Get To The Chedda! The Retro Action Movie Podcast

Screen One

“Get To The Chedda” is the ultimate throwback experience hosted by the dynamic duo, Matt Bourne and Malcom Martin. Join them on a nostalgic journey through the adrenaline-fueled world of 80’s and 90’s action movies. From the explosive stunts to the iconic one-liners, they rewatch these classics, dissecting each scene to see if they hold up against today’s standards. With their infectious humor and insightful commentary, Matt and Malcom dive deep into the heart of these films, exploring the nostalgia while also examining how these action-packed gems resonate in the modern era.

  1. 2d ago

    Schwarzenegger's RAW DEAL (1986): 40 Years Later, Is This the Arnie Film They Buried?

    RAW DEAL (1986) — Schwarzenegger goes undercover. The mob doesn't see it coming. Forty years on, the question is: does it hold up?Matt and Malcolm dig into John Irvin's crime thriller — the one where Arnie trades the jungle and the battlefield for the Chicago mob. Arnold Schwarzenegger as disgraced former FBI man Mark Kaminsky, dragged back in by his old boss Harry Shannon (Darren McGavin) to take down the Patrovita crime family from the inside under the alias Joseph P. Brenner. A cast built for damage: Kathryn Harrold as the sharp and complicated Monique, Sam Wanamaker as mob boss Luigi Patrovita, Paul Shenar as the calculating Rocca, and Robert Davi doing what Robert Davi does — maximum threat, minimum words.We track Kaminsky's dead-end sheriff exile, Shannon's ask and the loyalty debt behind it, the cold construction of a new identity, the slow infiltration, the burn before the detonation, and the quarry scene: Rolling Stones on the soundtrack, Arnie behind the wheel, one of the most purely cathartic moments in his entire filmography. The De Laurentiis production machine, John Irvin's direction, the film's complicated place in the Schwarzenegger catalogue, what it tried to do differently, and the verdict every GTTC has to deliver: What Chedda Rating does Raw Deal earn in 2026?Full Get To The Chedda! Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiFet-zP4QsN1mkF8nxgRoTfDsm5s7uHs #RawDeal #ArnoldSchwarzenegger #DarrenMcGavin #80smovies #80saction

    1 hr
  2. May 16

    Van Damme's NO RETREAT NO SURRENDER: Villain for a Weekend — Legend for a Lifetime!

    No Retreat No Surrender (1986) He had no billing. He had almost no lines. He stole the entire film.Matt and Malcolm dig into Corey Yuen's scrappy, electrifying 1986 martial arts sleeper, one of the great 80s movies you've never given enough credit — and the film that put Jean-Claude Van Damme on the radar a full two years before Bloodsport made him a household name. Jason Stillwell's underdog journey, the ghost of Bruce Lee as a spirit mentor, and the Soviet enforcer Ivan: the villain role JCVD was born to play.We track the underdog training arc, the ghost mentorship, the small-town rivalry, and the tournament showdown. But the real story is what Van Damme does with Ivan — maximum menace, minimum dialogue, zero wasted movement. And we've got something the algorithm will love! We're featuring the deleted scene of Jason and Kelly on a date in Seattle, cut from the final release and rarely discussed. If you've only ever seen the theatrical cut, this one's for you. The debut of a man who didn't need a leading role to announce himself to the world. 40 years on, does it hold? The Chedda Rating decides. Chapters: 0:00 No Retreat, No Surrender (1986) — The Setup 0:58 VHS Legacy & First Impressions 2:33 Corey Yuen & The Hong Kong Martial Arts Wave 5:56 The Bruce Lee Mythology & Kim Tai Chong 7:00 The Story: Jason, Ivan & The LA Dojo 9:05 Moving to Seattle: RJ, Scott & The New Enemies 14:17 Malcolm's Take: The Acting & Characters 19:00 The Soundtrack & The Montage Problem 20:37 The Kelly Subplot & The School Dance 24:58 Three Versions of the Film & The Deleted Scenes 30:00 Bruce Lee's Ghost: The Training Sequences 39:10 The Bar Fight & Father-Son Reconciliation 41:52 The Nightclub Scene & The Michael Jackson Moment 44:28 The Final Tournament 47:46 Ivan the Russian: Van Damme's 12 Minutes 50:45 The Final Fight: Breakdown & Continuity Errors 53:53 Legacy: No Retreat, No Surrender's Cultural Footprint 54:05 Top 3 Van Damme Films 1:01:33 The Cheddar Rating 1:05:00 Raw Deal (1986) — Coming Next Subscribe for weekly 80s breakdowns: youtube.com/@ScreenOne Full Get To The Chedda! Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiFet-zP4QsN1mkF8nxgRoTfDsm5s7uHs #essentialcinema #80smovies #NoRetreatNoSurrender #JeanClaudeVanDamme #MartialArts

    1h 7m
  3. Apr 17

    Chuck Norris THE DELTA FORCE (1986) The Cannon Masterpiece Chuck Almost Ruined

    Is The Delta Force actually Chuck Norris’s best film… or is he the least interesting part of it? In this episode of Get To The Chedda!, we break down one of the most bizarre success stories of 80s action cinema. A film that feels like two completely different movies stitched together: part 70s-style disaster thriller, part full-blown Cannon Films spectacle. Along the way, we dig into a stacked supporting cast led by Lee Marvin in his final performance, alongside Martin Balsam and the ever-reliable Steve James, who quietly steals the entire film. We also put forward Matt's theory: why Executive Decision might be The Delta Force done properly, and how the 90s evolved the Cannon blueprint in ways this film never quite managed. This is a deep dive into an accidental classic. One that somehow survives tonal whiplash, questionable logic, and yes… a rocket-launching dirt bike. Chapters: 00:00 - Introducing The Delta Force 00:45 - Pivoting from Red Sonja | RIP Chuck Norris 02:12 - The 70s Disaster Movie vs. The 80s Action Movie 08:50 - Alan Silvestri's Soundtrack (Make it Stop!) 10:17 - Production Facts: Lee Marvin, the Budget and Chuck's Deal 11:10 - George Kennedy, Shelley Winters and the Hijacking 15:01 - Separating the Jewish Passengers: The Film's Most Powerful Scene 19:11 - Menahem Golan, the Heat and Shelley Winters 22:11 - McCoy Returns 27:49 - The Cannon Machine Kicks In 29:33 - The Car Chase 36:01 - Steve James: 80s Action's Unsung MVP 41:02 - McCoy's Shortcut and the Logic of Cannon Films 43:19 - Chuck Norris's First Kick (One Hour 48 Minutes In) 46:11 - Abdul's End: The Rocket Launchers 48:06 - Lee Marvin Storms the Plane 51:45 - British Passenger Makes Tea During a Hostage Rescue 52:59 - Chuck Norris, the Runway and the Wig 55:30 - Pete's Death and Chuck Almost Cries 57:37 - The 4th Wall Breaking Smiling Extra, the Ending and the Music 01:00:11 - Final Verdict: Cannon's Accidental Masterpiece 01:05:36 - The Executive Decision Thesis 01:10:07 - The Cheddar Meter Score 01:13:02 - Next Time: No Retreat, No Surrender Subscribe to Screen One for straight-talking film discussion, deep dives, and proper cinema conversation.

    1h 15m
  4. Feb 21

    Dolph Lundgren's DARK ANGEL (1990): Killer CDs, Alien Drug Deals, Huge Explosions & Dolph Goes Dark!

    Dark Angel (1990) a.k.a. I Come In Peace — Dolph goes dark, Baxley lights the fuse.Dark Angel (1990) — released as I Come in Peace in the US — is Craig R. Baxley at his most unhinged: a 90-minute science fiction action movie with more explosions than plot logic, a 7-foot alien harvesting human endorphins to fuel an intergalactic drug trade, and Dolph Lundgren at his physical peak paired with the most caffeinated FBI agent in cinema history.Matt and Malcolm cover the full film: Baxley's stunt coordinator origins (Predator), his Action Jackson and Stone Cold trilogy, Matthias Hues as the most physically credible villain of the early 90s, the Yan Hammer Miami Vice neon-wash soundtrack, Brian Benben as the 5'7" chalk-and-cheese sidekick, and the single greatest one-liner in 90s action cinema.Why did it bomb at the cinema and become a VHS and DVD phenomenon? Why did Dolph's best physical role give him so little to physically do? And what does a Calico M950 submachine gun modified to look like alien technology actually fire?Chapters: 0:00 Introducing Dark Angel / I Come In Peace0:41 Craig R. Baxley’s explosive action background1:25 Record-breaking explosions every 10–15 minutes3:31 Matthias Hues as the B-movie alien villain5:10 Physical presence and Russian general roles6:23 Brian Benben’s 5'7" vs Dolph’s 6'6" casting8:26 Distinctly 90s aesthetic — neon, blues, steam, flames10:07 Random cop murder plot hole16:14 Matching dark suits after police station explosion16:35 Flying CD of death — practical wire-rig effects17:06 “Super Swede” trope — only smart guy in the room21:55 The Undertaker alien arrives in police car23:11 First motel victim — pinned to the floor24:50 Michael J. Pollard as “Boner”25:41 Dare’s “Maggie” soundtrack moment26:38 Jumping storylines and victim-scene structure27:48 Al Leong! as the money man28:13 Dolph meets Matthias — Manning wants revenge31:59 Mini tanks and constant explosions32:51 Modified Calico M950 SMG35:34 Marshmallow blood theory36:28 Switzer meeting — “eggs and omelet” setup37:04 Shooting FBI chief in the fountain37:48 Police car chase — guns and explosions41:21 “And you go in pieces, a*****e” — the one-liner41:55 Happy ending despite FBI murder and city carnage42:25 Benben third-wheeling the romance42:45 Open-ended franchise setup43:05 TV series potential vs movie sequel43:12 Disappointing end credits song43:40 Dolph rarely kicks despite karate skills44:21 Aliens drive most of the action45:13 Wasted potential at Dolph’s physical peak49:00 The Punisher (uncut) comparison — better fights51:11 Next Time: Highlander#DarkAngel #90smovies #DolphLundgren #MatthiasHues #IComeInPeace #essentialcinema

    53 min
  5. 12/07/2025

    Sylvester Stallone’s COBRA (1986) – The 80s Action Film Critics Hated But We Loved

    In this episode of Get to the Chedda, we dive into Sylvester Stallone’s Cobra (1986) – the 80s cop thriller critics trashed but fans turned into a cult classic.We break down why this Sylvester Stallone cop thriller deserves way more respect:• The mythical 2-hour workprint cut that may – or may not – still be sitting in a vault• Arrow Video’s recent 4K release and why the censored TV cut on it is basically a different movie• Peak 80s vibes: light blue stonewash jeans, tight tops, reflective aviators and that iconic toothpick• How Cobra sits alongside Nighthawks as one of Stallone’s most underrated cop movies• Why critics missed the point of Cobra’s pure, unapologetic 80s excessIf you grew up renting this on VHS, or you’ve just discovered it through the new 4K, this one’s for you. Chapters00:00 Introducing Cobra 00:52 Malcom's Opening thoughts 05:28 Cobra's Opening 06:43 Breaking Down The Supermarket Scene 13:56 Cutting Pizza With Scissors 18:10 Gotta Have A Montage! 20:20 ROBOTS! Again. 21:31 Discussing The Car Park Attack 26:28 The Hospital Scene In Depth 42:19 The Car Chase Is Really Cool 49:18 Cobra's Biggest Revelation! 54:18 Bikes and Bullets 58:47 Cobra Goes First Blood 1:01:34 The Closing Sequence, Time For More Confusion 1:09:55 Our Cheese Rating 1:12:38 Final Thoughts and Next Time on Get To The Chedda!Next on Get to the Chedda: Steven Seagal’s Marked For Death – because the only thing more dangerous than 80s crime is 90s ponytails…#Cobra1986 #SylvesterStallone #80sActionMovies #GetToTheChedda #UnderratedMovies

    1h 13m

About

“Get To The Chedda” is the ultimate throwback experience hosted by the dynamic duo, Matt Bourne and Malcom Martin. Join them on a nostalgic journey through the adrenaline-fueled world of 80’s and 90’s action movies. From the explosive stunts to the iconic one-liners, they rewatch these classics, dissecting each scene to see if they hold up against today’s standards. With their infectious humor and insightful commentary, Matt and Malcom dive deep into the heart of these films, exploring the nostalgia while also examining how these action-packed gems resonate in the modern era.