128 episodes

Join us as we lick our blades, banter and ramble on, and provide in depth reviews of some of our favorite (and not so favorite) Anime, Kaiju, Martial Arts, Chambara, and Asian films. You can find out more about our show, all of our previous episodes, and our show notes at our blog: bladelickingthieves.wordpress.com

Blade Licking Thieves Grant, TheHeat, and Zen

    • TV & Film
    • 4.6 • 40 Ratings

Join us as we lick our blades, banter and ramble on, and provide in depth reviews of some of our favorite (and not so favorite) Anime, Kaiju, Martial Arts, Chambara, and Asian films. You can find out more about our show, all of our previous episodes, and our show notes at our blog: bladelickingthieves.wordpress.com

    #100: Rashomon (1950)

    #100: Rashomon (1950)

    The Blade Licking Thieves podcast has hit 100 episodes!  Thanks to all the listeners out there that have taken the ride with us.  Please keep sending us your comments, feedback, and suggestions for new films or shows for us to watch.

    This being the 100th episode, we thought what better time than now to finally break the glass and at long last tackle a work by Akira Kurosawa, arguably, THE Japanese film maker.  Kurosawa's first film to achieve critical recognition in the West, Rashomon (1950) tells the story of an encounter in a bamboo grove between a bandit (Toshiro Mifune), a samurai (Masayuki Mori), and the samurai's wife (Machiko Kyo) ending with a rape and murder, yet the narrative is fragmentary, as the story is retold multiple times, through various eye witness accounts, often varying and contradictory, forcing the audience to judge "the truth" of the story for ourselves. 

    Timestamps:

    [00:00] Intro
    [24:14] Review - Rashomon (1950)
    [2:31:35] Twitter Questions

    Team B #16: Humanoids from the Deep (1980)

    Team B #16: Humanoids from the Deep (1980)

    BLT Team B return with a review of the schlocky, horror movie Humanoids from the Deep (1980) in which a small fishing village is laid siege by mutated fish-men intent on rape and murder.

    #99: Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

    #99: Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

    We review Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992), from acclaimed director Francis Ford Coppola, a visually arresting, erotically charged, and boldly operatic retelling of Stoker's classic gothic horror novel that remains just as spellbinding a cinematic vision today as it was upon release.

    Timestamps:

    [00:00] Intro + The Human Target, Brave Bang Bravern, Delcious in Dungeon

    [36:33] Review - Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)

    [2:43:05] Twitter Questions

    #98: Cyber City Oedo 808

    #98: Cyber City Oedo 808

    Tragic space vampires, sabre tooth tigers with laser beams, terminator-esque death machines, enough F-bombs to pop your explosive cyber collar, and more delightful nonsense abounds in Yoshiaki Kawajiri's classic cyber punk OVA:  Cyber City Oedo 808!  Tune in for the full review and your twitter questions!

    Timestamps:

    [00:00] Intro + Kaiju No. 8, Fist of the North Star, The Boy and the Heron

    [48:24] Review - CYBER CITY OEDO 808

    [2:25:58] Twitter Questions

    #97: Shin Kamen Rider (2023)

    #97: Shin Kamen Rider (2023)

    We're starting off the new year with a review of Shin Kamen Rider (2023), the third film in Hideaki Anno's Shin series of remakes of classic Tokusatsu franchises.  This latest entry, with a plot heavily inspired by Shotaro Ishinomori's original Kamen Rider manga, finds man turned cyborg Takeshi Hongo (Sosuke Ikematsu), as the titular Kamen Rider, squaring off against the villainous organization SHOCKER and its rogues' gallery of evil animal cyborgs; along for the ride is his beautiful but icy partner Ruriko Midorikawa (Minabi Hanabe) and a mysterious rival Kamen Rider (Tasuku Emoto) whose allegiance is unknown.

    Timestamps:

    [00:00] Intro, Baldur's Gate 3, Berserk, The Knick, Mad Max: Furiosa, Onimusha, and Symphogear

    [27:48] Review - Shin Kamen Rider (2023)

    [2:17:07] Twitter Questions

    #96: Pale Flower (1964)

    #96: Pale Flower (1964)

    A hard boiled yakuza fresh out of prison and a beautiful and mysterious young woman seek out high stakes thrills in the illegal gambling dens of Tokyo in Masahiro Shinoda's film noir Pale Flower (1964). Plus impressions of the anime Hell's Paradise and Onimusha.

    Timestamps:

    [00:00] Intro, Hell's Paradise, Onimusha

    [45:55] Review - Pale Flower (1964)

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
40 Ratings

40 Ratings

birdGodZ ,

Ah, I see you are a podcast of culture as well

One of my favorite pods. Thoughtful, funny, endearing subject matter… I love hanging out with these folks no matter what they’re talking about. <3

Von Chimera ,

Dudes rock

Dudes rock

jwford ,

White & Nerdy

A bunch of white nerds tripping over each other to give their uninformed opinions on film & tv in order to feed their own Asian fetish. It also takes them 40 min to get to the main review. Thank u next.

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