QAA Podcast - Premium Episode 146: Poltergeist II feat Bakoon (Movie Night) Sample

Episode Date: November 2, 2021

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Starting point is 00:00:00 What's up QAA listeners? The fun games have begun. I found a way to connect to the internet. I'm sorry, boy. Welcome listener to Premium Chapter 146 of the Q&Nan Anonymous podcast, the QAA Movie Night, Poultergeist 2 episode. As always, we are your host, Jake Rockatansky. Julian Fields.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Oh, I'm Oliver. He's Bakun on Twitter. That's correct. Gotta be patient. He's shy. I'm sorry, boys. I forgot we were reporting a thing for a moment. This is exactly what happened on our last episode because we did our, the last one we did with you, it was 420.
Starting point is 00:00:46 And we were all absolutely, I had to edit out so much silence from that episode. Okay, we were all very, yeah. And this is going to be kind of similar. Yeah, yep, yep. There can't be any silence because we're going to be talking about, you know, a Academy Award-winning film Poltergeist 2, The Other Side. That is true. That's right.
Starting point is 00:01:05 We're going to be talking about that movie, which Jake chose and, you know, bless him for choosing a sequel to a movie that we've never watched in the movie night. So that's already a win. Plus, if you watch it without any knowledge of the first, you have no fucking idea what the hell is going on. If you were born within the year 1989 to I would say 1997, you have an innate internal knowledge of the first polter. to guys film. Right. That's true. And you're also primed to be terrified of braces
Starting point is 00:01:35 that they might attack you from your mouth. God, absolutely. Yes. And I also, I mean, the movie, we'll get into it, obviously. Jake has a bunch of information about it. We have our guest, Oliver Leach, aka Bakoon, who is, you know, known for liking every horror film, despite some of them being very bad.
Starting point is 00:01:56 There's some I don't like, I would say. Well, you recommend. amended Battle Angel Alita to me, and that was one of the most painful watching experiences I've ever had in my life. I kind of liked it. God damn it, man. But you know what? I also liked Final Fantasy, The Spirits Within, which I saw in the theaters, which was
Starting point is 00:02:15 the first, like, all-CGI movie, and you know what? I'm going to watch that again, actually. Again. That movie's terrible. Yeah, that's not a good time. There we go. So, yeah, we're very happy to have you on for this. I think it's perfect.
Starting point is 00:02:28 and Poltergeist 2 is a beautiful mess. It's like a lazy Susan of different types of horror genres and it often transitions from scene to scene in like the least seamless way possible, just completely shockingly different phases to the film. Like the Spielbergian Schmaltz from the first one has been left out on the counter for a couple nights. It's gotten kind of, there's kind of a hard shell around it,
Starting point is 00:02:53 it's gotten kind of a funk to it. Yes. Yeah. It's trippy. it's like kind of bright. Like a lot of the horror happens like under bright lights. There's not too much like there's not a lot of
Starting point is 00:03:06 you know looking through dark rooms and waiting for something to jump out at you. It's not it's not that kind of horror which is I think one of my favorite things about the Poltergeist series at large is that the way they do their spirits is kind of in the vein of like Ghostbusters where they it's a lot of like animation. Yes.
Starting point is 00:03:26 Like hand drawn animation. to how they do the spirits. I love that. When you talk about quote-unquote daytime horror or sun-drenched horror, they call it, you talk about it takes a chance on massacre and this scene in Poltergeist too where the old preachers, you know, revealed for the first time when he walks up the house. I love to, like, if they made this movie nowadays, the preacher, you wouldn't know if he's a ghost like for the first act or not.
Starting point is 00:03:53 But like in this movie, like right away you see him like walking through people at the mall. It's like, no, this is a ghost. It's chasing after the little girl. We're in the first, like, 15 minutes of the movie. Like, no, this is the bad guy. Like, at the strip mall, right? Yeah, yeah, it's at the mall. Again, yeah, very sun-drenched, like, all.
Starting point is 00:04:10 In fact, it never really builds up much suspense. This is maybe one of the least suspenseful horror movies I've ever seen. It's just like, either it's action or it's basically like a, I don't know, like a family soap opera. Yeah. Very fun, yeah. Let's jump right into it, Jake. Yeah, sure. Okay, so a little background on the movie.
Starting point is 00:04:29 So Poltergeist to the other side. It was released in 1986, shortly after my birth. It was written by Michael Grace and Mark Victor, who also wrote Cool World, which is a movie that I love, with Gabriel Byrne and Brad Pitt before he had plastic surgery on his ears. It was directed by Brian Gibson, who went on to direct What's Love Got to Do With It? I don't know if I have not seen that film He also directed the juror with Richard Gear which was like a kind of like a decent 90s Sort of like legal thriller
Starting point is 00:05:07 And film was produced by MGM Studios Cost $19 million to make this movie And it sold about $41 million in ticket sales at the box office So not not too bad but probably not what they were hoping for I think it came out to kind of middle reviews. One thing that I found interesting is that the movie was shot entirely in Los Angeles. The main location of the house was in Altadena, which is just up near Pasadena in L.A., and there was a secondary location in Encino, which is up in the valley. The replicas for the indoor scenes
Starting point is 00:05:42 were shot at MGM Studios in Culver City, Los Angeles. And one thing that I found interesting is that the soundtrack was composed by Academy Award winner Jerry Goldsmith, who did fucking Chinatown, Logan's run, the original alien, the first Star Trek, Gremlin's Secret of Nim, a Secret Banger, Total Recall, Basic Instinct, and Rudy, just to name a couple. A little QAA lore. He also did the music for The Sum of All Fears, the famous QAnon movies starring Ben Affle.
Starting point is 00:06:12 But the sound work in that movie is awful. I know because I had to work with clips of it for our episode. Damn. But I mean, Gremlin's, Gremlin's hell of a sound check. Toto Recall, hell of a soundtrack. Oh, yeah. Poltergeist too?
Starting point is 00:06:28 Yeah, sure. You know what. Yeah, it was okay. It was okay. It wasn't memorable. It wasn't something that I walked away from being like, oh, the soundtrack and that was actually really good. No.
Starting point is 00:06:38 But mostly because if someone showed you these images with no music, like what the fuck are you going to come up with to balance out all these scenes that are shifting tone so dramatically, so quickly? Like, Poltergeist, one, is so good. that, you know, this movie can do a lot of bullshit while still kind of holding itself together on the strength of that first one. And it does a lot of goofy bullshit.
Starting point is 00:07:03 Yeah. And it really does depend. It's one of those sequels that you don't really see anymore that is so dependent on seeing the first movie. I mean, you... Well, I mean, the Halloween, the recent Halloween kills, that just picks up directly. That's true.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Like middle of the line almost. almost 4-1 Dork who's like finding a corpse you get it a bit but it is a rarity you get it more in the horror genre that was there yeah it does feel a bit like they took the fun and games phase of like a normal movie and just stretched it over the whole movie a bit like gremlins too where you're just fucking going from like sketch to sketch yeah it's just uh dad's invention then another dad's intention and then another dad's invention uh what if the movie was the shining yeah okay let's make the dad just drink for no reason right now and um and then he's going to become, then he's going to puke up
Starting point is 00:07:53 an entire alien entity, like, just ideas like that, like, let's have the kids braces attack him and become like a metal monster. Yeah. Coach, coach does drink a bit. He goes a bit agro in this one. He does, he does. He swallows the damn worm, which we all know is demonic. The H.R. Geiger worm,
Starting point is 00:08:09 which I'm sure when I go into. Yeah, I was so, I actually wrote that later, later on in the dock is that, like, I was very surprised to see that H.R. Geiger designed the creature, But then when you look at the creature, you're like, oh, okay, that makes perfect sense. It completely looks at it.
Starting point is 00:08:25 And, like, his drawing, his drawings for it are fucking terrifying. But, like, the first bulletin guy, that was Lux. That was, that was big. That was Spielberg. That was, you know, prestige. They could get, they could get gig. They could, you know, people are lining up for it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:41 And this movie's very, like, wacky. Like, the dad is very wacky in it constantly. Yes. Which I liked, actually. Like, he had a couple wacky scenes in the first one. who only is tooting on that reefer. That's true. That's true. But the whole movie, the second one,
Starting point is 00:08:57 he's kind of a cartoon of who he was in the first one, I bet. They all are. So the setup for this movie, the basic sort of premise of the film, is that the Freely family from the first movie, is staying with Diane, who's played by Joe Beth Williams, her mother's house after narrowly escaping the events of the first film, which I hope everyone who's listening watched, because it's great, but also very necessary.
Starting point is 00:09:21 to understand what's going on in this film. It becomes clear early on that whatever evil they believed they had escaped from has followed them here and continues to wreak havoc on the Freelies. The film opens with a ceremony performed by Taylor, one of the film's main characters, and potentially the ghost of a powerful shaman? I mean, I didn't look too deeply into this, but there's a couple scenes where he kind of disappears and then reappears sort of magically, and I wonder if there's discussion online, whether or not Taylor himself is some sort of spirit.
Starting point is 00:09:54 At that point, you're thinking more deeply into the film than anyone who wrote it, produced it, or directed it. Definitely. This is not like the hermetic Kubrickian, you know. Yeah, no. There's a line when you, when Kane comes to the house, which will clip later, where Kane says, he's like, I believe there's an Indian staying here with you.
Starting point is 00:10:20 And he's like, yeah, Taylor. And he's like, ah, so that's what he calls himself now. And I took that as a clue that this Taylor is something great, is something greater. Well, I took it to mean he is trying to intimate to this Caucasian homeowner that this man in this house is a villain. He's a roust about. He's going from state to state changing his name, rifting off people. That's what I took at us. That could be it as well.
Starting point is 00:10:48 Yeah. Like he comes up to the door like an old cracker, you know. saying like, you know, secret, yeah, I mean, you could read it as this is an ancient encounter between ghosts, or you could read it as he's playing on, yeah, you know. Well, what a fucking white settler from what the 1800s would play on, which is just pure racism. So it opens on Taylor, who's performing this ceremony on what looks like one of the Mesa's in Sedona, where Travis and I went for the Q-pilled alien conference, during the ceremony,
Starting point is 00:11:16 the fire turns blue and 80-style animated spirit. are released from the flames and inhaled directly into Taylor's nostrils like some sort of paranormal cocaine. We see Taylor driving his old pickup truck to the site where the first movie takes place. Where the house from that film used to be standing, there's now a giant crater. If you guys remember, the first movie ends with the house sort of devouring itself. Once he's there, Taylor meets up with Zelda Rubinstein's character, Tangina, and she informs him that they believe they found the source of the haunting. After digging into the rock beneath what used to be the swimming pool, Taylor descends into darkness and finds a cavern just packed with decaying bodies and skeletons.
Starting point is 00:11:55 Where's the family now? he asks. We cut to the Freely family who's enjoying a picturesque outdoor lunch with their grandmother. It's a stark contrast to where we left them in the first film. It's bright, filled with sunshine and flowers, and Carol Ann, played by the late Heather O'Rourke, has made herself a peanut butter and Eminem sandwich, a treat that I myself, as a child, cooked up whenever my parents were late in getting home from work. So in this picnic advertisement scene, it's revealed that Carol Ann can sense colors with her mind. When her grandmother asks for various swaths of yarn, Carolan reaches into the basket and retrieves them without even looking.
Starting point is 00:12:30 So our first clue from the writer that Carolan possesses certain gifts and that the grandmother can sense them. That's a very special gift that you and I have. It's nothing to be scared of. Will it help me be a ballerina? Yes, sure. Whatever you dream, it can be. This is your classic scene of, you know, revealing that the gift has, like, skipped a generation, right? That the grandmother can sense things, the daughter can sense things.
Starting point is 00:13:00 Well, the mom can a bit, a bit. And right after this, she and the grandmother actually have this argument about, you know, her wanting Carolan to just be normal and to have a normal existence as a kid, and the grandma's saying, but you can't ignore these gifts. And what's so funny is that like they so you're you know what you're mentioning sets up this kind of idea of like yeah matrilineal you know people who can sense things in other worlds and maybe the future and maybe the position of objects or colors with their hands and all that stuff and then they're like okay and now for the next hour we're going to watch like the dad who's not at all clairvoyant he's just going to go to man camp with some completely random guy you know and he keeps telling him hey you're you're a warrior now you're going to you're in a fight and then but neither of those. plot lines really ever evolve into anything. I mean, the closest conclusion you get is, yeah, the mom at the end being like, ah, yeah, I'm also in touch with this stuff.
Starting point is 00:13:51 And I guess that kind of helps them defeat the demon, like, in some way. But it's, um, it's all over the place. It really just serves as expository. It's the, the mom discovering her gift really only serves the story in the way that you get the final piece of lore of who Cain really is. But the dad went like, okay, when like the pre-year, comes to the door, he plays immediately on the dad. Like, you can't take care of your family. You're scared. You're not a real man. Right. And then immediately when Taylor shows up, he tells him the
Starting point is 00:14:23 same thing. Like, you've got to be a man. You're going to be a warrior, all this stuff. So it's kind of about a man, like, doing like, yeah, you know, semen retention and becoming more powerful. But then, yeah, it ties in like zero. That side of things does not tie in in any way to that, the whole crux of this, which is, yeah, this matrilineal, clairvoyant line in the family. Well, if it was just the ladies learn their power, it's like the dudes and the dad's watching it, they would feel kind of emasculated and left out. Maybe they would start drinking and become violent. So once the kids are in bed, Stephen, played by Craig T. Nelson and Diane, Joe Beth Williams,
Starting point is 00:15:01 discuss what they're going to do about the insurance from the last house. And what thing I actually really like about these movies is I feel like in some ways the family reacts as real people would like when shit starts hitting the fan they don't stay in the house they like move you know they move right away they're like no we're getting in the car we're getting out of here which is kind of atypical for like hunting movies usually there's a reason that they have to stay in the house yeah they go to the motel and they they they roll the tv out into the hallway they say that if the house disappeared then technically it's only missing missing what do they think this house is going to return or something now it's been a full year the house
Starting point is 00:15:42 is not coming back. I got a gut feeling, Diane. I'm positive about that. I know that, Steven. You tell him that... No, no, I'm gonna fill out the fourth plane. Oh, great. Well, what are we gonna claim this time? Act of God? House napping? Stephen, we are almost broke. Okay, we're broke, but we're not... we're not starving. Okay, but I don't happen to like having to live off my mother,
Starting point is 00:16:07 and I think that we deserve a house of our own again someday. Oh, honey, gee. Honey, gee, gosh. See, that's a difference between you and me, Diane. I am into downward mobility. I'm not settled for it. I'm into it. I like getting out there in the streets and meeting those people.
Starting point is 00:16:22 I like selling vacuums. I like carrying the pipes and the apparatus in my little demo case. Let's get the kids up and we'll paint the car of different colors, kind of day glow like we used to do when we were kind of freaky. You know, the freaky freelings on the road again. You know, the family whose house disappeared. Watch them find it, Diane. I'm not going to get upset about this, but I'll tell you something.
Starting point is 00:16:44 I'm writing them back, and when I sign that letter, I'm signing Mr. President. You know, it's really funny. I was doing some research, and the reason that Craig T. Nelson has the T in his name is because there was another actor registered to SAG with Craig Nelson, the actor Craig Richard Nelson. Oh, no. And Poltergeist was his first big thing, so he, like, had to distinguish himself. You know, he basically, he couldn't register his name with SAG because there was somebody else there. And now the tea is, the tea is golden. The tea is his, you know, his trademark.
Starting point is 00:17:14 He's also, like, pretty red-pilled. I found an interview. I'm not, I was going to play it, but I don't think it's worth it. No, no, no, no, please. Play this Glenn Beck interview from 2009. I want to see this. You want to see it, okay. Yes.
Starting point is 00:17:26 There are programs that they're asking me to fund that I refuse to fund. You have been listening to a sample of a premium episode of Q&ONAnon Anonymous. We don't run any advertising on the show, and we'd like to keep it that way. For five bucks a month, you'll get access to this episode, a new one each week, and our entire library of premium episodes. So head on over to patreon.com slash QAnonanonymous and subscribe. Thank you. Thanks. I love you.
Starting point is 00:17:53 Jake loves you.

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