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The Movie Loft Podcast

The Movie Loft Podcast

Auteur(s): Tony Phil Thom
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À propos de cet audio

The Movie Loft Podcast features three Boston boys, Tony, Phil and Thom, in an old barn loft talking about '80s movies and memories.

The name and premise is also a nod to a titular Boston institution, The Movie Loft, featuring Dana Hersey, which ran on WSBK TV-38 throughout our formative years. This project started as an excuse to capture our conversations for posterity. Highlighting a different movie in each episode, we revisit some long forgotten memories, and in the process weave together a documentary of our salad days.

The point of this show is not to walk anyone through a movie scene by scene - we’re well aware you’ve been watching these flicks for decades. The aim is to discuss our deep appreciation for what it took to get each picture made, where we were when we experienced them, and how they’re a part of the zeitgeist of their times. Sure, we have some opinions, maybe even a few “hot takes”, but we’re really just here for your entertainment. Hopefully you’ll finish each episode feeling like you had a seat at our table.

© 2025 The Movie Loft Podcast
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  • The Malden Chronicles — Robbin' Hood Trees Remix
    Nov 30 2025

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    'Twas the week before Christmas, when all through our house

    Not a creature was stirring, not even that big mouth

    Our stockings were hung by the chimney with care

    In hopes that the MPD would stay in the Square

    The renters were nestled all snug in their beds

    While visions of alchy bums danced in their heads

    And mummy in her Star Market smock and I in my head spin hat

    Had just settled our brains for a long winter's nap

    When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter

    I sprang from my bed to see what was the matter

    Away to the window I flew like a flash

    Tore through the plastic and threw up the sash

    The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow

    Gave a lustre of midday to objects below

    When what to my wondering eyes did I see

    But a rented U-haul and my brotherly thieves

    With their friend Paul as the driver so lively and drunk

    I knew in a moment this was more than a funk

    More rapid than eagles these coursers they came

    And one whistled, and shouted, and gave them all aim

    To the top of the porch and to the back driveway wall

    Now stash away! Stash away! Stash away all!

    As leaves that before the wild hurricane fly

    If police should appear, they'll slip away sly

    So up to the back of the house the coursers they flew

    With a truck full of trees, and all those wreaths too

    And then, in a twinkling, I heard all the proof

    The prancing and pawing of each Chippewa boot

    As I drew in my head, and was turning around

    Down Spring Street came the throngs with a bound

    They weren't dressed in furs, but heard something afoot

    And their money was crisp as in our hands it was put

    Departing with a bundle of pine they had flung on their back

    Bought from the neighborhood peddlers open round back

    Their eyes—how they twinkled! Their dimples, how merry!

    Their cheeks were like roses, their noses like a cherry!

    Their droll little mouths drawn up like a bow

    While bolt cutters and work gloves lay muddied in snow

    Held was the stump of a lead pipe tight in his hands

    To make them believe the trees were shorn from our own Robbin' Hood land

    Some even sold by a broad with a slim little face

    Our mother the matriarch known to put all in their place

    The chubby and plump, the blind and the deaf

    And we'd chuckle when at our back door she'd offer a right or a left

    As occasionally with a wink of an eye and a tilt of a head

    Some renters were left on sidewalks thought to be dead

    Jamie spoke not a word, but went straight to his work

    Knocking out redwood Big Bob; without even a smirk

    Now back to the telling of our story at hand, the one of the boys selling trees minus the brand

    Rarely giving a wave, from the peak of back porch stairs

    Knowing the close shave averted from one of their dares

    He reached for his pocket, to his team he gave a bundle

    Knowing those fine trees were now homed with the humble

    Then I heard him exclaim, ere he walked out of sight—

    “Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good fight!”

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    13 min
  • Planes, Trains and Automobiles 1987
    Nov 23 2025

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    It’s Thanksgiving, and we're carving up some Planes, Trains and Automobiles, and it’s not just as a holiday classic, but as a masterclass in comedic discomfort delivered by two legends at the peak of their powers: Steve Martin and John Candy. Martin is a symphony of simmering fury. A brilliant performance of the slow-motion dissolution of a WASP executive’s sanity. Meanwhile, Candy's a bulldozing force of good-natured, oblivious optimism. Martin’s precise, explosive rants are only possible because of Candy’s seismic, childlike sincerity. Elevating what could have been a simple road trip comedy into a biting, yet ultimately heartwarming, testament to the fact that even the most insufferable human beings deserve a little mercy... but only after they’ve endured absolute hell.

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    1 h et 32 min
  • The Monster Squad 1987
    Nov 12 2025

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    The Monster Squad (1987) is what happens when a bunch of middle school monster nerds decide to take on Dracula, the Wolfman, and the rest of Universal’s greatest hits — armed mostly with sarcasm, bike helmets, and the power of friendship. The film was unfairly dismissed when it came out, possibly because audiences weren’t ready for a movie where a kid yells, “Wolfman’s got nards!” and somehow, it becomes cinematic poetry.

    Over the years, The Monster Squad has crawled out of its coffin and earned its cult status — a true hidden gem for anyone who loves practical effects, 80s charm, and kids who apparently skipped all adult supervision. It’s equal parts monster mash and love letter to classic horror, proving that sometimes the movies we ignored at the box office are the ones that stick around in our undead hearts forever.


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    1 h et 33 min
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