Movie Memory Machine

Movie Memory Machine is your guide to the forgotten films of the ’80s, ’90s, 2000s, and beyond. Every week, our rogue time machine drops us into a different year to revisit wide-release movies that history left behind—cult favorites, forgotten flops, and everything in between. Along the way, we uncover behind-the-scenes trivia, oddball production choices, and the cultural baggage these movies left behind. Then we decide: does this movie deserve to return to modern memory—or stay lost in time?

  1. HACE 6 DÍAS

    The Dream Team (1989) | Michael Keaton Leads a Chaotic Comedy Breakout

    The Machine yanks Truman and Landen straight into 1989 New York, where the pigeons are plentiful, the crime rate is questionable, and four psychiatric patients are somehow having a better day than our hosts. With a comedy tone that wobbles between screwball, satire, and “oh no they let who loose in Manhattan?”, the guys dive into a movie that’s equal parts heartwarming and wildly irresponsible.   The Dream Team is a chaotic, character-driven comedy starring Billy, a volatile former ad exec (Michael Keaton, Beetlejuice), Henry, an anxious perfectionist (Christopher Lloyd, Back to the Future), Jack, a delusional former newsman (Peter Boyle, Everybody Loves Raymond), and Albert, a childlike gentle giant who only speaks in baseball commentary (Stephen Furst, Animal House). Directed by Howard Zieff, the film follows four psychiatric patients whose group outing spirals into an unplanned odyssey through 1980s Manhattan when their doctor is attacked and hospitalized. Balancing slapstick mayhem with earnest sweetness, the movie captures a late-’80s moment when studios still greenlit high-concept ensemble comedies with surprising warmth.   Why This Film? Once a modest box-office success and a cable-TV staple, The Dream Team has largely faded from pop-culture memory despite its stacked cast and oddball charm. It’s a time capsule of pre-Batman Michael Keaton, scrappy New York street comedy, and a tone Hollywood simply doesn’t make anymore—all perfect ingredients for the Movie Memory Machine.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Join Truman Capps and Landen Celano every week as the Machine flings them through cinematic history to rediscover the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating films of decades past. Stay connected and subscribe to keep up with every new episode. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the journey through cinematic history? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine running. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod

    2 h y 16 min
  2. 2 FEB

    5-For: Tag (2018) | When Adult Friendships Become Contact Sports

    The Machine isn’t done sprinting yet. For this 5-For transmission, Truman and Landen are handed five studio comedies that orbit Tag (2018)—movies where grown adults, respectable jobs be damned, are dragged into escalating games, schemes, and misadventures that test friendship, masculinity, and the limits of insurance coverage.   The Machine’s Five Selected Films According to the Machine, these films share a common DNA: high-concept premises, ensemble casts, and the quiet fear that adulthood might already be over. Game Night (2018) – Murder-mystery stakes collide with suburban friendship dynamics Date Night (2010) – Marriage, mistaken identity, and chaos after bedtime Horrible Bosses (2011) – Workplace rage filtered through cartoonish criminal logic Hot Tub Time Machine (2010) – Male nostalgia weaponized into a sci-fi party comedy The Hangover (2009) – The modern blueprint for friendship-based disaster comedies   Why These Five? Together, these movies map out the late-2000s and 2010s studio comedy boom—where adult responsibility was repeatedly smashed into genre frameworks like action thrillers, crime capers, and sci-fi romps. Seen alongside Tag, they reveal a moment when Hollywood tried to keep the R-rated comedy alive by turning friendship itself into the central stunt.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Stay connected with Truman Capps and Landen Celano as the Machine continues flinging them through the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating corners of cinema each week. Subscribe to keep up with every Main episode, Mini-Transmission, and 5-For journey. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the curated chaos of the Machine’s movie selections? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine humming. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod     Tag, Tag 2018, Game Night 2018, Date Night 2010, Horrible Bosses 2011, Hot Tub Time Machine 2010, The Hangover 2009, ensemble comedies, R-rated comedy, studio comedies, friendship movies, high-concept comedy, Movie Memory Machine, movie podcast, film discussion, curated films, thematic film list, forgotten movies, cult films, film history, podcast episode, cinematic analysis

    20 min
  3. 30 ENE

    Mini-Transmission: Tag (2018) | The Bromance Arms Race Continues

    Truman and Landen sweep up the leftover chaos from Tag (2018)—a movie that asked, “What if your friends never emotionally matured past recess, but in a kind of inspiring way?” They revisit dangling threads from the Main episode, dig into the real-life tag squad behind the film, and, as always, play The Trailer Game, trying to guess which slow-motion tackles and Jeremy Renner smirks the marketing department used before watching the trailer for the first time. Next week, the Machine sends them to April 7, 1989 with the clue: "This morning they were playing ping-pong in the hospital rec room. Now they're lost in New York and framed for murder. This was never covered in group therapy." Neither host is prepared for what that implies about their insurance deductibles.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Keep up with every Main episode, Mini-Transmission, and bonus discussion as the Machine flings Truman Capps and Landen Celano through the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating films of decades past. Stay connected and subscribe to follow every jump. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the ride through cinematic history? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine running. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod   Tag, Tag 2018, Jeff Tomsic, Ed Helms, Jon Hamm, Jake Johnson, Hannibal Buress, Jeremy Renner, Isla Fisher, action comedy, buddy comedy, based on a true story, 2010s comedies, movie podcast, trailer reaction, vintage trailers, Movie Memory Machine, film discussion, forgotten movies, cult films, cinematic analysis

    41 min
  4. 23 ENE

    Tag (2018) | The Wild, True Story of a Lifelong Game Taken Too Far

    The Machine hurls Truman and Landen back to 2018, where a perfectly normal adult world briefly stopped to witness a group of grown men sprinting, tackling, and emotionally spiraling through the most intense game of tag ever put to film. As the Machine reminds them, this bromantic stunt-comedy immortalized a real-life tradition—and maybe also proved that your thirties are just gym class with taxes.   Synopsis Tag is a high-energy buddy comedy starring Hogan Malloy (Ed Helms, The Hangover), Bob Callahan (Jon Hamm, Mad Men), Randy Cilliano (Jake Johnson, New Girl), Kevin Sable (Hannibal Buress, Spider-Man: Homecoming), and Jerry Pierce (Jeremy Renner, The Avengers). Directed by Jeff Tomsic, the film follows a tight-knit group of friends who have spent nearly 30 years locked in a hyper-competitive, anything-goes game of tag—one that threatens to unravel when the ever-untouchable Jerry announces he’s retiring after his wedding. Blending exaggerated action choreography with a sincere look at male friendship, Tag channels the late-2010s trend of “based on a true story, but played like a cartoon” studio comedies.   Why This Film? Though it earned modest attention on release, Tag quickly slipped between genres—too heartfelt for pure slapstick, too absurd for straightforward sentiment. It’s a fascinating example of a studio trying to reinvigorate the R-rated comedy market while packaging a very real human-interest story inside blockbuster-style action beats.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Join Truman Capps and Landen Celano every week as the Machine flings them through cinematic history to rediscover the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating films of decades past. Stay connected and subscribe to keep up with every new episode. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the journey through cinematic history? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine running. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod   Tag, Tag 2018, Jeff Tomsic, Ed Helms, Jon Hamm, Jake Johnson, Hannibal Buress, Jeremy Renner, Isla Fisher, Rashida Jones, buddy comedy, action-comedy, based on a true story, R-rated comedy, Warner Bros, 2010s comedies, ensemble cast comedy, Movie Memory Machine, movie podcast, film discussion, forgotten movies, cult films, film history, podcast episode, cinematic analysis, adult friendship movies, high-concept comedies

    2 h y 12 min
  5. 19 ENE

    5-For: War Horse (2011) | Cinema’s Most Heroic Horses (Plus One Brutal Battlefield)

    The Machine, perhaps inspired by War Horse (2011) and its belief that a single determined horse can survive anything short of a tank, has assembled five thematically linked films. Truman and Landen ride through a lineup that mixes equine legends, childhood-codex classics, and one devastating antiwar drama that reminds us what happens when there aren’t any noble steeds around to carry the emotional weight.   The Machine’s Five Selected Films The Machine has selected a stable of titles that echo the heart, heroism, and historical sweep of Spielberg’s film: Secretariat (2010) – a glossy, feel-good biopic about the most famous Triple Crown champion in history Seabiscuit (2003) – Depression-era racing legend as American underdog myth Black Beauty (1994) – the definitive “horse-as-narrator” classic of childhood heartbreak The Black Stallion (1979) – a gorgeously shot survival-and-bonding tale that remains a gold standard of equine cinema No Man’s Land (2001) – a razor-sharp, darkly comedic Bosnia War drama reminding us what human conflict looks like without Spielbergian sentiment   Why These Five? Each of these films mirrors a facet of War Horse’s identity — from uplifting race-track mythology to boy-and-horse bonding to the harsh realities of wartime survival. Together, they form a panorama of how cinema uses horses (and sometimes their absence) to explore resilience, innocence, national myths, and the complicated ways we romanticize struggle. It’s a surprisingly rich genre constellation… and the Machine seems very proud of itself for finding it.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Stay connected with Truman Capps and Landen Celano as the Machine continues flinging them through the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating corners of cinema each week. Subscribe to keep up with every Main episode, Mini-Transmission, and 5-For journey. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the curated chaos of the Machine’s movie selections? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine humming. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod   War Horse, War Horse 2011, Secretariat, Secretariat 2010, Seabiscuit, Seabiscuit 2003, Black Beauty, Black Beauty 1994, The Black Stallion, The Black Stallion 1979, No Man’s Land 2001, Steven Spielberg, equine movies, horse movies, war films, WWI films, racing films, Movie Memory Machine, movie podcast, film discussion, curated films, thematic film list, forgotten movies, cult films, cinematic analysis, film history

    17 min
  6. 16 ENE

    Mini-Transmission: War Horse (2011) | Spielberg Prestige, Battlefield Horses, and Next Week’s Leap

    Truman and Landen wrap up the loose ends from War Horse (2011) — a movie where Spielberg unleashes maximum sincerity, maximum sunsets, and a horse so noble it could probably negotiate peace treaties. They revisit the film’s stray thoughts, historical oddities, and emotional haymakers… and as always, they play The Trailer Game, trying to guess what images the marketing team deemed “horse-forward” enough to sell the film before watching the trailer for the first time. Next week, the Machine sends them to June 15, 2018 with the clue: "We don't stop playing because we grow old, we grow old because we stop playing." Frankly, it sounds like the Machine has traded in mud-slicked trenches for something equally chaotic.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Keep up with every Main episode, Mini-Transmission, and bonus discussion as the Machine flings Truman Capps and Landen Celano through the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating films of decades past. Stay connected and subscribe to follow every jump. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the ride through cinematic history? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine running. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod   War Horse, War Horse 2011, Steven Spielberg, Jeremy Irvine, Emily Watson, David Thewlis, WWI film, historical drama, Spielberg movie, Movie Memory Machine, movie podcast, film discussion, trailer reaction, vintage trailers, forgotten movies, cult films, film history, cinematic analysis

    33 min
  7. 9 ENE

    War Horse (2011) | Spielberg’s Sweeping WWI Epic That Time Forgot

    The Machine drops Truman and Landen squarely into 2011, a year when Spielberg decided the world desperately needed a World War I epic starring a horse with better instincts than most generals. Saddled with sentimentality and prestige energy, this film gives the hosts plenty to chew on as they gallop through its earnest battlefield odyssey.   Synopsis War Horse is a sweeping historical drama starring Albert Narracott (Jeremy Irvine, Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again), Rose Narracott (Emily Watson, Breaking the Waves), and Lyons (David Thewlis, Harry Potter). Directed by Steven Spielberg, the film follows a Devon farm boy and his extraordinary horse, Joey, who becomes entangled in the brutal machinery of World War I. Their story unfolds across trenches, cavalry charges, and occupied countryside, blending old-fashioned melodrama with Spielberg’s signature cinematic muscle.   Why This Film? Once positioned as a major awards contender, War Horse has largely slipped from the cultural conversation — overshadowed by other Spielberg milestones and remembered mostly for its sincerity in an era drifting toward irony. That mix of ambition, sentiment, and prestige makes it ideal fodder for the Movie Memory Machine.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Join Truman Capps and Landen Celano every week as the Machine flings them through cinematic history to rediscover the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating films of decades past. Stay connected and subscribe to keep up with every new episode. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the journey through cinematic history? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine running. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod     War Horse, War Horse 2011, Steven Spielberg, Jeremy Irvine, Emily Watson, David Thewlis, World War I movie, WWI drama, DreamWorks, Touchstone Pictures, historical drama, Spielberg filmography, prestige cinema, Movie Memory Machine, movie podcast, film discussion, forgotten movies, cult films, film history, cinematic analysis, awards season movies

    2 h y 23 min
  8. 5 ENE

    5-For: The Meteor Man (1993) | Five Films That Shaped, Shadowed, or Subverted the Superhero Dream

    The Machine, still crackling with residual meteor energy, whisks Truman and Landen into a curated crash course on five films that reflect the DNA, ambitions, and cosmic oddities of The Meteor Man (1993). From DIY superheroes to VHS-era legends to comic-book icons perfected, this lineup shows every weird, heartfelt, and boundary-pushing direction the genre could have taken.   The Machine’s Five Selected Films The Machine has chosen five thematically linked films that echo Meteor Man’s blend of underdog heroism, community stories, and genre experimentation: Blankman (1994) – another earnest, low-budget, inner-city superhero comedy powered by sheer sincerity Hollywood Shuffle (1987) – Robert Townsend’s satirical breakout, examining representation long before his meteor struck Be Kind Rewind (2008) – a handmade ode to community filmmaking and DIY mythmaking The Mask (1994) – a wild, effects-driven explosion of cartoon logic and early-’90s comic-book chaos Spider-Man 2 (2004) – the genre fully realized, marrying heart, spectacle, and responsibility in a way early pioneers dreamed of   Why These Five? Each of these movies taps into a different facet of what The Meteor Man was reaching for—community empowerment, superhero reinvention, cultural commentary, and gonzo genre energy. Together, they map the winding evolution from scrappy, heartfelt genre experiments to the polished, emotionally rich superhero films that defined the 2000s. In short: this is the alternate history of superhero cinema the Machine wants you to remember.   Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine Stay connected with Truman Capps and Landen Celano as the Machine continues flinging them through the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating corners of cinema each week. Subscribe to keep up with every Main episode, Mini-Transmission, and 5-For journey. Official Website: https://www.moviememorymachine.com Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviememorypod/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieMemoryMachine   Support the Show Enjoy the curated chaos of the Machine’s movie selections? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine humming. Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod   Tags The Meteor Man, The Meteor Man 1993, Blankman, Hollywood Shuffle, Be Kind Rewind, The Mask, Spider-Man 2, Robert Townsend, superhero comedy, Black superheroes, early comic book movies, DIY filmmaking, cult films, 90s movies, 2000s superhero films, Movie Memory Machine, movie podcast, film discussion, curated film list, thematic film list, cinematic analysis

    18 min

Acerca de

Movie Memory Machine is your guide to the forgotten films of the ’80s, ’90s, 2000s, and beyond. Every week, our rogue time machine drops us into a different year to revisit wide-release movies that history left behind—cult favorites, forgotten flops, and everything in between. Along the way, we uncover behind-the-scenes trivia, oddball production choices, and the cultural baggage these movies left behind. Then we decide: does this movie deserve to return to modern memory—or stay lost in time?

Más de Grunt Work Podcasts