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Screams & Streams

Podkast av Chad, Mike, & Sam

engelsk

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Les mer Screams & Streams

What if you could get a front row seat on a journey through the best and worst horror movies of the past half-century, all rated on Rotten Tomatoes? Brace yourself for an eerie tour with your hosts, Chad Campbell, Mike Carron, and Sam Schreiner, as they dissect each film with a surgeon's precision and a fan's passion. Our story began on a mundane work day, when two colleagues, Chad and Mike, decided to start a podcast centered on their shared love for horror films. The search for a genre was a winding, convoluted exploration of possibilities, before we arrived at the chilling idea of horror films.Our journey didn’t stop there. We had to figure out where to begin, how to categorize each film, and the scale to use for our rating system. We landed on a year-by-year review of the best and the worst films, starting from 1970 - the dawn of modern horror. Our shows come packed with a variety of categories like First Impressions, Tropes Hall of Shame, One-liners, and more. We also rate each film on a watchability scale, advising if it's worth your precious time. Join us as we sometimes agree, and other times disagree with Rotten Tomatoes' ratings. So, fasten your seat belts, it's going to be a spooky ride! Head to www.screamsandstreams.com for links and information related to our episodes.

Alle episoder

134 Episoder

episode Ep. 131: Guy Magar's "Children of the Corn: Revelation" (2001) cover

Ep. 131: Guy Magar's "Children of the Corn: Revelation" (2001)

A horror sequel can be messy, cheap, and even ridiculous and still be a good time. Children of the Corn: Revelation somehow misses that entire lane, and we felt every minute of its 82-minute runtime. We’re Sam, Mike, and Chad, and we’re breaking down the seventh entry in the Children of the Corn franchise, a Stephen King spinoff that sits at a brutal 0% on Rotten Tomatoes. We start with a quick plot setup: Jamie heads to Omaha to check on her grandmother, finds a condemned apartment building, and gets pulled into a swarm of possessed children and half-explained religious horror. From there, we go category by category: first impressions, our Tropes Hall of Shame, and the “don’t go back in the house” decisions that could have saved Jamie and definitely could have saved us. We also get into the craft failures that make this one such a slog, including the slow pacing, bargain-basement sets, shaky acting, and sound design that cranks generic music stings to eleven. Then we hit the fun parts: the weird one-liners, the most gratuitous scenes, what actually made us laugh out loud, and the biggest “what the hell was that?” moments, including plot holes we can’t stop poking. We wrap by comparing it to better evil-kids horror, share a few bonus facts (including budget and franchise trivia), and lock in our watchability score. If you like horror movie reviews, Rotten Tomatoes worst-of lists, and unfiltered sequel autopsies, subscribe for more, share the episode with a friend who loves bad horror, and leave a rating or review so more listeners can find the show.  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

23. mai 2026 - 47 min
episode Ep. 130: Guillermo del Toro's "The Devil’s Backbone" (2001) cover

Ep. 130: Guillermo del Toro's "The Devil’s Backbone" (2001)

A ghost in a basement pool is scary, sure, but the real question we can’t stop asking is simpler: does The Devil’s Backbone even feel like a horror movie? We sit down with Guillermo del Toro’s 2001 Spanish Civil War haunted orphanage tale (93% on Rotten Tomatoes) and argue our way through the tone, the pacing, and the genre label that follows Del Toro everywhere. We talk first impressions, including why the slow burn works for some of us and drags for others, and how the film’s dread comes less from jump scares and more from cruelty, hunger, and power. Along the way we hit our favorite Screams and Streams categories: the Tropes Hall of Shame (yes, the whispering voice and the classic keyhole scare), the “don’t go back in the house” decisions that could’ve saved lives, and the moments that made us laugh in a movie that’s otherwise bleak. Then we get into what really holds up: the ghost design with those cracked, leaking wounds, the strong performances from a cast full of kids, and a villain so hateable he almost redefines the threat. We also unpack the most unsettling details, including the infamous “fetus rum” and Jacinto’s escalation from greed to something far worse, before landing on our watchability scores and who we think should press play. Follow us at @ScreamStreamPod, share the episode with a horror fan who loves a good debate, and please rate, review, and subscribe wherever you listen.  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

16. mai 2026 - 40 min
episode Ep. 129: Walter Klenhard's "Disappearance" (2002) cover

Ep. 129: Walter Klenhard's "Disappearance" (2002)

A desert road trip takes one wrong turn and suddenly the town you’re looking for “doesn’t exist.” We’re reviewing Disappearance (2002), Walter Klenhard’s made-for-TV horror thriller that a listener sent our way, and we’ve got thoughts about why a killer setup can still leave you wanting more. With a 44% Rotten Tomatoes audience score, this one sits right in that sweet spot for horror movie podcast debates: familiar, frustrating, and weirdly watchable. We start with our spoiler-friendly breakdown of the premise: a family detours to a remote ghost town called Weaver for a few photos, then the car won’t start, the signals die, and the desert starts closing in. Along the way we sip a “Make Me Disappear” rum cocktail, swap first impressions, and run through a packed Tropes Hall of Shame, from creepy warnings and diners that go silent to the classic “we should separate” decision that never ends well. Then we dig into what doesn’t hold up, what actually works, and what the movie never explains. We talk shaky effects, heavy POV breathing, a snake moment that made us laugh, and the big swing of the ending where it feels like everyone is in on it, but the why stays frustratingly out of reach. We also compare the vibe to stronger desert horror picks like Wrong Turn and The Hills Have Eyes, share quick trivia, and lock in our watchability score. Follow us on Instagram @ScreamStreamPod, check out screamsandstreams.com, and if you enjoyed the review, please subscribe, leave a rating, and share the show with a horror fan who loves a good ghost town mystery.  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

9. mai 2026 - 32 min
episode Ep. 128: Rob Spera's "Leprechaun in the Hood" (2000) cover

Ep. 128: Rob Spera's "Leprechaun in the Hood" (2000)

A listener suggested Leprechaun In The Hood, and we walked straight into the trap. What sounds like a goofy horror comedy premise turns into a movie we can barely sit through, and that tension becomes the story of our review: how do you fairly critique something that seems to fight basic filmmaking at every turn? We break down the plot, the bargain set design, the harsh fade to black pacing that feels like missing commercials, and the special effects that never convince. We also talk about the uncomfortable parts that have not aged well, the strangely forced performances, and the way the soundtrack and “street” dialogue feel more like an imitation than a point of view. Along the way we keep our Screams and Streams format intact with tropes, one liners, gratuitous moments, laugh out loud beats, and our “what the fuck” list, including the baffling celebrity pop ins. To survive it, we mix a Sinister Sip called the White Leprechaun and dig into the limited trivia we can find: the straight to video release, the reported budget, and even reused footage from the 1993 film. Then we do the only honest thing left and place it on our watchability scale with a score we almost never use. If you love horror movie podcast reviews, bad movie breakdowns, and franchise deep dives, hit play, share this with the friend who always picks the worst movie, and then leave a rating and review so more horror fans can find us. What is the one horror sequel you would score a zero?  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

2. mai 2026 - 40 min
episode Ep. 127: Tom Gormican's "Anaconda" (2025) cover

Ep. 127: Tom Gormican's "Anaconda" (2025)

Anaconda (2025) dares you to answer a simple question: if your childhood favorite movie was a giant snake thriller, would you really remake it in the Amazon with your friends? We take that absurd premise and pull it apart from every angle, because this one sits right on the fault line between horror and comedy, and our reactions could not be more different. With a 47% Rotten Tomatoes score, it’s the perfect pick for a Screams and Streams review where the arguments are as entertaining as the movie. We dig into the film’s “movie within a movie” setup, the midlife-crisis nostalgia engine driving the plot, and the way celebrity casting changes the feel of the jokes. We talk candidly about Jack Black’s very specific style, why it works for some viewers and completely bounces off others, and how Paul Rudd and Steve Zahn shape the best moments. Then we get into the creature feature essentials: jump scares, lost signal, characters making questionable choices, and the big issue for a modern monster movie, CGI that looks a little too fake when the snake should feel terrifying. You’ll also hear our category breakdown, including one-liners, laugh-out-loud scenes, what does not hold up, and what surprisingly still works. We compare the movie’s meta ambitions to Tropic Thunder and its stalking tension to classics like Jaws, and we end with our watchability scores so you can decide if this belongs on your queue. Follow for more spoiler-filled horror movie reviews, then subscribe, rate, and share the show so more horror fans can jump into the debate. Where do you land on Anaconda (2025): fun mess or just a mess?  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

25. april 2026 - 44 min
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