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Tonight on The Introverted Obelisk, science proves once again that it does not understand the meaning of the word “enough.”
This episode dives into The Return of Doctor X — a late-1930s cocktail of mad science, newspaper intrigue, and the unsettling realization that death is more of a suggestion than a rule. Bodies pile up, alibis unravel, and a reporter starts asking the kind of questions that get you quietly eliminated in dark hallways.
Humphrey Bogart turns up in one of his strangest roles, playing a man who looks alive, sounds wrong, and radiates the energy of someone who should absolutely not be walking around.
It’s part horror, part mystery, and part cinematic shrug — a sequel that insists the experiment isn’t over just because the patient flatlined.
So lock the lab, double-check the gurney straps, and remember:
If science says it’s finished… it’s lying.
Support the show
By Obie KnoxSend us Fan Mail
Tonight on The Introverted Obelisk, science proves once again that it does not understand the meaning of the word “enough.”
This episode dives into The Return of Doctor X — a late-1930s cocktail of mad science, newspaper intrigue, and the unsettling realization that death is more of a suggestion than a rule. Bodies pile up, alibis unravel, and a reporter starts asking the kind of questions that get you quietly eliminated in dark hallways.
Humphrey Bogart turns up in one of his strangest roles, playing a man who looks alive, sounds wrong, and radiates the energy of someone who should absolutely not be walking around.
It’s part horror, part mystery, and part cinematic shrug — a sequel that insists the experiment isn’t over just because the patient flatlined.
So lock the lab, double-check the gurney straps, and remember:
If science says it’s finished… it’s lying.
Support the show