A Lifetime of Happiness: Movies, TV, and Video Games

Our Favorite Movies Part 2

June 14, 2023 Steve Bennet-Martin, Stephen Martin-Bennet Season 1 Episode 175
A Lifetime of Happiness: Movies, TV, and Video Games
Our Favorite Movies Part 2
Show Notes Transcript

The Steve's continue discussing their favorite movies across genres, focusing on categories like LGBT+ movies and different horror genres in this second part!

Ending- Any music or audio clips were borrowed from the original source material.

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Steve:

Hello, returning Happys and new listeners. This is

Stephen:

Steve Bennett Martin, and this is Steven Martin Bennett, and welcome to a Lifetime of Happiness.

Steve:

The podcast will be taking you on our journey through some of the movies, shows, and games and other things that are helping to keep us happy in pop culture, while hopefully bring a smile to your face along the way.

Stephen:

And today we are continuing with part two. Of the first annual Happy Awards. The Happys. The Happys, yes. And we're doing the movies right now. Yes. We got halfway

Steve:

through last episode. So if you didn't want listen, tune into that one to hear us talk about some of our favorite genres, like adventures and science fiction and other things. I don't remember cuz it happened a

week

Stephen:

ago. Yep. And we're doing them of all time and next year we're gonna do them. Things that came out the previous year. So this year we're jamming, you know, over a hundred years of movie making. Into one podcast. Yes.

Steve:

Well, what would you say are some of your favorite coming of age

Stephen:

movies? Ugh. Well, this one was easy for me. The first one is one that you don't care for at all. I

Steve:

love the Goonies. You've

Stephen:

never seen The Goonies? I've tried. You fell asleep? Yes, but yes, it's The Goonies. It's an iconic movie From the eighties, a group of kids and teens go on a mission to save their homes. Or have one last adventure before they're forced to go their separate ways. Has an incredible cast including Sean Aston, Josh Brolin, Corey Feldman, Martha Plimpton, Kawan, and there's a scene in there with a water slide, and I wanted to do that water slide so much. I love that movie that you have one ied, Willie the Pirate. You have sloth with the, Hey you guys. Yeah. Cool. It's a great movie. Awesome. What about you? What's one of your favorite coming of age movies? I thought for

Steve:

this of American Pie, cuz it came out when I was in high school and while it didn't resemble what high school life was like in the real world whatsoever, it was a fun fantasy high school world. And, and it's

Stephen:

classy. It's

Steve:

classy. I love my high brow humor. Plus I was in band. Surprise, surprise. So I love the one time at

Stephen:

band camp, what I, what instrument did you play? Percussion. Me too.

Steve:

Yes. And you have another one that I'm an also huge fan of and I love so

Stephen:

much. Yeah, it's dirty dancing because nobody puts baby in the corner. It's the T story of Teenager Baby and Dance Instructor Johnny Castle as they discover love in themselves. And the Catskills has an incredible soundtrack and that final dance with the lift will forever be iconic. Yes. For sure. What about you? What's one more coming of age movie for you? Love

Steve:

Simon. Cuz I wish it's a movie that existed when I was in high school.

Stephen:

Oh yeah. That is definitely a movie that I think all young queer kids should

Steve:

watch. Speaking of queer kids, what are your favorite lgbtqia plus? Movies.

Stephen:

Okay, so my first one is Connie and Carla. Connie and Carla witness a murder and go into hiding as two drag queens in West Hollywood. Ne Verde, Los and Tony Kle are the stars. There's live singing, bonding with Queens. It warms my heart and makes me sing along, and this is for me a definition of a happy movie.

Steve:

Yes. Similarly, I also chose a movie you agreed with Chew Bon Fu.

Stephen:

Yes, it's truly an amazing film. Three drag queens going across the country for a competition. Car breaks down in the middle of nowhere. They have to spend the weekend with people they never would've met otherwise. The town changes them and they change the town. It's beautiful. Funny. Stocker Channing's. Amazing. I could watch that movie. All the time. Awesome. And I also really enjoy the Broken Hearts Club. I was gonna put Trick, but this was the movie when I first came out that really touched my soul. It's funny and romantic, and it captured a moment in time in gay culture. And it also happens to have Dean Kane be before, before he became a horrible bigot. Well, there you go. What about you? What's one more gay movie for

Steve:

you? I have no idea how it aged, but when I came out I loved the original eating out because it was like just when I was like in college or just fresh out of coll. Oh, there was like a college age-ish. Yeah. And it kind of like captured very much like of that time and that feeling.

Stephen:

I definitely think the second one is the best one in the series.

Steve:

Yes. And eventually they just became camp. Yes. But the first one had that like awkwardness where you were like,

Stephen:

oh, it was super,

Steve:

super awkward. But I'm, but like, that's what, like dating and living and hooking up like in your twenties, early twenties was like, at least for me, was like super duper awkward. So I'm like, it was, it was, yeah. I, like I said, I, the whole series ended being fun. Watches overall, but nothing groundbreaking.

Stephen:

Now we're going to get into some of our favorite. Genres And we're going to start with,

Steve:

they're all scary movies. Yes. And I always remember to turn my phone off found silent before we start recording. Yes. I apologize

Stephen:

for that. Everyone. I had a spam call and. Usually you don't get spam calls this late in the day,

Steve:

but Yes. Well, speaking of the calls, one of my favorite psychological thrillers is the call. Oh,

Stephen:

with Halle Berry. My goodness, that movie was so intense. I remember we were trying to like cuddle on the couch and watch it.

Steve:

Yeah. And, but like we couldn't touch each other, but we need to be close to each other and like, we had to be upright

Stephen:

and it was just, oh, it was. It was intense. Yes. And that one is probably my favorite Halle Berry movie of all time.

Steve:

I would take it. And then what else do you love?

Stephen:

Silence of the Lambs.

Steve:

Yes. We covered an episode about that where you talked to how much you love

Stephen:

it. Yep. It's a truly exceptional movie. The scenes with Jodi Foster and Anthony Hopkins are legendary and there's so many quotes like the fava beans or the lotion on the skin. And it's as good today as when it came out. And that's a, a testament a while ago. Yeah.

Steve:

Yes. And then I also love get out from recent times. That was like a, taking the psychological thriller to a new level while making it modern.

Stephen:

Oh my goodness. In, it's so, so good. And, you know, there was the twist at the end that I didn't see coming, like, we're the keys? We're the keys, you know? Mm-hmm. I'm sorry, I can't give you the keys and you're like, oh, son of a bitch. Yeah. My other favorite psychological thriller is the Game. Mm-hmm. The game's a movie that when you first see it, it feels like something you've never, ever seen before in terms of movie making and things. And even though it's an older movie, I won't spoil any of it in case somebody hasn't seen it like me. And if you haven't, go watch it. Michael Douglas is exceptional and there's something truly, truly magic about the first time seeing this movie. Go see it.

Steve:

Yes. And what about favorite supernatural horror

Stephen:

movies? Ugh, so sinister is one like. So this list is one that I could like list out 10 movies easily. Yes. But we'll narrow it down to my two. So Sinister was a movie that scared me so much and it stuck with me for a while. Scott Derickson is the director. He's also responsible for the black phone from this last year. And the home movies in this movie were legitimately scary. And as you found out more, it just got creepier. I had gone to see this. In St. Pete with Jessica and Donnish and on the way back, I swear I saw the sinister guy on the side of the Skyway Bridge.

Steve:

Yeah, that's one that stuck with me. A as did Insidious as well. Similarly came out, I believe, around that same timeframe, and it was like a Onet twoo punch of really great, a hard

Stephen:

Oh yeah. Yeah. The first insidious is just, Woo.

Steve:

Yes. And you have another one that I vaguely remember you having me watch

Stephen:

Dead silence. It's James won and Lee one l. Give us the story of Mary Shaw. She had no children, only dolls Suki Stack house's brother has to go back to his hometown and get involved in the mystery of Mary Shaw and her killer ventriloquist dummies. And I thought this one was campy and out there, but also genuinely creepy. Yes, and I also

Steve:

love the final destination movies. The first one in particular, if I have to choose one, I feel like the first one. It's probably the best in terms of like replayability and standing on its own and being more about the the horror and less about the campy

Stephen:

deaths. Right, because if you're talking about iconic deaths, it's the beginning of the second one, which no one will ever be behind a log truck again. Exactly.

Steve:

Yes. But I love the final destination movies.

Stephen:

Let's talk about some found footage, horror movies.

Steve:

Yes. You started off with one that you think counts, explain and

Stephen:

defend yourself. Okay. So I think it counts its host and this was the movie that came out during the pandemic and was filled, filmed via Zoom. Oh yeah. That counts. Where the girls decide to have a seance and end up bringing forth a spirit that haunts them all. It's a really fast movie cuz it's like an hour and 20 minutes tops, if that much. Mm-hmm. And it has legitimate scares. I remember the. It legit, like we screamed. It was,

Steve:

yeah. It was scary. Especially during the time that it came out of Round the pandemic and all that. Yep. Yes. And I mean, I have to give nod to the film that basically invented the genre besides

Stephen:

Blair Witch. Okay. I was gonna say, you can't not mention Blair

Steve:

Witch, but, but like after Blair Witch. It's not like everyone started doing it.

Stephen:

No, you're absolutely right. I

Steve:

feel like paranormal activity happened and then, and then everyone did one, but Paranormal activity is the one who then took the concept that was established in Blair Witch and turned it into a truly horrifying experience. Right,

Stephen:

because I think that paranormal activity took it and made it something you could re-watch. Where I know there's some people that love the Blair Witch. But there are a lot of people that were let down. Yeah. After the Blair Witch I

Steve:

And I think paranormal activity was also more relatable cuz everyone can have that moment where you wonder if the house that you are in, whether it's the one you live in full-time or the house you're staying in is haunted. Yeah. And so a plus on paranormal activity, the first one, not the entire series, it's had its ups and

Stephen:

downs, it's had its ups and downs. I really enjoyed the second one in that one too. Cool Beans. Yeah.

Steve:

What, what next? Thank you.

Stephen:

That's not dismissive at all. Not

Steve:

at all. I love you.

Stephen:

I also enjoyed Hell House llc. I don't remember this one. So after an accident at a haunted house attraction, a documentary crew further investigates and makes further discoveries. There's a lot of silences in the movie and mounting tension and the setting works really well, and it had a cliffhanger ending that gave us two more in the series. And we have not seen the other two. We have seen the first one, but it's probably during a period you won't

Steve:

remember. Okay. Well, I do remember when we watched Grave Encounters, which was. One That was surprisingly good. It's so good. And you were, you went in with low to no expectations,

Stephen:

very low expectations, and I was pleasantly surprised and thoroughly entertained. And that is one that does not get enough credit. Yes.

Steve:

The second one made things more confusing I feel, than they needed to be agreed. But the first one was awesome. Yes. And what about survival Horror movies? We have to survive.

Stephen:

So for me, one of those is definitely the purge. Oh yeah, for sure. So the first three in the series I think are truly amazing. If you don't know about it for 12 hours, all crime, including murder, is absolutely legal. And some people who can afford it lock themselves away in their homes. Some people go out to take part in the murderous purge, and then of course there's the poor people that can't afford protection and are left to fend for themselves. It has a lot to say about racism, privilege, and what people will do when they abandon their morals. Oh, he is a

Steve:

good ride. Yes. But it's while people are getting murdered, so it's also fun.

Stephen:

Yes. Now what about you? What's one survival horror for you? A quiet place. So

Steve:

good was just a, again, just. I went in not knowing what to expect, that I was not expecting to have that kind of cinematic brilliance. Oh. And like reinventing and taking like, like individual pieces that you've seen before, but putting them into a story that you've never seen in a setting with the, with using audio and just, it was brilliant

Stephen:

watch, and especially coming from written and directed by the guy from the office. Like, yes. You didn't expect it. I didn't

Steve:

see that coming

Stephen:

at all. No. One of my other favorites is the shallows. Yes. A young woman goes to a beach that meant a lot to her mother. She's surfing 200 yards off the shore when she's attacked by a great white shark. And it becomes a contest of wills to get to shore and to get to safety. And it's interesting when I like there are more characters in the movie than her, but not many. And I think she deserves a lot of credit for carrying that movie all on her own. Yes. And what about you? What's one more survival? Horror for you?

Steve:

The dissent was just, I never want to go exploring caves. Yeah. Ever. Well, just kidding. I would do it still, but I would be terrified. But it would, I would be doing it being terrified because now I associate it with spelunking with like, Murderous cave creatures killing you and all your

Stephen:

friends. The one type of thing I would not want to do in cave exploring is where you have to get on your belly to get through a narrow space. That sets up one of my like phobias of getting stuck. Oh,

Steve:

and similarly, if you were in a cave where to get to the next section of the cave, you had to go underwater and. Swim a certain distance before you can resurface. Yeah, I also wouldn't like

Stephen:

that very much. Yeah. That goes back to my pose decided adventure phobia. So yeah, I understand that

Steve:

it was, it is very effective at making that setting very terrifying.

Stephen:

Yeah. Now, Let's talk about some Monster movies. Well, what's your

Steve:

favorite

Stephen:

Monster movie? So I have several. Of course you do, because I love Monster movies. I do. I tried to

Steve:

include too, that you would also like or have things

Stephen:

to say and you and one of them I was going to pick, so, but one is crawl a woman heads to Central Florida to check on her father to evacuate him before a hurricane. And then a levee breaks in alligators and floods, trap them in the house and they have to do what they can to survive and escape. Also of Note, rogue, not the X-Men, the movie from Australia, but a huge Crocodile is another favorite monster movie. It's hard to choose between the two. They're both great. I'll go with crawl

Steve:

though. Yeah. And I am just surprised that Tremors, I only watched it as an adult and I would've loved watching it growing up as a kid. Like tremors is made for like teenage

Stephen:

kids. Oh, it came out when I was. Like seven or eight, something like that. I mean, it's

Steve:

so amazing. Like it's just such a fun time.

Stephen:

Oh, and Reba McIntyre is so good in it. And Kevin ba like, it makes you

Steve:

pro-gun,

Stephen:

I mean, against those things for damn sure. Yes, yes. No tremors. I've seen every movie in the series. Obviously none of them are as strong as the first one. Yeah. But they're all a good time. Yes. And you, I also enjoy the thing, John Carpenter's version. It's a story about a team in Antarctica hunted by a shape-shifting alien that assumes the appearance of its victims. The practical effects are amazing. Kurt Russell is fantastic, and it's just another fabulous John Carpenter film.

Steve:

Excellent. And then I chose it. The new one, not the old one because I, I feel like it is a monster movie. It is a monster. It is a monster. It is just

Stephen:

terrifying. Yes. And the new one did a lot of things really, really good. It's hard to. You know, one up. Tim Curry's, Pennywise. Mm-hmm. But overall, the new movies are better than the original. Yes.

Steve:

Agreed. And what about you can't watch people get butchered without giggling and teeing sometimes, cuz we're all sadistic. So what about your favorite comedy horror movies?

Stephen:

So my favorite comedy horror movie is Beetlejuice. Yes. It's a legendary, iconic movie with a cast that can't be beaten. He has amazing musical numbers, has great laughs, has those ski sand worms that scared me as a child. You've got Gina Davis, Winona Rider, Michael Keaton, Alec Baldwin. Catherine O'Hara. Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice.

Steve:

For whatever reason, those three different keywords will make it one of your most popular podcast episodes too. For absolutely no reason. I

Stephen:

maybe it's just that good

Steve:

of an episode. I don't know, listeners, you tell us, cuz for whatever reason, Beetlejuice is our number one episode. Yeah. So go back and listen to it and tell us if you think it is the best episode by emailing us at happy life pod gmail.com.

Stephen:

What about you? What's. A comedy horror movie you enjoy. We spent another

Steve:

episode gushing about the cabin in the woods. Oh. Which is just taking the comedy horror and like re focusing on the horror, but remembering the comedy in it and Oh, cuz

Stephen:

it's still really funny.

Yeah.

Steve:

And yeah, chef's kiss with what they did with turning genres on their head and stereotypes completely all that. Yep.

Stephen:

Yeah. And what about you? This is one you introduced me to. Yes. Tucker and Dale versus evil. Yes. That was very

Steve:

funny.

Stephen:

Tucker and Dale used their savings to buy and renovate a vacation cabin in the middle of the woods. And through a series of misunderstandings, a group of preppy college students assumed that Tucker and Dale are murderers and prison, proceed to kill themselves and there's lots of blood and laughs and. It's just really, really good. Yeah, that

Steve:

was really funny. And I, I don't, I don't think it was one that I had watched and like was, oh, I think I watched it and like right away was like, we have to watch it again. Yeah. Cuz I wasn't expecting it to be that good the first time. Right. Yes. And I also love Ready or Not Oh,

Stephen:

love.

Steve:

Ready Or Not? We did that with our final girl February. Yes. And it's just another great new. Horror movie that has the guts, has the murder, has the suspense, while still making you laugh the whole time. And like I love that like the first three deaths of all the housekeepers went after another were just hysterical. And I know that they shouldn't have

Stephen:

been, but they were. Yeah, they totally were. And it makes me happy that that good of a movie is what got the writers and directors the Scream franchise. So yes, I'm proud of that. Speaking of slasher things, what is y? Some of your favorite slasher movies?

Steve:

Happy Death Day we did a whole episode on, and I just love that you never really get the chance to solve your own death. No, you never

Stephen:

get the UN unless you're Lindsay Lowen in the movie. I know who killed me. Yes. But

Steve:

I mean, you also don't get to oftentimes see the the mean girl at the beginning who gets killed first turn into the final girl at the end. Yes. And just again, just the way that they turn things around was just.

Stephen:

Chef's Kiss. Yeah. My, one of mine is, I Know What You did last summer. Of course, during the Reign of Scream, we also had this gem of a slasher. It gave us the most undeserved death of any horror movie character, ever. R i p Helen Shivers, we'll always miss you. Yes. Jennifer Love Hewitt is great as the lead, even though she's not Final girl Yes. Material, because she doesn't. Save herself. If you haven't seen the movie about the killer fisherman, what are you waiting

Steve:

for? Exact good one there, babe. Thank you. And for people the next one was your next and I really

Stephen:

liked it and it was good. Yeah, no, your next was great. It was also Barbara Crampton. Horror movie, queen of the eighties and early nineties. Made her come back into horror films with your next and has been entertaining us with horror movies since then. Perfect. It's really smart and I really enjoy it. Yes. And urban Legend. Oh yes. Good. Good call. University is beset by a rash of gruesome murders that resemble old urban legends. Rebecca Gay Hart and Loretta Devine are the standouts in this movie that has an all around excellent cast and it has the perfect level of camp.

Steve:

All right. Excellent. I agree. And urban legend is really good cuz everyone loves urban legends.

Stephen:

Yes. Why don't you tell us about your favorite horror

Steve:

franchises? I wonder which one, the first one is, oh wait, it. It's Scream. Yes. Scream is awesome. We've done episodes on like literally every single

Stephen:

movie. Tell me more. It's just a

Steve:

great franchise. I mean it, like for me it was the first like slasher I saw like in entirety. I remember I was in fourth grade, I was at a sleepover. I watched screen one and it was just awesome and I've loved the movies ever since then. It's the type that we can watch over and over and over again without getting old. It

Stephen:

agreed. For me Halloween has always been my favorite horror franchise. Yes, there are some entries that are not as good as the others. Looking at you, Halloween five, six, and eight we're ignoring the Rob Zombie remakes entirely. The Recoils brought the Lori and Michael Saga to an amazing ending that this iconic series deserves. Yes. And what about you? What's another series? Child's play,

Steve:

which again is one that I remember watching and seeing bits and pieces of growing up on, like cable and reruns. They were always like they edited for tv. Mm-hmm. And everything like that. But rewatching the series as an an adult and now having it continue on with the TV series has just given me this new appreciation for the child's play franchise that I just, I really love how they all. Are so different, but they all go together and tell one story in the end, and it's really been impressive and I can't wait for the new season. Yeah,

Stephen:

agreed. Child's play was one that I didn't have a great love for until curse of Chucky came out. Yeah. And then even the, the TV show at that point. Brought everything full circle and you're like, it's a whole connected world. And then you go back and you watch it and you're like, this is actually much better than I thought. Yes,

Steve:

for sure. And last but certainly not least, is

a

Stephen:

nightmare on Elm Street. Yes. It's another series with some truly amazing films. The first one. Number three, dream warriors and a new nightmare. Also home to one of the gayest horror movies that are ever Freddy's Revenge number two. I personally loved the remake and now that Robert England has publicly retired from ever playing the role again, just in the past few weeks, I think it's time to see what scares Freddie has left with a reboot to the franchise with a new lead actor.

Steve:

I would love that.

Stephen:

Now I added in this category, and you may have some things to say about it, but it may just be me. Favorite disaster

Steve:

movies. Yeah. I mean, I liked

Stephen:

Twister Chasing Tornadoes. Lost Loves Flying Cows. Well, there's a cow awesome special effects for that time period. I used to watch this one over and over and over again. Yes, the Poseidon Adventure was one of my favorite movies as a child. A luxury ocean liner is hit by a giant tidal wave at midnight on New Year's Eve, and it turns the ship upside down. And now the peeping people that want to survive have to make their way to the bottom of the ship that is now the only part above the water and the ship's taking on water and starting to sink. It has an all star cast for that time period and is really good.

Steve:

Well, as we talked last week about our love for Titanic, we love a good ship falling apart. Yes. What were we watching recently? We were like, oh my God, it's Titanic.

Stephen:

Oh, the second avatar movie. Yes. The second

Steve:

avatar movie at the end was giving serious Titanic vibes.

Stephen:

Yes. I also really enjoyed the day after

Steve:

tomorrow that I remember at the time I was like, oh my God, this is how the world's gonna end. I thought, I felt like, I was like, this is real. Yeah, isn't it? I wasn't sure.

Stephen:

Global warming causes a huge ice sheet from Antarctica to cause a climate shift that quickly triggers a storm that will affect the world's population. Jake Gillen Hall and Emmy Roso are fabulous. And Dennis Quaid before he became awful was excellent as Jake's dad doing what he had to do to get to his son and save him.

Steve:

Excellent. And I think I masturbated to this movie once before to the day after tomorrow. No deep impact. Oh, but not really. I was a different Deep impact. Yeah. Yes. Tell me about what this deep impact is about. So there were

Stephen:

a lot of movies I could have put into this category, like Dante's Peak Volcanoes, San Andreas. But for me, this one takes the final spot. It's like Armageddon, but actually a good movie. Mm-hmm. It took the end of the world aspect of the asteroids, but pushed the human element of it instead of mainly the action element. And we get to see the asteroids hit and the death and devastation that come with that. And we also get to see the human spirit willing to fight. And it's just Oh, really, really enjoyable.

Steve:

Yes. And what about favorite movies that somehow didn't fit into these other, other categories? But you can't end without talking about them. Okay, so

Stephen:

one for me is cruel intentions. So that it

Steve:

was like a number three drama pick.

Stephen:

Well, but I'm like, is it drama? But it's also a comedy. I I,

Steve:

and I didn't laugh as much as I did. Oh,

Stephen:

I thought it was a dramedy. Well, there we go. But two vicious step-siblings make a wager and begin to wreck the lives of those around them. But love gets in the way. Sarah Michelle Geller. Ryan Philippe, Reese Witherspoon, Selma. Blair. The movie was dark and biting and pure perfection. And just like some other movies, I didn't want the villain to

Steve:

lose. You never want the villain to lose? Sometimes I do, unless the villain's a cis white man or a slasher. There you go. And then, I mean, the Pokemon movies are never gonna be good enough to be even good animated movies in general. Not I that I don't love them, but I do have to say, if you love Pokemon movies and wanted to watch one Pokemon La Cario and the Mystery of me was probably my favorite Pokemon movie.

Stephen:

And it's a good one.

Steve:

Yes. And this one, I guess, would be your favorite foreign movies. Yes.

Stephen:

So El Orphan Ado and Pan's Labyrinth. I love Guillermo Deltoro, and these are two of my favorites that associate with him. El Ordo, or Translated to the Orphanage, is a Spanish movie about a woman who brings her family back to her childhood home, which used to be an orphanage for handicapped children. Her son begins communicating with an imaginary friend and then goes missing. It's haunting and sad, but so damn good. While Pan's Labyrinth is a dark fairytale set in Spain, 1944, where the bookish young stepdaughter of a sadistic army officer escapes into an eerie but captivating fantasy world. A fairy takes her to a faw in the center of a labyrinth and tells the girl that she's a princess, but she must prove her royalty by surviving three grueling tasks. It's dark and magical and wondrous, and. If you're good with subtitles, both of those movies should be on your watch list. Cool.

Steve:

I can't even think of I know I've watched foreign movies that I enjoy. Ooh, night Watching Day Watch. I really enjoyed the German movies about the

Stephen:

superpowers. Oh. And yes, I was, I for a second I was like, oh, I thought. They, I thought there was a Russian movie we watched that was really good too, but I couldn't remember it. That was that one. Okay. All

Steve:

right. Well, I hope that, I think we bad covered all the movies.

Stephen:

We have covered all the movies, so, I'd love to hear from our listeners what some of their favorites in each genre are.

Steve:

Yes, let us know which should win an imaginary award of being the happiest of its kind, and you can let us know by emailing us at happy life pod gmail.com

Stephen:

or you can get in touch with us on all the socials, whether that is Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or TikTok. Happy Life

Steve:

Pod and until next time, everybody stay happy.