Brad’s Scene of the Day – The Bar Fight in CODE OF SILENCE!


As a teenager of the late 1980’s, I’ve always been a huge fan of Chuck Norris. And my favorite Chuck Norris movie has always been CODE OF SILENCE. My wife and I are celebrating the action star’s 86 birthday by watching the classic from director Andrew Davis! Norris was never better than he is here!

I Watched Who Killed The Montreal Expos? (2025, Dir. by Jean-François Poisson)


Who Killed The Montreal Expos? is a documentary about the first major league baseball franchise to be located outside of the United States.  From 1969 to 2004, the Expos played in Montreal, Canada.  The documentary shows how the Expos became a source of pride for the people of Montreal and how it also became a source of one of their greatest heartbreaks when, after years of financial mismanagement, it relocated and became the Washington Nationals.

I guess one reason why I could relate to this documentary was because, before they got the Nationals, Washington had two baseball teams known as the Senators.  The first Senators moved to Milwaukee in 1961 and became the Twins.  The second team to be known as the Senators relocated in 1971 and became my team, the Texas Rangers.  Sometimes, it’s hard for me to believe that my beloved Rangers once had a different name and played for a different city.  I can’t imagine how much it would hurt if the Rangers ever announced that they were leaving Texas.  But, as the Expos showed in 2004 and as the Chicago Bears are showing right now, even the most storied of franchises can relocate.

Who Killed The Montreal Expos? offers a lot of theories of what led to Montreal’s team leaving from Washington D.C.  A players strike in 1994 ended a season that could have taken the Expos to the World Series.  In 1995, several bad trades led to the Expos going from being the best team in the league to the worst.  The team was in need of a new stadium but could never seem to raise the funds to build one.  The documentary puts most of the blame on the second-to-last owner, an American who a lot of people think was planning to move the team all along.  In the end, it doesn’t seem like there was just one reason for the Expos leaving Montreal.  It was a perfect storm of hardships and mistakes and, unfortunately, it was the baseball fans of Montreal who suffered.

I don’t know who’s to blame.  I just know it hurts when your team leaves.  Montreal, I hope your Expos return soon!  And I pray my Rangers never leave Texas.

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Chuck Norris Edition


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!

Today, we celebrate the birthday of Chuck Norris.  It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 Chuck Norris Films

Silent Rage (1982, dir by Michael Miller, DP: Robert Jessup and Neil Roach)

Missing In Action (1984, dir by Joseph Zito, DP: João Fernandes)

The Delta Force (1986, dir by Menahem Golan, DP: David Gurifinkel)

Invasion USA (1985, dir by Joseph Zito, DP: João Fernandes)

Scenes That I Love: Chuck Norris Saves America In Invasion U.S.A.


Today, Chuck Norris celebrates his 86th birthday and it only feels appropriate that today’s scene that I love should come from one of his greatest films.  From 1985’s Invasion U.S.A., watch as Chuck Norris saves America from Richard Lynch!

One Piece: Into the Grand Line (Season 2, Episode 1 “The Beginning and the End”) Review


“Don’t hold a father’s sins against his son. Blood doesn’t dictate destiny—everyone chooses their own path on this sea.” — Gol D. Roger

The Season 2 premiere of One Piece feels like a confident “we know what worked, and we’re doubling down” while also quietly admitting there’s still a long Grand Line of growing pains ahead. The episode is busy, sometimes overstuffed, but it’s rarely dull, and it mostly recaptures the scrappy charm that made Season 1 such an unexpected win for anime-to-live-action adaptations.

Season 2 picks up with the Straw Hats heading toward the Grand Line, and the show wastes no time reminding you how much the core ensemble carries this adaptation. Iñaki Godoy’s Luffy still feels like the glue: goofy, earnest, and occasionally dangerous in that “you can’t believe this idiot is a future legend” way that matches the spirit of the source without copying the anime’s louder extremes. Emily Rudd’s Nami and Mackenyu’s Zoro remain the show’s emotional and stoic anchors, respectively, and the premiere leans on their established dynamics rather than reinventing them. You feel like you’re hanging out with a crew that’s already lived together for a while, which is half the battle in making this world feel real.

The premiere’s biggest shift is structural. Season 2 is tasked with bridging Loguetown, Reverse Mountain, and the early Alabasta material, and you can feel the writers trying to thread a needle between faithfulness and streamlining. Instead of lingering on the smaller beats of each arc, the episode compresses them into a fast-moving chain of set pieces and character introductions. Loguetown becomes less a full-fledged arc and more a dense prologue to the Grand Line era, packed with Marines, pirate legends, and hints of the Revolutionaries. Depending on what you want from this adaptation, that’s either exciting or mildly frustrating.

On the positive side, the sense of scale is undeniably bigger. The Marines’ presence, especially with Smoker and Tashigi entering the mix, gives the premiere a sharper cat-and-mouse energy. Smoker arrives as a force of nature—less cartoonishly overpowered than in the manga, but still clearly the kind of threat that turns Luffy’s carefree adventuring into something riskier. The show smartly plays him as a guy who thinks he’s in a different, more serious story, which makes his clashes with the Straw Hats fun to watch. Tashigi, meanwhile, brings a softer, more idealistic edge that contrasts nicely with Zoro’s exhaustion with swordsmen who talk too much.

The premiere also continues the series’ habit of sliding in big-name players earlier than the manga did, and that’s where the episode gets more divisive. Nico Robin and Dragon show up as ominous presences in the larger world, giving you a clearer sense of the many factions circling this goofy rubber pirate. The upside is that it makes the One Piece universe feel interconnected sooner; casual viewers get a better roadmap of who matters long-term. The downside is that some of these appearances flirt with Marvel-style “universe building” more than organic storytelling. When every scene is either paying off an old setup or seeding three new ones, it can be tough to just sit in a moment and feel it.

Production-wise, Season 2’s extra time and budget show. The premiere gives Loguetown and the surrounding seas a lived-in, often cinematic atmosphere that outpaces Season 1’s more patchwork locations. Costumes continue to walk that tightrope between cosplay-accurate and functional; Smoker, in particular, looks like he walked straight out of a stylized military drama with just enough anime flair layered on top. The CGI still isn’t blockbuster-tier, but the show compensates with smart framing and selective use—powers and creatures are used to accent action, not dominate it, which keeps things from tipping into uncanny territory.

Action remains one of the adaptation’s better tools, even if it still doesn’t fully hit the insanity of Oda’s panels. The premiere emphasizes clarity over spectacle: you can actually follow where people are standing, how the fight geography works, and what the emotional stakes are. That’s a big improvement over a lot of modern genre TV. When Smoker crashes into the story or the Straw Hats get caught up in the chaos of Loguetown, the choreography sells impact even when the VFX can’t quite keep up with the wilder Devil Fruit abilities. You won’t mistake it for Hong Kong–tier action cinema, but it’s clean, readable, and character-driven, which matters more for this kind of swashbuckling adventure.

Where the episode stumbles most is pacing and tone. The premiere is under pressure to reintroduce the main cast, onboard new viewers, set up Loguetown, tease Reverse Mountain, and seed the Alabasta saga, all while dropping in cameos and lore nods for fans who know exactly where this is all heading. That leads to a few whiplash moments where the show jumps from lighthearted crew banter to life-or-death tension to ominous worldbuilding monologues in rapid succession. Season 1 sometimes had that problem too, but the stakes are higher now, and you can feel the strain.

Character-wise, the core Straw Hats come out of the premiere in good shape, but some of the supporting cast is still fighting for oxygen. Garp appears in a flashback, speaking to Gol D. Roger before he is sent to the gallows—a visit that teases the arrival of a future fan-favorite set for season 3. While it’s good to see that thread remain important, these cutaways occasionally feel like they belong to a spin-off series. That worked in Season 1 as a way to broaden the world; here, with even more plates spinning and new villains entering, it risks crowding an already packed episode. At the same time, those scenes help underline one of the show’s better instincts: it keeps asking what piracy and justice actually mean in a world this chaotic, rather than just treating the Marines as cartoon bad guys.

Thematically, the premiere starts nudging One Piece toward slightly heavier waters without losing its goofy heart. The looming Grand Line, the introduced Revolutionaries, and the presence of more morally gray Marines all hint at a story that will increasingly interrogate systems of power and inherited ideals. But the episode never forgets that this is, first and foremost, a story about a weird found family chasing impossible dreams. The crew’s conversations on the Going Merry, the small jokes, and the quiet beats where they process what lies ahead are what keep the whole thing grounded.

As a Season 2 premiere, this episode does its job: it reassures fans that the live-action experiment wasn’t a fluke, raises the narrative ceiling, and points the ship squarely at the Grand Line with confidence. It’s not flawless—worldbuilding occasionally overtakes character focus, the pacing can feel like a sprint, and not every early cameo lands as organically as it should. But if you liked Season 1’s mix of earnestness, scrappy visual ambition, and slightly awkward but heartfelt adaptation choices, this opener suggests you’re in for a bigger, messier, and still surprisingly sincere voyage. For a story built on the idea that chasing the horizon is worth the risk, that feels like the right kind of start.

Retro Television Reviews Will Return On March 23rd


With both 2026’s second Friday the 13th approaching and Oscar Sunday this weekend and then St. Patrick’s Day and Bruce Willis’s birthday coming up the week after, this is going to be a busy 14 days for me.  I’ve got a lot of movies to watch and reviews to write so my Retro Television Reviews are going to take a break for the next two weeks.  They will return on March 23rd, at which point I will hopefully be all caught up!

Review: War Machine (dir. by Patrick Hughes)


“It’s not about us anymore. It’s warning everybody that thing’s coming.” — Staff Sergeant 81

War Machine is a slick, mid-budget sci-fi actioner that mostly does exactly what it promises: put Alan Ritchson in a killbox with something inhuman and let the cameras roll. It is also a film that keeps bumping up against more interesting ideas than it has time—or maybe courage—to fully explore.

Set around a Ranger Assessment and Selection Program (RASP) training exercise, War Machine drops a squad of U.S. Army candidates into what should be a controlled simulation and then twists the dial from “routine” to “existential threat” in a single, nasty turn. Patrick Hughes uses the military-training frame as a clean, modular structure: we get the briefing, the banter, the march into the woods, and then the sense that something is just off before the real problem reveals itself. That problem, teased heavily in marketing, is a non-human adversary that pushes the movie from grounded war-games thriller into full-on sci-fi horror-action.

On a pure premise level, the film is almost aggressively simple: what if you locked a handful of Rangers-in-the-making in with an advanced, alien threat and watched them improvise their way out? The script never strays far from that line. It moves briskly from beat to beat—contact, casualties, regroup, “this isn’t part of the exercise,” reveal—without a lot of digressions. That tightness keeps the pacing snappy, but it also means character work often comes in shorthand: a line about a family here, a rivalry there, enough to suggest depth without really digging for it.

Ritchson is easily the film’s biggest asset, and the filmmakers know it. Coming off Reacher, he arrives with a built-in persona: the big, capable, slightly sardonic soldier who you just instinctively trust to solve violent problems. War Machine leans into that, but it also asks him to play a little more vulnerability than his Amazon series typically allows. There are moments—usually between set-pieces—where you see the strain and confusion creeping in, and the performance keeps the movie from turning into a pure pose-fest.

Most of the supporting cast is drawn in broad strokes but works well enough in the moment. You get the expected squad dynamics: the true believer, the skeptic, the joker, the one who freezes when things get ugly. The film rarely surprises you with what these people do, but the actors sell the camaraderie, and when bodies start dropping, the losses feel at least momentarily sharp instead of purely mechanical. Still, if you walked out of the movie and had trouble naming more than two characters, that would be understandable; the movie cares more about how they move than who they are.

Hughes’ direction sits in that modern streaming-action pocket: clean, serviceable, with a couple of standout moments but nothing that radically redefines the genre. The early training beats are shot with a straight military grit that grounds the later sci-fi escalation; you can feel the weight of gear, the slog of the environment, the tight focus on lines of advance and retreat. When the alien threat fully enters the frame, the film shifts into a more stylized mode, with harsher lighting, heavier VFX integration, and some nicely framed silhouette shots that emphasize size and speed over detailed anatomy.

Action-wise, War Machine is at its best when it uses geography and tactics instead of just spraying bullets into darkness. A mid-film set-piece in a partially collapsed structure, where the squad tries to funnel the creature into a kill zone, shows how much more interesting the movie becomes when the characters think rather than simply react. You get coordinated movement, overlapping lanes of fire, and the sense of a plan barely holding together. Other sequences lean more on chaotic spectacle, with quick cuts and digital mayhem that get the job done without really sticking in your memory.

The creature itself—both in concept and in execution—is solid, if not iconic. Hughes has mentioned that his original instinct was to completely hide the sci-fi angle in marketing and even within the film for as long as possible, turning the reveal into a full-on genre pivot. You can feel that tension: the movie is structured like a long-burn mystery, but the way it’s framed assumes you already know there is some kind of alien or advanced threat in play. As a result, the first half can feel like it is coyly dancing around a surprise that you walked in expecting, which blunts some of the intended impact.

Once revealed, though, the alien threat has a tactile, physical presence that helps sell the danger, especially when Ritchson is forced into close-quarters encounters. The effects and practical elements blend reasonably well, particularly in dim environments where the film smartly avoids overexposing any weaknesses in the design. You’re never watching the thing and thinking “instant classic,” but you also rarely feel like you’re staring at a dated video-game cutscene, which is no small feat at this budget level.

Where War Machine wobbles is in its relationship to its own ideas. The RASP setting, the simulated-mission-gone-wrong structure, and the presence of an unprecedented threat all hint at questions about how militaries adapt to non-traditional warfare, how much human soldiers matter in a future of machines, and what “training” even looks like when the enemy doesn’t follow any known playbook. Every so often, the screenplay brushes up against those questions—usually in a line about command decisions or acceptable losses—and then quickly retreats back into “shoot, move, communicate.”

There is also a thread about trust in authority and the expendability of trainees that could have turned this into a sharper, more cynical film. Instead, War Machine opts for a more earnest, almost old-fashioned faith in individual bravery and brotherhood. The movie clearly admires these soldiers and wants you to admire them too, so it stops short of really indicting the system that put them in harm’s way. That choice keeps the tone accessible and avoids turning the movie into a lecture, but it also leaves some dramatic meat on the bone.

In terms of craft, this is very much a “Friday night streamer” movie—for better and worse. It looks good enough on a living room screen, with clean sound design that makes each impact and gunshot feel beefy without blowing out your ears. The editing rarely confuses basic spatial relationships, which already puts it ahead of a lot of action on the platform, but it also seldom lingers long enough on a moment to let you fully savor the choreography or the creature’s movement. You get the sense of a film that has been trimmed for pace and attention-span metrics more than for rhythm or mood.

There has already been talk of this being a “spectacle worth watching” if you like Ritchson and sci-fi action, paired with the caveat that it is a decent, familiar entry in a crowded space whose lead performance carries it over the line. That feels about right. War Machine is not trying to be the next genre landmark; it is trying to give fans of Reacher a chance to see their guy punch, shoot, and strategize his way through a different kind of nightmare. On that level, it mostly delivers.

The ending leaves the door open for more, without dunking you in a full-on cliffhanger. You can watch this, feel like you got a complete story, and still understand why the creative team is already floating sequel ideas and talking about “War Machines” in the plural. Whether that happens will depend on the usual streaming calculus—completion rates, social buzz, how long people keep it in their “Recently Watched.” Creatively, there is room to expand the world and dig into the implications that this first film mostly uses as background texture.

If you come to War Machine looking for tight, character-driven military sci-fi with big thematic swings, you’ll probably walk away thinking about what could have been. But if you want a solid, competently staged sci-fi shoot-’em-up anchored by a physically commanding lead turn, this is a pretty easy recommendation—especially if you are already waiting for the next season of Reacher and need something in the same physical, bruising register to fill a couple of hours.