PoddsändningarFilmrecensionerHate Watching with Dan and Tony

Hate Watching with Dan and Tony

Dan Goodsell and Tony Czech
Hate Watching with Dan and Tony
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  • Hate Watching with Dan and Tony

    Hate Watching In The Blink Of An Eye: Blink too hard and you'll...fall asleep

    2026-03-12 | 1 h 30 min.
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    Three timelines. One supposed “grand message.” And somehow we’re left asking the simplest question a movie can provoke: what was the point? We take on In The Blink Of An Eye, the Hulu sci-fi drama that jumps from a prehistoric survival story to a modern relationship to a far-future space mission, then expects the connections to feel profound just because the music swells.

    We walk through what works, what absolutely doesn’t, and why the film’s structure keeps dodging real stakes. We talk about the acorn artifact that looks like a meaningful thread but never pays off, the “impossible” sick plants that should drive the plot but get brushed aside, and the AI companion relationship that should be emotionally loaded after centuries but lands with a thud. Along the way, we compare the finished film to details from the original blacklist script and call out the changes that flatten conflict and drain tension.

    We also dig into the movie’s big themes: mortality, longevity, and the idea that death gives life meaning. If you’re into movie reviews, screenwriting lessons, sci-fi storytelling, and debates about theme versus payoff, you’ll get a clear map of why this one feels like it’s reaching for Cloud Atlas energy without doing the hard work. Subscribe, share the show with a friend who loves a good hate-watch, and leave a review. What’s your best explanation for why these three stories belong together?

    Written lovingly by AI
    Be our friend!

    Dan: @shakybacon
    Tony: @tonydczech

    And follow the podcast on IG: @hatewatchingDAT
  • Hate Watching with Dan and Tony

    Hate Watching Play Dirty: A Train Wreck So Big Even the CGI Ran Away

    2026-03-08 | 1 h 42 min.
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    A great heist hums like clockwork: clear motives, sharp reversals, and rules the audience can trust. Play Dirty aims for that swagger but keeps slipping on its own tone, ricocheting between hard-boiled grit and broad comedy. We dive into why that mismatch turns big swings—a racetrack robbery, a physics-defying train derailment, a billionaire kidnapping—into set pieces that don’t carry weight, and how characters without real wants leave tension on the table.

    We start with Shane Black’s arc from Kiss Kiss Bang Bang and The Nice Guys to this Amazon release, then stack the movie against the Parker novels’ dry, ruthless DNA. Parker claims a code, but the story rarely honors it; the Outfit looms, but stakes feel abstract. Meanwhile, Lakeith Stanfield and Tony Shalhoub hint at a better film—one where wit lands and menace breathes—if only the script slowed down to let relationships form. When your thief’s vendetta shows up as a twist rather than a compass, the final reveal can’t resolve the mess behind it.

    From the vault that pops like tin foil to a New York that forgets to populate its streets, we also talk craft: why spatial logic matters, how music can sabotage momentum, and what separates chaotic noise from thrilling escalation. Then we hold Play Dirty against the genre’s gold standards—The Killing, Heat, even the breezy precision of classic capers—to map the ingredients that make heists sing: competence, consequence, and a world with firm rules.

    If you love capers, botched or brilliant, you’ll have fun arguing with us. Hit play, then tell us your take: did the tone clash wreck the con, or did the ride still deliver? Subscribe, share with a friend who swears by heist movies, and drop a review with your favorite caper twist.

    Written Lovingly by AI
    Be our friend!

    Dan: @shakybacon
    Tony: @tonydczech

    And follow the podcast on IG: @hatewatchingDAT
  • Hate Watching with Dan and Tony

    Hate Watching Transformers The Last Knight: Less Than Meets the Eye

    2026-02-25 | 1 h 33 min.
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    Knights, Nazis, submarines, and a three-headed robo-dragon walk into a Transformers sequel… and somehow the wildest ingredients still feel weightless. We dig into Transformers: The Last Knight to figure out why the VFX slap while the story slips, how the Arthurian hook gets buried under MacGuffins, and where the franchise lost the character charm that made the first film sing. We compare Shia’s live-wire energy to Mark Wahlberg’s steady center, debate Cogman’s C-3PO-adjacent chaos, and explain why Anthony Hopkins turning exposition into mischief nearly steals the movie.

    From the medieval prologue to a London chase that forgets who’s in which car, we track the editing choices that drain tension and the dialogue tics that mistake “joke density” for personality. The TRF heel turn, the Witwiccan lore tangle, and Optimus Prime’s mind-controlled pivot to Nemesis Prime get a clear-eyed autopsy. We also spotlight what works: Bumblebee’s mid-fight reassembly is kinetic and clever, the robot silhouettes are finally readable, and the sound design keeps even thin scenes feeling huge. When Bumblebee briefly regains his voice, you glimpse the beating heart this franchise can still find—if the script lets it.

    If you love franchise archaeology, blockbuster craft talk, and a fair share of roast with your reverence, you’ll feel at home. We sketch the version that might have landed: fewer MacGuffins, real consequences, a focused treasure trail for Vivian’s historian skills, and a talisman that pays off a character arc rather than a single slow-motion block. By the end, we answer the big question: underrated chaos or unwatchable noise?

    Enjoy the ride, then tell us your pick for the series’ last truly good entry. Subscribe, drop a review, and share this one with a friend who still quotes “more than meets the eye.”

    Written Lovingly by AI
    Be our friend!

    Dan: @shakybacon
    Tony: @tonydczech

    And follow the podcast on IG: @hatewatchingDAT
  • Hate Watching with Dan and Tony

    Hate Watching Strange Wilderness: Turkeys and Sharks and Bears, Oh My!

    2026-02-18 | 1 h 10 min.
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    What happens when a movie you once despised suddenly makes you laugh out loud? We dive back into Strange Wilderness and pull apart why some of its dumbest jokes still work—and why the “movie” around them often doesn’t. We set the table with the film’s sketch roots, the Sandler-adjacent cast, and the loose, improv-first approach that leaves scenes searching for an ending. Then we zero in on the bright spots: the nature documentary parodies that deliver clean, quotable lines with a confident, wrong-on-purpose voiceover. When the film sticks to that angle, the jokes snap; when it wanders, setups die before their payoffs.

    We get specific. The turkey clinic should be a premise machine; instead it blinks at the exact moment heightening should kick in. The scar-trading campfire misses easy layups. A promised punch to a rival’s face never lands. But Steve Zahn’s full-throttle commitment wrings laughs from chaos, Justin Long’s spaced-out physicality adds texture, and Jonah Hill’s stream-of-consciousness bursts occasionally hit surreal gold. The Bigfoot finale is dark and oddly honest—humans panic and ruin discovery—followed by a ludicrous “fix” that somehow fits the crew’s shameless logic. And yes, the late shark montage is a 10/10 showcase for tight edits and confidently stupid science, the kind of bit that proves craft can elevate silliness.

    Along the way we talk joke structure, UCB-style game, and why committing to escalation matters more than shock value. If you care about how comedy lands—writing, rhythm, and payoffs—you’ll find plenty to argue with and steal for your own creative brain. Stay for the punchy breakdowns, the debate over dated gags, and our case for why the right edit can redeem a bad scene. Enjoy the ride, then tell us: secret classic or still a glorious mess? Subscribe, share with a friend who loves movie autopsies, and drop your take in a review so we can feature it next time.

    Written lovingly by AI
    Be our friend!

    Dan: @shakybacon
    Tony: @tonydczech

    And follow the podcast on IG: @hatewatchingDAT
  • Hate Watching with Dan and Tony

    Hate Watching Gladiator II: A Monolithic Letdown

    2026-02-05 | 1 h 42 min.
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    What happens when a massive sequel forgets the one thing epics can’t live without—emotion? We take a scalpel to Gladiator 2 and dig into why the arena feels quiet even when the crowd is screaming. From a “last free city” setup that strains belief to a retconned bloodline that muddies legacy, the movie races for scale without building the spine that made the original unforgettable.

    We talk through the action that should define character but doesn’t: a rhino fight with no ripple effect, a boat battle staged for fireworks over logic, and CGI creatures that steal attention from the grit that gives gladiator stories weight. Leadership arcs are earned through choices, not titles. If Lucius is meant to inspire, show the moments he protects his own, the beat where he decides to stand, and the speech he actually earns. Without that, set pieces become noise. And the politics? Denzel Washington’s Macrinus hints at a master plan, then self-sabotages when a pragmatist would pivot, leaving palace intrigue to the monkey consul gag and a rubber head reveal that play like satire instead of strategy.

    We also get specific about what would fix it. Trade Rome’s vague ideals of “freedom” for concrete stakes—grain routes, aqueduct power, Praetorian numbers—and let tactics shape the fights. Give the final duel a purpose beyond vengeance by tying it to promises made and debts paid. The result wouldn’t just be bigger; it would feel truer, the way great epics do when pain, duty, and choice collide.

    If you enjoy honest breakdowns with jokes sharp enough to cut through bad CGI, hit follow, share with a friend who loved the original, and tell us: what’s the one change that would have saved Gladiator 2 for you?
    Be our friend!

    Dan: @shakybacon
    Tony: @tonydczech

    And follow the podcast on IG: @hatewatchingDAT

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Om Hate Watching with Dan and Tony

Unprofessional, unsolicited and unwanted opinions from Dan and Tony as they watch movies and tell you what's wrong with them.
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