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Geek Channel 8

154 Episodes
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Filmmaker and Sideshow Performance Artist Kino McFarland joins us for a watch of Edison's 1910 film Frankenstein, and the early German Expressionist serial Homunculus!
Christopher Saunders stops by for a discussion of our most requested movie to date, the 2024 remake of Nosferatu!
Jasone Staley returns for the Roger Corman time travel movie Frankenstein Unbound and while we're back in 1816 we also watch Ken Russell's Gothic.
We travel through time AND space wtih The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension!
We continue traveling through time - this week's stop is Seattle in 2012 where your Safety Not Guaranteed.
Michael Crichton again - but this time were trading dinosaurs for knights in shining armor.
How important is the big screen for Jurassic Park movies? Is the latest attempt to revive the series just a star vehicle for Scarlett Johansson? Will and Eric ponder these questions and more!
Our dino year continues with Jurassic World: Dominion.
Our Dino year continues with Jurassic World shorts from YouTube and Netflix!
We have a split decision on Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom.
Soon the Jurassic Park franchise will last as long as the Jurassic Era... and we are going to watch 'em all!
We dive into the ins-and-outs of season 2 of Genndy Tartakovsky's Primal.
Our Jurassic-ly long exploration of dinosaurs on screen continues with Adult Swim's Primal.
Will and Eric continue to watch all the dinosaurs. This time, the dinosaur movie you haven't seen, Turok: Son of Stone.
Will and Eric continue to watch all the dinosaurs. This time that means watching the box office flop Early Man.
Will and Eric continue to watch all the dinosaurs. This time that means watching the long-forgotten film Le Chainon Manquant (The Missing Link AKA BC Rock).
One Million Years B.C. has left it's mark on cinema history... mostly due to it's movie poster. But how is the film itself?
We watch the movie that started the cavemen vs. dinosaurs trend!
Near the Dawn of the 21st Century, 20th Century Fox brought us the Dawn of the Dinosaurs on film in the new millennium.
Jurassic Park, what hat thou wrought? We seek to answer the question "why was this made"? Were they "so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should"? Or is this the kind of movie that should've gone extinct long ago?