In this episode: It’s the “timeless quality” vs. the “wow factor,” Statham out-Stathams the pod, and Dave’s complaining coins a new episode format.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: The Wheel stays home, fat suit comedy is back, and Mark leads Dave in a steamy role-play exercise.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Dave waxes on that Subway smell, Mark takes a flyer on The Money Pit (1986), and do the guys know their spouses’ favorite movies, really?
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Dave provokes The Lion King (1994) fans, Mark extends the metaphor to wild success, and Baby Girl (2024) shout-outs are alive and well.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Invitations are “produced,” Mark would’ve preferred a fast-forward, and does The Blair Witch Project (1999) only work once?
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Dave is skeptical of this new The Running Man (2025), Mark reads from the Book of Ebert, and they sometimes call me Schwarzenschnitzle.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: The guys reflect on another fifty in the can, Mark still thinks about Babygirl (2024), and let’s all forget about that jawbreaker thing.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Burger King rewraps a familiar meal, Dave loves a Johnny Rico callout, and holy Hannah—150 episodes!
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: The Springsteen movie’s title is bad, Dave gets going too long on comics history, and it’s between Bozo and Britney.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: A surprise garlic sauce Top 5, Dave needs Mark to explain the joke, and you boys can take the window or the stairs.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: One Battle After Another (2025) shakes up TTRV’s Best of the Year lists with a spin of The Wheel, the guys both deploy magician metaphors, and how vague is too vague where spoilers are concerned?
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Dave’s still trying to make The Condor happen, Mark invokes the “three banger,” and the guys can’t help but qualify every pick.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Mark claims to have never “bopped it,” Dave’s head is too big for turtlenecks, and it could’ve been a muppet.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: TTRV identifies the Jason Statham essence, the guys have a little too much fun with character names, and Mark calls into question the heights of London skyscrapers.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Dave posits the Cracker Barrel thing is a conspiracy, there’s no getting around how confusing Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998) is from the jump, and Guy Ritchie is Shakespeare by the end of the hour.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: A movie so nice they covered it twice, Mark explains the “two kinds of wrong,” and news flash: leg lengthening surgery is painful.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Dave gets in touch with his feelings, Mark has his first encounter with K-pop and demon hunters, and is it possible TTRV is wrong about Materialists (2025)?
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: The front row comes calling, the coffee bit has legs, and Mark and Dave debate the merits of The Naked Gun’s (2025) total commitment to the joke.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Arby’s withholds the au jus, Paul Rudd reprises his Anchorman (2004) and I Love You, Man (2009) characters simultaneously, and Friendship (2025) divides the pod.
Music by Thomas Furr.
In this episode: Mark faces his nemesis, being a member of the Pitt Crew pays off, and is it Janet Planet (2023)?
Music by Thomas Furr.