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Judge Dredd
This week on Slept On Cinema, we are keeping up with Sylvester Stallone with the movie Judge Dredd!
In the crime-plagued future, the only thing standing between order and chaos is Judge Joseph Dredd. When maniacal ex-Judge Rico frames Dredd for murder, he discovers not even a prison sentence can stop Dredd from doling out his signature brand of justice and fulfilling his duty to police the violent metropolitan sprawls that crowd the decaying earth.
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Episode Timestamps
Chapter 1 - Rotten Reviews (0:00:00)
Kickstarting our journey with a plethora of harsh criticisms for the 1995 cinematic masterpiece 'Judge Dredd,' we set the tone for an engaging exploration of this often misunderstood classic.
Chapter 2 - Background Information (0:02:40)
We delve into the backstory of 'Judge Dredd,' exploring its comic book roots, Stallone's significant contribution, and how the film fared amidst the heavy competition during its release summer.
Chapter 3 - BOLO (Be On the Look Out) (0:07:35)
In this section, we outline everything you should be on the lookout for in 'Judge Dredd,' from gravity-defying cars to the surprisingly significant role of sauce-less spaghetti, and all the minute details that contribute to this film's unique charm.
Chapter 4 - Drink to Pair With The Movie (0:19:00)
Enhance your 'Judge Dredd' viewing experience with our hand-picked beverage recommendations, including the complex "Lawgiver" and the futuristic "Mega City One Mule."
Chapter 5 - Our Draft (0:22:20)
Join us as we draft our top picks from 'Judge Dredd,' featuring standout elements like Stallone's unforgettable chin and Armand Assante's enthralling performance.
Chapter 6 - Superlative (0:25:45)
In this fun segment, we pick the best and worst of 'Judge Dredd,' from the most quotable lines to the most cringe-worthy moments.
Chapter 7 - Bumper Sticker (0:29:10)
Here we select a favorite line from the movie that would make a great bumper sticker. Expect some hilarious and thought-provoking choices!
Chapter 8 - One Change to be a Blockbuster (0:31:20)
In this thoughtful segment, we discuss the changes we would make to the film to turn it into a blockbuster hit.
Chapter 9 - Spinoff Ideas (0:33:10)
We delve into the realm of 'what ifs' and dream up some potential spinoff ideas based on 'Judge Dredd.' This segment is sure to get your creative juices flowing!
Chapter 10 - Closing Remarks (0:34:50)
As we conclude our episode, we reflect on the enduring legacy of 'Judge Dredd,' go over anything we might have missed, and eagerly anticipate our next episode featuring a Steven Seagal double feature.
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74. Tammy & The T-Rex (1994)
48:02||Season 1, Ep. 74Join hosts Stan Steamer and Grobe Street for a historic episode of Slept-On Cinema—recorded LIVE from the Dedham Community Theater! This week, we are celebrating the ultimate cult classic: Tammy and the T-Rex (1994).Starring a young Paul Walker and Denise Richards, this film sits below 50% on Rotten Tomatoes, but we’re here to argue it belongs in the top 5 movies of all time. We dive into the infamous "Gore Cut," the insanity of implanting a boyfriend's brain into a robotic dinosaur , and the wild true story of how director Stewart Raffill made this masterpiece in just three weeks because a South American theater owner needed to move an animatronic.Whether you're a fan of 90s B-movies, practical effects, or just want to know how a movie with a T-Rex playing charades exists, this episode is for you. Grab your drink and join the movie optimists!In This Episode:Part 1: The Set-Up (Spoiler-Free)The Rotten Premise: A teen learns that a mad scientist (Terry Kiser) implanted her dead boyfriend's brain into an animatronic dinosaur.Production Lore: Filming during California wildfires , bribing fire departments with $200 , and the accidental genius of casting unknowns Denise Richards and Paul Walker.B.O.L.O. (Be On the Lookout): Before you watch, look for:A giant knee brace.Buck Flower (from Back to the Future).A "Provocative Cheer Routine".Roger Lodge (host of Blind Date)."White people dancing" (as an adjective).Drink Pairing: The Kamikaze with a Vodka Chaser (It’s basically a vodka margarita!).Part 2: The Deep Dive (Spoilers)The Draft: Stan and Grobe select their absolute favorite elements, scenes, and performances from the film.Superlative: We award the film a specific title for its unique achievements.Bumper Sticker Line: We debate the most quotable, sticker-worthy line of dialogue.One Change to Be a Blockbuster: The single adjustment that would have turned this cult hit into a mainstream smash.Spin-Off Ideas: We pitch the sequels and prequels that absolutely need to happen.Tying Up Loose Ends: Final thoughts and observations.Key Topics: Denise Richards, Paul Walker, Cult Classics, 90s Movies, Horror Comedy, The Gore Cut, Movie Reviews, Bad Movies We Love.Connect With Us:Instagram: @SleptOnCinemaTikTok: @SleptOnCinemaaWebsite: SleptOnCinema.com
73. The Skulls
46:15||Season 1, Ep. 73🎬 The Skulls (2000) | Slept-On Cinema PodcastSecret societies. Ivy League power. Late-90s conspiracy thrillers that somehow got absolutely buried by critics.This week on Slept-On Cinema, we dive into The Skulls (2000) — a glossy, paranoid, endlessly watchable thriller inspired by real-life elite secret societies like Yale’s Skull and Bones. Starring Joshua Jackson, Paul Walker, and Leslie Bibb, this film explores what happens when ambition, loyalty, and power collide behind closed doors… and how high the price of success really is.Despite a baffling 9% critics score on Rotten Tomatoes, The Skulls delivers peak early-2000s vibes: candlelit rituals, ancient rules, elite campuses, dangerous friendships, and the kind of slow-burn tension Hollywood doesn’t make anymore. We break down why this movie works far better than its reputation, why Paul Walker is electric in one of his best early roles, and why this film feels like a missing link between Urban Legend, National Treasure, and prestige conspiracy thrillers.🔍 In this episode:Why The Skulls might be one of the most unfairly rated movies we’ve ever coveredThe real history behind Skull & Bones and elite secret societiesPeak Y2K aesthetics: dorm rooms, libraries, rituals, and soundtrack choicesPaul Walker’s star-making performanceIconic moments, hidden details, and our favorite BOLOs to watch forWhat this movie gets right about power, access, and ambitionIf you love 90s & early-2000s thrillers, college conspiracy movies, or films critics completely missed the point on — this episode is for you.🎧 Listen now and rediscover a movie everyone slept on.
72. Urban Legend
43:01||Season 1, Ep. 72Urban Legend (1998) may be one of the most “how is this under 50%!?” movies we’ve ever covered — and this week, we’re diving right into the killer fun. On this episode of Slept-On Cinema, Stan Steamer and GrobeStreet revisit the late-90s slasher that turned every campfire myth into a bloody calling card. From killers in the backseat to Pop Rocks paranoia, this movie swings big, blends satire with suspense, and delivers some of the most memorable horror setups of the era.We break down why Urban Legend still absolutely rips 25+ years later, why the critics totally missed the point, and how this became one of the coolest “popcorn horror” watches of the 90s. As always, the first half is spoiler-free: we hit the Rotten Premise, some wild BOLOs, the era that produced this slasher boom, and the moments to keep an eye on when you watch. Then we send you off to enjoy the film before returning for a full breakdown of the kills, twists, tropes, and our signature Slept-On Cinema segments.If you grew up renting this from Blockbuster, if you love 90s horror, or if you just want to relive the glory days of oversized sweaters and college campus mayhem, this is your episode.Critics Score: 30% Audience Score: 38% Our Score: Criminally Slept-On.
71. Godzilla
44:51||Season 1, Ep. 71In 1998, Godzilla stomped into theaters with a roar, a record-breaking marketing campaign, and a wave of brutal reviews. But after 25 years, was it really that bad — or just misunderstood?This week, Stan Steamer and Bobby Morong (as GrobeStreet) revisit Roland Emmerich’s Godzilla (1998) through the lens of nostalgia, fatherhood, and second chances. From Taco Bell tie-ins to the unforgettable Puff Daddy x Jimmy Page soundtrack, the guys unpack what made this blockbuster such an easy target — and why it’s way more fun than people remember.Like every Slept-On Cinema episode, the conversation blends humor, genuine affection, and thoughtful film talk. This isn’t a takedown — it’s a love letter to the movies that got a raw deal.🕒 Episode Breakdown00:00 – Opening Roast: Stan and GrobeStreet kick things off by reading the original savage critic reviews — and talk about why Godzilla became a symbol of “too big to fail” ’90s blockbuster culture.06:25 – Rotten Premise: Bobby reads the official synopsis and Rotten Tomatoes scores. The guys break down how a movie with this much talent, hype, and merch still got dunked on by critics — and how time has been kinder to it.14:10 – The Right of Passage: One of the episode’s funniest and most heartfelt moments — GrobeStreet shares how watching Godzilla with his three-year-old son became a “family rite of passage.” It’s proof that some movies are meant to be felt, not graded.22:40 – BOLO (Be On The Lookout): Explosive set pieces, absurd product placements, questionable science, and peak-’90s soundtrack moments. The guys highlight the details that make this movie a time capsule — in the best way.35:15 – The Draft: Stan and Bobby each draft their MVPs — performances, lines, and miniatures that define the movie’s charm. No irony, just genuine appreciation for a wild studio swing.48:50 – One Change to Make It a Blockbuster: What single adjustment could’ve changed its legacy? The hosts pitch everything from “less rain” to “lean into the camp.”1:01:00 – Closing Thoughts: A grounded reflection on how nostalgia reshapes taste — and why Godzilla (1998) might be one of the most important “failed” blockbusters of its era.💬 Why This Episode WorksCelebrates a misunderstood blockbuster with humor and sincerityMixes nostalgia with sharp but good-natured film insightPerfect for fans who believe movies don’t have to be “good” to be greatSignature Slept-On Cinema segments: Rotten Premise, BOLO, The Draft, One Change🎧 Listen now on: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Acast 💬 Join the conversation: #SleptOnCinema #UnderratedMovies #FilmPodcast #Godzilla1998
70. The Final Destination
50:03||Season 1, Ep. 70Stan Steamer and GrobeStreet (Bobby Morong) dive deep into the psyches of the world's cereal killers in this 2009 3D horror spectacle. Despite being the highest-grossing Final Destination film ($186.5M worldwide), it paradoxically holds the franchise's lowest ratings (28% critics, 35% audience). The hosts explore why this NASCAR-centered death fest deserves reconsideration, celebrating its lean 82-minute runtime, pioneering 3D technology, and commitment to R-rated gore in an era of PG-13 horror.Timestamps:0:00 - Cold Open (Rotten Reviews)0:56 - Intro & Welcome1:44 - Rotten Premise2:15 - Box Office & Series History8:03 - BOLO (Be On The Lookout)15:01 - Drink Pairing: "The Pool Drain"17:18 - [BREAK]18:26 - Welcome Back19:55 - The Draft32:37 - Superlative: Favorite Death Scene37:30 - Bumper Sticker Lines38:38 - Movie Length Discussion39:09 - One Change to Be a Blockbuster40:59 - Spinoff Ideas43:35 - Tying Up Loose Ends49:03 - Next Episode Preview: Godzilla (1998)Notable Discussion Points:The spectacular McKinley Speedway opening disaster2009 fashion time capsule (frosted tips, Ed Hardy)Elaborate death fake-outs and tension buildingMissing Tony Todd's presenceWhy 70% of opening weekend was 3D showingsThe infamous pool drain sceneQuotable: "The signs are everywhere" - perfect bumper sticker material from a movie about inevitable fate.
69. Wishmaster
40:54||Ep. 69A horror genie? From ancient Persia? Released from a fire opal and ready to grant your darkest wishes? Oh yes. Wishmaster (1997) is exactly the type of gloriously gory, overstuffed chaos Slept-On Cinema was made for.This week, Stan Steamer and GrobeStreet dive into the ultimate “hard 40” — a movie that somehow sits at 25% on Rotten Tomatoes but still slaps. We break down the surprisingly impressive practical effects, the who's-who of horror cameos (Englund! Hodder! Todd! Ramey! Savini!), and why this feels more 1989 than 1997—in all the best ways.▶️ Timestamps: 0:00 – The critics hated this… but we didn’t 1:36 – Rotten Premise & box office context 3:43 – Director Robert Kurtzman’s makeup FX masterclass 6:00 – Horror Cameo Central: Freddy, Jason, Candyman unite 8:10 – BOLOs: narrating ancient text, statue blood, sweater game 13:50 – Draft: Best kills, best effects, best 90s moment 18:36 – What drink to pair: The Djinn & Juice, Hellraiser Sangria 22:01 – One change to make this a blockbuster 24:30 – Spinoff dreams: The Djinn Diaries, Persia Prologue, Horror-verseIt’s campy. It’s clever. It’s gruesome. It’s a perfect Slept-On Cinema pick. And remember: be careful what you wish for.
68. Drive Angry
52:33||Ep. 68Episode Highlight Quotes:🎬 "This movie delivers. It's exactly what you expect." - Stan Steamer on Drive Angry🔥 "If you're going to see this movie, if you're a fan... this seems like the exact type of movie you would deliver on as promised." - GrobeStreetFun Facts from the Episode:Critics: 47%, Audience: 37% - The hosts can't understand the low audience score!This is Slept-On Cinema's first true grindhouse filmPerfect drink pairing: Cold beer from a skull (or your favorite ceremonial cup/trophy)Best BOLO Moments:Walking away from explosions without lookingGratuitous nudity (it's grindhouse!)The mysterious wig manTom Atkins appearance!Memorable Quote for Social: "I never disrobed before gunplay" - A perfect bumper sticker line from the movieEpisode Summary: GrobeStreet and Stan Steamer dive into 2011's Drive Angry, a 3D grindhouse spectacular featuring Nic Cage escaping from hell. They discuss William Fichtner's scene-stealing performance as the Accountant, debate the best kills, and explain why this movie deserves way better than its 37% audience score.🎧 Listen now on Acast!#SleptonCinema #DriveAngry #NicCage #Grindhouse #MoviePodcast
67. Knowing
43:34||Season 1, Ep. 67SLEPT-ON CINEMA #67: KNOWING (2009)The One Where Nic Cage Does Math and Things Get WEIRD🎬 THE BASICSFilm: Knowing (2009) Rotten Scores: Critics 35% | Audience 42% Why It Qualifies: Because apparently predicting the future isn't impressive enough for critics🍿 FIRST HALF HIGHLIGHTS (SPOILER-FREE!)The SetupProfessor Nicolas Cage's son gets a creepy note from a 50-year-old time capsule. Turns out it's not your average "what I want to be when I grow up" letter. Cage does what any rational MIT professor would do: becomes obsessed, drinks heavily, and starts doing MATH.BOLO - Your Viewing Checklist:📊 SO. MANY. NUMBERS.✍️ Cursive writing (RIP penmanship)🔦 X-Files worthy flashlight action🥃 Cage's drinking game potential🚣 Boston movie bingo: crew on the Charles!📀 Peak 2000s tech: DVDs & 6-CD changers🏠 Possibly the creepiest house in cinema👂 Our first hearing aid movie!🍺 DRINK PAIRING CORNERFancy Option: 1975 vintage wine (time capsule vibes) Realistic Option: The biggest pour of whiskey you've ever seen💭 Stan's Pre-Watch Confusion"I thought this was 'Next' - that OTHER Nic Cage future-predicting movie from 2007. Turns out Cage predicts the future so often it's basically its own genre."🎯 WHY THIS MOVIE MATTERSIt's 2009 peak Nicolas Cage doing peak Nicolas Cage things. The hosts promise this film "throws EVERYTHING at you" and refuses to pick a genre. Is it disaster? Thriller? Mystery? Yes.🎙️ QUOTABLE GROBESTREET & STANSTEAMER"This is another Nicholas Cage film, which is almost a genre of its own""People want to know what type of movie they're watching. This movie doesn't give you one type""Prime, prime Cage era film not to be missed"📺 PERFECT FOR:Nic Cage completistsTime capsule enthusiastsAnyone who likes their movies INSANEPeople who appreciate when films go completely off the rails⏰ THE TIME CAPSULE RABBIT HOLEFun fact: There's a REAL missing time capsule in Walpole, Mass from 1974. Stan has offered to bring his shovel if anyone has leads. Also, Sam Adams and Paul Revere made America's first time capsule because of course they did.🚨 VIEWER ADVISORYThis movie gets progressively more bonkers. Whatever genre you think you're watching, you're wrong. Just embrace the chaos.Remember: First half is spoiler-free! Watch the movie, then come back for the full draft picks, bumper stickers, and Stan's spinoff pitch that somehow involves Nicolas Cage in space.Next Week: DRIVE ANGRY - Because when you think you're doing one Nic Cage movie, you HAVE to do another!
66. Showgirls
01:26:32||Ep. 66From box office bomb to bonafide cult classic — we’re talking Showgirls.This week on Slept-On Cinema, GrobeStreet and Stan Steamer are joined by film critic and author Adam Nayman (It Doesn’t Suck: Showgirls) to break down one of the most infamous films of the '90s. What begins as an NC-17 Vegas fever dream becomes a whip-smart commentary on power, performance, and exploitation — if you’re willing to look past the glitter (and the pool scene).We dive into:Why Showgirls was misunderstood from the startHow Elizabeth Berkley gave everything in the role of Nomi MalonePaul Verhoeven’s chaos-vision in full effectAnd what it means to revisit the film through a modern lensBOLOs (Be On the Lookout):That shrimp-eating sceneKyle MacLachlan’s perma-smirkThe most aggressive lap dance in cinematic history“Must be weird, not having anybody come on you...”Any moment with Henrietta “Mama” BazoomDrink Pairing: A frozen neon-colored daiquiri you regret halfway through. Where to Watch: Prime Video, Apple TV, or your local ironic film club.This episode is everything Showgirls is: wild, messy, strangely brilliant — and unforgettable.