After the Frame Podcast

Send Help - Raimi’s Back, and It’s a Blast

57 min · 8 de feb de 2026
portada del episodio Send Help - Raimi’s Back, and It’s a Blast

Descripción

Sam Raimi kicks off 2026 with Send Help a movie that somehow mashes up survival thriller tension with workplace comedy chaos, and actually makes it work. It’s fast, funny, sharp, and packed with the kind of horror-comedy-suspense blend that feels unmistakably Raimi. In this episode of After the Frame, we break down what worked and what didn’t: the smart setup, the instantly punchy character dynamic, the way the film slowly shifts empathy and power between its leads, and why Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien make the premise feel grounded instead of gimmicky. We also talk about the rough CGI moments, what makes this stand out from typical deserted-island stories, and why getting a crowd-pleaser like this this early in the year feels like a gift. Whether you’re looking for a date-night movie, a friends-night-out pick, or just a fun ride at the theater this one’s worth the ticket.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de After the Frame Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

27 episodios

episode After The Frame - Sci-Fi Spectacle, Horror Hits, and Comedy Chaos artwork

After The Frame - Sci-Fi Spectacle, Horror Hits, and Comedy Chaos

This week on After the Frame, we’re packing four very different reviews into one episode, from big-screen sci-fi spectacle, to grimy internet-age horror, to absurd comedy, to one of the scariest indie horror swings of the year. We start with Project Hail Mary, a massive crowd-pleaser powered by Ryan Gosling’s charm, breathtaking visual effects, and the emotional punch of Rocky. It comes incredibly close to greatness, even if a shaky final stretch keeps it from fully sticking the landing. Then we dig into Faces of Death, a disturbing and timely horror film about voyeurism, exploitation, and the way real-world fear gets consumed as content. It’s nasty, uncomfortable, and driven by a strong Dacre Montgomery performance, even when the story starts to wobble. From there, we lighten the mood with Over Your Dead Body, another confident comedy from the Lonely Island world. Jorma Taccone brings the absurdity, the movie commits to the bit, and your mileage will probably depend on how much that specific comedic lane works for you. Finally, we close with Obsession, a terrifying indie horror breakout that turns a simple wish-gone-wrong premise into something cruel, anxious, and genuinely scary. With Curry Barker’s confident debut direction and a star-making performance from Inde Navarrette, this one may be the horror movie to beat in 2026. Four movies, four wildly different tones, and one episode bouncing from space survival to online nightmares, ridiculous comedy, and full-body dread.

24 de may de 20261 h 8 min
episode Scream 7, Undertone, and Ready or Not 2: Horror Hits, Misses, and Safe Sequels artwork

Scream 7, Undertone, and Ready or Not 2: Horror Hits, Misses, and Safe Sequels

This week on After the Frame, we’re packing three reviews into one episode, moving from franchise disappointment, to atmospheric dread, to a sequel that’s fun but maybe a little too safe. We start with Scream 7, a frustrating entry in a franchise that usually knows how to balance mystery, nostalgia, and sharp horror satire. This time, the villain reveal, callback-heavy storytelling, and lack of real suspense leave us wondering if Scream has finally drifted closer to Stab than its own best entries. Then we shift into Undertone, a slower, stranger horror film that builds fear through mood, camerawork, and an incredible sound mix. We talk about why it works best as a Dolby dread experience, how Nina Kiri carries the film, and why the thin plot and shaky ending keep it from fully landing. Finally, we close with Ready or Not 2: Here I Come, a sequel that keeps the dark comedy chaos alive without really raising the stakes. It’s still a fun time, but for a franchise with this much room to get weird, we wanted it to push harder, swing bigger, and go more unhinged. Three horror-adjacent movies. Three very different levels of success. One episode full of sequels, scares, and missed opportunities.

17 de may de 202639 min
episode Wuthering Heights (2026) – Gorgeous, Gothic, and a Little Unfinished artwork

Wuthering Heights (2026) – Gorgeous, Gothic, and a Little Unfinished

This week on After the Frame, we dive into Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights (2026) — a bold retelling that looks stunning, feels soaked in atmosphere, and swings hard for gothic intensity. For a lot of its runtime, it’s gripping in that “can’t look away” way… and then the final stretch gets shaky. We break down what worked and what didn’t: the film’s striking visual language, the heavy tone, and the clear directorial point of view, alongside a third act that struggles to stick the emotional landing. We talk about what the movie is trying to say about obsession and cruelty, where the storytelling pulls its punches, and why it ends up being more compelling in pieces than as a whole. If you’re into messy romance, bleak vibes, and ambitious adaptations that spark debate, this one’s for you.

22 de feb de 202642 min
episode Send Help - Raimi’s Back, and It’s a Blast artwork

Send Help - Raimi’s Back, and It’s a Blast

Sam Raimi kicks off 2026 with Send Help a movie that somehow mashes up survival thriller tension with workplace comedy chaos, and actually makes it work. It’s fast, funny, sharp, and packed with the kind of horror-comedy-suspense blend that feels unmistakably Raimi. In this episode of After the Frame, we break down what worked and what didn’t: the smart setup, the instantly punchy character dynamic, the way the film slowly shifts empathy and power between its leads, and why Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien make the premise feel grounded instead of gimmicky. We also talk about the rough CGI moments, what makes this stand out from typical deserted-island stories, and why getting a crowd-pleaser like this this early in the year feels like a gift. Whether you’re looking for a date-night movie, a friends-night-out pick, or just a fun ride at the theater this one’s worth the ticket.

8 de feb de 202657 min