and his men make their way back to Ithaca?
The casting for The Odyssey is really good, but for as stacked as it is both with friends and new talent, not everyone gets to shine as much as one would think. They all have a role to play in this and surprisingly, the strongest performances are more from the supporting cast than the main ones. Damon is just fine here. He’s reliable when I’ve watched him in films like The Martian and The Bourne Films. He fits Odysseus okay, there’s really nothing wrong with him at all in this. The character is mentally tortured in some ways and he just wants to get home. I’m just not entirely sure I felt the whole weight of the character with Damon’s performance. This isn’t to say he dials it in, far from it. Again, that’s more me coming off of watching Assante do his thing in the 90s and then uncontrollably comparing. Hathaway, on the other hand, I suppose anyone who watched Troy (a film I don’t really remember, other than for Brian Cox’s screaming) may make similar comparisons to different elements of this film.
Hathaway and Holland do more in their roles to carry the story along. Penelope pines for her love and Telemachus knowledge of his father, and that both showcase the emotions that go with that well. I’m used to Holland playing younger characters. This may be one of the first few times where he seemed more like an adult, which he handles well. On the supporting cast side, both John Leguizamo (John Wick) as the family’s servant and Himesh Patel (Tenet) as one of Odysseus’ main soldiers really stood out with their roles. For the smaller parts, Elliot Page’s (Inception) Sinon, Samantha Morton’s (Minority Report) Circe make the best of their scenes. Safdie’s Agamemnon in particular doesn’t have to say a word. His mere presence was enough. Pattinson could have been a bit stronger or darker in nature, but I felt he carried his character well. Jon Bernthal (The Accountant 2) and Lupita Nyong’o(A Quiet Place: Day One) don’t have particularly large roles, but are important to the tale. Zendaya and Charlize Theron are kind of regulated to just a little expositional assistance here and there. They, along with Mia Goth (Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein) could have easily received a “guest starring” credit and no one would have known the difference.
I only have 2 issues with the movie. The first is that there are some elements in the overall story that never come into play(such as the Adverse Winds). Granted, you’re condensing a major text down to just 3 hours, so they had to pick and choose what they were going to work with. Still, I would have like to have seen some of those elements. For a film about gods and monsters, The Odyssey felt like it really veered more towards the monsters than anything else. Again, that’s just me coming off classic films like Jason and the Argonauts and Clash of the Titans. The gods here feel mostly like advisors, if nothing else. Again, not terrible, just different from my expectation. The other problem (or tic, nitpick, maybe) is that you may or may not find yourself chuckling a little and thinking of Monty Python’s The Holy Grail during some sequences that involve running. Maybe it was just me, but seeing everyone go from one adventure to the next just had me expecting a killer rabbit to be somewhere on the list of enemies. no matter how serious the film was.
Musically, Ludwig Goransson hasn’t slowed down since winning an Oscar for Sinners last year. His score for Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu was easily the best part of that film. For The Odyssey, Gorannson was asked to use Peter Gabriel’s Passion (the soundtrack for Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ and one of my favorite sources for background writing music) as inspiration for his own score. Working with classic instruments, he did very well here. I’m listening to it now as I’m working on this piece. While I’m still trying to recall what sound went where, it’s a solid score overall.
Overall, I absolutely enjoyed The Odyssey. I’m not sure how it’ll fare come Awards Season, but I do hope it finds itself in the mix, at least from a Cinematography standpoint.
As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in a few weekly watch parties. On Twitter, I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday and I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday. On Mastodon, I am one of the five hosts of #MondayActionMovie! Every week, we get together. We watch a movie. We tweet our way through it.
Tonight, at 10 pm et, I will be hosting #FridayNightFlix! The movie? The Hunt for the Wilderpeople, starring Sam Neill!
If you want to join us this Friday, just hop onto twitter, find The Hunt For The Wilderpeople on Prime, start the movie at 10 pm et, and use the #FridayNightFlix hashtag! I’ll be there happily tweeting. It’s a friendly group and welcoming of newcomers so don’t be shy.