Sound Speed Action: Movies, TV & Streaming Reviews

66. Special Topic: Paramount Thinks They Won. They're Kidding Themselves.

12 min · 17. mar. 2026
episode 66. Special Topic: Paramount Thinks They Won. They're Kidding Themselves. cover

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A new special topic episode of Sound Speed Action is out now everywhere you get your podcasts! The big ongoing story in the entertainment world has been the fate of Warner Bros. Discovery. Paramount has acquired Warner Bros. Discovery after a long bidding war with Netflix. Netflix is being called the loser in all of this. Look, either of these companies getting their hands on this archive of content pushes this industry into some uncertain territory. But the narrative that Netflix was outplayed here is crazy to me. Today's episode gets into why. 📌 EDITOR'S NOTE: I forgot to include this detail in the episode itself, but it's too important to leave out — so I'm adding it here. A thank you to my friend Arvind for the reminder. The WBD board initially rejected Paramount's hostile bid outright, citing "illusory" financing. The turning point came when Larry Ellison — Oracle co-founder and father of Paramount CEO David Ellison — stepped in with an irrevocable personal guarantee of $40.4 billion in equity financing. WBD's board chairman had specifically said the deal needed exactly that: direct accountability from Larry Ellison himself. Without that guarantee, Paramount's campaign likely dies in December. The episode covers the broader battle, but that's the detail that changed the math. We're stepping away from our regular reviews and recommendations for this one. Special topic episodes are for exactly this kind of thing, any major development that impacts this industry of art we all care so much about. The last one was about the American film union strikes of 2023. And by the way, the unions are renegotiating their contracts this year. Fingers crossed on that. Those strikes reshaped this industry in real ways, and this acquisition is going to do the same.

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68 episodes

episode 68. Review: In The Grey (2026 film) artwork

68. Review: In The Grey (2026 film)

A new podcast episode of "Sound Speed Action," a review episode on the movie "In The Grey" (2026), is now available everywhere you get your podcasts! Episode 68 – Review: In The Grey (2026) Guy Ritchie movies are special. There is always something fun about them. I got hooked with the one-two punch that opened his career, "Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" and "Snatch", and I have followed him ever since. The phases of Ritchie: The amazing start: "Lock Stock" and "Snatch". Veering off course (the Madonna era): "Swept Away" (yikes, not Ritchie). Finding his way back: "Revolver" and "Rocknrolla". There he is!: "Sherlock Holmes", "Aladdin", and "The Gentlemen". Now he is everywhere, also making shows like "MobLand" and "Young Sherlock". But spreading himself thin has recently produced fun yet troubled movies. "In The Grey" Pros: Eiza Gonzalez is the most fun thing here, full of charisma, not phoning it in. The action and that kinetic, slapstick Ritchie energy are intact. The understated Chris Benstead score adds to it, and the locations are fantastic. Cons: Gyllenhaal and Cavill are dialed way down, so the tough guys never feel human. That ties into the bigger problem: the protagonists never feel in real danger, the third straight Ritchie film with that issue. The courts get manipulated so easily that nothing pushes back, so there are no stakes. The on-screen scribble text is overused to hide the gaps, and the ending, hurt by reshoots that never happened, just abruptly drops. "In The Grey" hits rental everywhere June 2nd (it was in theaters May 15... 😬). When your movie does worse than "Swept Away," slow down, dude. I love Ritchie, but a reset is needed. Still excited for two Guy Ritchie 2026 works coming soon: "The Gentlemen" season 2 (Netflix, Fall) and "Wife & Dog" (in theaters) with Cumberbatch, Pike, and Hopkins. If you’re enjoying the show, please leave a review, it really helps the podcast. Thanks for listening

31. maj 202617 min
episode 67. Spoiler Review: Project Hail Mary (2026 film) artwork

67. Spoiler Review: Project Hail Mary (2026 film)

⚠ FULL SPOILERS. If you haven't read the book or seen Project Hail Mary yet, do that first, then come back. Andy Weir fans have been waiting for this one. The 2021 bestselling novel finally makes its big screen debut and this is the kind of movie that reminds you what movie magic can actually feel like. Ryan Gosling (star and producer), Sandra HĂŒller (Anatomy of a Fall, The Zone of Interest), directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller (21 Jump Street, Spider-Verse), and the voice and puppetry team behind Rocky team up to bring Weir's epic to life. It's a tall order given how many people love this book and how many millions were absorbed by Ray Porter's unrivaled audiobook narration. Sohrab and Roya break it all down. Does Gosling nail the balance of Grace, the goofy, brilliant, emotionally isolated scientist thrust into an impossible mission? Does HĂŒller carry the cold, commanding presence of Strat with the laser focus the role demands? And how do you bring a faceless alien to life and make the entire audience fall in love with him? Weir does it again, a story built on optimism, science, intelligence, and teamwork against insurmountable odds. Ted Lasso comes to mind: even in the darkest moments, there is always a place for hope. You feel that in every scene. Yes, things were cut from the book. Yes, changes were made. Are there some bumps and decisions we didn't fully understand on first viewing? Sure. Does this still deliver? Hell yes. Project Hail Mary has already locked its place on the best films of 2026 list and its theatrical run has been extended, including on IMAX. See it on the biggest screen you can. When it hits Prime Video, that'll be your second or third watch. If you are enjoying the show, please leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. It genuinely helps more than you know. Sound Speed Action covers film reviews, series reviews, and the business of entertainment. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts so you never miss an episode. For more great book content follow Roya at @royaltyreads on IG.

22. apr. 202632 min
episode 66. Special Topic: Paramount Thinks They Won. They're Kidding Themselves. artwork

66. Special Topic: Paramount Thinks They Won. They're Kidding Themselves.

A new special topic episode of Sound Speed Action is out now everywhere you get your podcasts! The big ongoing story in the entertainment world has been the fate of Warner Bros. Discovery. Paramount has acquired Warner Bros. Discovery after a long bidding war with Netflix. Netflix is being called the loser in all of this. Look, either of these companies getting their hands on this archive of content pushes this industry into some uncertain territory. But the narrative that Netflix was outplayed here is crazy to me. Today's episode gets into why. 📌 EDITOR'S NOTE: I forgot to include this detail in the episode itself, but it's too important to leave out — so I'm adding it here. A thank you to my friend Arvind for the reminder. The WBD board initially rejected Paramount's hostile bid outright, citing "illusory" financing. The turning point came when Larry Ellison — Oracle co-founder and father of Paramount CEO David Ellison — stepped in with an irrevocable personal guarantee of $40.4 billion in equity financing. WBD's board chairman had specifically said the deal needed exactly that: direct accountability from Larry Ellison himself. Without that guarantee, Paramount's campaign likely dies in December. The episode covers the broader battle, but that's the detail that changed the math. We're stepping away from our regular reviews and recommendations for this one. Special topic episodes are for exactly this kind of thing, any major development that impacts this industry of art we all care so much about. The last one was about the American film union strikes of 2023. And by the way, the unions are renegotiating their contracts this year. Fingers crossed on that. Those strikes reshaped this industry in real ways, and this acquisition is going to do the same.

17. mar. 202612 min
episode 65. Spoiler Review: The Housemaid (2025 film) artwork

65. Spoiler Review: The Housemaid (2025 film)

Psychological thrillers are having a massive moment, but finding a truly successful book to film adaptation remains a rare feat. Today we discuss how director Paul Feig, known for his range in films like Bridesmaids and A Simple Favor, took the beloved source material by author Freida McFadden and elevated it for the big screen. While the book set a high bar, this cinematic version manages to heighten the tension through creative risks and licenses that ultimately make for a thoroughly entertaining experience.For today's episode, Roya Tavakolian (@RoyalTeaReads on IG) returns to the podcast to compare the movie to its literary roots. We dive into the all star cast including Sydney Sweeney (Euphoria, The White Lotus) and Brendan Sklenar (1923), though the clear MVP of the film is Amanda Seyfried (Mamma Mia!, Mean Girls). Her performance is absolutely unreal and sets the bar high for the movie. We also break down the specific changes Paul Feig made to the narrative and why those choices helped the movie take the story up a notch.This stands as one of the best book to movie adaptations of 2025. The Housemaid is playing in theaters and is available to rent and buy on all platforms now too.If you are enjoying the show, please leave a review because it really helps the podcast.We hope you check out the movie. Let us know what you think and as always thanks for tuning in.

13. mar. 202627 min
episode 64. Spoiler Review: Avatar: Fire and Ash artwork

64. Spoiler Review: Avatar: Fire and Ash

4 years later and James Cameron is back with another headspinning installment of having us enter back into his worl of Pandora. Yes today's SPOILER REVIEW episode of "Sound Speed Action" is covering the mega-movie event of 2025 that was "Avatar: Fire and Ash". That of course means returning to the podcast after our review of "Avatar: Way of Water" 3 years ago is our good friend, Mr. Jonathan Olivo. We cover a lot of ground but I think we can definitely say this: WHAT. A. RIDE. Cameron does it again. Certain the visual effects alone are worth the price of movie theater admission alone but seriously this franchise and Fire and Ash bring a lot to it to make them special: The cast with Zoe Saldana (is she the biggest star ever?), Sam Worthing (wasnt crazy about him at first but by this installment he really owns and brought a lot of depth to this Fire and Ash). Stephen Lang and Sigourney Weaver - absolutely impressive with playing any role where there is literally any age. Superb. Oona Chaplan as Varang is a bit over the top but she also own it and goes full ham with her villain character Varang in a way that makes the character fun, complex, definitely interesting. Does it feel like a little bit of re-tread of the 2nd episode? We have some differing thoughts on that. Jack Champion is back as Spider in this movie. His role definitely has more weight here which opens up some doors for some fun directions that the Avatar world could go in? Only gripe with him is that the dialogue is a little paper thin. That said it doesnt take away from this thrill that at over 3 hours should feel long but flies so quickly with bringing all the thrills. Don't miss this one."Avatar: Fire and Ash" is playing in theaters. ABSOLUTELY THAT NEEDS TO BE EXPERIENCED ON THE BIG SCREEN! Enjoy.Also if you are enjoying the podcast, please drop us a review on whichever platform you get your podcasts. It helps the show a lot. Thanks.

28. feb. 202647 min