Rewind or Die – Cult Movies, Trash Cinema, and Deep Dives

Adam Chase

Rewind or Die is a comedy podcast about movies that are weird, wild, or way more important to us than they probably should be. Hosted by three friends with strong opinions and questionable priorities, each episode dives headfirst into a different cult classic, box office bomb, or nostalgic fever dream from the video store era. Expect deep movie breakdowns, absurd tangents, pointless arguments, unhinged theories, and the occasional debate over things like cursed action figures, haunted Chuck E. Cheeses, or whether Jack Burton could survive American Gladiators. If you love pop culture chaos, long conversations that spiral into madness, and the kind of movie talk that feels like arguing in your friend’s basement at 1 a.m.—you’re home now. New episodes every week. Bring snacks.

  1. Johnny Mnemonic (1995): The Future Was a Lot Dumber Than We Remember

    6D AGO

    Johnny Mnemonic (1995): The Future Was a Lot Dumber Than We Remember

    What happens when the future shows up… and immediately panics? This week on Rewind or Die, we dive into Johnny Mnemonic (1995) — the cyberpunk oddity that tried to warn us about the dangers of information overload years before anyone knew what a notification was. It’s a movie about data, corporations, brain storage, and a very tired Keanu Reeves carrying way too much of everything. We talk about how this film accidentally predicted modern burnout, why it feels like a prototype for later sci-fi classics, and how its anxiety-soaked vision of the future somehow makes more sense now than it did in the ’90s. Along the way, we break down its strange tone, its half-finished worldbuilding, its cable-TV afterlife, and why it plays better at 1:30 a.m. than it ever did in theaters. We also get into how Johnny Mnemonic sits right between The Lawnmower Man and The Matrix, why Keanu Reeves feels like he’s quietly inventing his later screen persona, and how this movie became less “bad cyberpunk” and more “early warning system.” Yes, we talk about the dolphin. Yes, we talk about the data. And yes, we ask the most important question: who was this actually made for? If you love flawed ’90s sci-fi, VHS-era cable classics, movies that swing big and miss loud, or films that accidentally predict the future, this one’s for you. And remember: the future may be dumb — but at least it’s interesting. Don’t step on the grass.

    42 min
  2. Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995): Burnout, Riddles, and the Entire City Exploding

    12/25/2025

    Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995): Burnout, Riddles, and the Entire City Exploding

    Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995) isn’t just the third Die Hard movie — it’s the one where the franchise stops having fun and starts having a very bad day. This week on Rewind or Die, we’re digging into the most stressed action movie of the ’90s: a sequel that abandons comfort, nostalgia, and holiday vibes in favor of exhaustion, logistics, and civic infrastructure collapsing in real time. John McClane isn’t rising to the occasion anymore — he’s being dragged through it, hungover, suspended, and already behind. We talk about why With a Vengeance feels so different from the other Die Hard films, how it turns New York City into the real antagonist, and why it might be the smartest sequel in the franchise. From riddles and payphones to traffic patterns and system failures, this is an action movie built on momentum — not spectacle. Along the way, we break down the Die Hard franchise as a whole, explain why this is the last entry that truly belongs in the Rewind or Die canon, and officially ratify the Rewind or Die Constitution (yes, there’s a cutoff year, and no, it makes no sense). We also spiral into cable TV memories, butchered TV edits, and why modern free-with-ads streaming somehow makes commercial breaks even worse than TNT ever did. If you grew up watching movies out of order on basic cable, if you remember when action heroes were allowed to be tired, or if you’ve ever felt personally attacked by a ringing payphone — this one’s for you.

    47 min
  3. Jingle All the Way (1996): Sinbad, Turbo Man, and the Mall Apocalypse

    11/30/2025

    Jingle All the Way (1996): Sinbad, Turbo Man, and the Mall Apocalypse

    This week on Rewind or Die, Adam, Jeff, Steve, and Lewis dive headfirst into the chaotic, sugar-fueled fever dream that is Jingle All the Way — the 1996 Christmas comedy that asked the bold question: What if Arnold Schwarzenegger committed several non-violent felonies in the name of holiday love? We break down the Turbo Man toy insanity, Sinbad’s perfectly unhinged performance, Phil Hartman’s suburban menace energy, and the cultural prophecy hiding beneath this “family-friendly” mall frenzy. Is this movie secretly brilliant? A misunderstood holiday satire? Or just a beautiful monument to 90s dad panic and late-stage consumer chaos? We also confront the most important theory yet: 👉 Is Jingle All the Way the spiritual sequel to Houseguest — uniting Sinbad and Phil Hartman in an accidental cinematic universe? Along the way we cover: • The Turbo Man hysteria and real-life 90s toy shortages • Why this movie predicted modern Black Friday madness • The Santa crime syndicate no one talks about • Jake Lloyd pre-Star Wars aka Baby Anakin energy • The parade that defied all laws of physics • Whether this movie deserves true holiday reclamation It’s loud. It’s chaotic. It’s oddly sincere. It’s everything Rewind or Die loves about forgotten 90s cinema — and somehow, against all logic, it just works. Next up: the biggest Christmas movie of them all… DIE HARD. So grab your last Turbo Man, dodge the mall stampede, and hit play — just don’t step on the grass.

    36 min

Ratings & Reviews

3.5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Rewind or Die is a comedy podcast about movies that are weird, wild, or way more important to us than they probably should be. Hosted by three friends with strong opinions and questionable priorities, each episode dives headfirst into a different cult classic, box office bomb, or nostalgic fever dream from the video store era. Expect deep movie breakdowns, absurd tangents, pointless arguments, unhinged theories, and the occasional debate over things like cursed action figures, haunted Chuck E. Cheeses, or whether Jack Burton could survive American Gladiators. If you love pop culture chaos, long conversations that spiral into madness, and the kind of movie talk that feels like arguing in your friend’s basement at 1 a.m.—you’re home now. New episodes every week. Bring snacks.