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Steve Martin runs a motor pool like it’s a Vegas casino, Phil Hartman’s out for blood, Dan Aykroyd’s accidentally in charge, and somewhere in the chaos—Chris Rock’s hacking a government computer and saying “I’m in.”
This week, the Rewind or Die crew reports for duty with 1996’s Sgt. Bilko—the military comedy so 90s it somehow features a hover tank, Cathy Silvers from Happy Days, and Travis Tritt for absolutely no reason.
Adam, Jeff, and Steve dig deep into Jonathan Lynn’s farcical filmmaking, Steve Martin’s con-man charisma, and why this movie might secretly be the last great analog comedy before the era of irony took over.
It’s scams, salutes, and sitcom energy running on government time.
Highlights Include:
• The Art of the Scam: why Steve Martin makes dishonesty look wholesome
• Phil Hartman as a villain who’s technically right but cosmically doomed
• The “I’m In” hacking scene that redefined 90s computer logic
• Why Sgt. Bilko and Captain Ron might share a cinematic universe
• The rise and fall of the “Dad Comedy” franchise dream
• A bonus debate: Was Major Thorn actually the hero?
And if you’ve ever wondered what happens when charisma outranks competence, grab your VHS copy and fall in—because this episode proves that sometimes the greatest military strategy is just talking your way out of everything.
By Adam ChaseSteve Martin runs a motor pool like it’s a Vegas casino, Phil Hartman’s out for blood, Dan Aykroyd’s accidentally in charge, and somewhere in the chaos—Chris Rock’s hacking a government computer and saying “I’m in.”
This week, the Rewind or Die crew reports for duty with 1996’s Sgt. Bilko—the military comedy so 90s it somehow features a hover tank, Cathy Silvers from Happy Days, and Travis Tritt for absolutely no reason.
Adam, Jeff, and Steve dig deep into Jonathan Lynn’s farcical filmmaking, Steve Martin’s con-man charisma, and why this movie might secretly be the last great analog comedy before the era of irony took over.
It’s scams, salutes, and sitcom energy running on government time.
Highlights Include:
• The Art of the Scam: why Steve Martin makes dishonesty look wholesome
• Phil Hartman as a villain who’s technically right but cosmically doomed
• The “I’m In” hacking scene that redefined 90s computer logic
• Why Sgt. Bilko and Captain Ron might share a cinematic universe
• The rise and fall of the “Dad Comedy” franchise dream
• A bonus debate: Was Major Thorn actually the hero?
And if you’ve ever wondered what happens when charisma outranks competence, grab your VHS copy and fall in—because this episode proves that sometimes the greatest military strategy is just talking your way out of everything.