Wonder Bros Pod

Episode 14: Doctor Strange

1 h 19 min · I går
episode Episode 14: Doctor Strange cover

Beskrivelse

Marvel went off the deep end with this one. And we mean that in the best way possible. This week, Cody and JD work through Doctor Strange (2016) — the film that took the MCU from political thriller (Civil War) and dropped it into a psychedelic mysticism trip. Inception meets 2001 meets Marvel meets actual quantum physics. Tilda Swinton, Mads Mikkelsen, Benedict Cumberbatch (who can't say "penguin"), and a cloak with a personality. Along the way: - "People used to think I was funny." "Did they work for you?" — JD on his five years in Africa as the big white guy with the bag of money, and why this line landed harder than any other in the film - The Ancient One's "surrender to the river" speech is actually 12-step recovery 101 — "that which you resist, persists" - "Time will tell how much I love you" — the watch inscription Christine carved that Steven carries through every film after - The Hong Kong climax has a cinematography detail almost nobody notices: time is reversing across the city EXCEPT for the sorcerers fighting in forward time. JD slowed it down twice to verify - The "worlds without end" line — Cody and JD's Anglican liturgy connection, and why Doctor Strange might be more accurate than the church - The arrogance of Western rationalism and why the Ancient One's first lesson isn't a spell, it's "open your eye" - Mordo's rushed arc and the cost of compromise - The third-act villain problem strikes again — Kaecilius is great until Dormammu shows up as a CGI face in the sky Plus: Cumberbatch in Sherlock, the watch as an anchor across the saga, and JD's defense contractor brain breaking down why Kamar-Taj's spell books have a technical writing problem. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

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Alle episoder

15 Episoder

episode Episode 14: Doctor Strange cover

Episode 14: Doctor Strange

Marvel went off the deep end with this one. And we mean that in the best way possible. This week, Cody and JD work through Doctor Strange (2016) — the film that took the MCU from political thriller (Civil War) and dropped it into a psychedelic mysticism trip. Inception meets 2001 meets Marvel meets actual quantum physics. Tilda Swinton, Mads Mikkelsen, Benedict Cumberbatch (who can't say "penguin"), and a cloak with a personality. Along the way: - "People used to think I was funny." "Did they work for you?" — JD on his five years in Africa as the big white guy with the bag of money, and why this line landed harder than any other in the film - The Ancient One's "surrender to the river" speech is actually 12-step recovery 101 — "that which you resist, persists" - "Time will tell how much I love you" — the watch inscription Christine carved that Steven carries through every film after - The Hong Kong climax has a cinematography detail almost nobody notices: time is reversing across the city EXCEPT for the sorcerers fighting in forward time. JD slowed it down twice to verify - The "worlds without end" line — Cody and JD's Anglican liturgy connection, and why Doctor Strange might be more accurate than the church - The arrogance of Western rationalism and why the Ancient One's first lesson isn't a spell, it's "open your eye" - Mordo's rushed arc and the cost of compromise - The third-act villain problem strikes again — Kaecilius is great until Dormammu shows up as a CGI face in the sky Plus: Cumberbatch in Sherlock, the watch as an anchor across the saga, and JD's defense contractor brain breaking down why Kamar-Taj's spell books have a technical writing problem. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

I går1 h 19 min
episode Episode 13: Captain America - Civil War cover

Episode 13: Captain America - Civil War

Phase Three begins not with a bang, but with a fracture. And the Russos called it "a film with no villain." This week, Cody and JD work through Captain America: Civil War — the film that broke the Avengers, introduced Black Panther and Spider-Man in the same movie, and gave us the six-word exchange JD calls the best two-line moment in Phase Three. Along the way: - The "He's my friend / So was I" exchange and why the Russos identified that single personal moment as the key that unlocked the entire film - Why Zemo — a Sokovian colonel with no powers, no army, no doomsday device — is the most effective MCU antagonist of his era - Steve Rogers keeping the secret about Bucky and Tony's parents — and JD's read on why the *silence* is what gives Zemo everything he needs - T'Challa breaking outside his own power-fear culture to choose forgiveness — Hofstede framework included - Rhodey paying the price because the best stories have real consequences (Boromir has to die) - The Underoos hand gesture that has confused JD for a decade - Why "Tony Stank" only works because Don Cheadle is the one reacting - The Sokovia Accords falling apart in real time when Tony has to lie to Ross to protect Cap Plus: JD's Ethiopian Coptic ceremonial shirt, why Captain America: Civil War is secretly just Captain America 3 (and why that matters), and the 15-minute airport fight scene that was filmed with 2D IMAX cameras. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

10. juni 20261 h 12 min
episode Episode 12: Ant-Man cover

Episode 12: Ant-Man

The last film of Phase Two. The smallest stakes the MCU has ever had. And the movie that secretly holds the entire Infinity Saga together.  This week, Cody and JD work through Ant-Man — the heist film that almost didn't happen, the comedy palate cleanser that turned out to be a load-bearing pillar, and the strangest behind-the-scenes drama in Marvel history. Edgar Wright developed this film for 8 YEARS before Marvel rewrote his script and he walked. He has never seen the finished version.  Along the way:  - The Edgar Wright saga — eight years, two months before cameras rolled, and a quote from Simon Pegg you have to hear  - Why JD calls Ant-Man "a story about being expendable" — and why that's actually a compliment  - The Hank Pym line that hit JD harder than any in the MCU so far: "I lost your mother. I didn't mean to lose you too."  - Scott Lang as the Bilbo Baggins of the MCU — the everyman who shouldn't be there but is the reason the Infinity Saga works  - The real quantum physics behind the Quantum Realm — and why JD's Navy nuclear background actually matters here  - The scene that made JD say the film jumped the shark — Darren Cross shooting an ant out of the sky from a moving helicopter at night with a handgun  - The grossest death in the entire MCU (and nobody talks about it)  - JD's takedown of meta-narration in writing — Bones, Stranger Things, and late-season Walking Dead all catch hands  Plus: the Falcon fight scene that exists because Adam McKay wrote it, the Robin Hood story underneath Scott Lang, and why Hope deserved the suit in this movie and didn't get it. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

3. juni 20261 h 5 min
episode Episode 11: Avengers: Age Of Ultron cover

Episode 11: Avengers: Age Of Ultron

Tony Stark created Ultron. But the question this movie asks — and almost no one heard at the time — is what's actually the difference between them? This week, Cody and JD work through Avengers: Age of Ultron. The middle child of the MCU. The film that was bigger and louder than the first Avengers and somehow landed smaller. The film that broke Joss Whedon's relationship with Marvel — and the film that, in retrospect, is doing more thematic heavy lifting than anyone gave it credit for in 2015. Along the way: - The Roy Thomas comic book Ultron — Hank Pym's creation in the source material, and what changed when Marvel handed the role to Tony Stark - The Whedon-vs-Marvel battle over the Hawkeye farm and the Thor pool scene that should never have made the final cut - Why Wanda's line — "Ultron can't tell the difference between saving the world and destroying it. I wonder where he gets that from?" — is the entire thesis of the film - Ultron's loneliness as the most-missed gutter moment in the MCU - Tony Stark as an addict in recovery from being Iron Man, and the spiral dynamics that explain why every solution he builds creates the next monster - The Vision's opening monologue and what it sounds like in 2026 when AI companies admit they can't say their models aren't self-aware - Hawkeye as the human anchor, Black Widow as the most underused Avenger in the movie, and Captain America trying to be funny when he absolutely should not - The retroactive Doomsday Clock tick we owe this film — and what it means Plus: a hot take on whether She-Hulk actually happened, the toy leak that hints Bruce Banner Hulks out in Brand New Day, and a third (or fourth?) reference to Hulk's dick. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

27. mai 20261 h 22 min
episode Episode 10: Guardians Of The Galaxy cover

Episode 10: Guardians Of The Galaxy

Off-world for the first time — and almost everything about this movie shouldn't have worked. A talking raccoon. A walking tree. A 70s mixtape. A director who'd never made a blockbuster, a co-writer the studio didn't expect to pick this property, and a B-list cosmic team most of us couldn't have named before August 1, 2014. And yet — Guardians of the Galaxy became the proof of concept for the MCU's entire second decade. In Episode 10 of the Countdown to Doomsday, Cody and JD dig into what makes this movie tick — and what almost broke it. They trace Rocket's origin from a planet-sized insane asylum called Halfworld to Bradley Cooper's career-defining voice work, unpack Nicole Perlman's two-year, ten-draft journey through Marvel's internal screenwriting program (and the messy credit dispute that followed with James Gunn), and pull apart the moments that landed — the Morag dance, the Kyln escape, Rocket's drunk "I didn't ask to get made" — from the ones that didn't quite (Ronan, Nebula's emotion dialed past where the audience could meet it, that lull between act two and three). They go deep on grief as the engine driving every character in this film, the convoluted Quill-Yondu relationship that takes a whole trilogy to pay off, and the Walkman as the sound of a dead woman's love crossing decades and light-years. Plus: what if Thanos had been the villain? What if Peyton Reed had directed instead of James Gunn? And what if Rocket — the heart of the movie — had been cut entirely (which Marvel genuinely considered)? Next week: Avengers: Age of Ultron. The MCU starts to feel its own weight. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

20. mai 20261 h 2 min