Seeing and Believing with Wade Bearden & Kevin McLenithan
Summary: Wade Bearden & Kevin Mclennithan search for the sacred on screen each week by reviewing the both the mainstream and indie film scene with the occasional special guest.
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Podcasts:
DC takes another stab at the whole superhero-franchise thing this week with Shazam!, They also review the long-awaited Mary Mageline movie with Rooney Mara.
Tune in this week to hear our interview with authors Kutter Callaway and Craig Detweiler and a review of Tim Burton's live-action remake of Dumbo.
Two genre films are up for consideration this week: one set in the farthest reaches of space, and one that hits uncomfortably close to home: Us and Prospect
The guys lean into the rule of threes with this week's pair of films. Triple Frontier, and the new film from Iranian master Jafar Panahi, 3 Faces.
Captain Marvel from Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck is up for review this week along with Wade and Kevin's Summer Blockbuster Preview!
The guys take a look back at Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ and Asghar Farhadi's first project outside of Iran, Everybody Knows.
Wade and Kevin review Robert Rodriguez's and James Cameron's latest film, Alita: Battle Angel manga, and To Dust, with Matthew Broderick and Geza Rohrig.
Are Lego movies still awesome? That’s the question that preoccupies the guys during the first half of this week’s show, as they review the sequel to Phil Lord and Christopher Miller’s hit The Lego Movie. The second film on the docket has fewer catchy songs in it but one heck of a title: The Man Who Killed Hitler and Then the Bigfoot. Sam Elliott does indeed engage in some very selective violence in this film, so the film lives up to its title; but is the rest of what Robert Krzykowski is doing in it worth your time? Music interlude by Sundaug, “Rays.” Used under Creative Commons license 3.0. Read the full article...
Wade and Kevin review Steven Soderbergh's first Netflix film, High Flying Bird and Joe Cornish's The Kid Who Would Be King.
Seeing & Believing concludes its look at the eight Best Picture nominees this week with a review of Bohemian Rhapsody, and a review of Velvet Buzzsaw.
Superheroes and politicians dominate the show this week with M. Night Shyamalan's "Glass" and Adam McKay's "Vice".
With their top-10 episode in the rear-view mirror, the guys get back into the groove of things with Marry Poppins Returns and If Beale Street Could Talk.
In this super-sized episode, the guys offer their picks for the best films of 2018 out of the multitude of excellent films that have been released.
The latest entry in the DC superhero universe and an awards favorite from Poland. Does Aquaman sink or swim? Does Cold War leave the guys feeling cold?
Merry Christmas from Seeing & Believing! Our last episode before Christmas starts off Alfonso Cuaron's Roma and then Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.