The cinematic equivalent of someone furiously clearing slightly moldering leftovers from their fridge, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies leaves its audience departing Middle-earth for the last time with an awful taste in the mouth.
Straight from the their secret headquarters in the pulsing heart of London and onto your computer/phone/generic MP3 device, Episode 11 of The Tea & Crumpet Filmcast is ready to be unleashed.
Recorded live at the British Film Insitute's headquarters, Dom, Liam, Dr Lindsay Hallam, David James and newcomer Emily Estep pour themselves a hot cup to warm them through an exhaustive discussion of this year's sprawling and wonderful London Film Festival.
Dom returns to the fold alongside Liam and Dr. Lindsay Hallam for another bumper episode of distinctly British podcasting. In the line of fire for this episode are the achingly hip Life After Beth (starring the fabulous Aubrey Plaza and the grumpy Dane Dehaan) and French Lynchian sex comedy You & the Night - prompting extensive and enamored discussion of Eric Cantona's member and M83's woozy score.
The gang may be depleted, but the mighty Tea & Crumpet Filmcast rolls on with reckless abandon. For episode 7, Liam is joined by Dr. Lindsay Hallam and David James to discuss one heck of a busy week at the movies.
Dom and Liam don their poshest raiment as they join regular contributors Dr. Lindsay Hallam, David James and Matthew Lee to take on another big week at the movies on this episode of The Tea & Crumpet Filmcast.
In an extra special bumper blockbusting episode of The Tea & Crumpet Filmcast, Liam and Dom are joined once more by Matthew Lee and Dr. Lindsay Hallam to talk this week's film releases as well as kick off a massive, all-encompassing post-mortem of the summer blockbuster season.
Back in their comfy armchairs and ready to talk all things trash, horror and schlock, Matt and Dom all but immediately hurl themselves into a (often stinking) pile of B-movie mayhem. Kicking off with reviews of the pretty awful Leprechaun: Origins and Jersey Shore Massacre, the guys then move on to pastures greener with reviews of Septic Man and Wer, then straight into horror Nirvana with Dead Snow 2: Read Vs Dead. As the horror season approaches, viewers need to know which films are egregious tricks and which are tasty treats - and The Graveyard shift is crazy enough to traverse everything the horror genre has to offer in search of hidden gems!