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"Don't Let Go" stars David Oyelowo as an LAPD detective who starts getting phone calls from his niece, played by Storm Reid -- after she and her parents are brutally murdered. Is it about time-travel? Parallel dimensions? God? We talk it out on the new "Low Key."
The Blumhouse film, from Jacob Aaron Estes, debuted at the Sundance Film Festival under the original name "Relive." It quickly sets up the plot before taking us through a series of twists that challenge everything you thought you knew about cell phone conversations between the living and the dead.
Is it a time-travel film? A story of crossed realities? We spend this episode puzzling it out, while praising the work of Reid and Oyelowo.
We also talk about how Estes and Oyelowo, a producer on the film, changes the setting from a farm in Ohio to the streets of Los Angeles, an especially intense scene late in the film, and the Zodiac killer.
Here are a few of our topics, with time stamps:
2:30: "I don't know if it's a time-travel movie, I don't know if it's a movie about parallel universes, I don't know if it's a movie where when you die you don't really die you're just transported to another world where you're actually living."
6:05: Has there been another movie quite like "Don't Let Go"?
11:30: Go watch "Jacob's Ladder"
16:30: “Hitman” is hard
17:37: This movie was originally set on a farm in Ohio with a bunch of white people
18:45: Props, Blumhouse
24:05: If someone was pointing a gun at you, would you rather run or ride a bike to escape?
28:35: The man-in-a-horror-movie dilemma
If you like us, please subscribe.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Aaron Lanton4.6
2727 ratings
"Don't Let Go" stars David Oyelowo as an LAPD detective who starts getting phone calls from his niece, played by Storm Reid -- after she and her parents are brutally murdered. Is it about time-travel? Parallel dimensions? God? We talk it out on the new "Low Key."
The Blumhouse film, from Jacob Aaron Estes, debuted at the Sundance Film Festival under the original name "Relive." It quickly sets up the plot before taking us through a series of twists that challenge everything you thought you knew about cell phone conversations between the living and the dead.
Is it a time-travel film? A story of crossed realities? We spend this episode puzzling it out, while praising the work of Reid and Oyelowo.
We also talk about how Estes and Oyelowo, a producer on the film, changes the setting from a farm in Ohio to the streets of Los Angeles, an especially intense scene late in the film, and the Zodiac killer.
Here are a few of our topics, with time stamps:
2:30: "I don't know if it's a time-travel movie, I don't know if it's a movie about parallel universes, I don't know if it's a movie where when you die you don't really die you're just transported to another world where you're actually living."
6:05: Has there been another movie quite like "Don't Let Go"?
11:30: Go watch "Jacob's Ladder"
16:30: “Hitman” is hard
17:37: This movie was originally set on a farm in Ohio with a bunch of white people
18:45: Props, Blumhouse
24:05: If someone was pointing a gun at you, would you rather run or ride a bike to escape?
28:35: The man-in-a-horror-movie dilemma
If you like us, please subscribe.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.