There’s something kind of special about the experience of a really great, really bad movie.
Think Red Dawn or Under Siege. Snakes on a Plane or Batman & Robin.
Independence Day is nearly perfect and so rewatchable — and also terrible.
This hour, a Nose-ish look at the joy of bad movies.
GUESTS:
- Theresa Cramer: A freelance writer and editor and the co-founder of Quiet Corner Communications
- Alicia di Leo: A para-educator in the integrated preschool program in the Manchester school system
- David Edelstein: America’s Greatest Living Film Critic
- Severn Sandt: Associate director of strategic partnerships and outreach at Trinity College in Hartford
- Howard Sherman: A theater administrator, writer, and advocate; he is the U.S. columnist for The Stage newspaper of London and the author of Another Day’s Begun: Thornton Wilder’s Our Town in the 21st Century
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Colin McEnroe and Eugene Amatruda contributed to this show.