It’s officially So Many Santas season, and the So Many Sequels crew kicks things off with one of the first new holiday releases of the year: A Very Jonas Christmas Movie (2025). The Jonas Brothers return to Disney with a short, silly, self-aware Christmas road-trip musical that feels like a home movie stitched together with music videos.Josh, Garrett, and David break down the movie’s Planes, Trains & Automobiles–style premise, the surprisingly stacked supporting cast (Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Chloe Bennet, Randall Park, Billy Lourd, and Will Ferrell), and whether the brothers’ self-parody actually works. There’s praise for the comedy bits, debate over the overproduced music, and a lot of discussion about what makes this movie charming… and what keeps it from being a true Christmas classic.Is this one for super fans only, or does it have enough laughs for casual viewers?🎄 Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us if this is going into your annual holiday rotation.
Is Planes, Trains and Automobiles a perfect Thanksgiving classic — or just brilliantly annoying?In this Food & Family Month finale, the crew revisits John Hughes’ 1987 travel-from-hell comedy and wrestles with why it still works… even when it absolutely shouldn’t.Steve Martin’s tightly wound Neil Page and John Candy’s relentlessly cheerful Del Griffith make for one of movie comedy’s most iconic odd couples — but does the sentiment earn its landing? We break down:Why the movie still feels painfully relatable decades laterThe infamous “I Like Me” speech — and whether it’s earnedThat all-time car rental rant (yes, that one)How John Hughes builds comedy like a series of sketchesWhy the ending hits harder than we expected🍿 If you love Thanksgiving movies, road-trip comedies, or just watching two comedians drive each other insane, this one’s for you.👉 Follow So Many Sequels on your favorite podcast app, leave us a review, and join the conversation on social. Your book club for movies rolls on.
Hollywood keeps insisting the future is streaming… so why does Wicked: For Good keep torching box office records? This week, the movie industry’s contradictions are impossible to ignore — and Netflix might be the worst offender.If you love movies and the conversation around them, follow So Many Sequels wherever you listen. Leave a review, subscribe on YouTube, and keep the conversation going with us online.somanysequels.com00:00 – Intro & what we’ve been watching01:00 – Pixar’s Elio (troubled release, solid movie)02:00 – Kevin James, Nobody 2, and wasted sequels05:15 – Wicked: For Good reactions (Act 2 problems?)12:20 – Comedy is back? (The Naked Gun)15:45 – Horror still works (The Conjuring: Last Rites)19:00 – Netflix vs theaters & Wake Up Dead Man frustration26:10 – Letterboxd launches a digital video rental store30:45 – Weekend box office breakdown33:00 – Final thoughts & industry outlook
Thanksgiving leftovers, holiday haze, and a whole lot of screen time—this week we’re unpacking what we watched after the big meal.Everything from a Stranger Things rewatch and a November movie binge to a spoiler-free look at Wake Up Dead Man. We even have sports with a college football breakdown and a look at Disney’s massive Zootopia 2 opening.What leftovers did YOU watch this week?
For Food & Family Month, the So Many Sequels crew unwraps one of the strangest and most iconic family films of all time, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971). Gene Wilder delivers one of cinema’s most unpredictable performances, and we break down why his version of Wonka is still the gold standard of chaotic candy moguls.From unsettling tunnel boat rides to bratty children meeting VERY questionable fates, we revisit the film’s dark humor, musical numbers, and the surprisingly emotional heart at its center. The guys share their childhood memories of the movie, debate Wilder vs. Depp vs. Chalamet, and explore how the film became both a cult classic and a meme factory.It’s nostalgic, bizarre, deliciously weird, and the perfect pick for Food & Family Month.🍫 Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us which candy room you’d explore first!
Are we ready for Woody and Buzz to battle… an iPad? The Toy Story 5 trailer is here, and the "Millennial Dad" energy in the room is off the charts. We break down whether the franchise has finally run out of batteries or if Pixar is about to deliver a necessary critique on screen time. Plus, we’re asking the hard questions: Is the new Michael Jackson biopic doomed by its own casting?---00:00 - Intro: November time dilation02:00 - TV Review: Pluribus (Apple TV+) & Rhea Seehorn05:40 - Book Club: Chain-Gang All-Stars & The Running Man11:15 - Movie Review: Freakier Friday (Disney+)13:45 - Book Club: Dean Koontz’s Velocity17:55 - Trailer Talk: Toy Story 5 (Toys vs. Tech)26:15 - Trailer Talk: Michael (Michael Jackson Biopic)29:45 - Box Office Update (Now You See Me 3, Predator: Badlands)
For Food & Family Month, the So Many Sequels crew dives into one of the most beloved family films of the 1990s — Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (1993). This week, Josh, Garrett, and David revisit the heartfelt animal adventure featuring Chance, Shadow, and Sassy, exploring why this simple story about loyalty and family still resonates decades later.From tear-jerker moments to standout voice performances (Michael J. Fox! Don Ameche! Sally Field!), we break down the film’s emotional beats, practical animal work, and how it stacks up against today’s CGI-heavy family movies. We also debate which pet we’d be in the Homeward Bound universe, share childhood memories tied to the film, and talk about why the ending still hits hard.It’s cozy, heartfelt, nostalgic, and absolutely perfect for the season.🎧 Subscribe, leave a review, and share your favorite Homeward Bound moment with us!00:00 – Welcome to Food & Family Month00:40 – First memories of Homeward Bound02:02 - Homeward Bound and the 1993 Cinematic Landscape05:00 – Breaking down the story15:20 – The cast and style18:36 – The ending that destroys everyone24:26 – Final thoughts & Letterboxd game29:39 – What’s next on Food & Family Month
We’re kicking off Food and Family Month with John Hughes’ 1989 comedy, digging into John Candy’s perfect balance of slob and softie, and why this movie still hits like a cozy holiday watch even without Christmas lights.We talk about Macaulay Culkin’s scene-stealing “jump scare” performance, Tia’s weaponized attitude, and how Uncle Buck somehow feels both chaotic and weirdly responsible.Is Buck actually the best kind of uncle, or a walking red flag? Join our book club for movies and leave a comment.#UncleBuck #JohnCandy #JohnHughes #MacaulayCulkin #80sMovies #MovieReview #FilmDiscussion #FoodAndFamily #SoManySequels #MoviePodcast #ComfortMovies #ThanksgivingSeason
We spent an evening with Cat Miller, prop master for Severance and Uncut Gems, and the behind-the-scenes details blew our minds. From custom-built vintage computers to iconic movie props, this is a craft you never get to hear about.This week on So Many Sequels, we kick off a new month with a deep dive into the art of prop-making after attending a live talk with industry pro Kat Miller. Then we break down what we’ve been watching — including Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, the wildly tonal Nuremberg, and the nostalgia trip of Richie Rich. We wrap up with sequel news (The Mummy 4!), Netflix updates, and a look at the weekend box office.00:00 — Intro01:00 — Food & Family Month kicks off02:00 — Our night with prop master Cat Miller (Severance, Uncut Gems)06:30 — How vintage computers were rebuilt for Severance07:15 — Why prop masters are the “mythbusters” of filmmaking09:00 — What We Watched This Week09:10 — Frankenstein (2024) review12:00 — Nuremberg (2025) reactions15:20 — Richie Rich rewatches & the lost era of kids’ movies20:00 — Sequel News: The Mummy 4 announced24:00 — Netflix hits & K-Pop Demon Hunters sequel27:00 — Box Office Rundown30:00 — Wrap-up & Where to Watch Nextsomanysequels.com
Jason Voorhees hits the reset button. We revisit the 2009 Friday the 13th reboot—the last film in the franchise (so far)—to see if it’s a hidden gem or a bloody mess.00:00 – Welcome to So Many Scares Finale01:00 – Setting up the 2009 reboot04:00 – Box office highs, critical lows07:00 – Recapping Freddy vs. Jason chaos12:00 – First impressions: good, bad, stupendous18:00 – Back to basics: Jason’s brutality and traps26:00 – The most 2009 cast imaginable31:00 – The final showdown (and wood chipper logic)39:00 – Ratings, Letterboxd takes, and our verdict43:30 – Wrapping up So Many Scares🎧 Listen to the full podcast on Spotify & Apple Podcasts → https://somanysequels.com💬 Join our Discord and tell us your favorite Friday the 13th kill!📸 Follow us on Instagram & TikTok: @SoManySequels🔔 Subscribe for new movie breakdowns every week!
The spooky season might be ending, but we’re still living in fear—of Art the Clown, The Grabber, and the fact that the White House tore down its movie theater.This week we unpack Weapons, debate horror’s next “face of fear,” and discover which presidents had surprisingly weird taste in movies.It’s equal parts creepy, funny, and movie-nerdy—exactly how we like it. Subscribe & leave a review to join our movie club for fans, not critics!
The So Many Sequels crew continues “So Many Scares” month by blasting off into one of horror’s strangest sequels — Jason X (2002), where the infamous Camp Crystal Lake killer takes his talents to outer space.David breaks down the film’s disastrous box office run and how it became one of the Friday the 13th franchise’s biggest flops. Garrett confesses that this was his first Jason movie and defends its “so bad it’s good” charm, while Josh struggles to believe how a hockey mask outlawed in 2024 could lead to one of cinema’s dumbest future timelines.From liquid nitrogen kills to horny space teens and “Uber Jason”, the gang debates whether this tenth installment is horror camp gold or intergalactic garbage. Plus, how it compares to Jason Takes Manhattan, Jason Goes to Hell, and the upcoming reboot.💀 It’s dumb, it’s wild, it’s Jason in space — and it’s the perfect spooky season chaos.👉 Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us your favorite ridiculous horror sequel!🕒 Chapters00:00 – Welcome to So Many Scares01:00 – Why Jason X Exists04:00 – 2002 Box Office Breakdown08:00 – Garrett’s Nostalgic Defense of Jason X11:00 – Cryogenic Freezing & Future Timeline Nonsense15:00 – The Dumbest Sci-Fi Setup Ever18:00 – Robot Girlfriends & Space Horniness23:00 – Liquid Nitrogen Kill Discussion27:00 – “Uber Jason” Transformation31:00 – Final Battle & Space Explosion35:00 – Is It So Bad It’s Good?38:00 – Letterboxd Game & Final Ratings43:00 – What’s Next: Friday the 13th Reboot
It’s a mid-month So Many Scares update! Josh, Garrett, and David share what they’ve been watching—from haunted live-stream comedies (Dead Stream) to vintage courtroom comfort (Matlock). They debate whether the world needs a Jetsons movie, celebrate Ethan Hawke’s spooky streak, and peek at the box-office numbers for Black Phone 2. It’s part horror chat, part nostalgic detour, and totally So Many Sequels.00:00 – Intro & So Many Scares check-in02:30 – The Black Phone 2 buzz05:20 – Josh’s Shudder pick: Dead Stream07:00 – Garrett braves Terrifier10:00 – Where are today’s horror icons?11:45 – David’s Matlock and Diagnosis Murder binge16:00 – The Jim Carrey × Jetsons rumor19:00 – Could the Jetsons work in 2025?22:00 – Weekend box-office update23:20 – Outro & where to find us👉 Subscribe for more movie talk: YouTube.com/@SoManySequels🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts💬 Join our Discord: somanysequels.com📱 Follow us on Instagram & TikTok @SoManySequels
Jason’s not just back—he’s unstoppable. In Friday the 13th VI: Jason Lives, one bolt of lightning brings our favorite masked maniac back from the grave and into full monster-mode.We talk Tommy Jarvis’ Frankenstein moment, the new horror-comedy tone, and why this chapter gave the series new (after)life. It’s funny, gory, and way more self-aware than you remember.What’s your favorite kill—or moment—from Jason Lives? Drop your thoughts in the comments and join the conversation!🎧 Subscribe, rate, and share to keep this movie club going.
The So Many Sequels crew is deep into “So Many Scares” month — and this week, it’s a mix of Hollywood surprises, nostalgic rewatches, and one truly bizarre controversy.David kicks things off with his thoughts on the Peacemaker season finale, calling it one of James Gunn’s most character-driven projects yet. Josh reviews The Smashing Machine, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s dramatic leap into awards-season acting — and whether the hype matches the film. Garrett revisits Happy Death Day and its sequel, celebrating their blend of humor, horror, and heart, while Josh revisits a 30th anniversary screening of Casper for some spooky family nostalgia.Then the gang dives into the week’s strangest headline: Amazon removing guns from classic James Bond posters. Is it censorship, overcorrection, or just corporate weirdness? Plus, they remember the late Diane Keaton, and David runs down the weekend box office — including Tron: Ares’s disappointing debut.🎃 It’s spooky season, it’s sequel season — it’s So Many Scares. Subscribe wherever you listen and join the movie club!00:00 – Intro & So Many Scares Month01:00 – Peacemaker Season 2 finale review (no spoilers)05:00 – Josh reviews The Smashing Machine (Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt)09:00 – The Rock’s acting evolution & future roles12:00 – Casper 30th Anniversary screening15:00 – Garrett revisits Happy Death Day & Happy Death Day 2U19:00 – Diane Keaton tribute21:00 – Amazon edits James Bond posters controversy27:00 – Box office rundown (Tron: Ares, Rooftop Man, Soul on Fire)30:00 – Upcoming releases (Black Phone 2, Good Fortune, Frankenstein)31:00 – Wrap-up & Friday the 13th preview
Jason Voorhees is back—but also for the first time...In Friday the 13th Part 2, the hockey mask is still a dream, and our favorite slasher is deep in his bag era (literally). We talk about Jason’s first official rampage, the iconic wheelchair kill, and how this sequel tries—kind of—to build a horror legend.It’s all part of So Many Sequels vs. Jason, our month-long trip to Camp Crystal Lake. We covered the original Friday the 13th during Camp Month, but this time Jason’s running the whole show.Subscribe & leave us a comment, and let us know what you think of Friday the 13th Part 2, Jason Voorhees, and the bag vs. the hockey mask.
The So Many Sequels crew returns for another “So Many Scares” October update, and this week, we’re talking horror in the real world — the streaming wars. Prices are up, content is disappearing, and the guys ask: When did streaming become more expensive than cable? From Disney+ and Netflix hikes to Warner Bros. and Paramount losing billions, it’s a full-on battle between corporate greed and consumer sanity.But it’s not all doom and gloom — we also share what we’ve been watching! Josh reviews Bone Lake, Garrett dives into Bug (the Oklahoma-based horror you’ve never heard of), and David talks Peacemaker, Creature Commandos, and the surprise return of The Simpsons Movie 2. Plus, an outrageous box office recap where Taylor Swift reigns supreme.If you’re tired of paying for six streaming apps, you’ll love this one. Subscribe, leave a review, and join the So Many Sequels conversation on YouTube, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!
We're diving into the 1995 classic Clueless to see if Amy Heckerling's teen comedy holds up 30 years later. From its iconic fashion to the jokes that went way over our heads as kids, we're breaking down why this movie is more than just a 90s time capsule.On this episode of So Many Sequels, the guys discuss how Clueless cleverly adapted Jane Austen's Emma for a Beverly Hills High School setting , Amy Heckerling's under-appreciated career as a mainstream female director in the 80s and 90s , and the on-set accidents that made the movie even better. Plus, we debate whether the central romance is charming or just plain creepy. Timestamps:00:00 - Welcome to Female Directors Month! 01:31 - How Did 'Clueless' Do at the Box Office? 03:54 - Why We're Talking About 'Clueless' 05:30 - The Under-Praised Director: Amy Heckerling 09:23 - Did 'Clueless' Set a New Standard for Teen Movies? 10:30 - The Aerosmith Music Video That Got Alicia Silverstone Cast 13:20 - How Jane Austen's 'Emma' Inspired the Story 15:04 - Is 'Clueless' a Parody of 90s Kids? 16:18 - The Hilarious Story Behind the "Haitians" Joke 23:12 - Adult Jokes We All Missed ("Herbal Refreshment") 27:34 - The Awkward Ex-Stepbrother Romance 30:20 - Cher's Journey of Self-Reflection 34:57 - Iconic Fashion, Lines, & Lasting Legacy 35:53 - Final Ratings & Reviews 37:33 - The Letterboxd Game: Who Won This Week?somanysequels.com
If American Psycho dropped today, Patrick Bateman would be arguing about business cards on TikTok and posting shirtless flexing pics on Instagram.This week, we’re diving into the satire that still hits. From Christian Bale’s ridiculous charm to Mary Harron’s darkly funny direction - this was a killer way to wrap up our month of female-directed films.
This week’s So Many Sequels is stacked with news, reviews, and hot takes:Sterling Harjo’s new FX/Hulu series The Lowdown puts Tulsa in the spotlight with Ethan Hawke leading the charge.Josh gives a glowing review of PTA’s One Battle After Another starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Sean Penn.Garrett dives back into the Taken franchise (yes, Liam Neeson still has a particular set of skills).David gets schlocky with Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight and Bordello of Blood.We react to Aaron Sorkin’s follow-up to The Social Network, plus the new Mandalorian & Grogu trailer.And of course, we wrap up with box office breakdowns and a tease of American Psycho and “So Many Scares vs. Jason” for October.