Grimoire
Cthulhu
Dracula
Abraham Lincoln
Ken
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Ken and Robin Consume Media: Backrooms, Obsession, Fallout, and The Sleuth of Baghdad

June 23rd, 2026 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

The Pinnacle

Dry Summer (Film, Turkey, Metin Erksan, 1964) Domineering farmer (Erol Tas) bullies his younger brother (Ulvi Dogan) into his plan to deprive neighbors of their property’s spring water, while coveting his strong-willed bride (Hülya Koçyigit). Stark morality tale ratchets up the audience’s desire for its incorrigible bastard protagonist’s comeuppance.—RDL

Recommended

Backrooms (Film, US, Kane Parsons, 2026) Embittered furniture store owner (Chiwetel Ejiofor) stumbles into a labyrinthine otherworld that imperfectly mimics grim, anonymous commercial interior spaces; his tense therapist (Renate Reinsve) goes to look for him. Not since Kiyoshi Kurosawa crept onto the horror scene has deteriorating industrial design provoked as much unease as in this adeptly realized weird fable.—RDL

Fallout Season 1 (Television, US, Prime, Geneva Robertson-Dworet and Graham Wagner, 2025) In a post-apocalyptic wasteland, a sheltered vault-dweller (Ella Purnell) seeks a decapitated head McGuffin to free her kidnapped father (Kyle McLachlan), crossing paths with an ill-treated soldier (Aaron Moten) and mutant revenant gunslinger (Walton Goggins) who want it for their own purposes. Keeps the momentum on the boil and lore revelations coming while threading the actions of multiple protagonists.—RDL

Obsession (Film, US, Curry Barker, 2026) Romantically maladroit music shop employee (Michael Johnston) makes an ill-advised wish for the intense love of a co-worker (Inde Navarette) who probably thinks of him as strictly a friend. Navarette’s calibrated yet jaw-dropping performance as the unfortunate wish object powers a sly riff on a classic horror premise.—RDL

Secret Mall Apartment (Film, US, Jeremy Workman, 2024) In 2004 a group of street-level Providence RI artists find a large dead spot behind the scenes of a high-end shopping mall and for four years covertly transform it into a second living space. Documentary uses footage taken by its subjects on early digital cameras to tell a shaggy dog story exploring the questions around hidden and ephemeral art. The role played in all of this by the weird geometry of the mall, built as it is to hug the rerouted Providence River, remains an exercise for the Mythos-aware viewer.—RDL

The Sleuth of Baghdad (Fiction, Charles B. Child, 2002) This collection assembles fifteen of the 34 stories, published between 1947 and 1969, featuring homicide inspector Chafik J. Chafik of the Baghdad Police. A mix of procedural and pure deduction, with a smattering of terrific impossible murders, the evocation of a thoroughly destroyed milieu is its most interesting feature.—KH

Okay

Sucker Free City (Film, US, Spike Lee, 2013) The paths of an empathetic gangbanger (Anthony Mackie), felonious finance company gopher (Ben Crowley), and impetuous triad debt collector (Ken Leung) cross in San Francisco’s Balkanized criminal underworld. Pilot for unproduced Showtime show, shot on blown-out early oughts digital video, transfers Lee’s concern for clashing local communities out of NYC, with less rounded characterization than his own scripts and a tacked-on ending.—RDL

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Episode 704: Mummy Curse Coded

June 19th, 2026 | Robin

Among My Many Hats presents Robin’s new book Hamlet’s GM Screen, coming in July from Pelgrane Press.

The Monster Hut looks around the corner at that long-necked yokai, the rokurokubi, and its sometimes entirely detachable head.

In Ken and/or Robin Talk to Someone Else, Ken talks to Jared Twing about his game Of Hearth & the Harrowing.

Finally the Conspiracy Corner takes a hard squint at the dead and missing scientists flap.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


Big news from mission control! If you missed out the first time, don’t panic. The wait is over: the CatStronauts board game is finally back in stock at Atlas Games! The first printing disappeared at lightspeed! Don’t let this reprint of CatStronauts slip through your claws.

In a hole in the ground… they found a body! Solve this mystery and more in the most adorable, yet murdery, GUMSHOE game yet, Merryshire Detective Club. Fantasy mystery master Gareth Ryder-Hanrahan brings you all the clues and crumpets your tiny frame can handle in the ultimate game of halfling sleuthing, crowdfunding soon on Backerkit.

The play The King in Yellow has haunted imaginations like a dirge since its first appearance in 1895. Now ask it to predict the future and run your life with Arc Dream’s King in Yellow tarot deck. Daniel Harms and John Scott Tynes, famous clairvoyants, divined the forms and portents of this Carcosan deck. Painter Kurt Komoda, in a fevered fugue of inspiration, reproduced designs thought long lost. Add it now to your accursed Arc Dream shopping cart.

Sign up to be notified of the upcoming crowdfunding campaign for The American Crisis: Dark and Bloody Ground at YourDadWillLoveThis.com. Download a free copy of the Nations & Cannons core rules using code KENROBIN.

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Ken and Robin Consume Media: Backrooms, The Furious, and One of Korea’s Robin Hoods

June 16th, 2026 | Robin

Recommended

Backrooms (Film, US, Kane Parsons, 2026) Failed architect Clark (Chiwetel Ejiofor) phases into an eerie yellow liminal space beside his furniture store’s basement and the creepery commences. Renate Reinsve enlivens a tricky role as Clark’s baggage-laden therapist, and the “follow these characters’ linear path through a series of increasingly unnerving sets” storyline relies strongly on her and Ejiofor’s sheer believability. You can occasionally sense the script and scope threatening to escape directorial control, but those swerves often bring their own frisson. And hey, it’s Parsons’ first feature film.—KH

The French Conspiracy (Film, France, Yves Boisset, 1972) Burned out activist (Jean-Louis Trintignant) becomes a pawn in a Deuxieme Bureau scheme to lure an exiled Algerian resistance leader (Gian Maria Volonte) onto French soil. Paranoid spy thriller with a stacked cast and more actual geopolitics than the genre usually admits.—RDL

The Furious (Film, Hong Kong/US, Kenji Tanigaki, 2026) Mute repairman Wei (Miao Xie) and investigator Navin (Joe Taslim) team up to rescue loved ones from evil human traffickers in not-Bangkok. Although Taslim’s dogged charm remains intact, and up-and-comer Brian Le stuns in a “biggest henchman” role, the real standout is Tanigaki’s collaboration with action choreographer Kensuke Sonomura. Together, they create a symphony of bone-crunching battles featuring whole new ways to dodge, hit, weave, and climb in combat. Not quite best of breed, but hey, it’s Tanigaki’s first feature film.—KH

The Furious (Film, Hong Kong, Kenji Tanigaki, 2026) In his effort to rescue his preteen daughter from human traffickers, a mute handyman (Miao Xie) teams with an equally fight-capable independent investigator (Joe Taslim) searching for his missing reporter wife. In his first feature as helmer, the most exciting action director working today delivers complex, crunching battles in a style adding MMA moves to restrained wirework. HK cinema fans will remember the lead from his scrappy kung fu kid roles in such 90s classics as My Father Is a Hero and The New Legend of Shaolin.—RDL

Lim Kkeok-jeong (Film, South Korea, Yu Hyun-mok, 1961) While ass-kicking the minions of a corrupt mayor, a heroic bandit discovers the righteousness of his daughter. Period adventure epic about Korea’s real-life 16th century Robin Hood equivalent was considered a lost film until a print was found in the Library of Congress and restored by the Korean Film Archive.—RDL

One of Them Days (Film, US, Lawrence Lamont, 2025) When the latter’s sponging boyfriend absconds with their rent money, together Dreux (Keke Palmer) and flaky Alyssa (SZA) quest through South L.A. to replace it. Affirming portrait of a community built around a chaotic buddy comedy.—RDL

Okay

The Law According to Lidia Poët Season 3 (Television, Italy, Netflix, Guido Iuculano and Davide Orsini, 2026) Lidia puts her brother’s political career in jeopardy by browbeating him into defending a friend who killed her abusive husband. To its detriment the show’s final season adopts a serialized structure, giving perfunctory treatment to its cases of the week.—RDL

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Episode 703: I Only Knew Twenty Lesser Sages

June 12th, 2026 | Robin

The Gaming Hut picks up on our previous general discussion of tuning pregens to a scenario by finding hooks for Trail of Cthulhu Investigators about to enter an old dark house.

Beloved Patreon backer Alex Gill convenes the Book Hut for an explanation of a tome sometimes translated as The Book of Mad Desire for the Knowledge of Written Symbols.

Fun with Science checks out the extraction of DNA from parchment manuscripts.

Finally our resident chrononaut hops into Ken’s Time Machine to decide whether to undo or protect the Cadaver Synod.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


Big news from mission control! If you missed out the first time, don’t panic. The wait is over: the CatStronauts board game is finally back in stock at Atlas Games! The first printing disappeared at lightspeed! Don’t let this reprint of CatStronauts slip through your claws.

Delve into epic fantasy adventure with one player and one GM in The Paragon Blade. Gareth Ryder-Hanrahan tunes GUMSHOE One-2-One for a mighty barbarian, skulking thief, and covert magician. Take your trusty companion and legendary artifact with you to pick it up at the Pelgrane web store or a discerning retailer near you.

The play The King in Yellow has haunted imaginations like a dirge since its first appearance in 1895. Now ask it to predict the future and run your life with Arc Dream’s King in Yellow tarot deck. Daniel Harms and John Scott Tynes, famous clairvoyants, divined the forms and portents of this Carcosan deck. Painter Kurt Komoda, in a fevered fugue of inspiration, reproduced designs thought long lost. Add it now to your accursed Arc Dream shopping cart.

Sign up to be notified of the upcoming crowdfunding campaign for The American Crisis: Dark and Bloody Ground at YourDadWillLoveThis.com. Download a free copy of the Nations & Cannons core rules using code KENROBIN.

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Ken and Robin Consume Media: Daredevil, Warp Marine Corps, Christopher Nolan

June 9th, 2026 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

Recommended

Big Time Gambling Boss (Film, Japan, Kôsaku Yamashita, 1968) After turning down the leadership of his adopted clan, an honorable 30s yakuza tries to mediate between his bullheaded preferred candidate and the expediently chosen winner. Classically constructed tale of a gangland spiral from order into chaos.—RDL

Cécé (Fiction, Emmelie Prophète, 2020) In a gang-ruled Haitian slum, a young woman maintains her independence by parlaying her Facebook likes into an influencer gig. Unsparing social realism for the social media era.—RDL

Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 (Television, US, Disney+, Dario Scardapane, 2026) Daredevil (Charlie Cox) and Karen Page (Deborah Ann Woll) spur a popular revolt against tyrannical NYC mayor Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio). Satisfyingly wraps a two-season arc that remembers what worked about the original show, even though making Kingpin a regular creates a stasis between protagonist and antagonist.—RDL

I am Baseball (Film, Japan, Takashi Ono, 2023) Young widow (Mitsuki Moriyama) is bullied into a maniacal baseball coach’s (Takehiko Fujita) scheme to mold her into the ultimate amateur player. Deeply strange satire of inspirational sports movies hybridizes the Brechtian alienation techniques of the 60s Japanese New Wave with the timeless comedy of guys getting smacked in the nuts.—RDL

The Nolan Variations (Nonfiction, Tom Shone, 2020) Based on lengthy interviews and discussions with Nolan, this examination of the director’s influences, touchstones, and approaches runs from Nolan’s London/Chicago upbringing through Following (1998) to Tenet (2020). Not a production history in any sense, more of a creation history, providing interesting insights into the most bankable great director (or greatest bankable director) of our times.—KH

Operation Mincemeat (Film, UK, John Madden, 2021) Seconded to MI5, a Lt Commander with family problems (Colin Firth) and socially maladroit Flight Lt (Matthew Macfadyen) team with the young widow they both pine for (Kelly Macdonald) to draw German attention from the planned Sicily landing by floating a corpse with fake documents onto the Spanish coast. An invented love triangle adds dramatic beats to a clearly told, stiff upper lip tick-tock of history’s greatest disinformation op.—RDL

Warp Marine Corps: The Complete Series (Fiction, C.J. Carella, 2015–2020) After aliens kill half of humanity, America expands into a hostile and occupied Galaxy. What begins as the Boxer Rebellion in space becomes a Humanity Fuck Yeah saga which takes a turn for the supernatural (paranatural?) horror genre long about Book Three. That book is such a delightful takedown of the Roddenberry “superior aliens judge humanity” trope that I forgive former RPG designer Carella his genre sloshing (which reminds me weirdly of Warren Ellis’ SF/horror) in the next two books. If you enjoy HFY, military sci-fi, and misusing the term tachyon as much as I do, this pentalogy is Recommended.—KH

Good

Satan in High Heels (Film, US, Jerald Intrator, 1962) With $900 stolen from her junkie ex, a carnival burlesque performer (Meg Myles) heads for the big city and the arms of both a connected club owner (Mike Keene) and his ne’er-do-well son (Robert Yuro). Sexploitation filmmakers overshoot the assignment with actual characterization and performances in this hardboiled time capsule of fetish and queer subcultures prior to the sexual revolution.—RDL

Okay

Bad Words (Film, US, Jason Bateman, 2013) Bitter adult (Jason Bateman) uses a loophole to worm himself into a kids’ spelling bee championship, resisting the attempts of his wide-eyed main competitor (Rohan Chand) to befriend him. A heavy reliance on ironic racism as joke fodder stale-dates this otherwise diverting entry in the misanthrope with a heart of gold sub-genre.—RDL

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Episode 702: An Alliance with Squirrels

June 5th, 2026 | Robin

Want to make sure that your players feel their successes? The Gaming Hut pitches in by looking at the difference between permissions and rewards.

Beloved Patreon backer Andrew Bates revs up Ask Ken and Robin for the secret truth of Toronto raccoons.

Finally the mythic land of Michigan surrenders its treasures to our resident bibliomane in the latest Ken’s Bookshelf.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


Big news from mission control! If you missed out the first time, don’t panic. The wait is over: the CatStronauts board game is finally back in stock at Atlas Games! The first printing disappeared at lightspeed! Don’t let this reprint of CatStronauts slip through your claws.

Delve into epic fantasy adventure with one player and one GM in The Paragon Blade. Gareth Ryder-Hanrahan tunes GUMSHOE One-2-One for a mighty barbarian, skulking thief, and covert magician. Take your trusty companion and legendary artifact with you to pick it up at the Pelgrane web store or a discerning retailer near you.

The play The King in Yellow has haunted imaginations like a dirge since its first appearance in 1895. Now ask it to predict the future and run your life with Arc Dream’s King in Yellow tarot deck. Daniel Harms and John Scott Tynes, famous clairvoyants, divined the forms and portents of this Carcosan deck. Painter Kurt Komoda, in a fevered fugue of inspiration, reproduced designs thought long lost. Add it now to your accursed Arc Dream shopping cart.

Play spies, skirmishers, and saboteurs in the battle for the future of the Thirteen Colonies in Flagbearer Games’ thoroughly researched and beautifully illustrated 5E compatible roleplaying game Nations and Cannons. Download a free copy of the Nations & Cannons core rules using code KENROBIN here. Sign up to be notified of the upcoming crowdfunding campaign for The American Crisis: Dark and Bloody Ground here.

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Ken and Robin Consume Media: Unhinged Hong Kong Action, Canine Horror, and Occult-Adjacent Mysteries

June 2nd, 2026 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

Recommended

Detective vs. Sleuths (Film, Hong Kong, Wai Ka-Fai, 2022) Hallucinating ex-cop (Lau Ching-wan) teams with a pregnant OCTB officer (Charlene Choi) chasing cult-like vigilantes on a murder rampage against unprosecutable offenders. Frenetic, high body count action mystery in which Wai, best known for his collaborations with Johnnie To, gets the budget to realize the fullest heights of his berserk vision. If a cop in her third trimester gets shot and is dangling off the side of a building and you’re only 28 minutes in, you may be watching a Wai Ka-Fai movie. Found on some platforms with wildly misleading cover art under the equally misleading alt title Demon Hunter.—RDL

Furie (Film, Vietnam, Le-van Kiet, 2019) Rural debt collector (Veronica Ngo) relentlessly fights her way through Saigon’s underworld to rescue her young daughter from organ traffickers. Expertly staged and performed action in gritty, street-level mode.—RDL

Good Boy (Film, US, Ben Leonberg, 2025) Loyal dog (Indy) senses a sinister force coming for his ill human in the old family house near the woods. Formally brilliant exercise in subjective horror anchored by an endearingly expressive animal actor.—RDL

Thought Crimes: the Case of the Cannibal Cop (Film, US, Erin Lee Carr, 2015) Documentary searches in vain for satisfying answers in the case of Gilberto Valle, the New York cop busted for seemingly taking steps to realize the heinously sadistic crimes he fantasized about on an Internet forum. Shows a legal case that wasn’t about what anyone wanted it to be about while staring into the void between the depravity of Valle’s forum posts and his self-presentation as a bewildered mooncalf.—RDL

Good

The Complete Curious Mr. Tarrant (Fiction, C. Daly King, 2003) Collects all twelve of the “episodes” of Trevis Tarrant written between 1935 and 1951. Tarrant is a less-annoying Philo Vance type of idle mystery solver, who specializes in impossibilities. Each episode has a somewhat occult air, even the conventional (and for the most part excellent) locked room problems, and it’s not too big a spoiler to suggest that one or two of them have “genuine” occult phenomena behind them. A mixed bag, as with many such collections, less charming than the Lucius Leffing tales but differently weird.—KH

Not Recommended

Cultures in Motion: Mapping Key Contacts and Their Imprints in World History (Nonfiction, Peter N. Stearns, 2001) Purporting to be an atlas of inter-cultural contact and transmission, this faintly stabs in the direction of “trade routes” and diasporas, with even the best maps (charting the expansion of McDonalds, soccer, and motion pictures in one map of “International Consumer Culture”) being more cartograms than anything else. Intriguing parallels between the spread of, say, Islam and Marxism go under-thought and under-mapped (only 23 maps in the book at all).—KH

Eureka (Film, France/Germany, Lisandro Alonso, 2023) In the old west, a gunfighter (Viggo Mortensen) seeks his daughter; a police officer on a South Dakota reservation faces too many problems at once; an indigenous Brazilian fugitive tries gold prospecting. Triptych of unresolved, enigmatic situations overestimates the impact of long takes and concludes with the thinnest segment.—RDL

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Episode 701: Star of Arioch Setting

May 29th, 2026 | Robin

In the Gaming Hut we get started quickly by asking how much background detail players want in a pregenerated character.

Making good on a promise from episode 696, the Archaeology Hut checks out another possible inspiration for the labyrinth, the complex at Gortyn.

Beloved Patreon backer Nicolaj convenes the Narrative Hut for a look at melodrama and how it differs from drama.

Finally the Eliptony Hut gives you what you need to know to discourse knowledgeably about the recent drop of Pentagon UFO files.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


Big news from mission control! If you missed out the first time, don’t panic. The wait is over: the CatStronauts board game is finally back in stock at Atlas Games! The first printing disappeared at lightspeed! Don’t let this reprint of CatStronauts slip through your claws.

Make room on your shelf and in your heart for Page Turners, Robin’s game of dramatic interaction for one player and one GM, coming soon from Pelgrane Press. Explore the intensity of emotional storytelling driven by a single protagonist with scenarios ranging from Shakespearean comedy to tragic vampire love, written by Robin, Sarah “Sam” Saltiel, Ruth Tillman and Wade Rockett.

The play The King in Yellow has haunted imaginations like a dirge since its first appearance in 1895. Now ask it to predict the future and run your life with Arc Dream’s King in Yellow tarot deck. Daniel Harms and John Scott Tynes, famous clairvoyants, divined the forms and portents of this Carcosan deck. Painter Kurt Komoda, in a fevered fugue of inspiration, reproduced designs thought long lost. Add it now to your accursed Arc Dream shopping cart.

Play spies, skirmishers, and saboteurs in the battle for the future of the Thirteen Colonies in Flagbearer Games’ thoroughly researched and beautifully illustrated 5E compatible roleplaying game Nations and Cannons. Download a free copy of the Nations & Cannons core rules using code KENROBIN here. Sign up to be notified of the upcoming crowdfunding campaign for The American Crisis: Dark and Bloody Ground here.

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Ken and Robin Consume Media: Obsession, a Very GUMSHOE Investigation, and Boris Karloff’s Police Procedural

May 26th, 2026 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

Recommended

Hidden in the Fog (Film, Sweden, Lars-Eric Kjellgren, 1953) Heiress flees into the big city after shooting her husband. Noir explicitly modeled on its American counterparts with a great second act twist that also signals a shift in tone and protagonist.—RDL

Last Known Address (Film, France, José Giovanni, 1970) Unjustly sidelined police inspector (Lino Ventura) and open-hearted rookie (Marlène Jobert) doggedly search for a missing witness to a murder by a wealthy businessman. The mundanity of the quest heightens its existentialism in this philosophical police procedural. An extremely GUMSHOE movie where you can very clearly see the protagonists using their abilities to gain core clues that lead to new scenes.—RDL

Personality Crisis: One Night Only (Film, US, Martin Scorsese & David Tedeschi, 2023) Combination concert and biographical documentary intersperses archival footage and interviews with David Johansen performing his New York Dolls and solo songs in his Buster Poindexter style at New York’s Cafe Carlyle in January 2020. It’s a huge blessing to have a record of this delightful and moving performance, captured months before his cancer diagnosis.—RDL

Good

Bolero (Film, France, Anne Fontaine, 2024) Brilliant but neurotically self-negating composer Maurice Ravel (Raphaël Personnaz) struggles with a commission from ballet dancer Ida Rubinstein (Jeanne Balibar). Lush and often witty prestige drama with a script perched between two concepts—procedural origin story of Bolero, or standard biopic?—RDL

Colonel March of Scotland Yard (Television, UK, ITV, Hannah Weinstein, 1955–56) Colonel March (Boris Karloff) of Scotland Yard’s Department of Queer Complaints investigates unusual crimes and impossible reports (which turn out to also be crimes). March is a John Dickson Carr series character, and the best of the episodes are those taken from his stories; others drag a bit even at half-hour runtimes. Karloff’s twinkling delight remains the best reason to watch these, seven decades on, but Eric Pohlmann’s Inspector Gorot of the Sureté holds his own when the episodes cross the Channel.—KH

Obsession (Film, US, Curry Barker, 2026) Shy schlemiel Bear (Michael Johnston) wishes on an ironic retro novelty item for his unrequited crush Nikki (Inde Navarette) to love him more than anything, which goes even more wrong than you’re thinking right now. Flashes of this film are as original and scary as anything in new horror, and again it’s good to see a horror movie that keeps the subtext (mostly) out of the text, but audience identification is hard enough with a schlemiel without also making him a moral and narrative nullity for 100 minutes.—KH

Visible Secret (Film, Hong Kong, Ann Hui, 2001) Hapless hairdresser (Eason Chan) falls for a charming but mysterious girl (Shu Qi) whose left eye sees ghosts. Early entry in the cycle of Asian Sixth Sense riffs focuses as much on naturalistic romantic drama as eerie manifestations.—RDL

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Episode 700: LIGHTNING ROUNNNDD!!!

May 22nd, 2026 | Robin

Ken and Robin celebrate the astounding 700th episode milestone of their eponymous podcast by once again answering listeners’ LIGHTNING ROUNNNNDD!!! questions.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


Big news from mission control! If you missed out the first time, don’t panic. The wait is over: the CatStronauts board game is finally back in stock at Atlas Games! The first printing disappeared at lightspeed! Don’t let this reprint of CatStronauts slip through your claws.

Make room on your shelf and in your heart for Page Turners, Robin’s game of dramatic interaction for one player and one GM, coming soon from Pelgrane Press. Explore the intensity of emotional storytelling driven by a single protagonist with scenarios ranging from Shakespearean comedy to tragic vampire love, written by Robin, Sarah “Sam” Saltiel, Ruth Tillman and Wade Rockett.

The play The King in Yellow has haunted imaginations like a dirge since its first appearance in 1895. Now ask it to predict the future and run your life with Arc Dream’s King in Yellow tarot deck. Daniel Harms and John Scott Tynes, famous clairvoyants, divined the forms and portents of this Carcosan deck. Painter Kurt Komoda, in a fevered fugue of inspiration, reproduced designs thought long lost. Add it now to your accursed Arc Dream shopping cart.

Play spies, skirmishers, and saboteurs in the battle for the future of the Thirteen Colonies in Flagbearer Games’ thoroughly researched and beautifully illustrated 5E compatible roleplaying game Nations and Cannons. Download a free copy of the Nations & Cannons core rules using code KENROBIN here. Sign up to be notified of the upcoming crowdfunding campaign for The American Crisis: Dark and Bloody Ground here.

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Robin
Film Cannister