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Ken and Robin Consume Media: Crisis on Infinite Lupins
April 23rd, 2025 | 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
The Adventures of Arsene Lupin (Film, France, Jacques Becker, 1957) Notorious gentleman thief (Robert Lamoureux) flirts with an aristocratic spy (Liselotte Pulver) while hoodwinking rich art collectors, eager-to-please jewelers, and the German Kaiser (O. E. Hasse.) Lavish celebration of style and luxury in glorious fifties color.—RDL
Noryang: Deadly Sea (Film, South Korea, Kim Han-Min, 2023) As the 16th century Imjin War drags to a close, genius admiral Yi Sun-Sin (Kim Yoon-seok) defies his Ming allies by demanding a final engagement to destroy withdrawing Japanese fleet. Final installment in the Yi Sun-Sin trilogy devotes a long first act to complicated three-way politicking, with factions within each force, all of which are needed to fully follow the rousing, extended naval combat sequences that follow.—RDL
Good
Arsene Lupin (Film, US, Jack Conway, 1932) Crusty Sûreté chief (Lionel Barrymore) pursues a spendthrift duke (John Barrymore) who he suspects is the wily gentleman thief Arsène Lupin. Agreeable pre-Code crime romp uses the Maurice Leblanc character to occasion a double shot of Barrymore.—RDL
Lady of the Train (Film, Egypt, Youssef Chahine, 1952) On discovering that she has not in fact been killed in a train crash, the degenerate gambler husband of a beloved singer pressures her to lay low so he can collect the insurance money. Wild plot turns keep coming in this noir-adjacent musical melodrama.—RDL
Oh, Canada (Film, US, Paul Schrader, 2024) Dying of cancer, an American expat who made a career for himself as a documentarian in Canada (Richard Gere) sits for an hijacks an interview conducted by a former student (Michael Imperioli) into a confession to his wife (Uma Thurman.) Adapting the structure of the Russell Banks source novel (Foregone) to film is a heavy lift, though Gere turns in an impressive performance. Set in the slightly alternate universe that vibrates into being whenever Americans set movies in Canada.—RDL
Okay
Lupin Season 3 (Television, France, 2024) When a mysterious foe kidnaps his long absent mother, Assane again follows in the footsteps of fictional master thief Arsene Lupin to fake his demise. Dutiful recapitulates the structure of season 1 & 2, making some off-putting choices for its protagonist without asking him to reckon for them.—RDL
Ken and Robin were both on the road this week. Like a true gentleman mastermind, Robin banked some capsule reviews for this exact eventuality.
Episode 645: I Don’t Make Up These Real Events
April 18th, 2025 | Robin
In the Gaming Hut we look at that essential tool in the GM’s arsenal, the ability to bend world logic toward the fun.
At the behest of beloved Patreon backer Eric Park, the Cartography Hut looks at the alleged travels and maps of Nicolo Zeno.
The Food Hut studies a cake of mythic import Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec might serve to Yellow King Roleplaying Game characters—the convent snake.
Finally estimable backer Dan Noland assigns Ken’s Time Machine to (non-fatally) prevent Woodrow Wilson from becoming US president.
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.
Stop gazing lovingly at that seed catalogue and start pre-ordering Vicious Gardens from Atlas Games. This contemporary, distinctive, choice driven card game combines the joy of gardening with the thrill of being a total jerk. Strategically cultivate your garden, harvest plants, and sabotage others in a cut-throat competition.
A global mythos conspiracy ensnares the player characters in The Borellus Connection, Pelgrane Press’ new Fall of DELTA Green mega-campaign by Gareth Ryder-Hanrahan and Kenneth Hite. Journey in the guise of federal narcotics agents to Saigon, Beirut, Prague and Bozukepe. Buy it for your GM and demand that she run it today!
Brace for more Delta Green Mythos horror with Dead Drops, Arc Dream’s latest bone-chilling anthology of black bag scenarios. From a secret Missouri church to a frozen Alabama town, the top secret terrors keep on unfolding. Acquire the 288 page full color hardback from the Arc Dream store, or purchase, download, rate and review the PDF at DriveThru.
Turn your digital dials to Gen Con TV, The Best Four Days in Gaming – All Year Long. Entirely free and streaming your way on Twitch, Gen Con TV offers actual plays, reviews, dramatized gaming shorts, minis painting and its flagship show, Table Talk, beaming to you Fridays at 2 pm with polyhedral news you’re dying to use.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ken and Robin Consume Media: Morris on Manson, Moravian Witch Hunting, 70s Cops, and the Hottest New Fiction of 1771
April 15th, 2025 | 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
Close Your Eyes (Film, Spain, Victor Erice, 2023) An unsolved mysteries-style TV show inspires a novelist (Manolo Solo) to follow up on the fate of a renowned actor (Jose Coronado), whose disappearance from set a generation ago ended his second career as a movie director. Erice, returning to filmmaking after a 31 year absence, infuses his ambiguous narrative of identity and loss with a complex, absorbing simplicity—not to mention a surprising homage to Rio Bravo.—RDL
The Expedition of Humphry Clinker (Fiction, Tobias Smollett, 1771) An outwardly querulous, secretly kindly gent, his fussy, husband-seeking sister and their lovestruck niece and hotheaded nephew take a tour across England and Scotland. Fictionalized comic epistolary travelogue leaves an accessible, amusing record of everyday life in Georgian Britain.—RDL
The Seven-Ups (Film, US, Philip D’Antoni, 1973) Plainclothes cop Buddy Manucci (Roy Scheider) and his team of maverick “Seven-Ups” find their pursuit of New York organized crime figures complicated by freelance crooks kidnapping those same targets. A fine 70s cop movie is vaulted into greatness by the third (after Bullitt and The French Connection) of stunt co-ordinator Bill Hickman’s legendary car chases.—KH
Sly Lives! (aka the Burden of Black Genius) (Film, US, Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, 2025) Arts profile documentary uses a diptych structure to examine the musical innovations of funk pioneer Sly Stone, and then to ask what role the extra pressures placed on a black superstar contributed to his breakdown into drug dependency.—RDL
The Thief of Bagdad (Film, US, Raoul Walsh, 1924) Exquisitely muscled rogue (Douglas Fairbanks) poses as a foreign prince to vie with rival suitors for the hand of a princess (Julanne Johnston.) Foundational work of fantasy cinema, its monumental sets dripping with art nouveau and Symbolist style, centered by Fairbanks as the prototypical action star. Obvious caveat: if there’s a non-orientalist way for a Westerner to do this story, it’s not gonna be the one from a hundred years ago.—RDL
Witchhammer (Film, Czechoslovakia, Otakar Vávra, 1970) In Baroque-era Moravia, an erudite deacon (Elo Romancik) challenges a venal inquisitor (Vladimír Smeral) conducting an escalating, lethal anti-witchcraft campaign. Harrowing historical political drama of complicity and inertia in the face of tyrannical abuse hits hard now, as it would certainly have done for Czech audiences two years after the Soviet crackdown.—RDL
Good
Chaos: the Manson Murders (Film, US, Errol Morris, 2025) Morris’ ongoing tumble down the MKULTRA rabbit hole leads him to entertain researcher Tom O’Neill’s admittedly unproven theory that Charles Manson gained his powers of persuasion from a government mind control project. The problem with this challenge to the prevailing narrative of Manson as a Svengali of nihilistic terror is that it still strives to impose sense on what was really a spiral of drug-addled, criminal stupidity, which is where the documentary correctly if somewhat reluctantly lands.—RDL
Episode 644: This is Not a Skeptical Museum
April 11th, 2025 | Robin
The Gaming Hut situates itself in a dense woodland for beloved Patreon backer Ben A’s request for tips on a historical time slip scenario.
Ken issues a Travel Advisory on his recent trip to Roswell.
Listeners love transportation infrastructure, as estimable backer John Scheib proves once again by convening the Architecture Hut for the eldritch truth behind the failure of Providence’s Washington Bridge.
Finally the Eliptony Hut tackles the freshly generated pseudo archaeology of underground megastructures beneath the Giza pyramids.
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.
Stop gazing lovingly at that seed catalogue and start pre-ordering Vicious Gardens from Atlas Games. This contemporary, distinctive, choice driven card game combines the joy of gardening with the thrill of being a total jerk. Strategically cultivate your garden, harvest plants, and sabotage others in a cut-throat competition.
Fear Itself, Pelgrane Press’ groundbreaking GUMSHOE game of personal and psychological horror, has returned from the swirling torment of the Outer Dark in a hauntingly beautiful premium hardcover format. With The Shattered Veil Edition, stunningly beautiful full-color artwork brings fresh terror to your table. Grab it alongside the highly anticipated Ocean Game expansion in its current Gamefound campaign.
Brace for more Delta Green Mythos horror with Dead Drops, Arc Dream’s latest bone-chilling anthology of black bag scenarios. From a secret Missouri church to a frozen Alabama town, the top secret terrors keep on unfolding. Acquire the 288 page full color hardback from the Arc Dream store, or purchase, download, rate and review the PDF at DriveThru.
Turn your digital dials to Gen Con TV, The Best Four Days in Gaming – All Year Long. Entirely free and streaming your way on Twitch, Gen Con TV offers actual plays, reviews, dramatized gaming shorts, minis painting and its flagship show, Table Talk, beaming to you Fridays at 2 pm with polyhedral news you’re dying to use.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ken and Robin Consume Media: Bill Burr, 80s Elmore Leonard, and a Martial Arts Crossover Event
April 8th, 2025 | 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
52 Pick-Up (Film, US, John Frankenheimer, 1986) Steel company exec Harry Mitchell’s (Roy Scheider) philandering exposes him to blackmail by Alan Raimy (John Glover), setting off an escalating battle of wills and wits. Elmore Leonard co-wrote the script based on his novel, and the result feels tighter and smarter than the average 80s thriller, while not quite maintaining the tension Frankenheimer was capable of.—KH
Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England (Nonfiction, Amanda Vickery, 2009) Deep dives into 18th century household account books, letters, court records and commercial catalogues illuminate Georgian home life, with a particular eye to the roles assigned to women and men. If you don’t want an entire chapter on the 18th century wallpaper industry maybe this isn’t for you, but I am addressing a self-selecting crowd here.—RDL
Bill Burr: The Drop Dead Years (Stand-up, Hulu, Ben Tishler, 2025) At age 55, Burr begins to confront his “drop dead years” by attempting to modulate his “angry Everyman” persona. The best individual bits, by and large, still come from that old type, but the larger structure of the routine points to a key change that will either produce a whole new comedy or remove his teeth entirely.—KH
Escape from Mogadishu (Film, South Korea, Ryoo Seung-wan, 2021) When embassies in the Ethiopian capital come under attack during the 1990 overthrow of Siad Barre, the mutually distrustful delegations of North and South Korea band together to find a way out of the war torn city. Docudrama political thriller culminates in a heart-in-mouth suspense action set piece.—RDL
The Girl on a Broomstick (Film, Czechoslovakia, Václav Vorlícek, 1972) Bored by the prospect of a 144-year detention, an inattentive student witch (Petra Cernocká) splits for the mortal world, where her shaky grasp of magic wreaks havoc at a contemporary high school. Wacky, anarchic comedy with funny gags, beguiling credits sequence illustrations and a jazz-funk soundtrack. I theorize that Cernocká and her foxy witch outfit exerted a galvanizing effect on a generation of impressionable young Czechs.—RDL
Nickel Boys (Film, US, RaMell Ross, 2024) Studious teen (Ethan Herisse) unjustly sentenced to a corrupt, murderous reform school befriends a more realistic fellow inmate (Brandon Wilson.) Moments of evanescent, Malick-esque beauty juxtapose with memories of rage and horror in a confident adaptation of the novel by Colson Whitehead.—RDL
September 5 (Film, US/Germany, , 2024) The ABC sports team at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, led by obstacle-smashing exec Roone Arledge (Peter Sarsgaard) and voice-of-caution Marvin Bader (Ben Chaplin) invents live crisis coverage on the fly when the Black September terror group attacks Israeli athletes and coaches. Journalistic procedural docudrama executes the shouting into phones genre with tension and clarity.—RDL
Zatoichi Meets the One-Armed Swordsman (Film, Japan, Kimiyoshi Yasuda, 1971) When samurai seeking to cover up a massacre hunt a high-leaping Chinese warrior (Jimmy Wang Yu), the swordcane-wielding blind masseuse yakuza punks can’t stop messing with (Shintaro Katsu) steps up to protect a young boy who knows what really happened. A martial arts crossover event for the ages becomes a fatalistic meditation on cultural barriers in this above-average entry in the long-running series.—RDL
Episode 643: Not Even Enough Gnomes
April 4th, 2025 | Robin
In the Gaming Hut beloved Patreon backer Sikander asks us to tackle a scenario where the PCs have to figure out whether their boss’ secrecy is sinister or mundanely selfish.
The Crime Blotter reviews the case of Barbara “Golden Boos” Erni, the 18th century thief who robbed Swiss inns aided by her prodigious strength and mysterious trunk.
Ripped from the Headlines finds the mythic truth behind the shooting of a white stag in Merseyside.
Finally the Consulting Occultist reveals the career of Albin Grau, ritual magician and production designer for the 1922 Nosferatu.
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.
Stop gazing lovingly at that seed catalogue and start pre-ordering Vicious Gardens from Atlas Games. This contemporary, distinctive, choice driven card game combines the joy of gardening with the thrill of being a total jerk. Strategically cultivate your garden, harvest plants, and sabotage others in a cut-throat competition.
Fear Itself, Pelgrane Press’ groundbreaking GUMSHOE game of personal and psychological horror, has returned from the swirling torment of the Outer Dark in a hauntingly beautiful premium hardcover format. With The Shattered Veil Edition, stunningly beautiful full-color artwork brings fresh terror to your table. Grab it alongside the highly anticipated Ocean Game expansion in its current Gamefound campaign.
Brace for more Delta Green Mythos horror with Dead Drops, Arc Dream’s latest bone-chilling anthology of black bag scenarios. From a secret Missouri church to a frozen Alabama town, the top secret terrors keep on unfolding. Acquire the 288 page full color hardback from the Arc Dream store, or purchase, download, rate and review the PDF at DriveThru.
Turn your digital dials to Gen Con TV, The Best Four Days in Gaming – All Year Long. Entirely free and streaming your way on Twitch, Gen Con TV offers actual plays, reviews, dramatized gaming shorts, minis painting and its flagship show, Table Talk, beaming to you Fridays at 2 pm with polyhedral news you’re dying to use.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ken and Robin Consume Media: The Vourdalak, They Cloned Tyrone, Reacher
April 1st, 2025 | 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
Mother and a Guest (Film, South Korea, Shin Sang-ok, 1961) An irrepressible yet vulnerable six year old (Yeong-seon Jeon) who lives with her mom (Choi Eun-hie), grandmother and maid, all of them widows, does not understand the adult emotions stirred by the arrival of a male teacher (Kim Jin-kyu) as a lodger in their guest house. Often funny, sometimes strikingly poignant domestic drama, told with a deceptive simplicity that veers away from melodrama toward emotional realism. Features one of cinema’s greatest child performances. See kbelow for more on the star and director.—RDL
Recommended
Ant Colony (Comics, Michael DeForge, 2020) Anomic ants ponder wretched insect existence and their illicit desires as catastrophe looms over their colony. Obsessively drawn, bleakly comic fable of deterministic fatalism set in a Herrimanesque arthropod hellscape.—RDL
Close Your Eyes (Film, Spain, Victor Erice, 2023) An unsolved mysteries-style TV show inspires a novelist (Manolo Solo) to follow up on the fate of a renowned actor (Jose Coronado), whose disappearance from set a generation ago ended his second career as a movie director. Erice, returning to filmmaking after a 31 year absence, infuses his ambiguous narrative of identity and loss with a complex, absorbing simplicity—not to mention a surprising homage to Rio Bravo.—RDL
The Lovers & the Despot (Film, UK, Ross Adam & Robert Cannan, 2016) Documentary recounts the astounding story of top South Korean film director Shin Sang-ok and his star actress ex-wife Choi Eun-hie, who were separately kidnapped from Hong Kong in 1978 at the behest of North Korea’s Kim Jong-il, a frustrated cineaste who held them captive until they were willing to make movies for him. Illuminates the many stunning turns of a wrenching incident often treated in Western media as a surreal joke.—RDL
They Cloned Tyrone (Film, US, Juel Taylor, 2023) Aided by a motor mouthed, has-been pimp (Jamie Foxx) and a streetwalker who learned detective skills from her Nancy Drew collection (Teyonah Parris), a taciturn mid-level drug dealer (John Boyega) chases down eyewitness reports of his own murder. Hyper-verbal, hazily shot weird science mystery joins the satirically conscious horror cycle ushered in by Get Out.—RDL
The Vourdalak (Film, France, Adrien Beau, 2023) Lost and robbed in the 18th-century Balkans, French Marquis d’Urfe (Kacey Mottet Klein) shelters in the home of Gorcha, who has become a vampirish vourdalak. Undeniably effective adaptation of the Alexei Tolstoy novella aims more for “cringe horror” than real dread, although Beau’s decision to show the vourdalak’d Gorcha as a marionette pays big dividends in the uncanny.—KH
Good
Reacher Season 3 (Television, US, Amazon Prime, Nick Santora, 2025) Seeking to revenge himself on a connected sadist who got away, Reacher (Alan Ritchson) goes along with a rogue DEA operation targeting the sadist’s partner Zachary Beck (Anthony Michael Hall). Although this season finds an even more enormous foe to pit against Reacher, it suffers from Reacher being fundamentally reactive (and run by pinhead feds to boot) and from a dearth of Reacher whaling on guys. At least it’s a tighter story than Season 2, but America wants real Reacher.—KH
You Can’t Buy Everything (Film, US, Charles Reisner, 1934) Querulous, wealthy miser (May Robson) forces her dutiful son (William Bakewell) to follow in her footsteps, until he falls for the daughter (Jean Parker) of the ex-fiancee (Lewis Stone) she loathes with obsessive fervor. Domestic melodrama takes a rare focus on a mother-son relationship, drawing its matronly antihero with unexpected realism, even when Robson is overacting a little.—RDL
Okay
The Amateur (Film, Canada, Charles Jarrott, 1981) CIA cryptographer Charles Heller (John Savage) blackmails the Agency into sending him behind the Iron Curtain to kill the terrorists who murdered his fiancee. Christopher Plummer embraces the role of the Czech secret policeman on the other side, animating as best he can the back half of the movie. A few set pieces provide intermittent thrills, but this is perhaps best watched as a hairy period piece.—KH
Piaffe (Film, Germany, Ann Oren, 2023) Forced to take over work as a foley artist from her hospitalized sister, a withdrawn woman (Simone Bucio) grows a horse tail and enters into a fetishistic affair with a fern expert (Sebastian Rudolph.) Solemn, surreal magic realist fantasy shies away from resolution, with cryptic, hermetically sealed results.—RDL