Multiplex Overthruster cover art

Multiplex Overthruster

Multiplex Overthruster

By: Javier Grillo-Marxuach |Paul Alvarado-Dykstra | Bradley Dumont
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Join two-time Emmy Award winner Javier Grillo-Marxuach (writer-producer of Lost, The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, The Witcher and creator of The Middleman) and Paul Alvarado-Dykstra (co-founder of Fantastic Fest, the leading genre film festival in the US) as they travel back in time to revisit the summer movies that shaped their generation: movie by movie, weekend by weekend, and year by year. Starting with the legendary summer of 1982, movie experts Javi and Paul - aided and abetted by the long-suffering Producer Brad - take you on an unprecedented audio adventure from Memorial Day through Labor Day weekends, spanning iconic blockbusters and obscure curiosities that some may be surprised to learn even exist. Relive the joy of seeing these amazing movies with your pals on opening night as these longtime friends rewatch their childhood favorites and discuss both what it was like to see them in their teenage years, and how their perceptions have changed over the decades. It's a time machine, it's a nostalgia trip, it's a witty and incisive glance at a world of movies and memory: it's Multiplex Overthruster!


Multiplex Overthruster is produced by Bradley Dumont, who co-created the series with co-hosts Javier Grillo-Marxuach and Paul Alvarado-Dykstra. Logo and artwork is by acclaimed Marvel and DC Comics artist Afua Richardson. Theme music is by Mike McGuill / Pond5. Additional voice work by Russell Bentley. The series is available on Apple Podcasts and most other major podcast platforms, as well as multiplexoverthruster.com and @mpotpod on social media.

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2024 Javier Grillo-Marxuach, Paul Alvarado-Dykstra, Bradley Dumont
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Episodes
  • Streets of Fire: Summer of '84
    Jun 1 2026

    In this gritty, neon-soaked, leather-wearin’, motor oil-stinkin’, rockabilly-singin’, pole-dancin’, pickaxe-swingin’ installment, Paul, Javi, and the tough-talkin’ Producer Brad travel to another place, another time to bear witness to a “rock’n’roll fable”. It’s Streets of Fire, one of the oddest mainstream summer movies of the eighties; a feature-length music video that is equal parts western, Road Warrior dystopia, Blade Runner quasi future noir, and Berlin sex club fashion show! It’s Diane Lane, Michael Paré, Rick Moranis, and Willem Dafoe at his palest and most consumptive in Walter Hill’s confounding valentine to toxic masculinity! So rev your engines, fire up your neon, and crank up that eighties soundtrack - because these streets are not gonna burn themselves!


    Show Notes:

    US Theatrical Release Date: June 1, 1984

    Streets of Fire AFI Catalog Entry

    Walter Hill Treated Screenplays Like Literature and Inspired a Generation of Filmmakers

    How Did This Get Made: A Conversation With 'Streets Of Fire' Co-Writer Larry Gross - SlashFilm

    40th Anniversary Interview with Michael Pare

    Roger Ebert's Streets of Fire review

    New York Times' Streets of Fire review


    Theme music by Mike McGuill

    Additional voicework by Russell Bentley

    Summer of '84 voiced by Colby Elliott


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    email: Multiplexoverthruster@gmail.com

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    1 hr and 53 mins
  • Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
    May 22 2026

    It’s Memorial Day weekend and the Multiplex Overthruster crew roars back to the movies for the Summer of ’84 with their old pal Indiana Jones! On his second outing, Indy stares down the many perils of the Temple of Doom… only it’s more like the “Temple of Holy Crap This Movie is Terrifying!” Look, over the years, Javi has followed Paul and the archaeological Producer Brad on many adventures, but into the Great Unknown Mystery… oh the hell with it, the Great Unknown Mystery here is how did all of the goodness of “Raiders of the Lost Ark” metastasize into this haltingly entertaining but mostly really weird and uncharacteristically dark story of child torture, monkey brains, a lava pit of wildly varying temperature, bloodless but nevertheless childhood-scarring heart ripping, and eyeball soup. It’s Indiana Jones as you have never seen him before… in an immaculate white dinner jacket, then strikingly shirtless and, uh, hypnotized into slapping his nine-year-old sidekick? Could Paul be right in his theory that the true hero of this film is Short Round and that we were robbed of an entire saga of Short Round Adventures? (Spoilers, he is right.) So dim your glowing stones, chill your monkey brains, and take a nice warm seat near the lava pit, because the Summer of ’84 is about to begin - in the bowels of The Temple of Doom!


    Show Notes:

    US Theatrical Release Date: May 23, 1984

    Weekend Domestic Box Office May 25, 1984

    Indian Jones and the Temple of Doom Box Office

    AFI Catalog Entry

    'INDIANA JONES' STIRS RATINGS DEBATE - The New York Times

    How ‘The Temple of Doom’ Changed the MPAA Ratings System

    Corliss, RIchard. (1984, May 21). Keeping the Customer Satisfied. Time

    Theme music by Mike McGuill

    Additional voicework by Russell Bentley

    Summer of '84 voiced by Colby Elliott


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    Bluesky

    email: Multiplexoverthruster@gmail.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    2 hrs and 37 mins
  • Romancing the Stone: '84 Spring Special #3
    May 15 2026

    While “When did Michael Douglas Get So Young” may not have been the sole burning question of our rewatch of Romancing The Stone, it certainly was among the many prompted by Paul, Javi, and the always Trustworthy Producer Brad’s journey into the wilds of this 1980’s gem. Though Paul may - occasionally, pointedly - disagree, Javi brilliantly lays out the many arguments for why this film remains an underrated hidden classic. Whether they are settling their differences or finding common ground, Paul and Javi - and yes, Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas, we guess - have one of their most spirited debates as they ponder the veritable mudslide of latino stereotypes on display and many other topics of interest while marveling, as if anew, by the explosive chemistry between Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner… and Danny Devito and Zack Norman and some crocodiles… and Alfonso Arau and “Pepe”… and Holland Taylor and pretty much anything with a pulse. It’s a union of Hollywood Titans - Zemeckis, Douglas, Turner, Devito, and Thomas - yes, Thomas - as they rock to some of the most eighties saxophone riffs ever: it’s Romancing the Stone!


    Show Notes:

    Romancing the Stone US Theatrical Release Date: March 30, 1984

    Weekend Domestic Box Office March 30, 1984

    Romancing the Stone Box Office

    AFI Catalog Entry: Romancing the Stone

    Roger Ebert's Review

    New York Times' Review



    Theme music by Mike McGuill

    Additional voicework by Russell Bentley

    Summer of '84 voiced by Colby Elliott


    Follow us!

    Instagram

    Bluesky

    email: Multiplexoverthruster@gmail.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 57 mins
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