God Awful Movies - 520: A Day of Judgment
Episode Date: August 19, 2025We're joined by Dave and Bryan from the "BRING ME THE AXE" horror podcast for a review of A Day of Judgment. --- Check out more from Dave and Bryan here: BringMeTheAxe.com --- This episode is sponsore...d by Greenlight, Mint Mobile, and BetterHelp. Use the links below to help support the show and get some deals. greenlight.com/awful mintmobile.com/gam betterhelp.com/awful --- If you’d like to make a per episode donation and get monthly bonus episodes, please check us out on Patreon: patreon.com/GodAwful Check out our other shows, The Scathing Atheist, The Skepticrat, Citation Needed, and D&D Minus. Our theme music is written and performed by Ryan Slotnick of Evil Giraffes on Mars. If you’d like to hear more, check out their Facebook page.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the craziest shit in the movie.
This was the best part of my life.
I stood up and cheered when I saw her.
My boyfriend came home and I turned this movie back on and skipped to that scene because he had to see it.
It's not just the lipstick, though.
She's also got like her eyebrows drawn on.
Okay, I figured out, I figured out what that was because that was driving me crazy
because it looks like her eyebrows are like going just down into her.
her eyes, but it's not. It's that she put on eye shadow, but also the eye shadow extends
up to her eye, but she looks like divine. It is, yes, amazing. I was so happy with this moment.
Welcome back to god-awful movies. We each week, we watch another terrible movie, so you don't
have to. I'm your host, Heath Enright, and I'm joined by the Eli Bosnick. Eli, how's
is going. 80 Sluck, baby. Yes, we're going back to
1981 when I began. Very exciting.
And we also have two brand new guest
masochists, Brian and Dave, from the Bring Me the Axe horror
podcast. Brian, Dave, welcome to the show. Hey. Oh, shit.
What's up, fellas? All right. So tell us about
Bring Me the Axe a little bit. Bring the Axe is
a comedic movie of the week exploration of horror movies.
kind of accidentally became a sort of vehicle for cultural studies podcast.
You know, as, as weird as that may sound, I mean, we started out talking about, hey, how about that
Amityville 2 movie?
Lots of incest in that movie, right?
Sure.
Like two years later, it's like a deep analysis of Cold War tensions and nuclear war with like a one-two punch of like the day after in threads and like our most recent series.
Excellent.
Our show is also intellectual.
Well, let's not get too crazy.
We had to Eli on a little while ago to talk about the story of Ricky.
Get rid of all those listeners you had acquired.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's get right into it.
Dave, what are we going to be breaking down today?
Well, we watched a day of judgment.
It is the story of a small southern town populated entirely by psychotic dirt farmers and philandering businessmen.
Yep, that is correct.
It is.
All bound for some vague and I think Frank.
confusing Old Testament comeuppance.
Big time.
Indeed, I was so confused about what the fuck was happening so often.
That's a lot of my notes is what the fuck is happening.
There's a, yeah, there's a moment.
There's a very moment in the movie where I think we're all kind of like,
now who the fuck is that?
Just jumping in.
It turns out that they got about halfway through their movie.
They must have been like, I think we killed off all of our characters, though.
So they just had to jam some new ones in there.
Oh, wait, wait, wait, wait, what about the guy with a gun at the beginning?
Yeah, come on. Let's get him.
Yeah, we can make this happen.
Let's get some more going.
And Brian, what made you and Dave select this particular movie?
As I understand it, this was your choice.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We brought this one to you guys.
Well, I really wanted to do like a Ron Ormond movie with you guys,
but I think you've done them all at this point.
Yes, we have.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I, honestly, I feel like this one lands pretty close to the mark.
Absolutely.
It's got all the moves, got all the vibe, got a little bit more blood.
also I desperately wanted to know
what a Christian slasher movie looks like
Yep
And so when we were talking about doing this
I was like well you know
We're gonna do a horror movie obviously
That's kind of our thing
And so I was like
Google Google Google
Christian slasher movie
It's gotta be out there
And lo and behold
I couldn't fucking believe it
But there it was
Hell yeah
There it was
And not only that
It was available on Blu-ray
So
Can't ask for better
All right and Eli
How bad was this movie
Well if you love
the schlock-slashers of 1981, and I do,
but you wish they had the morals of your church-going grandma
who absentee voted for Trump from the old folks' home.
You will love this movie.
All right.
Is there anything y'all would like to nominate this one
for being the best, being the worst at?
Oh, God, yeah.
Best worst coming out to your parents.
I had a lot of competition.
It was really tough, but I think I'm going to have to go
with best worst slap fighting.
sure yeah when it ends in fatality you've got to go best worst slap fighting it was an accident some amazing
there's a pump fake of a slap at one point but there's some excellent slaps that that aren't they were
like too hard for the actors and they were like hey don't do it soft a hundred percent we see some soft
slaps it's fun all right i was going to go with best worst way too many threads in the movie
they keep introducing new shit and i'm watching the
clock run down on this movie.
And I was like, okay, I feel like
10 different movies as like a prank
got combined on YouTube by accident.
And they have no chance of closing this.
Oh, yeah. This movie has more characters than a chorus line.
And it's a touch over 90 minutes.
And they all look exactly the same.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You got to put a hat.
Well, some of these people do have hats.
Yeah.
Identical white people.
They will figure out how to deal with their threads,
but not well.
And it's at the last fucking second.
So I was very confused.
And I know we're going to talk about this during the review,
but every thread is just a little more convoluted than it needs to be, right?
So you'll, like, see it's like, here's the greedy banker.
And you'll be like, okay, I can kind of follow this.
And they'll be like, and he's cheating on his son with another son.
And I'm like, wait, what?
Yeah.
It does escalate.
Like, the very last one is like, this is very convoluted.
Like, this plan to sort of gaslight his old boss is just like.
It should be its own movie.
Yeah.
It's like Samagas, the Christie's shit.
Yeah, that guy's story is amazing.
That should have been the whole movie, absolutely.
We start with like a real bitchy old lady,
and somehow by the end,
it's like Mission Impossible five.
Yes, exactly.
Everyone is Philip Seymour Hoffman.
And I'm going to take the easy one.
I'm going to take the fucking home run,
which of course is best,
best death noise.
Yeah.
There is nothing,
it should go on the new Christian movie bingo card
that they didn't practice their death noise
before they made the movie
because it's very obvious
this man had never yelled before
before he decided to make his death noise,
let alone
died in a movie.
Oh, and you know, this is like the most
regional of regional horror movies.
And you know that this guy, you know,
he'd done every like community theater.
Like, they've done Our Town.
They've done all this stuff.
And this guy was like, I'm going to take this fucking seriously.
And he just worked on it.
Yeah.
For weeks.
And then we got the opposite of the Wilhelm scream as a death.
All right.
Well, I think we're going to take a quick break and then we'll be back to tell you all about a day of judgment.
All right, everybody.
Welcome to the first writer's room meeting for a day of judgment.
Woo!
Now, we're going for a classic horror slasher takedown by God's vengeance.
So who are we thinking for victims?
How about a couple having an affair?
Perfect, perfect.
Oh, a no good banker.
who forecloses on a local farm.
Absolutely.
Nice, nice.
Oh, how about a guy who thinks you slept with his wife so he gets you in trouble at work?
Sorry, what?
Yeah, like nobody believes that it was him that made you late for meetings, but he did.
He made you late, and then he also messed up like two of the orders by using your signature.
Wait, how does he know your signature?
He used to work there.
Why would that mean that he knows your signature?
And also, he's planning to kill you and his ex-wife.
Ah, just feels so specific.
Also, we already did an affair.
That feels really repetitive.
I wonder the guy who's elaborate hoax to gas let you at work is also a murder plot.
Is everything okay at home, Greg?
Yes.
Okay?
Yes, it is.
This message is sponsored by Greenlight.
buying stocks upon the bounce then your money you won't flounce can't be flounce yeah definitely not
hey guys what you're doing oh hey heath i was just showing brian and david how i'm teaching my kid about
money but they're being super critical the advice is bad and the rhymes are bad yeah yeah i would imagine
look eli if you want your kid to learn about money in a way that's safe and responsible why don't you
try green light. The metaphor from Great Gatsby? No, no. Greenlight is a debit card and money
app made for families that helps kids learn how to save, invest, and spend wisely. Parents can
send money their kids and keep an eye on how they're spending and saving. Meanwhile, kids and
teens build money confidence and skills in a fun, accessible way. It feels more like a game
than a lesson. Oh, that sounds great. It is. Plus, the GreenLine app also includes a chores feature
where you can set up one-time or recurring chores
customized to your household
and reward kids with allowance for a job well done.
Amazing! I wish I had that when I was a kid.
Me too.
Greenlight is the easy, convenient way
for parents to raise financially smart kids
and families to navigate life together.
Maybe that's why millions of parents trust
and kids love learning about money on Greenlight,
the number one family finance and safety app.
All right, Heath, I'm sold. Where do I sign up?
Don't wait to teach your kids real-world money skills.
Start your risk-free greenlight trial today at greenlight.com slash awful.
That's greenlight.com slash awful to get started.
Greenlight.com slash awful.
All right, Heath, thanks.
Hey, do you know any good words that rhyme with bounce?
Bankruptcy?
No, I'm pretty sure that doesn't work.
And we're back.
And we're going to start with some music from an 8-bit wandering minstrel, I think.
Yeah, I had ominous renfair.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, no, this is pure Dungeons and Dragons music.
You got a roll D20 plus your Constitution save bonus there to just make it through this whole movie.
Yeah, no, I failed this save.
I feel like someone, when they were planning this movie, they got to the music part,
someone was like, well, my brother knows how to play the banjo.
Yeah, for sure.
And I know we don't usually dwell on credits, but if you don't watch along with us,
first of all, you should absolutely watch this along with us.
It's free on YouTube.
you can rent it on Prime.
Like Brian said, you can get it on
Blu-ray, which you should.
You should own it and give it out for gifts at Christmas.
But if anything told you how an awesome
a movie we are in for, it is these credits.
Because the names are like you're making up names
and someone doesn't get the joke you're doing.
So you start getting we're weirder and weird.
We start at Carrie Ann and we end at Larry Sprinkle.
Oh, yeah. So there's also like,
Henry Bloodworth, the third.
IRL Dixon.
It's so long, too.
The credits and the music kept going.
It felt like a wandering minstrel customer service line
had put me on hold.
And we're waiting for the movie to start.
We value your business.
Please wait for your movie to start.
My favorite, and Brian R.A.T.'s this, was Worth Keeter the third.
And I wrote my notes.
Three generations were like, another Worth Keeter, guys.
It's just a great name.
Another person has to have it.
You know that there was like,
I don't know, six people who worked on this movie,
but they loved this music so much.
They were like, just keep making up names
and sticking him in the front.
He's always got to get him.
He's on fire on that keytar, I say.
On fire!
I'm shredding the banjo right now.
We're keeping this, yeah.
I didn't even know he could play the harmonica.
Yeah.
Turns out he can't.
Neither did he.
So somebody finally got a fucking saving throw
so we could start the movie.
It starts with a powdered priest
and a very shiny cross.
Yeah, so they went with
Guy in old age makeup for this preacher
who's about to leave town because everybody's
not Christian enough. But then they also
went with
white face. I don't get it.
I do not understand it because he also like,
I can't tell if it's a, is it a wig?
Yes. It's 100%
a wig. And they powder
it and then they give them like the
pancake makeup white face.
And it's like, why is it important that
this guy is like old and broken?
this. Because they're giving him his fruit punch mouth.
They really want to accentuate.
They really went for fruit punchment.
I'm very confused as well.
Who has a touch of the consumption.
Yeah.
Now, is he leaving town or is he going to kill himself?
Because I, yes.
You could go either way.
Yeah.
This will be far from the craziest makeup that we get.
We're going to get some lipstick at a certain point.
That was, so that was going to be my best worst right there.
Oh, shit.
That was about, okay.
I don't put a pin in the lipstick.
Don't ruin it.
Yeah, big, big pin in the lipstick.
it'll come up pretty soon.
So this guy gives a sermon and he says,
this is the war to end all wars.
And I was like, okay, well, let's say you get a Holocaust, man.
You don't want to do that.
But apparently he's talking about like the war of good and evil or something like that.
Oh, no, no, no.
This movie takes place in the 30s or the 20s.
And so he's talking about World War I.
Oh, he was talking about World War I.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, okay.
I thought he was talking about good versus evil.
okay. Well, he says he's going to like murder some heathens or whatever. He's mad at the people who
won't accept Christ based on his amazing sermons. He says, and pay they shall, very ominously.
And then he ends it by being like, also, I kind of got fired. I have to leave.
Yes, and I was let go from my position. Anyways, I know I've been saying how much God hates
everybody but me and that you're going to get a moral retribution. Unrelated, I got fired.
Oh, yeah, yeah. If you are the soul.
beacon of morality in your community and all you get are these like three old ladies in your church
maybe this one's on you dog yeah yeah yeah i feel like this movie really kind of explains a lot about
present day america yeah exactly sadly that is true so from there we cut to reverend cage that's
his name riding a horse drawn carriage and he gets honked at by a car like like he's like he's
an omish person right now on the highway yeah and the person honking at him is charing
We meet Charlie here, and Charlie has a lot of his own problems, including alcoholism.
Pin and Charlie, everybody.
We're going to visit him about 40 seconds before the end of the film.
Charlie's also yelling at himself while he's driving.
He's yelling at a newspaper that he's reading while he's driving.
And we see that he's a gun ready for something on the passenger seat.
So, yeah, pin in Charlie as well.
Then we move over to Kaler's store.
and we see what appears to be Mrs. Peacock from Clue, the flapper.
This is Mrs. Kaler, Ruby Kaler,
and she doesn't want Harvey, her husband,
to go on the business trip that he's about to take.
And I didn't realize Harvey owns the store.
I didn't get that at first because when they cut to the store,
it is literally the quote store set from like every 60s sitcom ever made.
Yeah. It's a church rummage sale.
Yeah.
We also meet Kenny here.
He works at the store, and he's bad.
So we watch him intellectually, you know, flirt with a customer.
Yeah.
And yell at a little girl, too.
Yeah, I guess in the 1980s,
they thought what women wanted out of a shopping experience was sexual harassment.
Oh, yeah, this guy's dialogue is all, like, cribbed from porno movies.
Yes.
I actually, I don't think that they thought that's what they wanted,
but that is definitely what women were going to get.
Yes, exactly, yeah.
Honestly, Kenny being in a porno that no one,
else is in makes a bunch of sense
for his character.
Why isn't anyone getting their dicks out?
And then we also see that Ruby and Kenny
are adultery flirting together
a bit at the end of the scene.
Five feet from her husband.
Yeah. Also, it's 1980s doing
1920s costumes, so she's trying
to make up her mind between identical
frocks. It's hilarious.
Literally just a difference of color.
So from there, we cut over
to Reverend Cage again, and he
goes into the bank next to
the Kaler's store to see a guy named Mr. Sharp, and Reverend Cage needs to pay back his loan.
Now, may I expose myself slightly as a villain, perhaps on this week's podcast?
Because I understand the movie wants me to hate Mr. Sharp, but every scene that Mr. Sharp is in,
a character who he is supposed to be victimizing goes, hey, Mr. Guy who works at a bank,
I can't give you the money that I borrowed.
give me free money
and he goes no
and we're supposed to be like
you fat piece of shit
you capitalist pig
Eli wow wow
why is it just movie banks
that when they do
the normal course of business
we're supposed to be like
what a real sucks
Eli you're tasting a little leather
in your mouth right now
I did this what's talking about
I will say though
there is some strange rules
to this bank because at a certain point
a lady is going to come
in and be like, I just need my money, sir?
And the bank manager comes over and she backs up like he's about to slap her in the face.
And it's like, why can you put money into this bank and not take it out?
It's confusing.
It's like banking with horse and wells in this scene, too.
Like he's a big guy.
Reverend Cage sits down and the two of them are like, well, you know, usury is illegal.
And the other guy's like, what can Mammon do for you, Reverend?
It's just like, Rome references back and forth.
Guys, like, laid off just a little bit, like 20%.
Oh, it's that beautiful kind of bad writing that we really only see with like Donald James Parker,
where he's written a bunch of clever comebacks to himself at his typewriter.
So both characters are saying nothing.
They're all conversations he's had in his head.
Yes, it's shower fights the dialogue.
And it goes on forever.
It just gets so tedious to the point where at a certain point the banker gets up and I wrote,
Now, if you'll excuse me, Reverend, this witty banter is getting incredibly tedious.
But I will admit, you are winning this argument against me.
That is for sure.
And also, you are incredibly handsome.
Right.
So Reverend Cage, he wants another extension on a loan.
Sharp wants to bump the Vig.
We hear, yeah, that usury is illegal in the Bible.
And then Sharp says, you have 60 days.
Otherwise, it's on your superiors at the church.
And I was like, okay, this is, this is not how anything works with loans.
It'll get crazier.
We leave it there.
And then we cut over to a gas station where two, I'm going to say, 45-year-old men are talking about their upcoming high school dance.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
This is the health that RFK Jr. is aiming for.
Now, look, I know that these are adults playing younger people, or at least one of them is supposed to be a younger person.
But still, this actor was probably 30.
and he looks just old enough to be my grandpa.
Yeah, the age of this guy is upsetting
because of what we learn.
He's going to have a girlfriend in high school.
It's no good.
We also see Reverend Cage ride up to the gas station here.
Like, he's going to fill up the horse?
I don't know what was happening there.
He has a moment where the young men sort of gestures
rid of him at the hose.
And he's like, no, no, don't fill up my horse's ass with gas again.
That was a whole thing.
And we keep, in the lead up to this scene,
like, once we kind of like,
guy we could fade in on this scene
and it's George and some guy
they're like hey hey George you bring into the dance
you bring in Missy and he gets like super
touchy at the mention of this girl Missy
and then the Reverend comes up and he's
and he's like hey I need to talk to your parents
and say it's just about me and Missy
and he gets like what is the fucking story
with Missy I mean wait a second
they're supposed to be in high school
I couldn't tell I absolutely
seemed like it based on this dance
or maybe there's like an adult homecoming
yeah like maybe it's like I
I don't know. I do not buy for a second that either of these people are in school in any capacity.
Maybe it's like one of those, like an old-timey, like community dance thing.
Like a barn dance for grownups.
Like in, you know, my bloody Valentine where they're having like the big town Valentine's Day dance.
Okay. Yeah, maybe. Don't make me feel better.
It's all they've got. Yeah. So we meet George's mom here too. They own this gas station and their house is like there too.
That's their house and the station, I guess. George's mom walks outside and starts talking.
talking to him. And we also see three old church ladies who were in the church at the very beginning,
the cold open with Reverend Cage. And they just like walk up. They're wearing all black and nobody
acknowledges them at all. Oh no. For the whole film. Right. No, no. This is like they're like the
witches three. You know, bubble, bubble, toil and trouble. It's like Shakespeare is what I'm saying.
Yeah. Yeah. No, well written withdrawn. Okay. Here's the thing. These ladies are so conspicuously in the
back of every scene that I thought
at the end of the movie, they were going
to be revealed to be the killer.
No. No, they're just
lonely. Lonely old
ladies. Right? If the old ladies
have been doing the killing all around town, I was like,
oh, that's a clever club. But no, it's just
like these three old ladies agreed to sit in the church
scene, and then they were like, we'd also like
to watch the rest of the movie. And they were like, from
where? And they were like, center of a frame.
I'm telling you, this, whoever wrote
this, like, they think they're Faulkner
and Steinbeck and Shakespeare.
we are all at the same time
because they're going to appear
like as these sort of like
I don't know these are witnesses
or something like that
who just drift through
all of the sort of sinful scenes
to witness it.
Then they vanish
and we don't see them
until the end again.
Yeah.
This is also where we start
getting some incredibly cryptic
half sentence.
It's like everyone's like
did you go to the
and someone's like
I don't believe
how could you ask me
you know what happened last time
and it goes on and on
I'm like what the fuck
are these people talking about
It doesn't matter in the end.
We don't learn.
They don't answer it later.
They're setting up nothing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we also go inside the house for a second,
and it's just to characterize the dynamic between George and his parents who are like riding him all the time.
So the entire scene is just the parents saying something,
and George being like, gaw, I'm 40.
Fuck you.
Did you order the tires?
Yeah.
Stuff like that, exactly.
And then from there, we're going to meet Mrs.
Fitch. This is an old lady in her house and she's reading and then she hears something or senses
something and she looks at the window and local kids are playing just a game of monkey in the
middle in a field next to her yard and she's mad about that. I just want to, I want to say too that
you can tell she's reading because she's moving her lips the whole time. Yeah, exactly. And in the
20s everyone was at that first grade reading level by the time they reached 85. So that was where it was.
Now, Brian, Heath, as the resident olds, what?
How often did you play monkey in the middle as a child?
I played it earlier today. Whatever. That's not the point.
I fucking hate it. I was always the monkey.
Can't catch shit. They're too fast. They're too fast.
And I would like to say, thank you for leaving me out of that.
Heath and I are actually the same age.
What?
Okay.
Man, exactly.
It's my doing glow.
That's what it is, man.
How do you think we stay so youthful?
we play monkey in the middle. It's about cardio.
Heath, if I've said it once, I've said it
a thousand times, you should turn gay.
Okay. It does. It does for the
complexion. It doesn't work retroactively
though, so wherever you're at now,
you might just be screwing yourself.
But in 10 or 20 years, it'll really be a boon
for you. It's true. Yeah. Okay, we
also meet one other character here. Pretty
important one. Doodles the goat.
Oh. This is the pet goat
of the kids, the Benson kids.
And this goat fucking hates them.
They're playing monkey in the middle, and the goat's just
trying to eat and they're playing like right in his
eating area and he's like just fucking move the game
over like 10 feet. Yeah.
Trying to eat. Yeah. Also
we see the priest comes like
strolling through the scene again and as
the horse drawn carriage
just given Miss Fitch the dirtiest look as he goes by
Yeah. She's clearly the
worst person in town. Yes and she
will turn out to be the worst person in town
and several people in town are murderers.
Oh, I was to say yeah, in spite of the fact that several people
get murdered in this, she kills
a goat. I hate her the most.
She's just, it's inexcusable.
Yeah, well, here's the thing, though, because I thought about this later on, all these people
make just like a real bad choices. There's mistakes and poor choices.
Miss Fitch, though, she's just an asshole. You can't fix that.
Right. Like, that's, that's, this is a story about redemption, I guess, to the extent that
it's about anything. Maybe. Yep. It's no good. Yeah. So they're playing the game and the
ball rolls into her yard and they're all scared. They're like, oh, Lady Fitch is
house. We don't want to get it. They try to make the
goat go get the ball for a second.
I got to know how that works. They do.
It did work, though. They put the goat over the fence
and they're like, get it. And he's like, I'm a fucking
goat, guys. But later
on, she will say, doodles
went and got the ball, to which I think,
your little girl, you're a fucking liar.
That goat, first of all, has
no hands. And also, the way they
like hurl it over the fence
is a little bit mean, too. They did that
on purpose. This thing just wants to
eat whatever is around, and you're tossing
it over the fence and this lady's feeding it poison. God. Yeah. I was definitely team goat and
team no humans pretty much in the whole. So even these oaky kids suck. Yeah. So Mrs. Fitch
gets mad about this and calls the cops and then goes out and yells the kids. The three old women
in black walk by ominously again. Nobody acknowledges it because they are the the witches from
Macbeth, I guess. That makes sense. Yep. Fowl is fair. Fair's foul. And then we get a little bit more
evil characterization of Mrs. Fitch,
she's inside and she tells her maid to go get her brandy
and then accuses the maid of stealing the brandy.
Trump's America.
Yeah.
So that night, we see Reverend Cage.
He's riding the carriage and he's doing the thing.
He's winning arguments in his head.
And we see a full moon for a second.
And then we see a very silly Grim Reaper.
Yes.
Oh, also, I'm pretty sure that's a day for night shot.
And I love that shit.
Oh, 100%.
Yeah.
No, he's got the...
So this is the first time.
And look, I've seen a lot of grim reapers and movies over the years.
This is the first time I realized how unwieldy a full-sized sickle is.
This thing is massive.
There's no way he's killing anybody with this sickle.
It's just, it's at a weird angle.
It's blocking his ability to drive the horse.
Yeah.
And also, even if he's good with the sickle, he's got a good deal of oatmeal on his face.
And I feel like that's going to make it hard.
Yeah.
I've spent.
so much time trying to think, like, was the makeup supposed to make it look like a skull?
Oh, maybe?
Unclear.
Oh, because I just thought, like, that's right, Reverend, there's a new powder-faced weirdo in town.
Like, the only, like, they couldn't, like, a proper special effects guy for this.
And so they got, like, the, like, the local funeral director to come in and, like,
put on, like, the morticians wax and stuff like that for an approximation of a skull.
See, I felt like they saw someone, like, get pied at a local town fair and they were
Wait a second, Larry.
What if you left it like that?
And then you were the monster in our horror movie.
All right.
So we've met the Grim Reaper.
He's going to stay in the movie a bit.
Now, quick question.
We never seen Reverend Cage again.
Does the Grim Reaper kill him?
Did he suck that bad at his job?
Ooh, I wish.
I wish.
They just had like an angry head cannon.
Yeah, it might be a head cannon.
Yeah.
And they set this movie up with the Reverend.
Like we are, let's believe that the Reverend is going to be our protagonist.
And then he just fucks off and we never hear from him again.
I'm putting, I'm planting a flag here.
The Grim Reaper kills him.
Ooh, all right.
Yeah, no, head cannon.
I mean, kills themselves.
All right, fair enough.
So there we go back to Mrs. Fitch.
She's on the porch talking to the sheriff, who she called on the kids.
And she says, I expect justice.
Yeah, I want you to go over to the Benson house and shoot them all.
And yes.
Leave no survivors.
Just burn their home to the ground and salty ashes.
Yep.
So the sheriff agrees to go talk to the Bensons, the kids, the parents, whatever.
And then we go inside and more angry at the maid stuff to make Mrs. Fitch evil and racist, very racist.
The maid is a black person and Mrs. Fitch is very, very racist here.
Yeah, this is where she says, Alma, we've always been able to talk things out.
And I was thinking, yeah, but like, it means like I condescend to you in vaguely racist language until you apologize.
and promise to never do it again.
Yeah.
You want to know how much this lady sucks.
She's too racist for the 1980s pretending to be the 1920s.
And she's going to be, Mrs. Fitch is going to be one of the first, but certainly not the last
people in this movie who ask someone for help and then immediately start treating them
like a jerk.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Right.
So Alma the Maid quits because of very obvious racism, among other things.
and then we see the Benson kids splash fighting in a little waterfall area
and the sheriff comes to kind of talk to them about staying out of that yard.
Oh, and also, whenever they bring the kids in, we didn't mention it before,
but somebody is playing, it's like the Chil, the Benson Children's theme is like somebody
just honking on a harmonica.
Yeah, 100%.
At one point, a kid is playing one, but then he doesn't have it in his hands in the next
shot.
So I was very confused if it was background music or definitely.
Yeah, and then the bad, it's just like
the sheriff pulls up
to the swim at home, and it's like, squeak,
yeah, but he
basically tells the kids like, hey,
Mrs. Fitch made a complaint, but she's
fucking sucks, so just do your
best to ignore her. And I don't know if you guys,
did you have this person in your
neighborhood?
No. Okay, so when I was
growing up, we actually had
this person in our neighborhood who would
regularly call the cops on children
walking by her house
and so cops would show up at your house
and go, hey, Mrs.
down the street
has called and said you like
broke her window. And we went
and her window's not broken. So we assume
that's a lie and we'd be like, yeah, it's a lie.
It was great. Before the internet reinforced everyone's
mental illness, there was just a lady who would occasionally
call the cops at you in Binghamton, New York.
Wait, did you live in a trailer park by any chance?
Because if you did it, might have been our grandmother.
Oh, all right, there you go.
She was a little bit of a...
It's coming full circle.
A little bit of a wet blanket.
Yeah, also, I'm usually pretty A-Cab,
but I got to tell you, I feel for this sheriff.
Because this town is just full of petty shitheads,
and he has to deal with every single one of them, like, every day.
And I swear to God, this guy is just one bad day away from a shooting spree.
Yes, if you take this movie as having happened over one or two days,
which I think we are supposed to, right?
The sheriff is having the busiest and worst shift.
of his life.
And he walks away from every single interaction,
mumbling something like,
I hope you get the justice you deserve.
Yeah.
Having an awful week,
because you don't become a small town sheriff
to solve two murders in a 48-hour period.
So for there, we get Mrs. Fitch
staring out the window again at nothing,
and she's mad.
She finds the nothing suspicious,
and she calls the sheriff again.
Apparently, to report
that the Benson kids may have walked
past her house maliciously.
Yeah, they're planning something.
She calls a report of planning.
Yeah, and she almost says,
I will shoot a child.
Okay, bye.
That was pretty much the content of that phone call.
No, seriously.
This cop gets like 100 calls a day
and like 70 of them are from her.
Yeah, 100%.
100%.
I wrote in my notes,
she's going to stand her ground
on her rose bushes, damn it.
She is.
She almost says exactly that too.
Yeah, she says,
I will protect my.
my bushes and my plants.
And I wrote, yeah, you can only get a peek at him through her window, if you know what I mean.
So that night, doodles the goat, gets into her yard for a second.
And we see her narrating her angry thoughts to herself.
And then she yells for Alma, her maid.
And she's like, oh, right, quit because I'm a horrible racism.
Her race has lost another one.
Yeah, this is not the first maid who's quit on her.
I bet a lot of people quit on her, probably because she uses first.
phrases like, you people.
A lot, indeed.
So Mrs. Fitch has to go get
her bottle of poison
by herself. She was going to have
Alma go get her bottle of poison that's
labeled poison, poison, poison.
And she's going to poison
a flower
as bait for doodles
the goat and kill the goat.
Yeah. I wrote in my notes,
she's going to poison that goat and y'all literally
whatever happens to her from now on in the movie,
it's fine by me. Oh yeah, yeah.
This is like an old-timey version of like a death wish sequel.
Yes.
Whereas like, of course the cops are on the criminal side.
Guess I'll have to take business into my own hands.
Yeah.
So that's what happens, though.
This goat gets murdered with poison.
And we watch a goat die of poison or at least act that out.
Yep.
There is an, oh, okay, first of all, let's talk about this goat's performance because it's
fantastic.
I thought it was pretty good.
Yeah, because they do three separate shots.
They want to do sick goat where the goat is just being told to home.
still. Then they do dead goat
where the goat is very clearly
doing lie down slash rollover.
Pretty good job. Yeah, they spent the entire budget
on a trained goat, basically. Yeah, exactly.
I'm guessing this movie happened
because they knew a trained goat. They were like,
guys, guys, hear me out.
Yeah, somebody played the banjo. Somebody had a
goat that was very well trained. What
else do you need? The rest was
sweet, sweet movie magic. All came
together. So later that night,
Mrs. Fitch, here's some noises again.
And the Benson kids are
very justifiably throwing rocks at the house and yelling like you murdered our goat very clearly.
Yeah, honestly, if these kids are just here to murder her, that would be the best start to the movie I could ask for.
They're all going to stone her to death.
Yeah, something like that.
She runs out and yells at them and then the sheriff shows up and the kids gnarc about the goat murder, which is fair.
And she talks to the sheriff again and she's like, I have the right to protect myself with goat poison.
and that kind of works.
Apparently, the stand-your-ground law
applies to grievances against local kids
and murdering their pet goat with poison.
So the sheriff just leaves.
All of my notes here are just advices
to be violent to the sheriff.
I'm just like, shoot her, sheriff, shoot her in the face.
Hit her, sheriff.
Hit her right in the job.
Oh, she's going to love it
when they invent the next door app.
Oh, yeah.
She's actually inventing it.
That's what she does all day long.
It's just the telegraph.
This is working on series A funding.
Sadly, none of that happens.
He just leaves.
So I think we're going to take a quick break.
And then we'll be back with more, a day of judgment.
Guys, guys, Phil is back from the overworld.
So cool.
Amazing.
Hello, fellow demons.
Hey, Phil, how was the overall?
Filled with sinners, as usual.
They needed to be taught many lessons.
Oh, tell us all about it.
Okay, so there was this lady who murdered children's pets, and I ruined her garden.
I'm sorry, you ruined her garden.
Yeah, she really liked her garden.
I see.
And, and I dragged her down to hell.
Oh, okay, well, maybe lead with that.
Sure, okay, well, there was also a guy who was going to send his parents to the asylum, but I spooked him.
sorry you spooked him yep spooked him real good and is he better now well well no but uh but he's crazy
so it's kind of ironic right because it's like it's like meta sure maybe next time you go up
you run a plan by us and we can all sort of get a hand on the ball yeah honestly that would be
great sure man happy to help i'm bad at that
Okay, how about now?
I'd say that's about as far as I'd go.
Okay, good to know.
Hey, guys, what you doing?
Heath added us to his cell phone plan.
Those are cans and string.
Cans and string with no sneaky hidden fees.
Yeah, we are going to save a ton.
Exactly.
Guys, if you want to save money on your cell phone plan,
why don't you try Mint Mobile?
What's Mint Mobile?
Okay, spreadsheet is getting unwieldy now.
We could switch to Looker Book if we want to...
That's not the point.
Anyways, with Mint, you can get the coverage and speed you're used to, but for way less
money. And for a limited time, Mint Mobile is offering three months of unlimited premium wireless
service for $15 a month. So while your friends are sweating over data overages and surprise
charges, you'll be chilling, literally and financially.
I don't know, Eli. Well, I have to change my phone or my phone number.
Your can has a phone number?
Yeah, it says 32 ounces in the bottom.
Got it. Well, you can use your phone with any Mint Mobile plan and bring you.
your phone number along with all your existing contacts.
Amazing. But have you actually tried it?
I sure have. I switched to Mint Mobile when they became a sponsor.
Now I get the same great service for a fraction of the price.
That's why I, Eli Bosnick, personally endorse MintMobil.
All right. I'm sold. Where do we sign up?
This year, Skip breaking a sweat and breaking the bank.
Get this new customer offer and your three-month unlimited wireless plan for just
$15 a month at mintmobile.com slash gam.
That's mintmobile.com slash gam.
Up front payment of $45 required, equivalent to $15.
a month. Limited time new customer offer for the first three months only. Speeds may slow above
35 gigabytes on unlimited plan. Taxes and fees extra. See Mint Mobile for details. All right. Thanks.
But hey, at least the cans were free, right? Oh no. He's had us on a payment plan. He, 32 ounces.
And we're back. When we left off, doodles got poisoned to death. That's a sentence I've said in my life now.
And now, Mr. Gregg, the town lawyer, is walking down the street, and George from the gas station wants some legal advice.
Okay.
Oh, God, this is my favorite plot threat of the entire movie.
Oh, God, it's incredible.
But I do have to talk about the lawyer's first reaction to George wanting advice.
So, George, this is the kid who was talking about the dance earlier.
He's like, hey, can I talk to you about some things I want to do?
His first answer is, is Missy giving you legal trouble?
I wrote, for what, dude, yikes, 1980s?
This is about you dating a child and you're 40?
Let's take a walk and talk about it.
Oh, I know.
They are setting Missy up to be this just like final boss menace.
And as it turns out, like her worst crime is just her makeup.
Right, yes, exactly.
And meanwhile, George is like, God, no, I just want to murder my parents.
Jesus.
Okay, yes, thank you.
It really felt like he was setting up Menendez here.
And he's like, he doesn't say murder, but he's like,
I want to commit my parents to a home somehow.
And Mr. Greg, the lawyer is happy to look into that for him.
Yeah.
Mr. Greg should have been wearing like a red suit with a cape and like horns.
His character is, I'm surprised he doesn't get killed in this movie.
No.
There are no consequences for the lawyer who upon hearing I would like to trick my parents
into an old age home out of all their worldly goods is like,
okay, well, there's a couple of ways we can go back to him.
And every time that he does it, he has these like very, very sort of like these gestures with a flourish that is like, okay, that is clearly infernal shit he's doing that.
He all but says to them like, well, have you thought about killing them?
Yeah.
And he will do that lawyering work for George.
Then we see George just being wistly and happy for a second to show that like, oh, he's got a plan.
He's going to commit his parents to a home.
Cool.
Yeah, his parents are like, oh, you seem a lot more cheerful today.
And he's like, yep, nothing.
normal. Nefarious.
Did you just say normal? I did.
I did. Okay.
Love you, mommy.
Also, hey, I know the three of you are goys,
so I'm going to have to have you sort of bring me in here.
Do you guys get lawyers in places that aren't your parents know that lawyer?
What?
Okay, so I'll explain.
Gois in our audience and here on the podcast, take a knee.
See, the truth, we hand down lawyers like family heirloom.
You're introduced to him at your bar mitzvah and he does all your legal work until he dies.
And then usually his son is the next in line.
So just to be clear, I was very confused with this stranger danger lawyering I was seeing going in this movie.
Okay.
It's got to be tricky, though, because if your parents hand you down the lawyer, you got to wait for the son lawyer before you do the thing where you kill your parents.
Yeah, exactly.
I assume you do it for each other, right?
You help him steal his dad stuff.
It's a generational thing.
Okay.
Yeah.
What's great about George's plan is that he's like, well, you could send him to the poor
farm or, and George is like, I don't want to send him to the poor farm, don't you have
some terrible insane asylum?
We could put them in?
And the guy is like, no, no, no, you don't want that.
That's some real nightmare shit.
And he's like, I mean, yeah, but I don't want to be at a poor farm.
You know what?
Just put him in the asylum.
Yeah, that will be the plan.
But before we get the official plan from Mr. Greg Lawyer, we get to see Missy.
up with insane Joker lipstick.
Let's pull that pin right out.
Listen, this is the craziest shit in the movie.
This was the best part of my life.
I stood up and cheered when I saw her.
My boyfriend came home and I turned this movie back on and skipped to that scene because
he had to see it.
It's so crazy with the lipstick.
And the movie will pretend it's not there as if it's the three old women in black.
It's not just the lipstick, though.
she's also got like her eyebrows drawn on.
Okay, I figured out, I figured out what that was
because that was driving me crazy
because it looks like her eyebrows are like
going just down into her eyes,
but it's not, it's that she put on
eye shadow, but also the eye shadow extends
up to her eyebrow.
She looks like divine with this.
Yeah, and she has this Cupid's bow
lipstick. It looks like she had the makeup gun
set to whore. It is
amazing. I was so happy
with this moment.
You ever see those old ads
for women's pads
that are just like
the silhouette of a woman?
That's what she's done
to her own face.
We were talking about the eyebrows
earlier,
but have you ever seen someone
who has like shaved off
their eyebrows
and then drawn them on
and done a terrible job at it?
That's what she's done
to her lips.
Like if you told me
this actress was born without lips
and this was her first appearance
on camera,
I would kind of understand
the makeup choice.
Oh my God.
And they have this,
they have this like explosive argument.
like she clearly he's taking advantage of her in the past and he says something like i'm just trying to
just trying to give it to you straight missy and she says something like you don't know what straight
is george clay and i got to tell you what they call this foreshadowing well yeah because then she starts
throwing out all these things like a you know the lightning hit the tree in the in the forest and
we were in the barn in the hayloft and it was like hey missy missy everybody knows that hand stuff in the lake
doesn't count, okay? Yes.
Okay, I'm so glad you said that, Dave,
because I literally wrote in my notes,
everybody knows fucking doesn't count after a tree
gets hit by lightning.
This town is so clearly lost.
Like, they're just talking about outright satanic witchcraft.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And she says, because of that, she had to go all the way to the city,
1980, Shmishmortion reference,
oh, yeah, that's probably what that was.
Oh, yeah, because then he's like, well, we all know
it's the girl's fault.
And again, what did I say about how this movie
explains a lot about where we are now.
Yeah, he says, the girl's the one
who makes the choice, and I wrote, how progressive
of you?
Cool.
Yeah, so Mr. Greg DeLore shows up
after like eight minutes.
He's drawn up all the paperwork that
you need to lock up your parents.
He just needs to get the
power of attorney. George needs to get his parents
to sign the power of attorney thing.
And if it's a legal signature,
that's official because
signatures are magical in movies.
Yeah, especially power of attorney,
That is a single form.
Now, to be fair, it is a large form.
But once you sign the bottom of it,
all the power of attorney goes to another person.
You can do literally anything.
Now we know that this movie was written
by Britney Spears' dad.
Yeah.
So for there, we see George and his parents,
and he's going to trick him into signing.
Yeah.
If I can take everyone sort of behind the curtain here slightly
because there's this, it's so ridiculous.
He hands them like two checks
and then the power of attorney for him,
and they both fall for it instantaneously.
And while I was watching this movie,
I was in Connecticut visiting my mom,
who every time we picked up takeout food
would check the receipt that I handed her.
So I was like, yeah, I don't think this would work for me.
I would tell you.
But dad actually, he signs it,
but he's a little bit suspicious all of a sudden
because George just grabs the paper way too fast after the signature.
Yeah, exactly.
He screams, freedom!
Yeah, he's like, I trapped you.
I'm selling this shithole blowing down so I can dance at the pink pony club.
Also, maybe I just didn't notice it.
Maybe the lighting was weird or the makeup was weird in this scene.
But both.
Did his cheekbone pop out of place because of his evil dude?
Oh, no, no.
It's a weird.
He's got like, every time we see him because it's like a service station,
he's got like a smudge of grease on his face.
And in this one, it's just like in a weird spot on his cheek.
Oh, okay.
for some reason because of the lighting
I thought that like he had lost a cheekbone in the war
also
this is one of the best music in the
entire movie because it's like
it's banjo but it's like
bum bum bum
yeah nefarious
bandro is definitely the cue here
also when he says that he's leaving
for New York this is when dad says
you're going to be a Broadway boy
oh yeah this is my best this is my best worst
here I wrote my notes
Eli this is rough my note just says
you can just say gay, it's fine.
Broadway boy is quite the epithet.
Yeah.
I was really hoping he would become a Broadway boy
and we would get to see that in the movie.
We did not.
Oh my God.
If we had just followed him
and his failed audition
for the Book of Mormon on Broadway,
absolutely.
Descented to podcasting.
My note here is that this is the weirdest
version of our town I've ever seen.
Yeah, and that scene ends
with the big pump fake
of a slap from dad.
Dad, like, winds up and then stops and doesn't slap George.
Yeah, because he says to George, he's like,
well, you're going to go be some lounge,
just become some lounge lizard?
And I wrote, again, you just say gay.
Fine.
It's a real Y-I ought to moment.
Right.
So there we cut back to Mrs. Fitch.
She sees someone maybe parked a wagon outside of her house.
She looks a little bit closer,
and then she screams because it's the Grim Reaper.
She looks out and then she screams
and then like the shadow with a grim reaper
like passes over her flowers
and when it passes over like they're all dead
and she screams even harder.
But that's what she's screaming about.
Not that there is a grim reaper
come to reap vengeance.
It is that someone has killed her flowers.
It is. Yeah, it is.
Yeah. I like that the grim reaper used
the scythe for, you know, plant stuff for a second.
He kills the plants.
She freaks out because, yeah, the plants are dead.
She goes out to check.
And then she gets killed, I think, by the children of the corn and pulled into the hellfire pit.
Not going to lie, I love this.
I love this.
This is great.
Yeah.
Let me just take a moment to assure you audience members, this is long, long before special effects was the twinkle in Stephen Spielberg's eye.
I promise you, a real lady was way too close to fire to make that shot possible.
They just dragged Edna next to a fire pot used by White Snake the previous week at the local fair.
And I will say from here on out, I've never been to one of those church hellhouses, but I imagine that the rest of this movie is like that.
Oh, that's what I love is I kept thinking about this.
It's like this movie definitely has that vibe where, you know, you go to the church hellhouse instead of like the cool haunted house over, you know, across town.
And you get like led room to room by the devil.
And then, like, the end, he's like,
you thought you would smoke some marijuana at the party,
but now you're in a gang and have a age.
Yeah.
He pulls up a chair, flips it around the other way.
Let's wrap about Christ.
I'm going to wrap about it.
Yeah.
Everything that happens from here and out,
it's just like people, like, I mean, I wouldn't do this stuff,
but I don't think I would hack someone's head off for doing it
or drag them to hell.
Well, actually, she killed a baby goat?
Yeah, she killed the goat.
She definitely got him.
I'm good with it.
She can absolutely get dragged to hell.
I'm good with the hell.
for sure. Unity of purpose. So now we're going to check back in with Mr. Sharp, the banker. He's doing just evil banker stuff like having paperwork on his loans because that's evil. And he talks to his teller guy for a second. He's like, I counted all this money. I'm leaving, but I counted it all. Don't steal the bank money. And the teller guy wants a raise and he refuses to give him a raise. So he's an evil banker. Yeah. Mr. Sharp, it's Christmas and Tiny Tim is so sick.
Exactly. He's doing a reverse Ebenezer Scroo.
This is also where he's just something like, oh, I got to work all day on this transaction.
And again, I was like, what the fuck kind of bank is this?
Why are transactions taking all day?
Yeah.
They don't have computers.
They don't have computers.
You've got to run each number by down the line your hand by hand.
I'm telling you, this should take five minutes tops.
So is Mr. Sharp a bad guy?
I don't know, but he's terrible at his job.
He's terrible at bank.
He is very slow.
I don't think he's a bad guy.
The movie really wants him to be a bad guy, but it doesn't fit because they don't know what banking is.
I know.
They do pepper it every now and then where like his employee is like, oh, Mr. Sharp, I'd love to have Sunday off.
And he's like, psh, the fuck out of here.
That's for kids and women.
Yeah, he actually says, yeah, old women and children have Sundays.
And I wrote whatever that means.
Yeah.
Got to get a side hustle.
Get an Uber driving job or something.
Yeah, he lacks that grind set.
Right.
So then we see Mr. Sharp driving to find Mr. Morgan.
to check on Morgan's loan.
Mr. Morgan is, I think, an Amish-looking farmer guy.
That's Elder Morgan, do you?
Elder Morgan, sure.
Yeah, okay, okay.
No, it's not.
See, here's what Mr. Morgan is.
Mr. Morgan, I think, is supposed to be
like a rugged, old-timey farmer.
But what he really is,
is he looks like a 12-year-old boy
put on his dad in overalls
and went out to play Amish farmer for the afternoon.
Again, it's that writer who thinks,
he is Tom Joad, you know, from Greips-A-Rath.
Like, the person who wrote,
this thinks there's Steinbeck.
He glued on that beard and just got out there.
Steinbeck, Faulkner, Shakespeare.
A lot of good stuff going on.
A lot of great...
100% yeah. So, Mr. Sharp arrives and
he tells Mr. Morgan to, like, show off
the farm to prove the profit
margin. And the problem is, we're
looking at a farm
that has a cash crop of, I think,
unmoed grass and nothing else.
He's, he takes them out back.
He's like, look out over here. I'm going to take those
trees down. And I'm like, wait a second.
let's talk about this crop for a second.
It appears that you grow crabgrass, sir.
I was hoping he would take him out back and it would just be like acres of weed.
200 acres of coca plants.
You see these poppies, sir?
All right, you know what?
Take that extension.
Right, but like, to be fair, to the banker, right?
He's like, don't worry about that loan.
I owe you.
I'm about to invest more money in different crops that won't be ready for a long time.
Yeah, I mean, this is just his way of, like,
I mean, he's a little gruff, but he's basically like, hey, Morgan, I don't think you're very good at this.
Yeah.
Maybe get a different job.
Yeah, listen, this movie is trying my patience.
I have so far sided with a cop, and now I'm about to side with the banker.
Siding with bankers, yeah.
Because this guy, we don't, like, the whole thing is, like, they watch it.
They don't even really go into it.
Like, why is this banker bad?
I mean, like, bankers bad, obviously.
But, like, we don't know what the interest rate on this loan is.
It's a good point.
And, like, as we've seen, this guy doesn't grow shit.
Yeah.
And by his own admission, he's had a couple of hard years.
For sure.
But also, maybe don't give loans to grass farmers when the economy's all fucked up.
Oh, yeah.
I swear to God, he took that loan and he invested it in Iraqi dinars.
Yeah.
You ever hear a Nassara, Mr. Sharp?
Yeah.
Sharp's Bank is too big to fail.
I think that's a problem.
It's systemic.
And to make us even less sympathetic to the farmer here, at one point, they go to the farmer's
ice house, right?
Yeah.
And he's like, hey, man, you have the only ice house in the county.
You could make a tremendous amount of money with this.
And the farmer's response is, no, damn it, I'm a farmer.
His, okay, this farmer, he talks like a villain in a Bioshock game.
It's like every time he took, because he's not just, he's not just like, you know,
refusing the banker's good graces.
It's, oh, it's a man not entitled to the sweat of his brow, Mr. Sharp.
You can reach into the soil and touch it with you.
Like, what are you doing?
Like, he says, all I ask is you get.
Give me the fruits of my labor, and I wrote in my notes.
And also, don't ask me for the money I owe you back.
I wrote in my notes, there has to be a CNN crew just behind the camera for this movie,
waiting to interview this guy about why he voted for Trump and whether or not he regrets it.
He can't possibly make money off that ice house or ice hot or whatever,
because that's where he keeps his demonic cowboy.
Yeah, that is true.
Well, spoilers, Dave.
Yeah, I'm sorry. I'm jumping ahead.
But that is true.
That is true.
His red-eyed gimp is down there.
So Mr. Sharp says, well, you're an idiot.
You have until noon tomorrow.
And the implication is the bank is going to repo the farm at noon tomorrow, which is how nothing works.
It's fine.
Just a guy with a tow truck backing it up and digging it into the ground.
This farmhouse is one of several houses we're going to see that seems to have been built on cinder blocks.
Yeah.
Yeah. So we see Sharp driving away. He's just whistling happily being like, lo, lo, lo, lo, lo, doing usury. This is fun. And then we see Mr. Morgan trying to sell his farm at the last minute to some other guy, some rich guy in town named Jess Hill. Yeah. Now, none of this will ever matter to the movie because in the next scene, the banker's going to be like, no, a backsees. That didn't happen. But Mr. Jess Hill, the reason to talk about this scene anyways is that Mr. Jess Hill does
promise that his money will run like
tobacco juice, which I have to admit
is among the more vivid
metaphors I have heard in the last
decade of my life.
He would be loudly spitting his money into a brass
spatoon with like a cartoon sound effect.
Yeah, you can put your hands
on my plants and in my soil, he says.
That is like, that's a euphemous.
A hundred percent, yeah. What is he selling
him is what I want to know? That's the
sanic bonus for sure. But Mr.
Jess Hill is not immediately
on board, but pretty quickly. He's like,
like, okay, I don't know.
We're going to need rain.
And Mr. Morgan's like, I'll bring rain.
And he's like, all right, deal.
I'll go to the bank tomorrow and set you up with some money.
All right.
Well, if you promise it'll rain.
Again, this town has lost, satanic witchcraft.
He's going to do a spell.
Oh, okay.
It's also the way that he stood, the way, the two of them are walking.
The way Morgan is staring into his soul is so unnerving.
He's like, the guy is just walking straight ahead.
And Morgan is like turned fully walking.
walking sideways, just deeply.
His eyes are boring into him.
Morgan's manner is so bizarre.
And then I love it.
Just to really drive it home, they do a nice,
nice and legal handshake deal.
Yeah, spit on their hands.
It's official.
Oh, no, no.
They don't spit on their hands.
That's why it's null in the next scene.
Oh, actually, yes, very good point.
Doesn't count unless you spit.
Got a spin?
And they don't, crucially.
Good point.
So the next day, Morgan shows up at the bank demanding the money that,
allegedly Jess Hill left for him, but Mr. Sharp is like, yeah, there's no, no money for you.
We denied the loan for Mr. Hill.
Okay, so to be clear, he wasn't selling his farm to a guy who had the money.
He was selling his farm to a guy who was going to take out a loan and then turn around and give him the money to pay his loan that he has already been unable to pay back.
Obviously, somebody was like, hey, wait a second, like you guys realize that this is how like loans work, right?
Like, he's got to pay the money back.
And they're like, shit.
So I guess we've got to make Sharp a real bad guy here.
That's what they kind of flesh him out a little bit.
Because up to this point, he's just a banker doing his job.
I mean, he's kind of a jerk about it.
Yeah, he's a dick.
Is there any way I could just set up like a Kickstarter?
People can Venmo me money, like the national debt.
Is that how money works?
Yeah.
He's got to go on a fucking jubilee and just say some racist stuff and then fundraise off it.
Yeah.
Right.
So Mr. Sharp announces that he denied the loan to Mr. Hill.
So now Mr. Morgan doesn't have the money from that other loan for his farm.
Whatever.
Mr. Morgan gets mad and yells, you're a thief, which is not true.
And he tries to strangle Mr. Sharp, but he doesn't do it very well
because maybe he tried it in a different take and he strangled him too hard.
So now he's like soft strangling, Mr. Sharp.
Oh, see, I think the problem is that Mr. Morgan, the farmer, the actor is a little small.
And Mr. Sharp, the banker is a little big.
and there's a, we watch both actors realize my hands don't fit around the thing you call a neck.
Either that or Morgan, Morgan wet at him and they just like bounced off of him.
Yes, exactly. So it's just a gentle hug, but then Mr. Sharp pulls a gun.
Yeah, it looks like a massage. It's like, I'm going to strangle you, but I, well, let's do a little Alexander technique first.
A lot of tension. A lot of tension. Align. And he grabs the gun and points the gun at Morgan,
but he just kind of reaches over, implying that the gun was just kind of laying on the
counter? It wasn't his gun. It was just sitting there. You know before COVID where you could just go to
the bank and take free pens? In 1920s, you could just take free guns out of that container.
When America was fantastic. Yes, exactly. So from there, we see Mr. Sharp driving with the sheriff
to go to the new farm that he's repoed in 12 hours because he owns it now. And the sheriff is
supposed to be helping him evict Mr. Morgan, I guess.
Worst job in town.
The sheriff has got the worst job in town.
100%.
Yeah.
They call for Mr. Morgan to come out of the farmhouse,
and Morgan's mad, so he's got a gun.
He doesn't walk outside and, like, point the gun angrily.
He smashes his own window out from the inside and points the gun that way.
He's got a gun and a flare for the dramatic.
I wanted him to get a yes right away and have him be like, fuck.
Window's going to be expensive.
Should it should have yelled through the door.
He also, at one point, he's doing this like,
oh, man deserves the rights of his blah, blah, blah, blah.
He sounds like someone about to be arrested on TikTok, right?
I'm just watching cops drag them out of an airport.
I'm just, I'm traveling, sir.
I'm traveling.
I'm not conducting business.
I'm a fremon on the land.
You can't tell me not to.
I'm lowercase or uppercase or whatever.
He also just starts yelling non sequiters,
much like somebody being arrested on cops.
He says, like, my wife died of the influenza.
You can't have my phone.
about to say his first point is that his wife died of influenza yeah her body is out there in that
old ice house that's why he doesn't want anybody going in it yeah camera pans over to influenza in a camera
hat that turns out to be a deputy sheriff just does a big shrug at him and then it gets pretty
dark and sad here Morgan fires at them angrily the sheriff keeps calmly talking they don't get hit
and he's just like come on man get out Morgan yells he's not leaving and then Morgan backs away from
the window and kills himself.
Bud Dwyer, baby!
Yeah, yeah. Last words were, who is John Galt?
And the banker's like, oh, man,
you got blood all over my new house.
He backs away and he's just like,
he must have been crazy to do something like that.
I was like, yeah, I mean, all you wanted to do is exploit
a shitty loophole and steal his house out from under him,
thereby robbing him of his humanity and his self-respect.
But I never thought it was.
would come to this.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, now we're going to pick up the thread of George and Missy and lawyer, Mr. Gregg.
So Missy is now with the lawyer, Mr. Greg.
And they pull up to the gas station and also George's house.
And they hear scared grunting stuff happening inside.
Yeah.
We got to get in there then.
Yeah, what is it?
They're like, they're looking for George, obviously.
And it's like, yeah, it looks like he split down.
couldn't resist the call of Broadway.
Okay, so this is supposed to be
the after effects of him getting visited
by the Grim Reaper who we saw kill
and drag to hell the old lady earlier, right?
Yeah, I think so.
Yeah, because we keep getting those little flashes
of the Grim Reaper, because we never,
the thing that kind of is the flaw in this movie
is sort of claim that it's like a slasher movie.
We never really see the, we never really see the Reaper do anything.
He's just kind of like lurking.
It's like they had that actor for like an afternoon.
Hey, hey, they made this movie on $5 in a dream.
They are not doing any of that in the light.
They also have like one second per Grim Reaper shot
because he's dripping with oatmeal off his face.
And that's like all you get.
Listen, this is South Carolina in the summer.
It's hot.
Yeah.
Okay.
But what I didn't understand is like,
what happened to the parents?
Are the parents in the old age home?
And now they're taking him to the asylum
because he's crazy because he got punished by the Grim Reaper.
Or were the parents sitting in a different part of the house being like,
well, you know,
that Grim Reaper fella came by and made our son crazy.
But hey, at least he tore up that paperwork.
Am I right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
No idea.
Is he the only one who doesn't die?
Because we are later led to believe that he also died.
Right.
Yeah, because at the end, okay, we'll get there.
But yes, his appearance at the end of this movie is very puzzling.
Yeah.
Because, no, he's just crazy.
Also, he's like raving mad in front of like a, there's a little table has a little coffee mug
full of just dirt in it.
I admit, King Lear Mad.
is not exactly a desirable future, but, you know, there are lots of mentally ill people who live
fruitful, wonderful lives. Some of them are on this podcast. They could play baseball. Yeah,
it's exciting. Make America healthy again. So you remember Mr. Kaler, Harvey Kaler and his wife
Ruby and Kenny? Yeah, we're going to pick up their story now. We're back at Kaler's store.
and Mr. Kaler is grabbing the company checkbook
to make a purchase in the city
and he's telling Kenny about it.
He's going to buy a gift for Ruby.
Oh, he's really evasive at first
and I'm like, I swear to God,
he's going to the city to buy drugs.
It's more of that cryptic kind of double speaker
where he's like, no, no, no, Kenny.
It's not that kind of trip.
And I thought, yeah, he's going to get some of that
sweet, sweet bear back sex.
No, but he's buying his wife a giant Ruby
and he takes Kenny into his confidence.
He's like, now you're in charge tomorrow.
I'm never afraid to leave things in your hands.
And I wrote in my notes because I know you'd never fuck my wife, Kenny.
That's why I trust you with this business.
Every time Kenny's in scene, he's like wringing his hands together and he's like,
yeah, you know, your wife needs a little taken care of.
I think I could take care of her for you.
Yeah. Smash cut to the affair happening.
Yeah.
Yes.
Right.
Well, sorry, not the affair happening because we get a really,
long Kailer's wife dancing
Hussily, the 1980s
thinking about 1920s version of Husslea?
Oh, she's just a modern flapper.
Gotta get her flap on.
What I love about this scene is that she's supposed
to be by herself and dancing,
you know, like everybody does, who doesn't do that?
But you can tell that there are clearly
lots of other people in the room because she keeps
making eye contact with like somebody
behind the camera.
Waiting for them to say, cut, you can stop
dancing now. Or whatever you're doing.
Yeah. When people ask me, by the way, what Heath does in the house he lives in without his wife, this is what I picture. I picture him in a flapper outfit. I get it. I sometimes dance by myself. That's actually the only time I ever dance is by myself. I also play monkey in the middle by myself sometimes. You don't know. I have a very full life. So much room for activity. Anyway, we're getting off track. Kenny shows up at the house here and taps on the window. Mrs. Kaler, Ruby turns off the record player. And at this moment, a fully.
clarinet player takes over from the music that was on the record player.
Oh, yeah, this is, yeah, this is like old-timey stuff.
So, like, you don't get that, like, smooth jazz funk, like, porno music set up.
You get Dixieland.
Yeah.
And he walks in, and they're going to have their little flirty moment.
And then I think this is where it's implied that they have their affair, their sex here.
Oh, 100%.
Yeah, yeah.
We got a nasty, nasty kissing scene between these two people who just do not want to kiss one
another. And then we cut with none else of sex. We just cut to post sex. They're having drinks
upstairs in the house. And at this moment, this was fun. I enjoyed this. Ruby is giving a very
like awkward speech to Kenny about not trying to steal her husband's store. She's just like,
yeah, Harvey sucks. And like, we're fucking. Like, he earned, Harvey earned it. We're just having
sex. Like, I earned it too. I fuck Harvey sometimes. And she says, Harvey's skin smells all must
I've earned this too
Also they're wearing the same clothes
that they were wearing in the last scene
which makes me wonder like
did they fuck with their clothes on?
She also keeps emphasizing
the weirdest syllables in all this
she'd be like
he earned it
Harvey did
yeah
okay but this is when Harvey shows up
he drives up and he's got a big
Ruby ring for her
for Ruby
yeah for Ruby and he confronts them
yeah how could you do this to me
I enjoyed he confronts him and he's like
aha
also I
throw this ring at you.
Oh, I missed. Fuck.
Damn.
But aha. Yeah. And for a second,
Ruby tries to pull this off. She's like,
oh, Harvey, I just got you this copy of the ethical slut.
It's going to get violent in a moment.
And I put that in quotes.
Violent-ish. It's going to get violent-ish, yeah.
Yeah, we get what's supposed to be in, I'm sure,
the director's note, a face slap, but it was like a face,
ah, push.
It is so this is my best worst.
And he sort of comes at him.
Kenny comes at Mr. Kaler real slow, like.
And this is sort of like, when you see fights in movies,
they're, you know, punching and kicking and all that.
This is more like what a real fight looks like.
Yeah.
And he just sort of goes for his face and like brushes his face a little bit
and then pushes him over the couch.
Yes.
And then, of course, Mr. Kaler dies with my best worst, this noise.
Eh.
Aw, beans, I'm dead.
No second takes.
No fucking sales.
it takes for this one.
Right. So they decide they're going to make it look like an accident.
And I was like, okay, I think it was an accident though. So like their new plan is to stage a
different accident. Yes. I wrote in my notes. I mean, he tripped and fell in his house.
That seems like a great accident. Yeah. That would have worked. But no, they're going to carry Harvey's
body out to the car. And then Kenny puts him into the driver's seat of the car and lets the car
roll into what I believed was going to be
like a pond or something. Yeah, the old
Ted Kennedy special, yeah. Sure.
Exactly. A little
chappaquitic. But no, he
rolls Harvey's
body and the car into a
dynamite pit that was there.
It explodes like that car
was full of Mr. Kailer and
100 pounds of dynamite.
We also get our only
sound effects of the movie so far. It goes
kaboink,
go boom. It's like,
like they were next to the Looney Tunes guys at lunch
and they were like, you're using all those sound
effects today? You got any
extras we could use for our horror movie?
I'm glad you went there because I was
going to say, Eli, you have a note that just says
kiboyk, kibon? Can you say more
about that?
Yeah, that's the noise of dynamite.
Apparently, Harvey had a
dynamite pit. Kind of came back
to bite him in the ass. We'll see how it goes
with the cover up. But first,
let me give Act 3 of the hard sell.
What the fuck happened to Reverend Cage?
What the fuck happened to George Menendez
who clearly wanted to murder his parents?
Go fuck yourself?
Yes, when we return for the
whatever's left of a day
of judgment.
Hi, I'm Tony D
from Tony D's house of big movie Big Banks.
Do you have a struggling farmer business?
Do you need a loan that you'll immediately
be unable to pay?
Would you like several extensions on that loan
with no consequences whatsoever?
Well, then come on down to Tony D's Big House
a big movie banks. We give out money like candy to literally anybody. And then at their lowest
moment, we take their stuff because that's how banks work apparently. Don't need these house
of big movie banks. Free money until it's not. This is an ad by BetterHelp. I'm telling you,
dude, you get your raw colostrum going, you're going to feel like a million bucks. Wow, really? Definitely.
Hey guys, what you're talking about? Oh, Brian's been feeling down in the dumps lately. Big times. And I
keep telling him that he needs to try all these vitamins and cold plunges and rectal sunning.
Actually, Brian, have you tried therapy?
Oh, man, I'd love to, but, you know, it's just so hard finding a therapist, you know?
Not with BetterHelp, it's not.
What's...
What's better help?
No, come on. I was like right in the middle.
Look at the stopwatch.
No one's on vacation. Let me milk it.
With over 30,000 therapists, BetterHelp is the world's largest online therapy platform,
having served over 5 million people globally.
Oh, that sounds great.
It's convenient, too.
You can join a session with a therapist at the click of a button,
helping you fit therapy into your busy life.
Plus, switch therapists at any time.
Hold up.
So no awkward therapist breakups?
No awkward therapist breakups.
As the largest online therapy provider in the world,
BetterHelp can provide access to mental health professionals
with a diverse variety of expertise.
Talk it out with BetterHelp.
Our listeners get 10% off their first month at BetterHelp.com slash awful.
That's BetterH-E-L-P.com slash awful.
All right, Eli, thanks.
Okay, so you guys don't want to do the cold plunge?
No, I think we're good.
All right, I'll go empty the ice cube trays.
How many ice cube trays do you have?
A lot.
I bet.
And we're back.
When we left off, Kenny exploded a corpse and a car,
which made all that stuff evaporate, I guess.
So Kenny goes back inside the house,
and Ruby is already out on the plan of the cover-up.
Okay.
So here's what's so crazy.
I don't know why he thought Ruby was in on this from the start.
We've watched them have three scenes.
In the first scene, they have sex.
In the second scene, he's like,
someday I'll have all this.
And she's like, hey, man, I don't like you like that.
We're just fucking.
And then in this scene, he's like, I murdered your husband.
We're in this together.
And she's like, no, man, watch the movie.
Yeah, somehow they go from like a handshake to him being like,
remember how we were going to kill your husband together?
And I was going to take over his life.
And she was like, um, what?
No, no.
I just want to fuck you. God.
And this is where Kenny tries to flirt somewhere,
he tries to have a little, you know, post-man slaughter sex.
And she's like, no, no.
No.
Yeah, Kenny, you are literally holding my dead husband right now.
Maybe, maybe wait, 15, 20 minutes.
I read it wrong.
I read it wrong.
So now we cut over to Mr. Sharp.
And he went back to the new farmhouse that he owns
that has suicide blood everywhere to just hang out and check out his farm.
I wanted him to just have a big bucket and a mop.
Well, better sooner than later before it soaps into the floorboards.
It's like cat piss.
Yeah, once it gets into the wood, you're never getting it out.
You're never getting it out.
That's what I've always said about cat piss and suicide blood.
So he's excited about making money on this ice house.
So he checks out the ice house, but then the Grim Reaper shows up.
And locks him inside.
Right.
He gets locked inside the ice house.
And then we find out that the Grim Reaper
has like an intern with red eyes doing like the wet work.
Oh, that's Elder Morgan.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, because you can tell by like the, the hat.
Oh.
And also the glowy eyes.
Because he had glowy eyes before?
What do you?
No, well, no, I don't know.
It's the hat.
You can tell by the hat.
Also, not going to lie, love this shot.
Oh, God, it's so good.
Yeah, it's like the end of the fog when Captain Blake comes like out of the shadows down to
the church.
Oh, yeah, yeah, precisely.
But, you know, it's cheaper.
Oh, so this is like the demonic ghost of Elder Morgan getting revenge.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
More Elder Morgan gets his revenge.
Yeah, that tracks.
Okay.
I'm glad I'm here to guide you through this.
Yes, exactly, yeah.
Okay, so it's at this point that the movie realized, oh shit, we're all out of movie.
Yeah.
Who did we introduce in the movie?
That guy who wants to kill his parents?
Fuck.
Yes, Charlie.
Yeah, because all of a sudden, like, it just yanks to the right.
and like we're in an entirely new plot thread
and we are so far away from this Charlie character
that I was like, who the fuck is this guy?
I didn't know who it was at first either, yeah.
This is also where we go from people making poor choices
to someone being so maniacally insane.
Like this is like a Batman villain insane.
Yeah, this guy has an elaborate plot that he's doing.
This guy Charlie.
He hates the guy he was staring at in the newspaper.
That guy's name is Sid Martin.
We're going to learn that Sid is the president of the company that fired Charlie.
So he has a grudge.
And Sid Martin might be trying to steal Charlie's wife, Grace.
Okay.
I do have to talk about one moment from this because he's expositing all of this to us when the scene opens.
And this was almost my best worst.
I went with the death noise, but this was almost my best worst because he does a little spacework here
where he gives the newspaper of Mr. Sid a drink where he like takes the bottle and pushes
it into the newspaper that's in his hand.
He's like, he points his gun at the picture.
He's like, take a picture of his wife and like
put it up to the picture of Sid.
He's like, now kiss.
Little kids Barbie doll kiss.
It could not be silly. It's obvious
this actor did not plan any of his spacework and he was like,
what if I make a picture's kiss and then give the
Ryan Gosling on the TV.
No? Okay. Next scene.
Grace, Sid, Sid,
Grace. They're not kissing.
But he also, he accidentally hits
the lampshade on the table, and it is, like, violently shaking for, like, a good 25 seconds.
It's all I could focus on.
Right.
So Charlie is going to do his elaborate plan here.
He sneaks into the office of Sid Martin, the president of the company, and he starts looking
through a bunch of shit.
He looks at the calendar.
He looks in the file cabinet.
I thought he was doing, like, corporate espionage or something.
It was pretty confusing, especially because he starts typing a letter here, too.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, talk about it.
confusing. I thought, like, I was like, is Sid the lawyer guy from before? Like, who are all of
these people all of a sudden? Yes. Why would we assume that there are totally new characters involved
in a totally new, like, crime drama? We just watched an old lady get dragged to hell and a banker
get attacked by an ice house ghost. And here we are on, you know, espionage and intrigue.
Yeah, it's like they shot an entirely different movie and we're like, oh, shit, right, we could
probably used that one in a day of judgment.
Yes, that's what I think happened.
I think they thought this was going to be a crime thriller and they were like, shit,
we actually only shot 20 minutes of that.
Charlie goes bonkers movie.
Hey, do you want it for the end of your 50 minute long?
Can we do nine other things?
Maybe kill a goat?
Great.
Yeah, let's do it.
So he types a letter in the dark in this little office that's going to be part of the
elaborate plan.
Then the next day, we see Sid arriving at work and Charlie is sitting in his car outside
the office to confront
Sid. Well, he's got a gun. He puts
and pulls a gun on him and he says, get in,
Mr. Wife Steeler.
Oh, no, this is also where he was like, we used to be
friends. What's wrong, Charlie? And he was
like, ah, that's the way it always was.
I was always getting shot in the ass while you
were all fucking other people's wives.
And I was like, what is
happening? Who are these people?
That is a very specific
backstory that we have together.
I got to know, like, you used
to see this. You don't, they don't do this anymore.
but you used to see that where they'd be like
some kid would get shot with like a load
of buckshot, but it was like
rock salt. I'm like, yeah.
And I'm like,
does that used to happen?
It seems like, it seems like getting shot
with anything, especially in the
ass, is going to require
some surgery. Yeah, a lot of my monkey
in the middle games ended with like
rocks all the ass shooting.
Now, listen, I played a lot of monkey in the middle
myself. Never got shot with buckshot.
Check your privilege.
You see,
The thing about guns is that it's more the speed of what's coming out of it,
not so much what it is.
You can load it full of jelly beans and it's still going to hurt.
It was always like a wistful thing that they would do in these movies that took place
during like the Dust Bowl era.
And it's like some old, cranky old man like shooting some kid in the ass with rock salt.
I remember that, yeah.
I think when Trump finally fascist takes over the whole government
and starts attacking civilians in the streets,
he should shoot nerds gummy clusters at us.
That'll be fun.
It'll be a delicious death.
Right?
Right.
Okay.
So correct me if I'm wrong about this insane, elaborate thing that's happening.
So Charlie says, get in Mr. Wife Steeler.
And then Sid is like, yeah, okay, sounds cool.
Let's talk about this.
He gets in the car.
We cut for one second, literally one second, to people inside Sid's office area,
just being silently mad.
And then there's more arguing in the car.
And then Sid is like, oh, wait.
That's, ring, that was my cell phone.
I have a meeting inside.
And then we cut inside and there's this other businessman who's mad that Sid is late for
their business meeting.
Do I have this right so far?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Art of the deal.
Okay.
So Charlie's holding Sid in the car at gunpoint.
To make him late for his meeting.
To delay a meeting.
Yeah.
Moaha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
See, it's all coming together.
It's a lot of moving parts.
Okay.
Yeah, but it works.
It works.
Mr. Gellman is like, hurrump, he is five minutes late.
This deal is off.
Yeah.
What if he had shown up to work early that day?
What if he had showed up 30 minutes early to make sure he wasn't late for his meeting?
Was he going to hold him there for the full 30 minutes?
What if the guy had walked by and been like, hey, are you ready for the meeting?
It feels like there's so much that could have gone wrong with this vengeance play.
Charlie got really lucky about this plot.
Yeah.
Yeah, he really did.
That's how you know it's what God really wants, because it all falls into place.
Yeah.
Everything he does to sit in this movie with the...
exception of shooting him 20 seconds before
the end feels like a prank
war that Noah and Heath would have to explain to me
we're not allowed to do anymore.
Right. So
the business meeting is getting delayed.
That's going to fuck up the business of the business.
Whatever. Then we cut over to
Grace. This is Charlie's
wife who's maybe leaving him
for Sid.
She finds a bottle in the closet
like a bottle of alcohol because
Charlie's an alcoholic and he hit it
there. And she finds a photo
album that she's going to take with her
because she wants to leave,
he's an abusive alcoholic. Yeah, but she's
not leaving for Sid. She's leaving
because Charlie sucks. Yes.
She just come back for the photo albums
because he didn't suck that much. She wants to remember
the good times, I guess.
No, the wife stealer thing is all inside
of Charlie's head. Yeah. I really wanted
her to open up the photo album and it's just her
just like trying to do normal photo album
stuff while Charlie's drinking and plotting
elaborate revenge plans. Yeah, it's
really, it's not just that Charlie's
a drunk, it's that Charlie also is
experiencing some like old
tiny madness. Like this is
oh yeah. Honey, honey, can
you put down the yarn and push pins so
we can get one picture just one time?
He's got
like a quicksilver in his hat band
or something like that. You got to take
health advice from chat GPT about your
salt intake to go this kind of crazy these
days. They've been talking all about this methylene
blue. But yeah,
he comes home and she explains that he's lost
the ability to love because of the liquor.
wrote in my notes. Heath, I have a theory. Okay. All right. So now we get a little bit more explanation
of how this insane prank is working. Sid Martin is on the phone talking to Mrs. Allison,
some other business associate. Charlie sent that letter that he typed apparently to Mrs.
Allison using Sid's letterhead and, I guess, forging the signature, and sent it to the rest of the
committee of business leaders, business, whatever, and that's going to kill all the deals.
And all of this could be resolved.
All you used to do is be like, oh, yeah, someone broke into my thing and they sent you the
thing.
That's why the letter says, like, I don't want to do business with you also.
You're a big stupid face because he's like, and it also said very unkind things.
It's like, just say, hey, some crazy guy did that.
Let's resolve this now.
He could, but he never says what's happening to anybody.
The sheriff is like, hey, is anything weird going on?
And he's like, no, why would you suggest that?
No, well, signatures are magic.
He has power of attorney also.
So this is all real.
And all the business people are like, yep, he's crazy.
We're squashing the deals with Sid Martin.
And then we see, just for a second, Charlie driving away from this office and he does a little finger gun to be like, ha-ha, I got him.
Yeah, and it results in a car chase.
The world's slowest car chase.
Yes, I loved this car chase so much.
With an accompanying banjo soundtrack.
It's like a dukes of half.
hazard break. It looks like them
do, boys. A guy in themselves quite a pickle
this time. Yeah, I wrote in my notes
everyone is driving car 1.0
so they're going three miles an hour.
They're being outpaced by a turtle
passing by. Yeah, they get
to the top of the hill, they pop it into neutral
and then they push. Whoever gets
to the bottom, it's like a pine wood derby.
Yeah.
I was in those a couple
times. Never won. I was mad.
Anyway. Do you get some rocks all in the ass?
That's how a lot of my story
And it's true.
Don't jump ahead of me.
So the random speed trap happens next.
This car chase was actually part of the elaborate prank by Charlie.
What was the speed limit back then?
Like five miles per hour?
Yeah, I guess.
So they have that car chase for a second.
And then Sid gets pulled over by the sheriff, who was known to be there by Charlie.
Yeah.
And the sheriff says, you can't be driving around like some Barney Oldfield.
and my note is anybody?
Anybody?
Who the fuck is Barney Oldfield?
Yeah, I was hoping that the old's on the podcast
would tell us who the fuck.
Barney Oldfield was a very early
race car driver, but I only looked it up
today.
He shot me in the ass with Rock Salt one time.
As the resident old, no clue.
I had no idea.
It was the war to end all wars,
you see.
I had an onion tied to my belt.
We were all aiming for Heath's ass
with whatever ammunition we could.
We had to punish him somehow
for being the fattest monkey in the middle of the nation that's ever seen,
causing the great depression.
So we see the speed trap thing happen,
and then Sid gets back to the office,
and it's revealed that Charlie was doing a prank.
Charlie's just waiting there with a big smile,
and he's like, ha-ha, speed trap, gotcha.
I bet you got a ticket.
Oh, and he's leaned perilously back on his car.
Yeah.
This is a deep, deep lean.
Yeah.
Okay, and we learn a couple more important, weird steps
in this very large prank.
30 barrels of whitewash.
Yeah, that's the one.
Cid is just getting owned by this drunk, so hard.
When you have to invest that much money to buy 30 gallons of whitewash,
you are on board for, like, you are deep in this now.
Oh, I know.
There's no going back.
I was just saying, I don't know whose side I'm supposed to be on in this movie.
Because at this point, I fucking hate everybody.
The sheriff, you're on the sheriff's side.
Except the sheriff, that goat, those kids, maybe the Grim Reaper.
yeah so you might have heard us say 30 barrels of whitewash just now what the fuck was that
sid goes into the office here the secretary's like you better get to your appointment you're late
and then we learned that also 30 barrels of whitewash have arrived and that doesn't make any sense
and apparently charlie did it i wanted to hear charlie from the outside be like
ah whitewash prank got yeah okay can i lay a little of the blame for the whitewash on the
secretary here because she said
she saw the order with his signature on it,
but like, unless this is a whitewash distillery
or some other kind of business,
I feel like you would flag
when your boss buys 30 barrels of whitewash.
Oh, she sucks at this so bad.
Yeah.
Yeah, like if my boss, a true crime podcaster
was like, oh, by the way,
could you also get me 30 gallons?
I'd be like, could you say that one more time
so I know what you just said?
I'm going to text you to clarify the instruction here.
Are you tasting burnt toast right now?
Yeah.
Shut up.
There's the signature on it.
We're just doing it.
No questions, please.
Whitewash.
Yeah.
So that happened.
And then we see that Sid drives to Charlie's house to go yell at him about this insane series of pranks that's been happening.
Oh, right, right, right.
Because he's like doing this.
He's like, yeah, monologuing with that like that real southern drawl.
Can't understand a fucking word these guys are saying.
Yeah.
I couldn't understand a thing any of them were saying.
Like, because a lot of this is clearly shot in the South.
But like, a lot of them are just like.
kind of close to the Mason-Dixon,
except for Charlie.
Yeah.
It was just like,
Oh,
I'm going to be a lot.
Right.
What?
So Sid shows up,
knocks on the door angrily,
wants to confront Charlie.
Charlie's inside,
just smiling and drinking a little bit.
And Charlie calls the sheriff
who shows up in literally five seconds.
This town is three buildings
that the sheriff has just been going around
in a circle,
dealing with emergencies in the last four.
48 hours. Right. And this is where we get Charlie gaslighting Sid so fucking hard and gaslighting
the sheriff so that the sheriff hates Sid. And Sid's kind of going nuts. Yeah, the sheriff
at this point, he's just like, I don't care who did what. You people are terrible. Every single one of you.
Yeah, the sheriff makes Sid go wait by his car. He talks to Charlie for a second. Charlie explains
that like, no, I, what do you? I resigned from this job. And then this guy, Sid went crazy. And I haven't
done anything wrong. Sheriff walks over to Sid and is like, hey, I heard that Charlie resigned and
you're being weird. He's like, no, I fired Charlie. What are you guys talking about? This is crazy.
Yeah. And then he's like, no, I just called. I talked to your secretary. She read me the letter.
And it's like, I'm the one who fired him, though. I don't care what the letter says.
And the sheriff's like, okay, well, I'm not going to arrest you, Sid, but you got to get a
hold of yourself. You're ridiculous. And Sid, it's like, you're part of the deep state. I don't
know what's happening. This is crazy. This conspiracy goes all the way to the top. Yeah.
Yeah, exactly. So that night, Sid walks out of the office and Charlie is waiting outside and he's
got his gun out and he's like, get in the car, you drive. Yes. So again, just Charlie really needed
perfect timing for every element of his plan, right? If the sheriff had checked at the office,
if he had not gone back to his office, Charlie just would have been waiting there all night.
Fuck, probably went home to his house. God damn. I don't know why I assumed he would go back to work.
end of the work day.
Yeah.
But he got lucky.
He got lucky.
Right.
So he gets sit in the car and then they go and they pick up Grace.
Grace gets in the car too and they drive out to a field.
This is where the movie gets really dark.
Yeah.
He just murders the both of them.
But they also walk out of the visual field of the movie, which I kind of enjoyed.
Like we literally watch them walk out of the part of the movie we could see.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The next part is like, ah, did it really need to go here?
Because like, you were really winning on this.
Like, you were getting.
one over on this guy hard.
Like, you can just go get another job, man.
And, like, feel good about screwing this dude over.
That's just one too many pranks.
Also, I feel like if you're doing a whitewash-esque gaslighting plan,
you kind of ruin it at the end by shooting someone in the chest, right?
Yeah.
Like if Moriarty was like, and then, Mr. Holmes, I will kick you in the ball.
But just as he murders them, thunder strikes and must-up face guy shows up
25 minutes.
I wanted him to be like panting hands on knees
and he's like, I'm sorry, I really wanted to see
what the fuck Charlie was doing.
I got engrossed.
Yeah, I have to.
I got engrossed.
There's a lot of character threads
I'm having to like really just run back and forth all of times.
You guys, all right, you're next.
I had to put a farmer.
You're next.
You're next. You know, ice house.
I have to admit, this, the sheriff really drops the ball here.
The one time the sheriff drops the ball.
Like, you could have stopped a double homicide,
but you were just a little too exasperated at this point.
Look, he's got a deal.
with so much bullshit in this town, man.
Goats are getting poisoned.
You know, things are going to fall through the cracks.
That car exploded.
Right.
So they get murdered.
And then we check back in with Kenny.
He's leaving the Kaler's house.
And then Ruby from inside screams because there was a figure in the window.
And of course, it was the grim reaper.
Okay.
The best way I can explain it is this.
You ever get told by someone, hey, please clean this area.
And in the first part of the day,
you do a really meticulous, beautiful job.
You're like running a razor blade
along the cock lines of the kitchen
to make sure that every inch of dust
has been taken care of.
And then it's 2 p.m.
and you realize the person's coming back at 2.30,
so you're just like, fuck it, I'll just push all these dishes.
I'll throw these dishes into a garbage bag
and then I'll drive out into the country with him.
That's what it feels like skull-faced guy
is doing in the last 40 seconds of this movie.
Right? He's like, oh, fuck, I forgot to take care of that couple.
They're lightning powers.
I hit them with lightning while they're in the house.
And then the house just bursts into flames.
The house bursts in flames.
And then we see Charlie leaving his murder scene.
He hears something and he runs into the woods.
And it's like the Law and Order theme song is playing.
Like, we're a little law and order.
And he runs into the Grim Reaper.
And he's like, oh, hey, hey, grim reaper.
And he tries to shoot the Grim Reaper with his gun.
Oh, God.
I was hoping that the Grim Reaper's magic would make like a little flag come out of the gun at the end that just said bang.
Or what if it had worked, right?
What if he had just been like, ah, you got me?
Fuck.
Shit.
But no, you can't shoot the Grim Reaper, it turns out.
So instead, Charlie gets beheaded.
I was off my feet clapping when this happened.
I was pretty great.
I said beheaded, but he gets befaced.
Like, just the front of the face gets chopped by the side.
Yeah.
Yeah, this is the.
one bottle of ketchup they were willing to spend
on this movie. It's pretty great.
It's pretty great. And now we watch
all of the sinners that we have watched in this
movie get Disney slow-moving
rideed to hell. Yeah.
Even Greg. Yeah. They're on
a walking tour of hell, right?
The Reaper is, and he's doing
that thing where he's like, okay, but people at the
back need to come a little bit closer in, guys.
I'm not wearing one of those speaker things around
my wife. But he does
tease them a little bit with a little shot of
heaven. Right. Yeah, this is the Grim Reaper.
just like speed running the ending
like he was talking about
he summons all the unresolved
characters with the clock running down
and then he he kills him like
it was like Michael Scott roasting
but for Grim Reaper killing
he's like okay Kenny
adultery boom roasted Ruby also
adultery boom kid go to hell
and so he's got Charlie Kenny
Ruby Sharp George and Mrs. Fitch
they're all going to get Grim Reaper's
but first they see
a bunch of pillars and light
and they all think maybe they're going to heaven.
Yeah.
But then they see hell.
The reaper's like, oh, you like that?
Heaven looks really nice.
Like you'd like maybe want to be there?
Suckers.
Idiots.
That's how you do a prank, bitch.
And then we see hell and hell looks like the cover of a yes record.
Right.
So they go to hell and they have memories of all the bad stuff they've done as they get banished hell here, I guess.
But then they all wake up from.
with a nightmare.
It was a little dream.
Every single one of them
does the sit straight up
out of bed thing.
I felt so bad that Noah missed this movie.
Oh, I, God, I was so pissed.
Yeah, this was weak.
I don't know.
The scream that George lets out
when he wakes up is hilarious.
So now they've all learned
their lesson in that speed run
by the Grim Reaper.
Mrs. Fitch is going to stop
poisoning goats, I suppose.
George is going to stop stealing his parents' house
and committing them to asylums or homes.
Bank guy.
Sharp. Bank guy is going to give away money.
Just give it away and not ask for repayment.
You just do whatever you fucking want with that money, I guess.
Yeah. Ruby's going to not let her fuck boy kill Harvey
and she's not going to help with a cover-up of that.
And then we see Kenny and it's just like, yeah, Kenny's going to go fuck himself.
Whatever.
Oh, and Charlie, of course, will not.
do very elaborate
gaslighting conspiracies anymore.
Yeah, Charlie just
go into a meeting, getting his one day
chip. This isn't nearly as exciting as what
I was happening. It's been three days
since my last elaborate gaslighting
conspiracy. Yeah. And then
everybody goes to church together.
Boo. Yeah. Oh, God.
But I want to talk about the revelation
at the end of this scene, right? Because what
we are expecting, the new priest
comes and he mounts the stage
and we're expecting skullface guy, right?
Oh, right, because when he walks in,
we don't see him from the front.
We see the Skull face guy.
We see the Grim Reaper's costume,
like walking in all like slow walking.
And he like makes his way up through the pews
and everybody's like, you know,
recoiling.
And then he turns around.
He's just like some dude.
Yeah.
He's normal, which makes the gasping make no sense.
It also means that there's no payoff to the thing.
And then he does like a full-ass three-minute boring sermon
where he's like, all right,
let's all turn to press.
12 on our hymns and that's the end or as the movie credits calls it the beginning oh yeah and then
before it even rolls the credits it rolls the 10 commandments oh yeah and the first time that i watched
it it took me that long to realize that all of these people were commandment breakers oh it took me
today i learned just now from you this is what you keep this is why you brought me on this is why
we bring i'm gonna hold your hand through a day of judgment i also miss that were there even 10 of them
or 12?
How many commandments?
They did the truncated ones that they started doing in the 50s
where they combined the twos to make them into 10.
Okay.
Did you think back and realize that did they actually violate a commandment each
and get in trouble in their nightmare?
I see, I spent some time thinking about that.
I was like, but what about like the first commandment?
And then I was like, oh, shit, okay, the banker.
Banker doesn't lend to church on Sunday.
Yeah, his God was money.
Oh, right.
So, yeah.
Because he sent all the mammon shit.
Right.
Right.
Okay.
Well, 10 commandments.
That was the moral of the story, I guess.
Well, reduced commandments to 10.
Yeah.
Who do you think was the biggest sinner?
Like, who deserved the grim reaper the most?
Goat killer.
Yeah, Mrs. Fitch, 100%.
All the way, all the way.
She, I, being dragged to hell and then burned in the pit, well, it was too good for her.
Yeah.
Okay.
Honestly, Heath, the fact that you had to ask makes me want to shoot you in the ass with
rock salt.
Okay.
And I know I say that every week, but this week I mean,
it and I hope we keep it in the podcast. Right on the whiteboard man. Yeah. Remember what happened last time?
All right. Well, that's going to do it for a day of judgment, but that's not going to do it for the episode just yet because we found another terrible movie for next week. So Eli, what's on deck?
Well, Heath, it's been too long since we've dived into the crystal blue waters of anti-evolution bullshit.
So we'll be taking a refreshing dip into the anti-scientific bat shittery that is God of wonders.
The intelligent designer.
I bet they're going to talk about Swiss watches.
That'll be fun.
The irreducible complexity of the eye.
Guaranteed.
So with that to look forward to,
we'll bring episode 520 to a merciful close.
Huge thanks to Dave and Brian for joining us.
Much appreciated.
And if everyone wants to hear more, where should they go?
You find us at Bring Me the X Horror Podcasts,
wherever you get podcasts.
We do it every week.
It's kind of a rotating thing.
we've also got a show called 99 cent rental
and we do an alternating thing
you know bring me the acts is obviously horror movies
99 cent rentals fundamentally the same show
but for like sci-fi and martial arts
and all kinds of crazy bullshit
you can find us on Instagram but bring me the
X-Pod we got a Patreon
and bring me the X-Pod
where we got an X-Files show
that we do over there as well it's like
you know we talk about X-Files episodes and like
half of it is us kind of laughing about
90s headlines so yeah
beautiful and as I understand it you really
get into like the nuances of global monetary policy, a lot of intellectual stuff. Oh yeah,
yeah, yeah. It's it's heady stuff. You know, bring a sniff or brandy with you. You really want
to put on airs. Fantastic. And of course, a big thanks to our Patreon donors for all the generosity.
If you'd like to help support the show, you can make a per episode donation at patreon.com
slash godawful. And that'll get your early access to an ad-free version of every episode.
And if you enjoyed this show, be sure check out our sibling shows, The Scythian Atheist, Citation
Needed, The Skeptocrat, and D&D Minus, available in all the podcast places.
If you have questions, comments, or cinematic suggestions,
you can email Godawful Movies at gmail.com.
Tim Robertson takes care of our social media.
Our theme song was written by Ryan Slotnik,
a few of giraffes on Mars.
All other music was written and performed by our audio engineer, Morgan Clark,
and was used with permission.
Thanks again for giving us a chunk of your life this week.
For Dave, Brian and Eli, I'm Heath,
promises to work hard to turn another chunk next week.
Until then, we'll leave you with the American graffiti clothes.
Greg married Missy and learned over time
that there were plenty of other guys around town
who also left Broadway on the Dowdwell.
Charlie only drinks socially now.
After attending the premiere of this movie,
the entire cast and crew finally understood
why you never hire a straight man to do hair and makeup.
Skeleton-face guy had an incredibly busy night in D.C. ahead of it.
Charlie only does elaborate pranks socially now.
The preceding podcast was a production of Puzzle and the Thunderstorm LLC, copyright 2025, all rights reserved.