Movies & TV

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Here's a list of tons of leftist movies.

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blorp.bot.nu/o/visual_cuisine

※Use a VPN and make sure you have a Hexbear account. Also, be aware that the uploads have two subtitle tracks: SDH and non-SDH subtitles, listed as "English" and "Latin" respectively for technical reasons. Let's thank Aer once again for going above and beyond the call of duty in providing these uploads for us.

A lot of episodes with long titles tonight!

The rest of this post may contain spoilers.


What's the chef cookin' tonight?

"Twilight Time"

...is an episode — not the last — in which Twilight Sparkle has to deal with the consequences of celebrity, more specifically how certain ponies (in this case the CMC and their bullies, Diamond Tiara and Silver Spoon) take advantage of her fame. I feel like this episode is really most notable for the Twilight Sparkle burger meme.

"It Ain't Easy Being Breezies"

...is a somewhat toyetic episode which was teased in a single line in one of last week's episodes. Fluttershy's "key" episode for this season's "Chest of Harmony" arc, it centers on the migration of these fairy-like creatures known as "breezies", who I believe actually originated in G3. In G4 the breezies will naturally only have two cameo appearances and one namedrop after this debut episode, which seems to be the fate of a lot of the creatures and characters of this show.

Otherwise this episode is perhaps notable for inspiring a fan song in the "happy hardcore" genre, which ended up being used as the theme song of a since-retired linguistics YouTuber.

"Somepony To Watch Over Me"

...is an episode about Apple Bloom trying to assert her independence while Applejack is overly protective. This episode features a chimera. It also features Cajuns. Now that's what I call fantasy!

"Maud Pie"

...is, I'd say, tonight's standout episode, because it introduces the titular fan favorite Maudileena Daisy "Maud" Pie. She is one of the most obviously autism-coded characters I have ever seen in fiction, and has drawn comparisons to the likes of Yuki Nagato due to her "stoic monotony".

Maud Pie was actually seen for the first time in one of last week's episodes, as a filly in a photograph shown for like a few seconds in the Weird Al episode; and Maud will go on to have voiced appearances in 11 episodes after this point, silent appearances in 5, and 1 namedrop. So I guess you could say Maud Pie broke the curse of introduced characters never appearing in any significant capacity after their debut episodes!

"For Whom The Sweetie Belle Toils"

...is tonight's second episode centered on a Crusader's relationship to her o-neigh-san. This time it's Sweetie Belle acting in a play, only for herself to be outshone by Rarity's costumes for the play. This episode has a very memorable dream/flashback sequence, which I'd perhaps describe as "A Christmas Carol-esque".

...Which is of course to say nothing of the *actual* A Christmas Carol episode in the first half of season 6, which I must say I'm looking forward to.

"Leap of Faith"

...is Applejack's "key" episode for this season's "Chest of Harmony" arc, and the penultimate "key" episode overall — Twilight's "key" episode is the season finale, which we will watch next week.

In any case, this episode centers on Flim and Flam's grand return to sell some snake oil, and how Applejack gets roped into their nonsense.

...Yeah, remember the Flim-Flam brothers from their The Music Man parody back in season 2? That episode drew some amount of criticism from fans for the Flim-Flam brothers not actually scamming anypony, and was described by one of our viewers on Blorptube as something to the effect of "fascist lionization of small business" — so I wonder if the Flim-Flam brothers' big return in "Leap of Faith" here was written at least in part to make them retroactively less sympathetic, by making them into actual scammers of the most classic variety.


Content warnings

  • Childhood bullying ("Twilight Time")
  • A cruel experiment involving a small creature, I guess? ("Twilight Time")
  • A character eats fast food sloppily ("Twilight Time")
  • A character is hounded or denied privacy ("Twilight Time")
  • Bodily transformation ("It Ain't Easy Being Breezies")
  • A rare species is threatened by bees ("It Ain't Easy Being Breezies")
  • Missing child / child in peril ("Somepony To Watch Over Me")
  • A character is trapped in a rock avalanche ("Maud Pie")
  • A character eats a rock ("Maud Pie")
  • Familial conflict ("For Whom The Sweetie Belle Toils")
  • A child has a nightmare ("For Whom The Sweetie Belle Toils")
  • A small child trips ("For Whom The Sweetie Belle Toils")
  • Fashion and beauty stuff? ("For Whom The Sweetie Belle Toils")
  • Characters get scammed ("Leap of Faith")
  • An elderly character nearly does a fatal stunt ("Leap of Faith")

Please tell me if you'd like to add to or change something about this list.


♫ Uniting nations at the speeeed of liiiiight ♫
[epic sax solo]
♫ Station of the '20s — TV☆3SIS! ♫

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We'll be streaming here: https://blorp.bot.nu/o/visual_cuisine

Remember to use a VPN if you don't want IP info being shared with others. See you then!

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IMPORTANT NOTE: please use a VPN whenever visiting Blorptube, or anywhere else on the internet, for that matter. Protect your privacy.

For this Friday Movie Night, first up is Johnny Got His Gun (1971), an adaptation of Dalton Trumbo’s 1938 novel of the same name, directed by Trumbo himself, in his only stint in the director’s chair. A World War I soldier whose face and limbs have been blown off awakes in the hospital in extreme pain, and uses his memories of how he got there as a temporary respite from his misery. War bad. Think of this as a predecessor to Jacob’s Ladder (1990), to which it is often compared. Critics rave about this one, so let’s check it out.

After that is Us and Them (2018), a Chinese romance about a young couple who meet in 2007 during the mass holiday migrations. One is an aspiring video game designer, and the other a hopeless romantic who makes up stories about non-existent boyfriends. They fall in love, separate again, find each other again, and all that. Can they rekindle their flame after ten years apart? This sounds like one Netflix-ass premise, but hey, the reviews are good, so we’ll give it a whirl anyway. Director is Rene Liu, in her only feature film to date; this is currently the highest-rated Chinese film on Letterboxd directed by a woman. Okay, fine, we’ll check it out.

We’ll start at 8PM EST on Blorptube, right here:

https://blorp.bot.nu/o/visual_cuisine

Be there, comrades!

Letterboxd:

Doesthedogdie.com links:

CWs for Johnny Got His Gun:

  • Nudity.
  • Objectification of female characters.
  • PTSD.
  • Gun violence.
  • Body horror.
  • Hospital scenes.
  • Alcohol.
  • Smoking.
  • Dead bodies.
  • Warfare.
  • Suicidal ideation.
  • Sad ending.

CWs for Us and Them:

  • Kissing.
  • Sex.
  • Cheating.
  • Death of parent.
  • Alcohol.
  • Smoking.
  • Profanity.

Links to movies:

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Why cant they give Jesse Plemons different character to play?

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Will and Hesse sit down with Lexi Alexander, director of Green Street Hooligans (2005), Punisher: War Zone (2008) & Absolute Dominions (2025).

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IMPORTANT NOTE: please use a VPN whenever visiting Blorptube, or anywhere else on the internet, for that matter. Protect your privacy.

For this Special Thursday Cinema Night, first up is Drunken Angel (1948), a yakuza-themed film noir from the master himself, Akira Kurosawa, considered his first great film. A gangster (Toshiro Mifune) receives medical after being wounded in a gunfight, only to discover he has tuberculosis, too. The doctor tries to keep him in the hospital for treatment, and the two form an unlikely friendship. But uh-oh, what happens when the boss finds out his underling is having second thoughts about the whole gangster thing? Drama ensues. Considered one of the best Japanese films of the 1940s.

After that is Smile 2 (2024), the sequel to Smile (2022), which we watched yesterday. Its plot does not directly connect to the first, aside from its central conceit of trauma taking the form of ghosts with unsettling smiles. This time, the object of torment is not a psychiatrist, but a pop star (Naomi Scott), whose anxiety over the pressures of fame and fortune begin to drive her into insanity. Same director as the first film (Parker Finn), and considered by pretty much everyone to be superior to its predecessor. Let’s check it out.

We’ll start at 8PM EST on Blorptube, right here:

https://blorp.bot.nu/o/visual_cuisine

Be there, comrades!

Letterboxd:

Doesthedogdie.com links:

CWs for Drunken Angel:

  • Drug addiction.
  • Alcoholism.
  • Hospital scenes.
  • Self-harm.
  • Gun violence.
  • Terminal illness.

CWs for Smile 2:

  • Child abandonment.
  • Abusive parents.
  • Stalking.
  • Gaslighting.
  • Drug use.
  • Drug addiction.
  • Alcoholism.
  • Death of animal.
  • Cruelty to animals.
  • Animal corpses.
  • Death of cat.
  • Death of pet.
  • Someone is physically restrained.
  • Someone’s mouth is covered.
  • Cutting of flesh.
  • Throat slitting.
  • Blood and gore.
  • Hand damage.
  • Dislocations.
  • Someone struggles to breathe.
  • Decapitations.
  • Choking.
  • Someone is burned alive.
  • Body horror.
  • Squashed head.
  • Unconsciousness.
  • Broken bones.
  • Tooth damage.
  • Torture.
  • Eye mutilation.
  • Stabbing.
  • Drug overdose.
  • Death of parent.
  • Jump scares.
  • Shower scenes.
  • Possession.
  • Audio gore.
  • Incarceration.
  • Mental hospital scene.
  • Mental illness.
  • Self-harm.
  • Violent mentally-ill person.
  • Dissociation.
  • Suicide attempt.
  • Suicidal ideation.
  • Unstable reality.
  • Meltdown.
  • Misophonia.
  • Anxiety attacks.
  • Suicide.
  • PTSD.
  • Jump scares.
  • Screaming.
  • Profanity.
  • Flashing lights.
  • Someone is watched without their knowledge.
  • Chronic illness.
  • Sad ending.
  • Honking horns.
  • Screeching tires.

Links to movies:

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you're not allowed to say The Sopranos though.

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IMPORTANT NOTE: please use a VPN whenever visiting Blorptube, or anywhere else on the internet, for that matter. Protect your privacy.

For this Wednesday Super Slop Night, first up is Smile (2022), a horror tale about a psychiatrist who deals with the most disturbed patients as a way to cover for her own childhood trauma. But what happens an evil entity starts stalking her, and she starts being confronted by the demons of her past, all associated with the unsettling smile of death? I assume spooky stuff. One of the top reviews on Letterboxd call this “so mid-2000s style horror that it’s almost camp”. Sounds cool. Director is Parker Finn, who is known only for this and the sequel, Smile 2 (2024), which is generally regarded as an improvement. We have to start with the first one, though.

After that is Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra (2002), a live-action adaptation of the famed French comic book series, and sequel to Asterix & Obelix Take On Caesar (1999), which we watched last week.. A pair of superpowered Gauls get into a bunch of comical antics fighting the Romans, who have been unable to conquer the village that the wily protagonists defend. This time, their war leads them on a journey to Egypt, where they meet Cleopatra herself (played by Monica Bellucci.) Hilarity ensues. Director is Alain Chabet, who is otherwise best-known for the caveman comedy RRRrrrr!!! (2004), which we have not yet watched. As with its predecessor, it was a big hit at the French box office, and is almost universally regarded as superior to the first. Sounds good to me.

We’ll start at 8PM EST on Blorptube, right here:

https://blorp.bot.nu/o/visual_cuisine

Be there, comrades!

Letterboxd:

Doesthedogdie.com links:

CWs for Smile:

  • Child abandonment.
  • Abusive parents.
  • Stalking.
  • Gaslighting.
  • Drug use.
  • Drug addiction.
  • Alcoholism.
  • Death of animal.
  • Cruelty to animals.
  • Animal corpses.
  • Death of cat.
  • Death of pet.
  • Someone is physically restrained.
  • Someone’s mouth is covered.
  • Cutting of flesh.
  • Throat slitting.
  • Blood and gore.
  • Hand damage.
  • Dislocations.
  • Someone struggles to breathe.
  • Decapitations.
  • Choking.
  • Someone is burned alive.
  • Body horror.
  • Squashed head.
  • Unconsciousness.
  • Broken bones.
  • Tooth damage.
  • Torture.
  • Eye mutilation.
  • Stabbing.
  • Drug overdose.
  • Death of parent.
  • Jump scares.
  • Shower scenes.
  • Possession.
  • Audio gore.
  • Incarceration.
  • Mental hospital scene.
  • Mental illness.
  • Self-harm.
  • Violent mentally-ill person.
  • Dissociation.
  • Suicide attempt.
  • Suicidal ideation.
  • Unstable reality.
  • Meltdown.
  • Misophonia.
  • Anxiety attacks.
  • Suicide.
  • PTSD.
  • Jump scares.
  • Screaming.
  • Profanity.
  • Flashing lights.
  • Someone is watched without their knowledge.
  • Chronic illness.
  • Sad ending.
  • Honking horns.
  • Screeching tires.

CWs for Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra:

  • Objectification of female characters.
  • Slapstick violence.
  • Alcohol.
  • Fistfighting.
  • Torture.
  • War scenes.

Links to movies:

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Join us!

blorp.bot.nu/o/visual_cuisine

Note that you need a Hexbear account to use Blorptube. You may wish to use a VPN as well. Note that we're starting half an hour earlier than usual because we're watching one more episode than usual. Next week we'll finally start Once Upon a Time... Life, which, unlike ...Space, I actually watched as a kid.

Also, if you use an anime tracker like Anilist or MAL: Once Upon a Time... Space is listed in a number of anime databases due to being a Japanese co-production.

By the way, the same applies for Once Upon a Time... Life!

What are we watching?

Episode titles: "The Humanoids" — "An Hostile World" — "City in Flight" — "The Great Computer" — "The Battle of the Titans" — "The Infinity of Space"

Series description: Once Upon a Time... Space tells about the confrontation of many big galactic powers. Among them there is the Omega Confederation, of which Earth is a member; the military republic of Cassiopeia led by General The Pest; and a powerful supercomputer which controls an army of robots. The show follows the adventures of space police members Pierrot and his friend Mercedes ("Psi") and adapts elements of Greek mythology and other mainly European folklore. Some episodes concern topics such as the balance of political power; man vs technology; and the existence of God.

We're watching the official YouTube uploads of the English dub, I should mention. It's got pretty bad audio mixing at times, and only automatic captions. Thankfully, Once Upon a Time... Life evidently has much better audio mixing, so you can look forward to that next week!

Content warnings

This show is said to contain "little to no violence" except against wild animals, but from the track record of what we've watched so far, it's also got some questionable handling of race and class, like one of the episodes we watched basically had robot drapetomania.

The previous show in this series, Once Upon a Time... Man, for which Space is technically a continuation, had the following content warnings, if nothing else: Death incl. murder — sexual assault — nudity — animal gore — disease — racist caricatures — religion presented as fact — Eurocentrism

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Please donate if you are able to: https://hexbear.net/post/5278275

@@@@This comes from above: it's strongly recommended to use a VPN for cytube. @@@@ There was a thread recently about vpns and a few you should explicitly avoid.

You can read more about Peertube and potential security concerns here: https://hexbear.net/post/3471120?scrollToComments=false

We will be using Blorptube tonight: https://blorp.bot.nu/o/visual_cuisine

It is still recommended to use a vpn for peertube

The visual cuisine for tonight is two more Twin Peak episodes followed by more Venture Bros. Special thanks to DrMonarch for uploading the entirety of Venture Bros, uncensored. ~~It looks like we're going to finish season 6 tonight.~~ we won't be finishing season 6 tonight, instead we will watch 4 or 5 episodes depending on how everyone is feeling

Twin Peaks

https://www.doesthedogdie.com/media/12451?index1=-1&index2=-1

  • Domestic violence
  • Stalking
  • Drugs & alcohol
  • Addiction
  • An animal dies
  • A pet dies
  • Shaving/cutting
  • Kidnapping
  • Cheating
  • Abusive parents
  • Abused becomes the abuser
  • A woman is brutalized for spectacle
  • Gaslighting
  • A character is abused with a belt
  • Child abuse
  • Bugs
  • A character is drugged
  • References to pedophilia
  • References to and implied sexual assault
  • A bully beats someone up
  • A character is restrained
  • A character's mouth is covered
  • A character struggles to breathe
  • A character gets choked
  • A character has undergone amputation in the past
  • A character dies by hanging
  • Unconsciousness
  • Bone breaking
  • Finger mutilation
  • Corpses
  • Torture
  • References to a child dying
  • Sexualization of minors
  • A character sacrifices themself
  • Death
  • A disabled character is played by an able bodied actor
  • A child's toy is destroyed
  • Ghosts
  • Jump scares & loud noises
  • Natural bodies of water in the opening credits
  • Characters are possessed
  • Trypophobic content
  • Vomit & spit
  • Copaganda
  • Incarceration
  • Anti LGBT+ slur
  • An LGBT+ character dies
  • Deadnaming
  • Hospital scenes
  • Depictions of mental illness
  • Self harm
  • Misrepresentation of autism
  • A mentally ill person is violent
  • Dissociation
  • Characters implied to be autistic are mistreated
  • Suicide attempt and a character declares they will attempt it
  • Unstable reality
  • A character has a meltdown
  • Misophonia
  • Anxiety attacks
  • Body dysmorphia
  • Claustrophobic
  • Depictions of ptsd
  • Shakey cam
  • Screaming
  • Profanity
  • Flashing lights & images
  • Ableism and ableist language
  • "Man in dress" jokes
  • A trans character is misgendered
  • Fat jokes
  • Misrepresentation of a minority
  • Religion
  • Large age gap
  • A character loses their virginity
  • Incest
  • Kissing
  • Jokes about men crying
  • Mentions of existentialism
  • Sad endings
  • Car crash and someone is hit by a car
  • Blood & gore
  • Guns & gun violence
  • Nuclear explosion

The Venture Bros

https://www.doesthedogdie.com/media/50010?index1=-1&index2=-1

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0417373/parentalguide/

  • Profanity & slurs
  • The r-slur is used both as a slur and to describe a character with an intellectual disability
  • A homophobic slur is used multiple times as well
  • Violence
  • Guns & gun violence
  • Blood & gore
  • A dog does die
  • Abusive parents
  • Stalking
  • The abused becomes an abuser
  • Gaslighting
  • Child abuse
  • Body dysphoria involving a prominent side character that appears in multiple seasons
  • Transphobia: in addition to the above being played off as a joke for a while, a prominent side character is insinuated to be a transwoman a few times because she has a deep voice
  • Sexual content
  • Sexual objectification of characters
  • Incest
  • Suicide & suicide attempts
  • Depictions of PTSD
  • Vomit, spit, shit, & piss
  • Drugs, alcohol, and addiction
  • Scene with a dog fighting ring
  • Dead animals
  • Depictions of bugs
  • Depictions and mentions of SA
  • Characters are restrained
  • Shaving and cutting
  • Characters are crushed to death
  • Characters choke to death
  • Body horror
  • Amputation
  • A character is buried alive
  • A character hangs themself
  • A character undergoes a medical procedure to alleviate pain in their genitals
  • Unconsciousness
  • A character has a seizure
  • Teeth are damaged
  • Depictions of torture
  • A character's eye is mutilated
  • Death of children
  • A minor is sexualized: Dean is frequently depicted as a horny teenager and multiple jokes revolve around this
  • Death of a family member
  • A child's toy is destroyed
  • Cheating
  • Ghosts
  • Clowns
  • Shower scene
  • A character is possessed
  • Needles & syringes
  • Hospital and mental instituion scenes
  • A character has cancer and another dies from cancer off screen
  • Anxiety attacks
  • Mentions of an eating disorder
  • Flashing lights & images
  • Ableism
  • An LGBT character dies
  • Age gap: an underage character lies to an adult to get the adult to sleep with them
  • Nudity that is generally censored
  • A scene with implied bestiality
  • Car crashing and honking
  • Someone is hit by a car
  • Plane crash
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