The Weekly Planet - Superman III - Caravan Of Garbage
Episode Date: February 25, 2021Superman 3 is considered by many to be the Superman 3 of the Superman franchise. Lex Luthor is gone along with most of the cast with Christopher Reeve this time playing second fiddle to Richard Pryor... in a movie so bafflingly stupid it makes me question my own sanity and if movies have ever been entertaining or funny. Some good bits though. Anyways thanks for listening!SUBSCRIBE HERE ►► http://goo.gl/pQ39jNVideo Edition ► https://youtu.be/-R2W7o5fP7AJames' Twitter ► http://twitter.com/mrsundaymoviesMaso's Twitter ► http://twitter.com/wikipediabrownPatreon ► https://patreon.com/mrsundaymoviesT-Shirts/Merch ► https://www.teepublic.com/stores/mr-sunday-movies The Weekly Planet iTunes ► https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-weekly-planet/id718158767?mt=2&ign-mpt=uo%3D4 The Weekly Planet Direct Download ► https://play.acast.com/s/theweeklyplanetAmazon Affiliate Link ► https://amzn.to/2nc12P4#Superman #DCComics Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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We are back for Caravan of Garbage.
Complete, not complete, I wish it was completing.
We're doing all the Christopher Reeve Superman movies.
Effortlessly charming Christopher Reeve, great.
Just a shining light in movies of wildly varying quality, in my opinion.
Yeah, it does feel like diminishing returns.
Now, you must be happy watching this one, though,
because Marlon Brando's not in it.
First one that he's not in.
It certainly helps.
Side note, have we mentioned how weird it is that both Marlon Brando
and Russell Crowe have both portrayed Jor-El, Superman's father,
but also pre-Finding Fame in the movies,
Russell Crowe as musical artist Russ LaRock
released a single called I Just Want to Be Like Marlon Brando.
Oh, my goodness.
Do you think that when he got the role as Jor-El,
he was like, the prophecy's true?
The prophecy I said?
Yes. My music is magic and real. The prophecy I said? Yes.
My music is magic and real.
It makes things real and happen.
Now, I'm bringing back 30-odd foot of grunt.
Toeflop, great podcast.
Check it out if you do want to.
You do want to.
Leave a like if you want, Mason.
That'd be great.
Have you left a like this week?
Of course he has.
Look at him.
He's doing it now.
He's done it.
He's absolutely done it.
Did you know Superman 3 was originally called Superman vs. Superman
before they were threatened to be sued by the producers of Kramer vs. Kramer?
Huh.
Yeah.
The non-superhero drama.
Yeah, but...
It's not even Michael Richards Kramer vs. Michael Richards Kramer.
No, absolutely not.
But it is also a confusing film in terms of who's the villain,
where is it going?
Is it a comedy?
Who's the main character?
Is it Superman?
Not really.
Look at the outset.
As you watch it, you get the idea very quickly.
They wanted it to be two things,
and so it just comes across as two separate movies.
One is a Superman movie with not a lot going on really,
and the other is a slapstick
richard pryor comedy where he's like a like he's an unemployed bum and then he it turns out he's
really good with computers and he and he runs a heist and he gets in up up to hijacks and you
know also it's not really a superman movie where one of the major action sequences in this movie
is richard pryor explaining a thing that Superman did
and acting it all out.
They've given him a lot of space to do Richard Pryor stuff.
But it's not good improv at all.
There's a point where he...
He's not bouncing off anybody either.
They all stand there.
Well, exactly.
It seems like they gave direction.
Richard Pryor's going to do some Richard Pryor stuff.
Yeah.
Just everybody else stand there and cop it.
Because there's a point where Superman,
he's come back to Smallville and he's receiving an award on stage
from the people of Smallville.
And Richard Pryor just shows up dressed as a military general
in a Jeep with some kryptonite to kill Superman or impede him in some way.
And then rather than just throw it at him,
he decides to do this thing where he's going to also present Superman
with an award and he does a big monologue about the military or something.
I don't remember what the monologue was about because it went for a while.
Yeah.
Yeah. But it wasn't good. It wasn't bad wasn't bad did you know though i like him in things so do i but not this but not this particular thing which i hadn't seen since i was a kid i think this is
my second viewing of this yeah well yeah exciting isn't it so he was also you know he was obviously
a big name at the time and like brando he was paid like a staggering amount of money,
$5 million.
And he's famously,
like I said,
he did it for the money.
He also had like a crippling drug addiction at the time.
And he hated the movie.
He was like,
it's a bad movie.
Everybody in this movie hates this movie.
A lot of people who weren't in this movie hated this movie.
I'm going to off the top of my head.
I'm going to guess Gene Hackman hated this movie.
Sure.
Because he's not in it,
so they just replaced Lex Luthor with a guy
who was basically Lex Luthor but less interesting.
Yeah, he's less interesting,
but he also does more Lex Luthor stuff.
Like he's a rich, successful businessman.
He's running multiple businesses.
Well, one's coffee and one's oil.
Maybe he's doing other things.
Those are the two that I remember him mentioning.
But this movie's just slapstick city, really. They've really just ramp ramped that up and i don't think there's a better example of this
than when richard pryor takes a set of skis and just skis off the roof of a skyscraper and then
he isn't saved by superman or anybody anybody he just falls off a roof and then lands and then
falls off another roof and then ends up on the street. Oh, side note, this movie opens and it reveals to us that Metropolis is like the world's worst Rube Goldberg machine.
I wrote this.
It's just a series of like interlinked domino style disasters that are constantly happening.
And as I'm watching this, I'm like, oh, that guy's, you know, that guy's going to fall off this bridge.
And these telephone booths have crashed together
and the car's going to crash or whatever.
And the bank robber runs out or whatever.
I'm guessing that Superman is going to whoosh in
and he's going to solve everybody's problems.
He's going to rescue this person.
He's going to stop that bank robber.
He doesn't.
He stops like one guy.
And the penguin.
Yeah, he blows out a flaming penguin
and he rescues a guy from drowning in a car.
But the rest, everybody else, like the blind...
The robber gets away.
The robber gets away.
That guy falls in a ditch.
A blind man...
He hits a guy in the face with a pie.
Yeah.
The blind man walks through a valuable painting.
I don't know.
What was this meant to show us beyond the Superman...
Hijinks.
It's a Richard Lester movie.
Richard Lester loves the hijinks.
There's a moment in the movie
where a husband thinks that his wife
has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars,
so he just smushes a grapefruit into her face
and then just continues to eat it.
There's a moment where the two crosswalk guys
getting a little punch up,
a little animated punch up.
The little electronic guys in the traffic signals, yeah.
Why does he do things like this?
Richard Lester.
Yeah.
I don't know because it's funny.
It's not funny.
It's not funny.
It wasn't funny at the time.
You caught my bluff.
It wasn't funny.
It's also a bit confusing in terms of like what year this is supposed to be
because it came out in 83, right?
Yeah.
But Gus Gorman's Chex,
it also reads 1983.
That's Richard Pryor's character.
Correct.
The 20th century,
oh, sorry,
the 20th high school reunion of Clark Kent
appears to be set in 1985
because he's from class of 65.
Okay.
And the Olympics are also happening
which happened in the summer of 84.
But I guess it's a comic book world
and all these things happen.
Yeah.
Again, there's a statue of world and all these things happen yeah again
there's a statue of liberty in metropolis yes there is yeah you're right what am i doing i
want to talk about chris reeve though because you said that he is the beacon of light and hope and
charm and you know what this is a worse movie but he's looking better than ever quite frankly it
looks great now dig on this james yeah his evil version of superman is what evil version of toby
mcguire spider-Man wishes he could be.
His hair's looking great.
He's got the perfect amount of five o'clock shadow.
The suit is dark and just dark enough.
He's got like a darker tint, like a tan.
He's had a spray tan.
Yeah, that's right.
Here's the thing about the hair, though.
I didn't realize this.
Christopher Reeve suffered from alopecia, not male pattern baldness.
You know alopecia where you get the random spots.
So in three and four, he's wigged up.
Huh.
Yeah.
Well, it's a really good wig.
I agree.
It's terrific.
But yeah, you're right.
He's never looked better.
And on top of that, he puts in 100% despite not wanting to do this movie since Richard
Donner was fired from The Last.
They were looking to replace him.
So again, they went on the hunt around Hollywood for names.
I've got more names, Mason.
Great.
Travolta.
Huh.
Jeff Bridges.
Okay.
Kurt Russell.
Hmm.
They settled.
These options are better than the last ones.
I agree.
Why Dustin Hoffman?
Well, here's what they apparently settled on.
Yes.
They settled on Tony Danza.
Look, I'm not 100 against it i guess yeah i
guess yeah but uh apparently they pleaded with reeve uh like days before it all came together
and he agreed only if he could change the script and he did uh to some extent but i think though
he he brought things to this which i think add to the story in a big way because when he goes back
to smallville i was watching some interviews of him,
he makes the decision to go,
well, I don't need to put on this bumbling persona
because I grew up here,
so I can just act as the person that they knew me as then,
like just 20 years on,
because he's not doing as much tripping over stuff
and all that kind of thing.
That's true, yeah.
He's much cooler and calmer.
And he's very much like at one point he stands up against, I guess,
his bully in this movie.
He's like, oh, I'm going to show this kid how to bowl.
And he's like, you let the kid can bowl on his own
and I will destroy this bowling alley.
And everybody hit it.
Yeah.
And look, they didn't replace Reeve.
No.
But they did their darndest to replace, well, I mean, Hackman.
Yeah.
But also, speaking of Smallville, they did replace Lois Lane.
Margot Kidder is Lois Lane, essentially with Annette O'Toole as Lana Lang.
Lois Lane appears right at the start and she's like, I've got to go.
I'm on holiday.
Yeah.
Five minutes, 12 lines.
And then she shows up at the end and she's like, I'm back.
And the movie is essentially like well guess what
you've been replaced with this new person and she's got a diamond ring from clark kent and then
she just goes oh and then that's the end and i guess she got fired or died between movies because
she's not in the next one yeah right yeah i think annette o'toole's great though honestly i mean
she obviously shows up in smallville later i have to say that because people will tell us.
As Martha Kent, that's right.
Yeah, that's right.
But yeah, Margot Kidder, they said that, look,
her relationship with Clark Kent, it ran its course
because she got her memory wiped.
So that relationship essentially no longer exists anymore.
I see the logic there.
I guess.
Okay, fair enough.
But also you could have just not mind wiped her at the end of the last one.
Yes, that's right.
And that would have been fine.
Speaking of replaced though, they use Christopher Reeve's high school photo as opposed to Jeff
East who played young Christopher Reeve in the first Superman movie who they put on a
wig and prosthetics and also dubbed over his voice with Chris Reeve and he didn't know
that and for years they had this kind of beef.
They proused him.
They proused him.
David Proust did.
That's right.
And then they went, we're also taking you out of this david prowse was christopher
reeves trainer on the previous movie so they probably heard him talking about how they
stole his identity as darth vader and they went what a great idea i agree yeah good stuff all
around uh yeah that being said i think the the tiny snippets of like interact i think the cast for the most part seem
to have settled into their roles in this yeah like if they'd given them a better movie and more chance
to you know to interact because i think the the tiny interactions we had between clark and lois
and jimmy olsen and perry white i think they were actually kind of the best from from sure as opposed
to previous ones but again they got a minute each.
I also think there's some really decent Superman-ing in this.
There's the fire scene where he uses the lake to put it out and he grabs the big pipe and they all slide down it.
You see him kind of problem solving.
Yeah, right.
And I think that's genuinely good Superman stuff.
There's also too much acid in this movie.
There's a whole room of acid.
There's more acid than all the other Superman movies put together, as far as I know. So's a whole room of acid. There's more acid than all the other
Superman movies put together as far as I know.
So there's a room of acid.
There's a pit of acid in the Superman
V Superman fight which we will talk about.
And at the end he uses a loose jar
of acid to destroy the computer.
And in a way I'm like well this is
better than flying backwards through time
or whatever because they foreshadowed it.
They're like don't get this acid hot,
otherwise it'll acid everything.
What if it's a different type of acid?
All acid's the same, we think.
We're pretty sure.
There's also another Superman moment that I really love
is the bit where he goes into the photo booth,
takes the photos, and he rips it off,
and he takes the time to go, here you go, kidney,
and he runs off.
He gives the kid the Superman photo,
but not the three where he's changing into Superman.
Yeah, a funny joke from Richard Lester.
You've got to give it to him, James.
I wouldn't even say it's a funny joke.
I would say it's just a moment that feels authentically Superman.
Yeah.
I also like the transition where he runs behind the fence
and he kind of changes into Superman.
I know there is that kind of weird fade as he does it,
but I think that's a cool kind of image as well.
You know what I mean?
That kind of feels like a comic book transition.
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C'est R-A-K-U-T-E-N. Like, we don't like this. So instead, it'll be about the computer guy
and also a guy who wants to make a killing in coffee and oil
and then they build a big computer
and Superman fights a big computer.
So the computer is like a hangover from,
that was supposed to be like a Brainiac invention.
Yeah, right.
And the villain, the Lex Luthor knockoff,
was supposed to be Brainiac, right? Was that the idea? My guess would be that he was going, the Lex Luthor knockoff, was supposed to be Brainiac, right?
Was that the idea?
My guess would be that he was going to be Lex Luthor.
No, I think he was supposed to be Brainiac.
Oh, not teaming up with Lex Luthor.
No, he was hiding out on Earth or whatever.
Because Brainiac's all about computers or whatever.
Sure, yeah.
But it's really, it's not very...
He's a real Brainiac, that guy.
I mean, you think he's going to get someone to punch at the end
when the computer builds a
robot which i remember seeing as a kid and just being like well that's the most terrifying thing
it's the face and the wig on top of the horrible yeah it's really hard but then he just kind of
zaps her and she kind of tumbles into a little ditch yeah and then he fights a computer and it's
just like shifting parts and lasers and it's just it's nothing and full credit to chris reeve because
he really looks like he's giving it his all flatten that computer but imagine if it was
like a big robot skull because it's actually brainiac exactly good it's also i mean not good
probably but okay here's a joke probably richard pryor who's inexplicably good at computers is
schematic for the computer just looks like something a child made just like on my computer
it's got look it's got this many batteries and this many hard drives and it's got a big screen
as big as a face or whatever and you know what i mean it's just like i don't know that's most
that's a gag right who knows i should just assume it's all gags right no because it was also in that
point it was also that era like at one point somebody think i think unironically says the
ultimate computer yeah so I don't know.
Well, I think he says something like, this is like a regular computer,
but it can do a thousand more things.
Wow, a thousand, huh?
That's pretty good.
Can it play ski free?
Can it turn a person into a robot?
Yep.
Or play ski free.
You can't do both at the same time.
Well, yeah, processing power, obviously.
So even though we do have, like, a villainous computer
and a sort of villainous Richard Pryor
and a man who's sort of Lex Luthor or Brainiac.
And a couple of henchwomen.
A couple of henchwomen as well, yeah.
Including Billy Connolly's wife.
Yes, that's right.
Pamela Stevenson, Lady Connolly.
And a woman who's a psychiatrist in addition to being an actor.
Really? I did not know that.
And a woman also who's just referred to as being comically old and ugly,
where she just looks like a...
To me, she looks like a regular person.
And that's Robert Vaughan's sister?
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
And a butler who appears briefly.
Oh, there's a butler, isn't there?
Yeah.
I like his little 80s hideout, his skyscraper situation.
It's good.
It's better than living in the sewers.
I agree.
But no, the villain of this piece, I would say,
that people remember is evil Superman.
And I think the next movie went,
what if we just did evil Superman for the whole movie?
Well, see, I think I've been, for years,
I've been confusing elements of the last two movies
because I remember, like from watching it as a kid,
I remember him, I thought maybe they created an evil – the computer created an evil Superman.
But ultimately he just, you know, Superman became evil for a little bit
and then fought an illusion of himself, which makes me wonder,
was it like a Fight Club scenario?
Are there a bunch of, like, junkyard workers just looking at a Superman
beating himself up and throwing himself through walls?
I thought they were both real because they're both physically, like,
hitting things. He really looked like he went in that trash compactor as well. They did that for real. Because they're both physically, like, hitting things.
He really looked like he went in that trash compactor as well.
They did that for real.
Obviously, it wasn't a real trash compactor.
But didn't it look like that he was actually getting crushed in that?
Giving 110%.
I completely agree.
Yeah.
Also, I thought-
Maybe he was.
Maybe he does split into two.
I'm not sure.
I don't know.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know.
There's some pretty-
I think it's just junkyard workers looking at Superman going,
stop hitting yourself.
Stop hitting yourself.
I wish that they hung around to see that fight
because they're all like, let's get out of here.
A man or two men are going insane and we should go.
Superman's going to beat up that guy who works at IBM.
So, but the reason though He turns evil
Is because
Again
It was revealed
In an interview
That Kryptonite
Is his weakness
And that's why
They attempt to make Kryptonite
And they fill in the blanks
With tar
And that's what turns him evil
But again
It's the same as the first movie
Maybe don't tell everybody
Your weakness is Superman
What's wrong with you?
Yeah
What are you doing?
Yeah
Maybe he just loves a scoop
Maybe that's true, yeah.
Yeah.
So some of his evil acts are he straightens the leaning tower of Pisa
and two just very dirty Italians in front of a green screen.
They're not having it, are they, Mason?
No.
But they get two scenes.
They get two scenes.
Which makes me wonder if they were famous at the time.
Maybe.
Maybe there was some sort of dirty Italian comedic duo.
Maybe they're famous in Italy.
I don't know.
Maybe they are.
Maybe they're Mario Puzo's friends.
That's entirely possible.
He puts out the Olympic flame.
Which made me wonder,
what do they do if the Olympic flame actually does go up?
I think they have a spare,
like they have a reserve, like one.
Also, who cares, really?
No, I don't care.
It's fire.
It doesn't matter.
It's true.
It's all the same, isn't it?
Yeah.
So what happens is they're about to put it
into the big Olympic fireball thing
and it goes out and then an announcer comes out
and he looks directly at the crowd and he goes,
you saw nothing.
None of you saw anything.
Shut your mouth.
They do the slit throat pose.
Absolutely, yeah.
He also gets drunk.
Yep.
Famously in the Bars,ickin' Peanuts.
Didn't think he could do that.
In the new Superman and Lois, the trailer for the new show,
that Superman goes, man, I wish I could get drunk sometimes.
Yeah, me too, Superman.
Maybe if you're on Kryptonite.
Maybe if you're on Tar Kryptonite, you can.
Yeah, you can get drunk, exactly.
And one of the final acts is he breaks open an oil tanker for sex.
That's right, yeah. And then I completely- But haven't we all, you know? But I completely forgot this. He breaks open an oil tanker for sex.
And then I completely forgot this because then immediately after he flies back to the woman's house and then has sex with her.
Like it cuts to black.
But then what I find hilarious when they meet up at the end, he goes down to fight the robot and she goes, oh, didn't it mean anything to you?
Whatever.
And he goes, lady, I don't know you. but the thing is right direct quote but he would have had to have known her because he knew
to go and fix the oil tanker you know what i mean he's just like i would never not me i'm superman
i don't i don't do that and i guess if you're superman you could be like these aren't my kids
i was on gold kryptonite at the time couldn't have been been. It was my double? Evil double. I don't know.
Also, he went to her apartment after he turned good and there was the message waiting for him.
That's a good point.
He clearly remembers.
And they were like, Superman, come to us if you dare.
And then they're like, we'll defeat him.
We're on little chairs with balloons attached.
He'll fall into this trap where we just shoot rockets at an invincible man.
Yeah, exactly. Also, that's not how computer games work. You don't get points if you miss a target. he'll fall into this trap where we just shoot rockets at an invincible man yeah exactly
also that's not how computer games work
you don't get points if you miss a target
you don't get points for trying Robert Vaughn
no well I was going to save this for trivia
but I think most of our trivia has been used already
oh no I've got one piece that I'll keep for later
but the video game
folks look forward to our new segment
one piece of trivia
the video game Webster Plays
was created for the film.
It originally looked so...
Really?
Yes, I know.
I love this.
It originally looked so lifelike that the creators were asked
to make it more computer-like.
I bet it didn't.
Can you imagine how lifelike it would have tricked audiences?
Yeah.
What is this?
We don't understand.
Jesus.
Yeah.
But I do love that evil Superman fight.
Again, I think it's good Superman stuff.
Again, it's 110% Christopher Reeve acting.
That face-off is good.
They're just hitting each other with car parts and whatever.
And it ends with him strangling himself to death.
Yeah, so I just thoroughly enjoyed that.
It's good solid work.
It's good fun.
I agree.
And you know the bit where the computer hits him with radiation?
Yes.
That's from the comics apparently.
So maybe they took that from the comics or maybe, as in with most of these movies,
they didn't read any comics and anything that's the same is probably a coincidence. Maybe coincidence maybe yeah i mean superman's been shot with so many kryptonite lasers at this
point you know what i mean though that being said there was something similar used in the death of
superman so maybe the death of superman copied from this huh there you go also just if you're
fighting a big computer right if you were fighting a big computer if i said mason i need you to fight
this big computer uh i would uh and you were superman would computer, if I said, Mason, I need you to fight this big computer. I would. And you were Superman.
Would you just stand around or would you just fly through it?
Yeah, I'd probably go into space and grab a meteor and then just drop it on the continent.
Yeah, exactly.
Freeze breath, heat vision, super clap.
Or give it the clap, am I right?
Lady, I don't know you, all right?
It was purple kryptonite this time. I don't know you, all right? It was purple kryptonite this time.
I don't know.
Yeah.
So here's a fun bit of trivia, and I'm just going to leave it at this.
One piece of trivia.
One piece of trivia, Office Space.
Look, if you've seen Office Space, you know what I'm talking about.
Yeah, that's right.
It's one of those things you have to mention, don't you?
Yeah.
Watch Office Space if you haven't because it's much better than this. But if you've seen Superman
3, you'll get what I'm talking about in Office Space when you watch Office Space. Yeah. So after
this, Christopher Reeve, who was, as I mentioned, very reluctant to return, was like, I'm done with
this. And his reasoning was that he felt there was only so much he could kind of do with the
character. And he said similarly of James Bond, after Connery left,
he didn't think the portrayals of James Bond
and what they were doing with them,
they were kind of becoming too far-fetched and a bit ridiculous.
And so I guess he wasn't a fan of like the Roger Moore era
and, you know, the things that he was around for at that time.
You're talking about Sean Connery?
Yeah, so he liked Sean Connery, but he didn't like the Roger Moore stuff.
I should say, yeah.
But Connery also did come back in 83 for a Bond movie.
He did, that's true.
It's neither here nor there.
But, of course, he was talked back into returning for Superman 4,
A Quest for Peace.
That's right.
More like A Quest for Piss, probably, am I right?
We'll come back, we'll talk about it, won't we, next week?
Batman v Superman, The Quest for Piss.
Oh, did you see the, I was watching some behind-the-scenes thing as well,
and there's a moment where Batman runs out of the computer,
a guy in like a Batman costume.
What?
It's just in a, it's an out, it's like an outtake.
Like a prank.
Like a prank.
I love pranks.
And you love jokes, and that's why you love this movie, Superman 3.
I didn't hate it as much as I thought it would.
I don't think it was very good.
Nah.
But there were some good scenes.
I agree.
Because I was going into this like,
I don't think I'm going to be able to enjoy this at all.
But there was
some things in here which I thought were fine
I think you could take all the various good bits
out of these movies and make a solid 10 minute
YouTube video about it
it would be incomprehensible
it would be a random selection of scenes
but boy
would it be a random collection of scenes
wouldn't it ever
we do do this every week.
And if you didn't want them early, you can actually go to Big Sandwich.
Do do.
Do do.
I know, right?
Quest for piss.
If you go to BigSandwich.com and sign up, they always go up there early.
Because Ben, who edits these, he gets them done a little bit early, doesn't he, Mason?
That's right.
Just for us.
He goes above and beyond.
He really does.
So they go up there.
But we also have bonus podcasts, including one on clickbait,
including one on particular years in pop culture.
That's right.
We go through them.
We do a bunch of movie commentaries, don't we?
That's right.
And we do a comic book club.
Yes.
We probably did The Death of Superman, or we're going to, aren't we?
Oh, we could, couldn't we?
Yeah.
We definitely should, yeah.
That scene with the laser.
Oh, my God.
Can you imagine it?
It's a big laser.
I mean, I've seen it.
I saw it in this, so I could see it in a comic. Less moving, though. Yeah, that's true, isn't it? I'll just move the page really quick back and forth. Yeah, that has a big laser. I mean, I've seen it. I saw it in this. So I could see it in a comic.
Less moving, though.
Yeah, that's true, isn't it?
I'll just move the page really quick back and forth.
Yeah, that's a good call.
But also, of course, we have a podcast called The Weekly Funnet
where we talk movies and comics and TV shows.
That comes out every Monday.
If you do want to check it out, we do the news of the week
and then we do a particular topic and we just get into it, don't we?
And then we say, sometimes we say what we've been reading or watching that week.
Sometimes it's hours of a terrible TV show or something because we're doing one of these videos. Exactly. get into it, don't we? And then we say, sometimes we say what we've been reading or watching that week. That's right.
Sometimes it's hours
of a terrible TV show
or something
because we're doing
one of these videos.
Exactly.
Sometimes I'm like,
I don't have time
to watch anything else.
We watched all of the Inhumans.
Oh my God,
but it was worth it
in the end, wasn't it?
Well, it's worth it
because we don't have
to watch it again.
That's true,
we never have to watch it again.
Oh, I'm never going to have
to watch Superman 3 ever again.
No, that's true.
Anyway, thanks everyone for watching, though.
We appreciate it.
That's right.
Grab that gem, you guys.
We'll see you next week.
Goodbye.
This podcast is part of the Planet Broadcasting Network.
Visit planetbroadcasting.com for more podcasts from our great mates.
I mean, if you want.
It's up to you.
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