Body and Soul (2000, directed by Sam Henry Kass)


Small town boxer Charlie Davis (Ray Mancini) travels to Reno with his best friend and manager, Tiny O’Toole (Michael Chiklis).  Charlie wants to become a professional and he has the support of Tiny and Gina (Jennifer Beals), a saintly hitchhiker that they pick up on the way to Nevada.  Charlie managers to impress a legendary trainer (Rod Steiger) but, as Charlie moves up the ranks, he comes under the influence of a corrupt promoter (Joe Mantegna).  Seduced by a bad girl (Tahnee Welch) and allowing his success to go to his head, Charlie alienates Tiny just when he needs him the most.  A chance to become the champion is coming up and the promoter expects Charlie to throw the fight.

There’s not a boxing cliche that goes unused in this movie.   Simple-minded by talented boxer?  Check.  Loyal best friend?  Check.  Overwrought narration?  Double check because merely calling this film’s narration overwrought doesn’t begin to do it justice.  Saintly good girl?  Check.  Dangerous bad girl?  Check.  Gruff trainer?  Check.  Corrupt promoter?  Another double check.  It’s not that the cliches are necessarily unwelcome.  Most boxing movies follow the same basic plot.  Instead, the problem here is that the film neither has the direction or the performances to make the cliches compelling.

You would think that casting Ray Mancini as a boxer would give this film some authenticity but Mancini looks as uncomfortable in the ring as he does when he’s having to actually act.  As bad as Mancini is, his performance is nowhere near as desultory as Michael Chiklis’s.  Chiklis not only plays Tiny but he also narrates the movie and watching and listening to him, you would be hard pressed to believe that he would someday star in The Shield.  Meanwhile, Rod Steiger and Jennifer Beals are wasted in underwritten roles.

If there is one thing that redeems the film, it’s Joe Mantegna as the crooked promoter.  Using his Fat Tony voice, Mantegna at least seems to have a sense of humor about the film.

I always appreciate a good boxing movie but this ain’t it.

Review: 8mm (dir. by Joel Schumacher)


“Because he could!” — Daniel Longdale

Joel Schumacher’s 8MM (1999) uncoils like a reel of forbidden footage you shouldn’t have found, pulling a buttoned-up private eye into the rancid shadows of underground smut peddlers and whispers of snuff films that may or may not exist. It’s a late-’90s thriller smack in the wake of Se7en and Kiss the Girls, starring Nicolas Cage as Tom Welles, a Harrisburg family man whose crisp suits and steady hands belie the unraveling ahead. Hired by a steel magnate’s widow to verify an 8mm tape depicting a girl’s torture-murder, Welles tumbles down a rabbit hole of L.A. peep shows and New York meatpacking sleaze, his moral compass spinning as the line between fantasy and atrocity blurs. Schumacher crafts a narrative engine that hums with procedural grit, doling out dread in measured doses while mirroring the protagonist’s corrosion, though it occasionally stumbles in its heavier-handed turns.

The setup hooks with surgical efficiency, painting Welles as everydad detective: he buries bodies for a living, kisses his infant daughter goodbye, and screens the tape in a vault-like study that feels like a confessional. Myra Carter’s Mrs. Christian trembles with decorous horror as the projector whirs to life, bathing the room in jaundiced flicker; the footage—grainy, handheld, a pleading teen bound for “Machine’s” blade—lands like a gut punch without lingering on gore. Lawyer Longdale (Anthony Heald, all patrician slime) waves it off as staged porn, but Welles digs anyway, tracing victim Mary Ann Mathews through missing-persons archives to her runaway dreams in Hollywood. Paired with Max California (Joaquin Phoenix), a Sunset Strip tape jockey with pawn-shop cynicism and a Zipperhead tee, they prowl fetish dens where vendors hawk needle-play loops and dismiss snuff as urban legend. Schumacher’s lens, via Robert Elswit, turns these dives into feverish grottos—neon strobes slicing steam, racks of VHS promising the forbidden—building unease through denial upon denial.

That mounting frustration propels the first hour’s finest stretches, a slow immersion where Welles’s calls home grow terse, his wife’s concern (Catherine Keener, quietly anchoring) a lifeline fraying in crosscuts. Max’s street-rat patter—”Snuff? Ain’t no such thing as snuff, man”—leavens the rot without undercutting it, Phoenix layering vulnerability beneath the snark that makes his arc genuinely affecting. Schumacher parcels revelations like a fuse burning short: a Florida trailer confirms Mary Ann’s vanishing, a porn mag scout nods toward “real death” commissions, and suddenly they’re in New York, knocking on Dino Velvet’s door. Peter Stormare vamps as the mulleted auteur of extremity, his studio a cathedral of spotlit chains where Machine (masked, hulking) performs for hidden lenses. The confrontation there explodes into sudden violence and betrayal, shattering assumptions about the tape’s origins and thrusting Welles into a desperate fight for survival, with devastating losses that harden his path forward.

This mid-film rupture peels back layers of the underworld’s machinery, revealing how far some will go to sate forbidden appetites—no vast conspiracy, just raw opportunism turning fantasy lethal. Chaos erupts in a brutal showdown that catapults Welles into lone-wolf payback, though the script’s mechanics creak here, tipping from investigation to vengeance saga with less finesse than its buildup promises. He tracks leads back to L.A., confronting scout Eddie Poole (James Gandolfini) in a derelict factory, beating out confessions amid rusted girders, then facing Machine—unmasked as unassuming accountant George Higgins (Chris Bauer), who shrugs, “I like it”—in a rain-slicked graveyard melee. Schumacher stages the violence as visceral toll, not catharsis: fists land with bone-crunching thuds, blood sprays real, and Welles emerges hollowed, sobbing in his wife’s arms over the unerasable stain. It’s raw consequence over triumph, indicting the watcher as much as the watched.

Cage shoulders the load masterfully, dialing back his manic energy for a portrait of competence curdling into obsession—hesitant stares post-tape, fists unclenching at home, exploding only when the dam breaks. It’s restrained Cage at his peak, the fury earned through incremental fracture, though some beats flirt with overemphasis. Phoenix shines brighter still, turning Max from sidekick gag into soulful foil; his death resonates because Joaquin sells the bravado as fragile armor. Stormare’s Dino struts operatic depravity, a Bond villain in wifebeater, while Gandolfini’s Poole simmers regretful everyman heft—pre-Sopranos groundwork for Tony’s shadows. Heald’s Longdale drips WASP entitlement, and bits like Norman Reedus’s twitchy dealer add lived-in texture. Schumacher elicits extremes without cartooning them, populating the underworld with deviants who feel plausibly human, not pulp cutouts.

Visually, 8MM thrums with Schumacher’s maximalist pulse tamed to noir grit: Elswit’s shadows swallow faces in peep booths’ crimson haze, the snuff reel’s jitter evokes cursed artifacts, and the loft showdown’s spotlights carve brutality like Bosch hellscapes. Mychael Danna’s score slithers—piano sparsity for Welles’s drift, synth throbs for dives—capped by Aphex Twin’s “Come to Daddy” warping a raid into glitch-rage frenzy. Production design nails the era’s analog underbelly: dog-eared tape boxes, industrial decay standing in for L.A. (shot cheap in Florida), all evoking a pre-digital void where evil hides on celluloid. The snuff aesthetic probes voyeurism smartly—we glimpse pleas and steel without exploitation, questioning our gaze alongside Welles’s, though the film’s flirtation with seediness risks tipping into the very prurience it critiques.

Andrew Kevin Walker’s script (fresh off Se7en) structures as moral diptych: procedural probe yields to vigilante spasm, bookended by domestic anchors that underscore the cost. No tidy psychologizing redeems the killers—Higgins kills because appetite wills it, Poole for “business,” others for greed—exposing evil’s flat banality over tortured backstories. The widow’s suicide post-truth, Mary Ann’s mom’s grateful note (“You cared enough to try”), and Welles’s scarred homecoming deny closure; vengeance hardens more than heals, bodies burned sans parade of justice. It’s a gut-punch thesis on film’s limits: some horrors defy capture, watching them unmakes the witness. Schumacher, slumming post-Batman gloss, revels in the ugly, though pacing drags early in porn prowls and the revenge rampage strains credulity.

Yet for all its stumbles—script contrivances like convenient turns, a third act veering punchy over precise—8MM endures as underrated descent, a thriller that stares unblinking into appetite’s void. Cage and Phoenix elevate genre tropes, Schumacher’s design makes depravity stick, and the core query lingers: does filming evil make it real, or us complicit? Flaws aside, it hums with the era’s dark electricity, a flawed reel worth unspooling for its unflinching grind.

Live Tweet Alert: Watch Arcade With #ScarySocial!


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 1993’s Arcade!

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!

 

Scenes That I Love: “I Love The Smell of Napalm in the Morning” from Apocalypse Now (Happy birthday, John Milius!)


Today, the Shattered Lens celebrates the 82nd birthday of the iconic screenwriter and director, John Milius!

While director Francis Ford Coppola definitely put his own stamp on 1979’s Apocalypse Now, the film started life as a script written by John Milius and the film itself is full of dialogue that could only have been written by Milius.  The most famous example is Robert Duvall’s monologue about the smell of napalm in the morning.  Actually, the entire helicopter attack feels like pure Milius.  Reportedly, Duvall’s character was originally named Colonel Kharnage but, by the time the movie was made, his name had become Kilgore.  It’s still not exactly a subtle name but it’s not quite as obvious as Kharnage.

(When James Caan read the script, he loved the role so much that he was offended to not be offered it and, as a result, he turned down offers to play not only Willard but also Kurtz.)

Happy birthday, John Milius!

“Someday, this war is going to end.”

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special John Milius Edition


4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More 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 is John Milius’s birthday and you know what?  It should be a national holiday!

It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 John Milius Films

Dillinger (1973, dir by John Milius, DP: Jules Brenner)

Big Wednesday (1978, dir by John Milius, DP: Bruce Surtees)

Conan The Barbarian (1982, dir by John Milius, DP: Duke Callaghan)

Red Dawn (1984, dir by John Milius, DP: Ric Waite)

Nightstick (1987, directed by Joseph L. Scanlan)


The three Bantam Brothers (Walker Boone, Tony DeSantis, and Dave Mucci) have just gotten out of prison and they’ve all already stolen several pounds of explosives.  Pretending to be international terrorists, they try to blackmail banker Adam Beardsley (John Vernon) into paying them off.  Deputy Police Commissioner Ray Melton (Robert Vaughn) wants to go by the book but his superior, Thad Evans (Leslie Nielsen), realizes that this case is going to require a cop who is willing to break all the rules.  It’s time to call in Jack Calhoun (Bruce Fairbairn).

When this movie started, I assumed that it was a comedy.  The title sounded like a double entendre and Leslie Nielsen’s name was right there in the opening credits.  The opening heist scene also felt like a comedy, up until the Bantam brothers started shooting people.  That was when I realized that this movie was supposed to be a drama.  Why would you cast a post-Airplane! Leslie Nielsen in a serious cop film?  This film did come out before The Naked Gun but it was still after Nielsen sent up every cop show ever made with the original Police Squad television series.  .And then, on top of Nielsen, the film gives us Robert Vaughn and a very grumpy John Vernon.  All it needed was OJ Simpson as Calhoun’s partner.

Even though the movie was a drama, it still felt like a comedy.  Bruce Fairbairn wasn’t much of a cop but luckily, the three Bantam brothers weren’t that much of a group of criminals.  Jack Calhoun had a girlfriend (Kerrie Keane) who constantly reminded him that he could have been having sex with her if he wasn’t constantly searching for the Bantam brothers.  “I can’t be in two places at once,” Calhoun said with a sigh.  I’m still not convinced this wasn’t a comedy.

Nightstick was originally made for Canadian television.  When it first aired, it was called Calhoun.  The name was changed to Nightstick for the video release, even though no one in the movie uses a nightstick.  Calhoun uses a gun and, at one point, a binder but he doesn’t carry a nightstick.  Maybe his character should have been named Jack Nightstick to make the title work.

Did I hallucinate this movie?  I’m pretty sure it was a comedy.

 

A War in Three Acts: Platoon, Full Metal Jacket, Hamburger Hill


“It don’t mean nothing, man. Not a thing.” — Motown

Between 1986 and 1987, American cinema gave us three tightly packed visions of the Vietnam War: Platoon, Full Metal Jacket, and Hamburger Hill. Released in rapid succession, these films all wrestle with the same historical trauma, but they do so in wildly different voices, rhythms, and moral registers. Together, they form a kind of triptych: one film leans into psychological moral chaos, another into ironic, machine‑like detachment, and the third into a quietly punishing realism that refuses to dress up the slaughter in metaphors. More than just their content, the way each film moves through its story is shaped entirely by the director’s fingerprint—Oliver Stone, Stanley Kubrick, and John Irvin—so the narrative flow of each movie becomes a direct extension of its directorial worldview.

The timing and the directorial context

The dates matter, because they show how a single era of pop culture could generate such divergent treatments of the same war. Platoon hit in 1986, right when Hollywood was trying to reframe Vietnam as a moral and psychological disaster, not just a geopolitical blunder. Then, almost as if the studios had hit “play” on a three‑channel experiment, Full Metal Jacket and Hamburger Hill both arrived in 1987. That tight window turns the comparison into something richer: same war, same decade, but three very different directors reordering the same raw material into different cinematic engines.

What’s even more interesting is that the three directors arrive with fully formed styles already in place. Stone, the veteran turned auteur; Kubrick, the perfectionist ironist; Irvin, the no‑frills dramatist—each brings his own choreography to the war, so the way each story unfolds matches the way each director thinks about power, systems, and the human body under pressure. That’s why, when you watch them back‑to‑back, the transitions feel organic: the emotional spiral of Platoon slides into the clinical detachment of Full Metal Jacket, which then hardens into the attritional grind of Hamburger Hill.

Oliver Stone and Platoon: an emotional spiral

Oliver Stone’s background as a Vietnam veteran inflects Platoon with a semi‑autobiographical, almost fever‑dream energy. The film doesn’t just tell a story; it feels like a memory returning in fragments, haunted by shock, guilt, and moral erosion. The narrative is built around Chris Taylor’s voice‑over, which acts less like exposition and more like a confessional diary. That choice gives the film a lyrical, almost jagged rhythm: quiet jungle moments bleed into sudden night attacks, tenderness collapses into atrocity, and moral clarity dissolves into confusion.

Because Stone thinks of war as a kind of moral purgatory, the story doesn’t march steadily toward a clear climax. Instead, it spirals. The Barnes–Elias conflict—brutal, pragmatic Barnes versus idealistic, wounded Elias—functions as a kind of internal compass for Chris, and the film’s pacing keeps snapping back to that moral tug‑of‑war. Action sequences are often disorienting, with overlapping sound, quick cuts, and long stretches of jungle unease, so the narrative feels less like a linear plot and more like a psychological collapse happening in real time. The whole movie feels like a descent that only slows down long enough for Chris to realize how far he’s fallen.

In aesthetic terms, Stone leans into handheld camerawork, natural light, and a gritty, almost documentary‑like texture, which makes the violence feel unfiltered and immediate. But it’s the emotional rhythm that’s most Stone‑ian: the film is never neutral. It wants you to feel the weight of each decision, each atrocity, and that emotional burden is coded into the editing and the pacing. So when the narrative moves from boot‑camp–like introduction to jungle chaos, it’s not just a setting change; it’s a shift into a darker, more volatile psychological state.

Stanley Kubrick and Full Metal Jacket: geometry and detachment

If Stone’s Platoon feels like a pressure cooker of emotions, Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket feels like a cold, geometric diorama. The film’s narrative is famously bipartite: the first half is boot camp, the second half is Vietnam, and the shift between them is as abrupt as a switchblade. This structure doesn’t just happen to be there; it reflects Kubrick’s obsession with systems, control, and the way institutions prepare men for violence. The story doesn’t so much build as it compartmentalizes: each section is a discrete unit of dehumanization.

Kubrick’s directorial signature—tight symmetry, precise framing, and a wry, almost clinical camera—means that the narrative never settles into the raw, unsteady rhythm of Platoon. Instead, events feel staged, rehearsed, and ritualized. The drill‑instructor sequences play like a grotesque performance, where brutality is delivered in rhythm and repetition. Even when the film moves to Vietnam, it keeps cutting back to Joker’s voice‑over and to moments of ironic distance, so the story feels controlled, almost surgical. The famous “I am the Monster” line doesn’t land as a catharsis so much as a rehearsed line in a larger script, and that’s very Kubrick: the narrative refuses to offer a neat emotional arc. There’s no gradual hero’s journey, no tidy redemption.

The sniper sequence at the end may feel like a climax, but it’s really more of a microcosm: it condenses the film’s themes into one tight, brutal encounter. Conceptually, the narrative is more like a diagram than a journey, and that’s why it feels so natural that Full Metal Jacket follows Platoon in any viewing order. Where Stone’s film is all about internal collapse, Kubrick’s is about systemized violence, so the transition from spiral to schema feels logical. The aesthetics and the narrative are perfectly aligned: every composition and every cut reinforces the idea that war is a machine, and the men are its interchangeable parts.

John Irvin and Hamburger Hill: attrition as narrative

If Platoon spirals inward and Full Metal Jacket diagrams the machinery, Hamburger Hill simply grinds. John Irvin’s directing style is lean and actor‑driven, which means the film’s narrative is built around one real‑life battle—the assault on Hill 937 in the A Shau Valley—and the story basically becomes a relay race without a finish line. Irvin doesn’t reach for mythic symbolism the way Stone does, nor does he sculpt the war into a cold diagram the way Kubrick does; he just lets the hill devour the men, assault after assault.

The pacing is deliberately slow and physical, so the narrative feels less like a progression and more like an accumulation. The film lingers on the weight of the packs, the mud, the smoke, and the bodies stacked around the soldiers. There’s little in the way of elaborate visual flourishes or philosophical monologues; instead, the story keeps returning to the climb, the push, the retreat, and the regrouping. That repetition is the core of its storytelling: the film isn’t about a big reveal, but about the slow erosion of morale and the body’s limits.

In aesthetic terms, Irvin’s Hamburger Hill is stripped‑down: handheld shots, naturalistic lighting, and a focus on small, believable interactions between soldiers. There’s no overt symbolism hovering over the hill; just a convergence of stubborn orders, exhausted bodies, and the slow wearing‑down of the unit. The narrative feels like it’s being pulled forward by physical exhaustion rather than by psychological revelation, so the film’s rhythm is the one you’d expect from a unit that’s been told to “take it again” one too many times. In this sense, the director’s hand is most visible in the absence of embellishment: the story isn’t dressed up, it’s simply put through a meat grinder.

How the narrators shape the story

Each film also has its own kind of narrator, which alters the way the story flows. In Platoon, Chris Taylor’s voice‑over is the bloodstream of the film: it stitches together the chaotic action into a kind of moral confession. The narrative feels like it’s being filtered through his memory, so the pacing isn’t about strict chronology; it’s about emotional emphasis. In Full Metal Jacket, Joker’s voice‑over is cooler and more ironic, functioning less as confession and more as commentary. The film’s over‑voice creates distance, so the narrative feels like it’s being watched from the outside, even as it moves through intimate scenes. In Hamburger Hill, there’s no guiding voice‑over at all; the story is driven by the unit itself, by group dynamics and shared experience rather than a single pair of eyes.

That absence of a narrator makes the film feel more “collective,” so the narrative flows like a shared burden rather than a private reckoning. If you line up the three films, you can see how the narration evolves: Platoon gives you one man’s haunted monologue, Full Metal Jacket gives you a dead‑pan reporter’s voice, and Hamburger Hill gives you silence broken only by commands and gunfire. Each mode of narration pulls the story in a different psychic direction.

Structure, tone, and psychological design

Beyond the directorial fingerprints, each film’s structure gives it a different kind of spine. Platoon is the most traditionally dramatic of the three, even though it still feels raw and unstable. The story follows Chris Taylor’s descent into Vietnam and uses the Barnes–Elias conflict as a moral engine, giving the film a clear emotional axis. Even when the film feels episodic—raids, patrols, drug‑fueled downtime—it keeps snapping back to that central tension, so the narrative never fully loses its dramatic center.

Full Metal Jacket breaks free from that kind of unified arc altogether. The boot‑camp half is about the making of soldiers, while the Vietnam half is about the disintegration of everything those soldiers were taught. The film’s structure feels like a diptych because Kubrick wants you to see how the two halves talk to each other: the drills, the chants, the dehumanizing rituals all come back to haunt the men once they’re in combat. The sniper sequence condenses all of that into a single, brutal encounter, so the narrative feels like a series of boxes that, when opened, reveal the same underlying machinery.

Hamburger Hill has the most straightforwardly procedural structure. It doesn’t really spiral inward like Platoon’s moral descent, nor does it fracture into symbolic set‑pieces like Full Metal Jacket; it just keeps going. The story is anchored to a single objective—the hill—and the narrative returns to it over and over, each pass costing more lives and more sanity. That repetition is the core of its storytelling: the film isn’t about a big reveal, but about the slow wearing‑down of the unit as a collective body.

All of this shows up in how each film handles tone and psychological design. Platoon behaves like a psychological tragedy, where violence is an ethical test and every atrocity marks a turning point in Chris’s moral collapse. Full Metal Jacket operates more like a satire with a pulse, where violence is part of a system that has already turned people into functions. Hamburger Hill doesn’t really ask whether the soldiers are good or bad, enlightened or corrupted; it asks why they keep climbing the same damn hill. Thematically, the movie is about shared suffering, endurance, and the absurdity of trying to locate meaning inside a slaughterhouse mission. The narrative doesn’t privilege any one character’s epiphany; it spreads the weight of the experience across the unit, so the moral landscape feels diffuse and worn‑down rather than dramatically concentrated.

Violence, realism, and the final arc

Each director also decides what violence means in the story, which shapes the final arc. In Platoon, violence is moral theater: night raids, village atrocities, and the final confrontation between Barnes and Elias are framed as defining moments. The film behaves like a tragedy, where action reveals character and character collapses under pressure. The narrative circles back to these scenes, so the emotional arc feels like it’s being built on top of a foundation of shock and guilt.

In Full Metal Jacket, violence is more alienated and ironic. The first half turns cruelty into institutional theater, while the second half turns combat into fragmentation and shock. The sniper sequence is the film’s most intense set‑piece, but it’s also one of its coldest, because it’s framed as a ritual: the men perform their roles, repeat their lines, and then disengage. The narrative doesn’t really resolve; it just stops, which feels right for a film that treats war as a never‑ending system.

Hamburger Hill treats violence as exhaustion made visible. The hill itself is a passive, almost indifferent character: it keeps taking bodies without offering any higher meaning. Each assault costs more than it gains, and the film steadily strips away any illusion that heroism or sacrifice will redeem the effort. The narrative doesn’t pause to moralize; it just shows the cost in bodies, bandages, and broken faces, so the film’s tone feels more like a grim balance sheet than a philosophical treatise.

Final round‑up: one war, three cinematic engines

If you line them up in a viewing order that makes sense narratively, the sequence feels almost organic. Platoon introduces you to the war as a psychological and moral descent, with Stone’s direction bending the narrative into a jagged, emotionally charged spiral. Full Metal Jacket then reframes that same war as a machine, where Kubrick’s clinical distance and formal structure turn the story into a diagram of dehumanization. Finally, Hamburger Hill strips away both the myth and the diagram, leaving only the physical, grinding reality of a hill that keeps eating men.

In the end, these three films don’t just show different angles on the Vietnam War; they show how three very different directors—Stone, Kubrick, and Irvin—can reorder the same raw material into entirely different cinematic engines. Stone’s Platoon gives you the wounded soul of the genre, Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket gives you the machine, and Irvin’s Hamburger Hill gives you the mud, blood, and repetition underneath both. Together, they form a kind of trilogy of approaches: spiral, schema, and slog. And that’s why, when you watch them in sequence, the transition from one to the next feels less like a jump and more like a steady, grim evolution of how war cinema learned to talk about the same nightmare.

Live Tweet Alert: Join #FridayNightFlix for The Terminator!


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?  1984’s The Terminator!

If you want to join us this Friday, just hop onto twitter, find The Terminator 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.

See you there!