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After the Frame Podcast

After the Frame Podcast

By: Matthew Alden Malik Moss-Solomon
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After the Frame is where the credits roll but the conversation begins. We dive into the emotional beats, hidden meanings, and lingering questions behind your favorite films and shows. If you love rewatching with a deeper lens, unpacking character arcs, or exploring “what happens next,” this is your space. Smart, heartfelt, and a little nerdy—perfect for fans who can’t stop thinking after the screen fades to black.Matthew Alden, Malik Moss-Solomon Art
Episodes
  • Disclosure Day, The Sheep Detectives, and The Drama: Spectacle, Surprises, & Squirming in Your Seat
    Jul 5 2026

    This episode on After the Frame, we’re covering a trio of movies that all surprised us in different ways: one with Spielberg-sized spectacle, one with sheep solving a mystery way better than expected, and one with enough cringe, comedy, and dramatic intensity to make you physically uncomfortable.


    We start with Disclosure Day, a movie packed with wonder, scale, and that unmistakable Spielberg “wow factor.” There’s a lot of greatness on screen, but we break down how the script and underbaked characters keep pulling the movie back down every time it starts to fully take off.


    Then we move to The Sheep Detectives, one of the year’s biggest surprises. What looked like a goofy talking-sheep movie turns out to be a clever, heartfelt, genuinely engaging mystery with smart writing and real emotional weight. We talk about why it works, how the mystery keeps you invested, and why it’s way better than it had any right to be.


    Finally, we dive into The Drama, a sharp, uncomfortable, and wildly impressive blend of cringe comedy and emotional chaos. Zendaya and Robert Pattinson are operating at the top of their game, Alana Haim deserves real supporting recognition, and A24 deserves credit for marketing the movie without giving away the ride.


    Three movies, three distinct flavors: cinematic wonder, barnyard mystery, and full-body social anxiety.

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    43 mins
  • Masters of the Universe, Toy Story 5, and Scary Movie – Camp, Comfort, and Comedy That Misses
    Jun 28 2026

    This episode on After the Frame, we’re covering three very different franchise swings: a campy fantasy reboot, a surprisingly purposeful Pixar sequel, and a spoof comedy trying to recapture old magic.


    We start with Masters of the Universe, a messy but entertaining adventure that leans into the camp, delivers some impressive practical character work, and somehow gives us a pretty strong Jared Leto Skeletor. It’s overlong and uneven, but there’s enough weird fantasy fun here to make the ride worthwhile.


    Then we jump into Toy Story 5, a late Disney/Pixar sequel that actually clears the most important bar: it feels like it exists for a reason. With strong animation, familiar voice work, and a modern story about screens, childhood, and connection, this one proves there’s still some heart left in the toy box.


    Finally, we dig into Scary Movie, a franchise return that reminds us how hard good parody actually is. We talk about why the early entries worked, why this one feels like it stops dead for references, and how spoof comedy falls apart when the jokes become the whole movie instead of serving the story.


    Three franchise plays, three different outcomes: one campy surprise, one heartfelt sequel, and one comedy that needed sharper knives.

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    50 mins
  • The Boys Season 5 & Daredevil: Born Again Season 2: Supes, Sinners, and Street-Level Chaos
    Jun 7 2026

    This week on After the Frame, we’re covering two very different superhero shows in one episode: one loud, bloody, and apocalyptic; the other gritty, grounded, and locked back into what makes its hero work.


    We start with The Boys Season 5, the final ride for a series built on violence, satire, and superhero corruption. We break down whether the show sticks the landing, how Homelander remains one of TV’s most terrifying villains, and why the chaos still works even when the season feels bloated, blunt, or familiar. It may not be the sharpest the show has ever been, but it still goes out angry, nasty, and unmistakably itself.


    Then we shift to Daredevil: Born Again Season 2, a major step in the right direction for Matt Murdock’s return. We talk about the improved confidence, the stronger action, the Matt/Fisk rivalry, and why the season works best when it embraces legal drama, street-level crime, Catholic guilt, and brutal moral conflict. There’s still some franchise baggage, but this feels much closer to the Daredevil fans wanted from the start.


    Two superhero shows, two very different missions: one closing the book in blood and satire, the other finding its footing in the shadows of Hell’s Kitchen.

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    59 mins
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