POD 366, EP. 153: SATAN HATES THE THING WITH CHEEKS SYNDROME 2

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Discussed in this episode:

Satan Hates You (2009): Read Eric Young’s review. The indie parody from 2009 gets its first Blu-ray release; the included “Creepy Christmas” shorts should be a nice bonus. Buy Satan Hates You.

The Stendahl Syndrome (1996): Read Gregory J. Smalley’s review. ‘s late giallo, premised around a dubious condition that causes people to hallucinate when viewing artwork, gets a 4K UHD upgrade from Vinegar Syndrome. Buy The Stendahl Syndrome.

The Thing with Feathers (2025): Read Michael Diamades’ review. Despite ‘s relative star power, Thing with Fearhers did not fly at the box office, and now receives a no-frills Blu-ray from Universal. Buy The Thing with Feathers.

Troll 2 (1990): Read Ryan Aarset’s review. Despite the fact that Troll is—by comparison—the better movie, there’s always been more interest in its disastrous sequel-in-name-only, Troll 2, which is widely considered one of the most laughably inept movies ever made. So much so that Vinegar Syndrome decided to upgrade 2 in a 4K UHD special edition, leaving the original in the dustbin. Buy Troll 2.

Twin Cheeks (1994): AKA Twin Cheeks: Who Killed the Homecoming King? A college student goes undercover as a male stripper to investigate his brother’s disappearance—think a parody as done by at his queerest and most transgressive. The VHShitfest edition of ‘ microbudget ” spoof includes director’s commentary, odds and ends, and an entire underground bonus feature, It’s Not the House, It’s My Mother (2023?), about which little information is available.  Buy Twin Cheeks.

WHAT’S IN THE PIPELINE:

No guest is currently scheduled for next week’s Pod 366 (although and of Haunters of the Silence will appear the following week.) Greg and Giles will run down the week’s weird news and releases, as always. In written content, Micheal Diamades bathes in the animated Slovak origin story of Erzsébet Báthory, The Bloody Lady (1980); Shane Wilson attempts to translate Passages from Finnegans’s Wake (1966), the almost literal adaptation of James Joyce’s famously difficult novel; Gregory J. Smalley warns you not to Return to Silent Hill; and Giles Edwards refuses to chicken out in facing Luther the Geek (1989). Onward and weirdward!

IT CAME FROM THE READER-SUGGESTED QUEUE: TURBO KID (2015)

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DIRECTED BY: François Simard, Anouk Whissell, Yoann-Karl Whissell

FEATURING: Munro Chambers, Laurence Leboeuf, Aaron Jeffrey, Edwin Wright, Michael Ironside

PLOT: In a post-apocalyptic future, a young kid discovers the fighting gear of the legendary Turbo Rider and sets out to topple the tyrannical overlord Zeus.

Still from Turbo Kid (2015)

COMMENTS: Turbo Kid lays down its ace right from the get-go, as a gravel-voiced narrator describes the grim vista of a tomorrow carved out by nuclear winter and acid rain. “This is the future,” he intones, as a boy on a BMX bike pedals into frame. “This is the year 1997.” Time for a quick double-check on the year this came out… yep, and we are truly underway.

The 366 Weird Movies archive does not lack for films from four decades ago that employed a low budget and suitably barren locations to depict the world-after-the-end-of-the-world to audiences. (Just off the top of my head, I can think of three such movies that I myself have reviewed.) Recent years have seen several attempts at nostalgic pastiche, but Turbo Kid stands alone for setting “80s desolation romp” as a target. In particular, it’s the product of the serial nostalgist collective Road Kill Super Stars (aka RKSS, which consisted of this film’s three writer-directors, until Simard was booted last year for criminal sex charges); when their proposed contribution to the anthology The ABCs of Death was rejected, they had more than enough ideas to expand the concept into a feature.

Considering that Turbo Kid’s sole objective is to recapture that special 1980s mix of futuristic nihilism and naïve can-do spirit, the effort is remarkably successful. The empty fields and gravel pits in Quebec that stand in for the future’s wastelands are suitably desolate. Costuming and production design tap into the mixed milieu of flashy colors and big hair roaming around what look like abandoned sewage treatment plants. Plenty of props serve as icons of the era, from Rubik’s cubes and Nintendo Power Gloves to the ubiquitous BMX bikes that serve as everyone’s transportation around the barren wasteland. (Not that bicycles would be the most unusual form of transport to dominate the coming hellscape.) Plus, the synth-fueled musical score by Le Matos is both pitch-perfect and tiresome in a way that’s era-appropriate, and is supplemented in the font-of-the-future opening credits with the most fitting rock song choice imaginable, a fist-pumping anthem from Stan Bush (of “The Touch” fame). If you’re fooled for a moment into thinking that this was churned out in 1985, that’s fully intended, because Turbo Kid doesn’t want to just capture the feel of these 80s low-budget sci-fi epics; it wants to be one of them.

This commitment to verisimilitude extends to the film’s cast, who play everything straight enough to sell the movie’s central joke. Chambers is just the right kind of bland hero, not looking anywhere as young as his outward level of maturity, but fully selling The Kid’s sweet ignorance. As his sidekick and love interest, Leboeuf’s perky Apple turns out to be the most delightful, refreshing thing that Turbo Kid brings to the party. Her indefatigably chipper vibe initially seems like it’s going to become annoying fast but quickly becomes the animating force in the film, with a naively joyful spirit that makes a crucial revelation about her character land with a nod of approval instead of a roll of the eyes. And then there’s the filmmakers’ most crucial piece of casting, landing master of scene-chewing villainy Michael freaking Ironside to do the thing he does. Undoubtedly, he could play this part in his sleep, but while his work here is effortless, he’s in no way phoning it in. He plays the heel with all the acid-tongued vigor of his younger days, in which he no doubt celebrated getting cast over Kurtwood Smith. Ironside even makes a virtue of the directors’ most questionable choice, surrounding Zeus with a less-than-skillful set of minions who leave the overlord shy of his most supervillainous aspirations. It’s a bit of postmodern irony that’s out of place in Turbo Kid’s otherwise resolute commitment to the homage.

Perhaps the thing that most distinguishes Turbo Kid from its ancestors is the remarkable level of gore. It’s not as though these films are devoid of viscera, as any Mad Max entry will demonstrate, but RKSS is relentless, with a seemingly inexhaustible supply of fake blood spewed via every manner of stabbing, decapitation, and explosion. This festival of fluid is impossible to take seriously, presented in an extremely cartoonish manner, and resembling nothing so much as Sam Peckinpah’s Salad Days. It can be outright funny at times, like a sawblade on a helmet that turns its victim into a screw top, or a body that lands squarely atop another person like the most unwieldy hat. So it’s one of Turbo Kid’s better surprises that the orgy of violence ends up showcasing the film’s sweetest moment, a romantic tableau that’s only enhanced by the surrounding rain of blood.

Given the opportunity for parody, Turbo Kid opts instead for direct mimicry, an odd choice by itself, but one that makes the finished film more earnest than weird. That does make the film a charming watch, if a weightless one. That 80s trash was pretty fun, and this re-creation is pretty fun, too. It’s a low bar, but clearing it is a decent way to spend an hour or two.

WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:

“…a wildly discordant, schizophrenically adorable, gore-soaked fantasy set in an deserted industrial wasteland… Add in the other nutso, hilarious touches, and you have the garnish you need to turn your sweet tale of friendship into a Friday night blood feast.” – Patrick Feutz, Inside the Blue Paint

(This movie was nominated for review by film izle. Suggest a weird movie of your own here.) 

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    CAPSULE: THE THING WITH FEATHERS (2025)

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    DIRECTED BY: Dylan Southern

    FEATURING: , Sam Sprueli,

    PLOT: After the loss of his wife, a widowed man comes in contact with a mysterious human-sized crow.

    Still from The Thing with Feathers (2025)

    COMMENTS: Dimly-lit interiors and catatonic acting clarify from the beginning that this will be a grim watch. And it is, as we follow an unnamed man, dealing with complex emotions after the passing of his wife, struggling with denial while trying to care for his two sons and to find comfort in his work as a comic artist. This is not a realistic tale, but an allegorical and elliptical one, with gothic flourishes as a human-sized crow gradually makes his appearance.

    The narrative, based on Max Porter’s novel “Grief is the Thing with Feathers,” is divided into four chapters, each dealing with a different perspective. The first, focusing on Dad, remains close to typical horror conventions, with its slow-burning atmosphere culminating in a series of violent confrontations with the aforementioned crow. The intensity of one of those encounters is underlined by an excellent 360°  shot. The aggressive, grotesque bird mocks our hero for his self-pity, and evens becomes physically violent, while calling him generic names like Sad Dad and English Widower. At the same time jump cuts bring us back into reality to create an ambiguity regarding the nature of the crow, which could just as well be a figment of the protagonist’s imagination.

    The next chapters focus on the bird, the kids’ perception of the events, and a new demon plaguing the family’s home, seemingly an enemy of the crow. Events are open to interpretation as different monsters come to symbolize different aspects of the mourning process, drawing, through allegory, a distinction  between grief, as a healthy way of dealing with loss, and total nihilistic despair.

    We don’t have the most original and unique premise here. The central metaphor isn’t exactly something we haven’t seen before. However, thanks to a competent main performance by Benedict Cumberbach and an emphasis on dimly-lit interiors, the execution doesn’t completely disappoint. For fans of art-house psychological horror, in the vein of The Babadook  and similar movies distributed by A24, this is an okay recommendation.

    WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:

    “…the perfectly cast Cumberbatch effortlessly moves between fever dream, painful reality and apparent hallucination with every cell in his body present in the character… It’s a strangely beautiful, well paced and moving film…”–Annete Basile, Film Inc (contemporaneous)

    ONLINE FILM CRITICS SOCIETY 29TH ANNUAL AWARDS (2025) (WITH OUR VOTES)

    The Online Film Critics Society awards for 2025 are in the books. It was a 2-movie race between One Battle After Another and Sinners, with One Battle snapping up the most prestigious categories and Sinners wiping up nearly everything else. It was a terrible season for movies from within our weird movie coverage universe. Universal Language was snubbed completely, and Bugonia was only nominated for Best Actress and Adapted Screenplay, losing both times. Better luck next year, I guess.

    As always, despite the occasional levity in my tone, I take my voting responsibility seriously. I do not put forward weird films at the expense of worthier mainstream candidates just because it’s “my thing.” Here is the list of this year’s winners, along with my choices and a touch of personal commentary. I did a decent job of catching movies this year, screening all of the Best Picture and Best Foreign Language candidates, and only skimping on Animation and Documentary categories.

    BEST PICTURE

    Winner: One Battle After Another

    Poster for one battle after another Also nominated (listed ranked in final order of votes): Sinners, Sentimental Value, It Was Just an Accident, The Secret Agent, Marty Supreme, Weapons, No Other Choice, Hamnet, Train Dreams

    My vote: Bugonia (not nominated), One Battle After Another (of the nominees)

    Comments: I was surprised and disappointed that Bugonia did not finish in the top 10 in the first round of voting (it did make the Academy Awards list). On the other hand, at least we didn’t embarrass ourselves by nominating F1! While not perfect, One Battle After Another was the best option of the slate that was nominated.

    BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

    Still from little amelie of the character of rainWinner: KPop Demon Hunters

    Also nominated (in alphabetical order): ArcoElio, Little Amélie or the Character of Rain, Zootopia 2

    My vote: Little Amélie or the Character of Rain

    Comments: This is one of the two sections I typically skimp on (the other being documentaries). Of the five nominees, I only saw Arco and the lightly surreal childhood bildungsroman Little Amélie. Amélie got a nomination from me for Best Picture, though, so I have trouble Continue reading ONLINE FILM CRITICS SOCIETY 29TH ANNUAL AWARDS (2025) (WITH OUR VOTES)