Weekend Watchlist: Where the Crawdads Sing, Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris and Don’t Make Me Go
[Izon by Trent Walton fades in, plays alone, fades out]
MIA Hi! Welcome to Weekend Watchlist, a look at what’s screening and streaming, brought to you by The Letterboxd Show. I’m Mia, they’re Slim...
SLIM Hello!
MIA And together we’ll dig through what’s dropping this weekend, last weekend, recent trends on Letterboxd and we’ll also take a peek at our own watchlists—all under 30 minutes or your money back.
SLIM Mia, I’m back. I saw a ton of great from folks listening. They sent emails into [email protected] that they said they loved hearing you and Mitchell together. If I can quote, “their chemistry is off the charts.” Mia, that’s what I heard last week.
MIA That’s what you’ve heard?
SLIM That’s what I heard.
MIA That’s really what you’ve heard? Wooow!
SLIM That’s real life. That’s real life.
MIA Real life. Wow. You know, I miss Mitchell. I do.
SLIM I miss Mitchell too!
MIA I miss Mitchell!
SLIM Mitchell, come home.
MIA Mitchell, come home...
SLIM Mitchell was probably up until 4am watching some random 4K that they forgot that they owned. [Slim & Mia laugh] They fired that up. So I’m back. I’m here to pour cold water on all that chemistry. This week, we’ll chat Where the Crawdads Sing—big release this week. Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris, Don’t Make Me Go, community reviews. And just a quick note, just reminder that our dear sweet Marcel the Shell [with Shoes On] is expanding into more theaters this week. So please, please, please go see that if you can.
MIA Go check out that little guy. He’s sweet and he deserves the .
SLIM He does.
MIA You know what’s not so sweet, Slim? Murder! [Slim laughs] Let’s talk about Where the Crawdads Sing, directed by Olivia Newman. It is in theaters on 22,000 watchlists. Here is the synopsis: “SECRETS ARE BURIED JUST BENEATH THE SURFACE. Abandoned by her family, Kya raises herself all alone in the marshes outside of her small town. When her former boyfriend is found dead, Kya is instantly branded by the local townspeople and law enforcement as the prime suspect for his murder.”
SLIM Duh-duh-duuuuh. This is on 22,000 watchlists. So, I’m a noob. I’m a Where the Crawdads Sing noob. I didn’t know that this is like a book, are you following this book?
MIA Yes.
SLIM The history of this book?
MIA So I used to work at Powell’s Books up in Portland—the largest independent bookstore in the country. And I sold about ten million copies of this book. [Slim laughs] So the 22,000 watchlist number kind of adds up for me, because there are a lot of, a lot, a lot of people read the book. I’m not sure if necessarily they’re diehard fans of the book, but a lot of people read it and are like, “I should see the movie, I read the book!” So that makes sense to me. It had that Reese’s Book Club sticker on it.
SLIM Ohhhh, Reese.
MIA Yeah, the coveted Reese Witherspoon Book Club sticker that goes a long way.
SLIM What about that Taylor Swift song, you heard about this? Swifties? There’s like a—she wrote a song just for the movie.
MIA Ohhhh—
SLIM Did you know about that? I’m breaking news! I’m breaking Taylor Swift news to you on Weekend Watchlist!
MIA I feel like it was in the back of my head that that was going on, and I was like, oh, maybe she’s friends with Daisy Edgar-Jones, because...
SLIM Could be. [Slim laughs]
MIA I don’t know, I feel like—no, because her boyfriend is Joe Alwyn, who’s in Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney, which is related to Normal People, which Daisy Edgar-Jones stars in. So he’s part of—she’s like part of the Sally Rooney universe.
SLIM Ohhh. The Sally Rooney Cinematic Universe.
MIA Yes, exactly. So, again, this adds up a little bit. [Mia laughs]
SLIM I had—I don’t think I’ve seen Daisy Edgar-Jones in anything until I watched Under the Banner of Heaven this year, that TV series with Andrew Garfield, which I liked.
MIA Yes.
SLIM The other thing—so if you google this movie, there’s like a little bit of a potential scandal, alleged scandal. Did you read up on this, about the author and her husband? My word!
MIA It seems like there might be some alleged murderer cover up going on here. No, nothing confirmed. We’re not going to break that news here. [Slim & Mia laugh] But...
SLIM Just Swift news.
MIA Zoinks! I do think it’s kind of almost baller to write a book about... like murder when you may have helped your stepson cover up a murder...
SLIM It’s pretty bonkers. I did read—I saw the article pop up when I Googled this movie. I guess it’s starting to bubble up now that this movie is out. In the ‘90s, her and her husband had filmed like this ABC TV show in Zambia about protecting animals from poachers. And in the video—in the interview, on literally ABC, they show a poacher getting shot, but they never say who was doing the shooting. And the Delia's, the husband and wife team left the country after that, so... that has nothing to do with the movie per se but I don’t want us to be in a position where this movie comes out, like, “Oh! I can’t believe you didn’t bring up the alleged murder of these two...” So... [Slim & Mia laugh]
MIA Yeah, we got to say something.
SLIM What about some reviews? What are you, what are you hearing about this movie from the community? Any vibes?
MIA Oh well, our buddy Brian Formo, he has a review: “All the issues I have with the movie are surely from the text — particularly the only Black characters being there solely to assist the lily-white Marsh Girl without having any scenes/life outside of that role — but the filmmakers are responsible for some of their own. Such as making it all look like a CW show with perfect makeup, perfect hair, etc.” Yes, that was something I was thinking while watching the trailer. I was like, this girl is supposed to be feral? [Mia & Slim laugh] Um... okay!
SLIM Yeah, I watched the trailer, it looks very nice. The CW vibes is a funny point. Anthony wrote: “I met Daisy Edgar-Jones right after seeing this so it’s an automatic win in my book.” That’s a pretty nice little moment there seeing that movie, and then meeting her afterward. Holy cow.
MIA Yeah! I’d watch it with my mom, I don’t know, she’s probably read it. [Mia laughs]
SLIM Sure. [Slim laughs] Alright, so enough about murder-core. Let’s move to nice-core. Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris directed by Anthony Fabian, in theaters, this is on three and a half thousand watchlists right now.
MIA Oh, let’s get those numbers up, you guys! You guys...
SLIM We need to bring it up. Wait until you hear Mia’s thoughts on this movie.
MIA Yeah, yes.
SLIM “A new adaptation of Paul Gallico’s much-loved novel about a cleaning lady in 1950s London who falls in love with an haute couture dress by Christian Dior and decides to gamble everything for the sake of this folly.” Tell us about it, Mia.
MIA This is a lovely story about following your dreams. So Lesley Manville stars, she is the titular Mrs. Harris, she goes—she goes to Paris, word on the street, it is true! She does go to Paris and she meets Isabelle Huppert, so the cast is awesome, the cast is stacked. So it’s like, Miss Pettigrew [Lives for a Day] meets Emily in Paris meets Paddington meets Phantom Thread...
SLIM Oh my gosh.
MIA Yeah, it’s a big mashup. But it all works, like I’m not kidding, I really enjoyed it. I cried in the theater. It is a warm, comforting watch. The character of Mrs. Harris is so three dimensional, you are rooting for her to get that dress! Like the whole time, you’re like, “She needs to get that dress she loves,” even though it’s silly. It also has a lot of really interesting themes about pro-unionization and workers-rights. And it’s a really lovely cathartic escapist-fantasy, where the powers that be take workers needs seriously—it’s like really, there’s a lot packed into this little rom-com that’s actually somewhat profound while also being a feel-good watch.
SLIM Love it.
MIA So I really, truly loved it and I would see it again in theaters because it was that warm and special.
SLIM Is it time for nice-core to take over? Is it time?
MIA Yeah, the world is bad right now, I’ll say it. It is bad out there. And it was really lovely to just like go into a theater for two hours and kind of just escape from all that and root for this woman to get this dress.
SLIM Chris left a review: “The only good nicecore!!!” Alexa also left her review: “i too would risk it all for a dress but neither of those and definitely not by christian dior.” The nice-core vibes, it reminded me of—I mean, I don’t know if it would be considered nice-core, but the positive vibes I got when I left Marcel the Shell [with Shoes On], like I felt like I could do anything after seeing that movie.
MIA Yes! Yes, exactly! And Marcel also made me cry. So I really like, I like that kind of bittersweet, melancholic feel-good because I feel like it’s more realistic to what life is like. I like movies where it’s about discovering the positive and the negative, I suppose, because you got to have the negative to have the positive.
SLIM You gotta.
MIA And that’s what Marcel [the Shell with Shoes On] and Mrs. Harris [Goes to Paris] have in common.
SLIM Hopefully a bunch of people added that to their watch list just now. Check it out this week.
MIA Yeah, we’re gonna bump it up to 22k watchlists.
SLIM Bump it up!
MIA Bump it up! Let’s move on from feel-good movies to feel-bad movies—which are just as important. We have Don’t Make Me Go directed by Hannah Marks, it is streaming on Amazon Prime, 3.4 average and 3.5k watchlists. “When a single father to a teenage daughter learns that he has a fatal brain tumor, he takes her on a road trip to find the mother who abandoned her years before and to try to teach her everything she might need over the rest of her life.”
SLIM Don’t Make Me Go, I seeing this poster in our Letterboxd Slack, there were some like early-vibes in our internal Letterboxd Crew Slack, and the poster is dynamite. And so I was able to get access to this, I think you were as well. I really liked Don’t Make Me Go. Feel bad, feel sad. I was getting some CODA vibes from this movie, at least initially, in of like, a family coming to grips with something and maybe it unites them... and that’s definitely the case. But there is a scene later in the movie in a field that legit knocked my socks off. Unreal acting, unreal writing, great moment. I had some slight issues with decisions made in the third act, but overall, really enjoyed it.
MIA We’re burying the lede that John Cho is the star of this film. He is the father in question. And he is a beautiful, goofy, karaoke-singing dad. And I mean that’s worth it just for that. Agree about the rocky third act. Mia Isaac is incredible, she plays the daughter, she will also be co-starring in Not Okay alongside Zoey Deutch and Dylan O’Brien, which comes out soon as well.
SLIM I do want to spotlight Flynn’s review, Flynn who works on the Letterboxd social team. Beautiful review, I won’t read the whole thing, I definitely recommend people click through and read it, but: “This movie will make you want to hug your parents so tight. And if you’re a parent, it will make you want to hug your kids so tight. So I would say watch this with your parents or your kids. But I’m warning you, there are a lot of tears to come with this film.” So that was a very positive review from Flynn.
MIA And then Samm also has a review: “I started crying during the opening credits because I knew this was going to eff me up on several levels. This was not good for my hypochondria. That’s all I’m gonna say.” [Slim & Mia laugh]
SLIM So Hannah Marks, Don’t Make Me Go, three and a half thousand watchlists, recommend if you want to just let loose and start weeping.
MIA Yeah, go see Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris and smile so much and then come home, watch this movie and weep it out. [Slim laughs]
SLIM Let it all hang out. It’s healthy for you to let it all out. You got to. So those are the main releases this week. I do want to look back at last week’s releases, you guys had a jam packed show, my god, last week. Thor: Love and Thunder dropping slightly to a 3.3 average. Emma Hodge left a review: “I really don’t understand all the hate this movie is getting simply for being funny. Are you expecting art and cinema in the 367th MCU installment? Don’t be mad at Taika for understanding the assignment. These films are not meant to be taken seriously, just sit down eat your popcorn and try to have a good time.” Mia...
MIA Hm... [Slim & Mia laugh] Emma, I’m not sure I agree with that, but... [Mia laughs]
SLIM Letterboxd legal is now stepping in in front of Mia, “Mia, please!” [Slim laughs] Ohhh my goodness. I think the bloom might be off the rose for this kind of Marvel movie. We’ll see. Robert left a review: “More like Love to Blunder, am I right?!” My gosh.
MIA Robert, go off.
SLIM Scathing.
MIA Scathing review from Robert. [Mia & Slim laugh]
SLIM Both Sides of the Blade I think went up in average, 3.1 average, and Murina 3.5 average, so very positive for those two releases from last week.
MIA We love to see Claire Denis going up.
SLIM How about Luke’s review for Both Sides of the Blade: “Personally, this ranks below titane as it doesn’t have enough ass shots of Vincent.” Not enough ass shots.
MIA Yeah, they could—I mean there was some, but we can again, we can bump those numbers up.
SLIM You gotta bump ‘em up.
MIA That is the theme. [Slim laughs] Bump up those ass shots, bump up the watchlists for Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris.
SLIM What do you want to spotlight from the last week?
MIA Well, I briefly mentioned this on the pod last week, Fire of Love is coming out. I finally got a chance to watch it and it is gorgeous. It is a documentary about two volcanologists who are in love with each other. They love each other, and they love volcanoes, and it’s beautiful. I will read a little excerpt from my review. “French New Wave rom-com-tragi-documentary about a volcanologist power couple made me weep in the AMC. a starry-eyed reminder of romance and science’s unlikely propensity to intertwine, told with sizzling 16mm archival footage and lyrical voiceover narration.” I thought it was Jennifer Jason Leigh the entire runtime, I really did. I was convinced, I was like, this is so cool, I get to listen to JGL—JGL, that’s Joseph Gordon-Levitt! [Slim & Mia laugh]
SLIM Too many abbreviations!
MIA I got to listen to JJL and then at the end it said, “Narrated by Miranda July” so, oops! Oopsie, oopsie. But Miranda is cool too.
SLIM Oopsie.
MIA Oopsie!
SLIM That’s great. Yeah, a lot of buzz from last week from you both about this movie.
MIA So yeah, please check out Fire of Love, it is really one of the best movies I’ve seen this year. I also got to go to the Mike Leigh retrospective, it has made it to LA. So they’re screening a bunch of Mike Leigh films over here. A lot of them are new restorations as well. So I caught this new restoration of Life is Sweet, which I had not seen previously. And I’m having a great time familiarizing myself with more of his work. I’d only seen Happy-Go-Lucky and Naked before this, and I really enjoyed both. So I’m super excited to start seeing more of his films. He said that this is his least favorite of all of his films, Life is Sweet, I mean. And I don’t think he should be so hard on himself because this was still like a really, really lovely family drama. So I think it’s really impressive when your quote unquote “worst” film is better than most people’s best!
SLIM Yeah, I have never seen this either, just added this to my watchlist. Mike Leigh, we touched on a little bit on Jack’s Letterboxd Show episode—
MIA Yes, Secrets & Lies!
SLIM About Secrets & Lies which I really enjoyed.
MIA Which I’m going to be seeing soon, I will be seeing that soon.
SLIM And All or Nothing, Mike’s movie, I have All or Nothing at five stars on Letterboxd right now. Timothy Spall, the king.
MIA Yes! Yeah, he’s in Life is Sweet as well. He’s really funny.
SLIM That’s the reason why I added it to my watchlist, because I saw him in that backdrop photo. Love his stuff when they work together.
MIA I added this to my watchlist because David Thewlis is in it. So yeah, we love our English character actors. [Slim laughs]
SLIM One thing I’ll spotlight, another release this week that we just didn’t have room for but I will make a little bit of room now is She Will, which is releasing in theaters and video-on-demand this week. I dug it. It’s an ageing film star goes to a Scottish retreat after having a double mastectomy, but the entire area that they’re staying at after the surgery is literally built on the ashes of witches that were burned decades previous. So she and her nerves start to experience strange things from then on, which is an amazing idea for a movie, like this ageing film star that’s just been through the wringer. And she starts to just feel empowered by what’s happened on this land. It looked awesome, very moody. They do some very interesting editing things in the movie. It’s somewhat messy but I still liked it, so I’d probably maybe three and a half stars for She Will. And I think it’s like presented by Dario Argento, was like the first thing that I saw on screen. [Slim laughs]
MIA What?
SLIM Yes. And this feels like—I’ve said this before—but this feels like a Shudder movie. And whenever I say that, I mean that as a big positive. I’m a Shudder subscriber. This is like a Shudder movie that I would love to stumble upon one weekend with my wife and just have fun watching a new horror movie. So, very cool. Recommend it.
MIA This looks cool. I’m adding it to my watchlist right now.
SLIM Great poster too.
MIA We are bumping those numbers up.
SLIM So usually in this segment, we check in on the Letterboxd Top 50 of 2022, but Jack is recuperating. No updates, no major updates this week, but if you want some more data by all means check out Jack’s episode with his four faves on this feed. It was a lot of fun and we dig into the Midyear Check-in for all of those Top 25, Top 50 check-in, so very fun episode. But now it’s time for us to get our own watchlists. This is the big segment of the show—the big segment. Big, big, big. We go to our watchlist the previous week, we shuffle, we have to watch that movie before we meet next. Mia, you shuffled Defending Your Life.
MIA Yes! Yes! I got Defending Your Life. I really, I really enjoy Albert Brooks as a writer, director, star, everything. This has been on my watchlist for a long, long time. So glad to check it off. And I found this to be a really, really sweet, if not flawed rom-com... [Mia & Slim laugh] There’s a, you know, there are some parts of it that don’t fully make sense as to how he’s being judged—I should say what the movie is about first. So for those who don’t, who don’t know about Defending Your Life, it is about a yuppie, Albert Brooks, who dies and goes to this kind of purgatory-esque land where he has to defend his life. And basically the powers that be figure out if he’s ready to move on to the next step, which is it’s not super clear what it is. It’s not like heaven, it’s just like, you kind of get to move on... And so it’s excruciating, he has to show clips from his life on Earth to like this of judges and I would be in a ball rocking back-and-forth on the ground if I had to do that. Because you don’t get to pick the clips! They’re just are like, “Roll this clip from his life.”
SLIM No, no, no. Game over for me.
MIA It was really... very philosophical, existential, very well-written, very smart, witty. Meryl Streep character is not fleshed out super well. She’s kind of a Manic Pixie Dream—
SLIM Dream Girl.
MIA Dream Girl that he meets and all she really does is laugh at his jokes. That’s kind of her whole character, is he says something funny and she laughs, and that’s her personality. But other than that, again, I keep saying other than that...
SLIM Will you be drifting into the Albert Brooks filmography more after this?
MIA I would love to. And I’d like to drift into the James L. Brooks filmography as well—they’re not related. Did you know that?
SLIM James L Brooks, the only reason I know James L Brooks is from The Simpsons.
MIA The Simpsons, exactly. And I just always assumed they were related because Albert Brooks would be on and I was like, oh, they’re brothers. Nope.
SLIM I need to get into the Albert Brooks. I need to dig into the Albert Brooks filmography as well. That’s a blind spot for me.
MIA Come on in!
SLIM A lot of people rave—
MIA Start with Finding Nemo. [Slim laughs]
SLIM I mean, the directorial filmography.
MIA He directed that, right? [Mia & Slim laugh]
SLIM So my shuffle from a few weeks back, since I was off last week, was Boyhood. Richard Linklater, this movie is like five stars from everyone and your mother, you walk down the street and you ask a random, they’ll say, “Boyhood, five star movie.” I gave this two and a half stars.
MIA Go off.
SLIM Boyhood is famous for following this family over the course of twelve years. Like literally they filmed it over twelve years, so that the young boy lead could age over the course of time and Ethan Hawke is in it. He also ages. Patricia Arquette is the mother, they’re divorced. But it’s about this boy’s journey over a period of twelve years growing up. I want to shut it off after twenty minutes. I could not vibe at all with this movie—I almost DNF’d, the fabled Letterboxd DNF log job. So I started to have a panic—like in my head, I did like the Skinner meme—am I out of touch?
MIA No, it’s the children. [Mia & Slim laugh[
SLIM It’s the children who are out of touch. It’s the children who are wrong. But there was just a lot of scenes with like some, you know, non-actors that just were in this movie, it went on for so long, it just took me out of it. I love the idea of the movie, but the execution was just completely not for me—capital letters is Not For Me. One of my main call-outs was, it’s not that long ago, but trampolines without the walls? Like the safety walls? Every trampoline I see now with young kids in my neighborhood, it’s like a trampoline but they have those gated, you know, protector walls outside of trampoline.
MIA Yes, yes.
SLIM So in this movie, it’s like an old school trampoline. And I was like, oh my god, I cannot believe not that long ago we were all using trampolines without those walls! It just seems so dangerous to me now, how do we all not have broken bones from being on a trampoline? [Slim laughs] It just blew my mind.
MIA I should get a trampoline [Slim laughs]
SLIM So I love School of Rock.
MIA Yes!
SLIM I will say that, it was the last line of my review, love School of Rock, love Richard Linklater, love the first of the Before trilogy, I haven’t seen the rest. It’s not for me. That’s okay, sometimes, you know?
MIA That’s okay sometimes. It is for me, so I will take the Before trilogy off your hands. [Slim laughs] And I will love it. It will love it for you! [Mia laughs]
SLIM Thanks everyone for tagging your reviews “Weekend Watchlist”. We love seeing so many reviews come through every week on Letterboxd with the tag. Paul watched Le Samouraï: “This film is very much my jam. A methodical and quiet hitman playing cat-and-mouse with bastard French cops. I was expecting a bit more action and obvious tension, but was treated to something different, yet still rewarding. Those last 20 minutes were an absolute thrill.” Great movie.
MIA That is in my watchlist as well, I believe.
SLIM Ohhhh.
MIA Ohhh, yeah, yeah. It’s been in there. It has been in there.
SLIM Alain Delon. Yeah, it’s on HBO Max and Criterion right now.
MIA Wow. That is a beautiful man. Donal reviewed La Jetée, which is a classic, very important short: “Packs a lot into 28 minutes, and left me with the sense of having experienced something profound - which I couldn’t say of Twelve Monkeys.” Ohhh!
SLIM Burn.
MIA For those, Twelve Monkeys is kind of like a, an adaptation of this beautiful French sci-fi La Jetée. Oh! They have a bonus Mad God review. [Mia laughs] This is awesome. Bonus Mad God review: “Wallace & Vomit.” [Slim & Mia laugh]
SLIM Well said.
MIA Yeah, okay, I’m understanding now, because it’s stop motion and very gross. Okay. Yes. That makes sense.
SLIM I did watch that. I don’t think we’ve talked since I watched Mad God.
MIA We haven’t?! Yes you did watch it.
SLIM Yeah, I liked it a lot. Liked it a lot.
MIA Right?
SLIM Four stars.
MIA It is crazy.
SLIM Alright. Let’s go to our own watchlists, it’s shuffle time.
MIA Shuffle time.
SLIM I’m gonna hit the watchlist on the website here, I am going to filter my watchlist, since I’m a Pro member... Stream-only. And then I’m going to sort by Shuffle. And the first movie that I have to watch before next week... [shuffle sound plays] Oh... my... god. 1980’s Alligator streaming on Shudder and Shout Factory. “A baby alligator is flushed down a toilet and survives by eating discarded lab animals that have been injected with growth hormones. The now gigantic animal escapes the city sewers and goes on a rampage pursued by a cop and a big game hunter.”
MIA Whoa!
SLIM It’s my time. It’s my time to shine with Alligator.
MIA Prequel to Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile. [Slim laughs]
SLIM Alright, so what did you get? [shuffle sound plays]
MIA I got something... I got something delicious. Just scrumptious. I got Woman in the Dunes, 1964.
SLIM Whoaaa.
MIA Yes, yes. Let me just real quick read the synopsis: “An entomologist suffers extreme psychological and sexual torture after being taken captive by the residents of a poor seaside village.” This is the, it’s number 42 on our official Top 250 Narrative Feature Films list.
SLIM All time list. Wow. Cripes.
MIA So again, this is one that’s been in there for a while. The posters one of my favorite posters ever made.
SLIM This is a big check off the watchlist, right?
MIA This is huge. This is huge for me.
SLIM My friends do a Criterion podcast called the Cinenauts, they go through the Criterion and watch movies related to whichever movie they pick and they did an episode on this. I that episode was very sexual.
MIA Yeah, that’s what I’m expecting, according to the synopsis, that was about psychologic— extreme psychological and sexual torture.
SLIM So I get an alligator movie and you get psychological, sexual torture. [Slim laughs]
MIA Yeah! You know... [Mia laughs] We’re gonna have a really nice, carefree, nice-core...
SLIM Soph has this is a 4.5, my god. “Who knew that sand could be both terrifying AND sexy?”
MIA Oh god, they’re gonna do stuff in the sand. [Slim laughs] I don’t know what they’re gonna do in the sand, but…
[Izon by Trent Walton fades in, plays alone, fades out]
SLIM Thanks so much for listening to Weekend Watchlist brought to you by The Letterboxd Show. You can follow Mia, Slim—that’s me—and our HQ page on Letterboxd using the links in our episode notes. And if you had an amazing time, just like we did, just now maybe consider rating the podcasts on Spotify, or leaving a review on Apple Podcasts, it helps spread the word about the show.
MIA Thank you so much to our crew and thanks to Letterboxd member Trent Walton for the theme music ‘Izon’. Thanks to Jack for the facts—get well soon Jack! And Sophie Shin for the episode transcript. And to you, for listening. Weekend Watchlist is a Tapedeck production.
SLIM And I forgot to mention this, but thanks to PocketCasts, my preferred listening app, they’re featuring Tapdeck right now in the Discover section of the app. So all of our pods are spotlighted, it’s really cool to see. Thank you PocketCasts.
MIA Thank you PocketCasts!
[Tapedeck bumper plays] This is a Tapedeck podcast.