Dad, You're Wrong

DYW S02E01 'Undertone' 2026

39 min · 30 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio DYW S02E01 'Undertone' 2026

Descripción

DAD, YOU'RE WRONG — EPISODE 6: "A24, DO YOU HAVE MOMMY ISSUES?" Dad, You're Wrong is back for 2026, and Eric and Josh couldn't have picked a more fitting film to kick things off. Undertone is a film about a paranormal podcaster who probably should have stopped listening after the first audio file. It is ninety-three minutes of exceptional sound design, one remarkable performance, slow camera work that borrows heavily from the right toolboxes, and a script that Eric and Josh land in very different places on. Josh walked out wanting to watch it again that same day. Eric checked his phone three or four times. They dig into the analog versus digital horror debate, the Skinamarink and Iron Lung comparisons, the unreliable narrator theory that might explain everything, the threads that never get tied, and why the sound design is either the whole movie or the problem with the movie depending on who you ask. Josh makes the most coherent case for the ending either of them has heard. Eric almost agrees. VHS Vault: Josh finds a Sundance screener of Darren Aronofsky's Pi (1998) at a thrift store in Pilsen. It connects to this episode more than you might expect. Plus: what is coming next, why trepanning came up, and the question this film kept making Eric ask about A24's recent output. Eric's Rating: VOD Josh's Rating: Theater

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10 episodios

episode Passenger 2026 artwork

Passenger 2026

EPISODE S2E04: "Passenger" (2026) Welcome back to Dad, You're Wrong, the podcast where a Gen X dad and his millennial son keep score on this year's horror slate. This week the score gets weird. Andre Ovredal's Passenger (2026) takes van life, sticks a demonic stalker in the rearview mirror, and asks what happens to compassionate people who do the right thing on a dark country road. Eric brought his buddy Joe along for the ride. Eric and Joe laughed. They were the only people in the theater who did. Josh leaned over to his partner sixty seconds in and said "I think we're in trouble." He had a worse time than the people getting murdered on screen. The hosts work through Ovredal's cold open and its sound design, the cross-timeline trick that introduces our leads, why the male lead refusing to gaslight his girlfriend is the smartest writing decision in the film, what Melissa Leo is doing in here, and the script-doctor ending Josh argues the film should have had. Eric thinks two-thirds of this works. Josh thinks the worst thing a horror movie can do is make you feel nothing. Plus: the role reversal for the ages. This week it is Josh telling Eric he is wrong. VHS Vault: A Knight's Tale (2001), starring Heath Ledger, Alan Tudyk, and a soundtrack that has no business being that good. Eric's Rating: VOD. Josh's Rating: Skip. Stick around past the closing notes. The hosts run a bonus chapter on the three best time-travel films ever made. If you have ever defended Triangle, Primer, or Time Crimes at a party, do not skip out early.

28 de may de 202648 min
episode Hokum 2026 artwork

Hokum 2026

DYW S02E03: Hokum 2026 Damien McCarthy's Hokum (2026) puts Eric and Josh on opposite sides for the first time this season, and it is the kind of split this show was named for. Adam Scott plays Om Baumann, a whiskey-drinking novelist who travels to a remote inn in Ireland to spread his parents' ashes and finds the place full of things he did not bargain for. Josh enjoyed it. He sees a complete three-act story, a real character arc, and a director who keeps refining his craft from Caveat through Oddity into this. He came in blind, walked out grinning, and is ready to defend the film. Eric did not. Eric walked out feeling exactly like he did walking out of Undertone: good atmosphere does not make for a great film. He spends the episode making the case that McCarthy can build a mood like nobody else and still cannot land a through line, and that audiences should not have to do the homework in post. The hosts go beat by beat: the cold open, the end of the first act, the witch lore, the small details that either matter or do not, depending on whose side you are on. Josh argues forgiveness. Eric argues craft. In the VHS Vault, Josh pulls Galaxy Quest (1999) and makes a case nobody is going to argue with: it is the best Star Trek movie ever made. Eric's rating: VOD. Josh's rating: Watch in Theater. This is a Dad, You're Wrong episode in the truest sense. Pick a side.

17 de may de 202647 min
episode Obsession 2026 artwork

Obsession 2026

DYW S02E02: Obsession 2026 Curry Barker's feature debut Obsession (2026) lands the rarest kind of episode for Dad, You're Wrong: the one where Eric and Josh agree on everything. Both hosts walked in blind. Both walked out with the same call. Both have it as their number one film of the year so far. This is a one million dollar monkey's paw cautionary tale starring Michael Johnston as Bear, a shy music store clerk with a years-long crush, and Indy Navarrette as Nikki, the childhood friend on the receiving end of one very ill-advised wish. Eric and Josh dig into Barker's restraint as a craftsman, the way he holds back just enough to keep the suspense alive when most modern horror is busy shocking or jump-scaring. They make the case for Indy Navarrette’s performance as the horror Oscar of the year. They place Bear in the lineage of detestable modern leading men, alongside Companion's Jack Quaid and Holcomb's Adam Scott, and explain why he tops them both. And they trace the influences running through the film, from Sam Raimi to It Follows to Lost Highway. Eric's rating: Watch in Theater. Twice, if you can swing it. Josh's rating: Watch in Theater.

15 de may de 202648 min
episode DYW S02E01 'Undertone' 2026 artwork

DYW S02E01 'Undertone' 2026

DAD, YOU'RE WRONG — EPISODE 6: "A24, DO YOU HAVE MOMMY ISSUES?" Dad, You're Wrong is back for 2026, and Eric and Josh couldn't have picked a more fitting film to kick things off. Undertone is a film about a paranormal podcaster who probably should have stopped listening after the first audio file. It is ninety-three minutes of exceptional sound design, one remarkable performance, slow camera work that borrows heavily from the right toolboxes, and a script that Eric and Josh land in very different places on. Josh walked out wanting to watch it again that same day. Eric checked his phone three or four times. They dig into the analog versus digital horror debate, the Skinamarink and Iron Lung comparisons, the unreliable narrator theory that might explain everything, the threads that never get tied, and why the sound design is either the whole movie or the problem with the movie depending on who you ask. Josh makes the most coherent case for the ending either of them has heard. Eric almost agrees. VHS Vault: Josh finds a Sundance screener of Darren Aronofsky's Pi (1998) at a thrift store in Pilsen. It connects to this episode more than you might expect. Plus: what is coming next, why trepanning came up, and the question this film kept making Eric ask about A24's recent output. Eric's Rating: VOD Josh's Rating: Theater

30 de mar de 202639 min
episode Dad, You're Wrong: Episode 6 - 'Top 10 List' (2025) artwork

Dad, You're Wrong: Episode 6 - 'Top 10 List' (2025)

S01E06: "The 2025 Top 10" - Our First Annual Horror Countdown It's the episode we've been building toward all year. Eric and Josh are joined by two very special guests—Luz and Shelly—to aggregate their individual top 10 horror lists into one definitive 2025 countdown. Four voices. Four lists. One brutal point system. Films rise and fall based on consensus, and some surprises emerge when wildly different tastes collide. Who championed what? Which film sparked the most debate? And which beloved pick landed on only ONE person's list? From body horror masterpieces to vampire epics, from mystery box nightmares to films that left us genuinely speechless—this episode covers the best horror had to offer in 2025. Plus: honorable mentions, the films that just missed the cut, and one movie so good it reminded us why we love cinema. No spoilers here. You'll have to listen to find out what made the cut. Explicit Content Warning: Strong language and film spoilers throughout.

8 de ene de 20261 h 13 min