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The Machine yanks Truman and Landen straight into 1989 New York, where the pigeons are plentiful, the crime rate is questionable, and four psychiatric patients are somehow having a better day than our hosts. With a comedy tone that wobbles between screwball, satire, and “oh no they let who loose in Manhattan?”, the guys dive into a movie that’s equal parts heartwarming and wildly irresponsible.
The Dream Team is a chaotic, character-driven comedy starring Billy, a volatile former ad exec (Michael Keaton, Beetlejuice), Henry, an anxious perfectionist (Christopher Lloyd, Back to the Future), Jack, a delusional former newsman (Peter Boyle, Everybody Loves Raymond), and Albert, a childlike gentle giant who only speaks in baseball commentary (Stephen Furst, Animal House). Directed by Howard Zieff, the film follows four psychiatric patients whose group outing spirals into an unplanned odyssey through 1980s Manhattan when their doctor is attacked and hospitalized. Balancing slapstick mayhem with earnest sweetness, the movie captures a late-’80s moment when studios still greenlit high-concept ensemble comedies with surprising warmth.
Why This Film?
Once a modest box-office success and a cable-TV staple, The Dream Team has largely faded from pop-culture memory despite its stacked cast and oddball charm. It’s a time capsule of pre-Batman Michael Keaton, scrappy New York street comedy, and a tone Hollywood simply doesn’t make anymore—all perfect ingredients for the Movie Memory Machine.
Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine
Join Truman Capps and Landen Celano every week as the Machine flings them through cinematic history to rediscover the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating films of decades past.
Stay connected and subscribe to keep up with every new episode.
Support the Show
Enjoy the journey through cinematic history? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine running.
Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod
By Grunt Work Podcasts5
77 ratings
The Machine yanks Truman and Landen straight into 1989 New York, where the pigeons are plentiful, the crime rate is questionable, and four psychiatric patients are somehow having a better day than our hosts. With a comedy tone that wobbles between screwball, satire, and “oh no they let who loose in Manhattan?”, the guys dive into a movie that’s equal parts heartwarming and wildly irresponsible.
The Dream Team is a chaotic, character-driven comedy starring Billy, a volatile former ad exec (Michael Keaton, Beetlejuice), Henry, an anxious perfectionist (Christopher Lloyd, Back to the Future), Jack, a delusional former newsman (Peter Boyle, Everybody Loves Raymond), and Albert, a childlike gentle giant who only speaks in baseball commentary (Stephen Furst, Animal House). Directed by Howard Zieff, the film follows four psychiatric patients whose group outing spirals into an unplanned odyssey through 1980s Manhattan when their doctor is attacked and hospitalized. Balancing slapstick mayhem with earnest sweetness, the movie captures a late-’80s moment when studios still greenlit high-concept ensemble comedies with surprising warmth.
Why This Film?
Once a modest box-office success and a cable-TV staple, The Dream Team has largely faded from pop-culture memory despite its stacked cast and oddball charm. It’s a time capsule of pre-Batman Michael Keaton, scrappy New York street comedy, and a tone Hollywood simply doesn’t make anymore—all perfect ingredients for the Movie Memory Machine.
Subscribe & Follow Movie Memory Machine
Join Truman Capps and Landen Celano every week as the Machine flings them through cinematic history to rediscover the forgotten, the flopped, and the strangely fascinating films of decades past.
Stay connected and subscribe to keep up with every new episode.
Support the Show
Enjoy the journey through cinematic history? Become a patron to access exclusive episodes, early releases, and help keep the Machine running.
Patreon: https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod

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