Jay Jermo & Louisa Jenista

Critique-Opolis

Tv EN ↓ 99 episodes

Jay & Louisa deliver a fiery, opinion fueled overview of movies, social movements, cultural behaviors and eating habits - dovetailed with a honey-based recipe and reviews of the most obnoxious movie/media news headlines we can get our eyeballs in front of. For our latest editions, we will be reviewing scripts from the infamous Hollywood 'Black List' (scripts with a ton of 'buzz' that have yet to secure a deal or go into production) - and adding our own casting and story development suggestions.

Author

Jay Jermo & Louisa Jenista

Category

Tv

Podcast website

www.buzzsprout.com

Latest episode

Jul 6, 2026

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Episodes

Aliens Show Up And Nobody Watches TV 06.07.2026

Send us Fan Mail One secret can change the world, but only if anyone believes it. We sit down with Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day and end up talking less about extraterrestrials and more about the machinery of secrecy: who holds the evidence, who controls the story, and why “disclosure” might land with a shrug in 2026. We walk through what makes the film tick as a science fiction chase thriller...

When Your Kryptonite Is An Air Horn 30.06.2026

Send us Fan Mail Sound can be wallpaper in a movie, or it can be the whole engine. Tuner lands firmly in the second camp, and we had a lot to say about why it works. We talk through the film’s core hook: Nikki (Leo Woodall) is a piano tuner with hyperacusis and perfect pitch, and the same ultra-sensitive listening that makes him great at music also makes him terrifyingly good at cracking safes. Th...

Stolen Song, Stolen Spotlight 08.06.2026

Send us Fan Mail A wedding singer writes a melody for his newborn daughter, years pass, and then one late-night jam turns that private song into a public smash. The twist: the pop star who helps “finish” it takes it back to Hollywood, the production machine cranks up, and suddenly the charts are roaring while the original writer is left texting into the void. We break down Power Ballad with Paul R...

Shopgirl And The Weight Of Loneliness 26.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail He sends her a pair of gloves from her own workplace and somehow that becomes the beginning of everything. We’re talking about Shopgirl (2005), the Steve Martin adaptation that looks like a romance on the surface but lands as a sharp, quiet story about depression, loneliness, and the way relationships can distort identity when you’re desperate to feel seen.  We walk through Mirabe...

We Follow A Studio Executive Until Everything Breaks 18.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail A studio executive gets buried under endless pitches, anonymous postcards, and one creeping fear that won’t go away: he’s about to be replaced. Then Robert Altman turns the pressure up until it becomes something much darker. We’re talking about The Player, the razor-edged Hollywood satire that opens with a legendary tracking shot and never stops reminding you that everything here...

What Happens When A Rom-Com Has No Tone 11.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail French Lover somehow became a Netflix hit, and we walked in expecting a charming French rom-com with Omar Sy and walked out asking how so many scenes made it past the final draft. We’re not doing a polite “maybe it’s just not for us” review, either. We talk through the exact moments where the movie loses emotional logic, why the pacing feels like it’s on fast-forward, and how the...

What The De Niro Papers Reveal About Great Acting 04.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail The moment we realized The Score is the only time Robert De Niro and Marlon Brando share the screen, we knew we had to dig in. What surprised us is how well this 2001 heist film still works: it’s tense without being gross, funny in small doses thanks to Edward Norton, and anchored by a setting that actually matters. Montreal isn’t just a backdrop here, it shapes the whole vibe, fr...

What If The Villain’s Power Is Really Untreated Pain 27.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A newborn talks from the womb, delivers himself, and immediately starts asking the one question most adults avoid: why. That’s the spark of Kirikou And The Sorceress, Michel Ocelot’s French animated folktale inspired by West African folklore, and it turned into one of those reviews where the deeper we looked, the more the movie revealed. We break down what makes Kirikou such a rar...

If A Science Teacher Can Save Earth Then Why Can’t We 20.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A space movie can look expensive and still feel hollow. Project Hail Mary does the opposite: it feels human, funny, tense, and oddly comforting, even when the premise is pure nightmare fuel. We just saw it in theaters and we’re still buzzing, so we jump straight into what makes it work, from the opening mystery of an amnesiac teacher waking up light years from home to the terrifyi...

How A Watercolor Animated Short Portrays Pet Loss 13.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A chained-up dog. A kid who stops and says “no,” then frees him. A glowing gold thread that refuses to break even after death. We talk through Run Totti Run, a Cambodian-set animated short with a watercolor sketch look that feels like a Monet painting in motion, and we don’t dodge what it’s really about: pet loss, grief, and the stubborn ways love keeps showing up after someone is...

Snow Bear 07.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail Welcome back to you favorite straight from Michigan movie podcast! We are back after a brief hiatus because, well, life.  For this latest episode of Critique-o-polis, Jay stumbled upon an animated short called Snow Bear. Being a lifelong fan of the polar bear, Louisa was more than happy to watch this Snow Bear. This short movie did not let its most recent viewers down.  This movie...

Raising Arizona 09.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail In today's episode of Critique-o-polis, Jay and Louisa discuss the 1987 cult classic Raising Arizona. Nicolas Cage plays a conflicted HI McDonnaugh torn between his primal criminal nature and the desire to be a loving, stable husband to Holly Hunter's Ed(wina), is police booking photographer, having met during HI's repeated bouts of recidivism within the Arizona pen...

Another Round 02.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail This week on your favorite movie podcast we chat about the Danish film, "Another Round," starring Mads Mikkelsen. Martin played by Mads Mikkelsen is the married father of two boys and also a history teacher. Martin joins three of his friends, also teachers at the same School in a sort of social experiment: Drinking while at work, but more specifically maintaining a const...

Night Hunter 23.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail This afternoon, Jay and I are discussing the movie Night Hunter. This is not a movie that was on my radar which is surprising to me, but also not. The casting is excellent. I love all of the names in this film. I'd say some of the subject matter is intense, but movie is gritty, but worth a watch as it comes together (well for the most part) at the end. Another detail to note,...

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery 17.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail Hello friends. Welcome back to Critique-o-polis. Today, Jay and I discuss the third installment of The Knives Out series: Wake Up, Dead Man.  As with the previous two movies, the location is remote, set aside from the busy city and focuses the viewer on the story AKA the crime at hand. Wake Up, Dead Man is set in a small, fictional village, Chimney Rocks. The movie centers around...

Allegro non Troppo 09.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail After our brief hiatus, Critique-o-Polis is back! Jay says that it is his fault that we were off for a few weeks, and while that might be true (it's not), he has a good "excuse," Jay was working elsewhere. I think that it is very fair that we took some time off to live another part of life. We will always be watching movies and reviewing them for you! It is one of o...

Cinema Paradiso 05.01.2026

Send us Fan Mail Happy New Year! Welcome back to another wonderful episode of Critique-o-polis. Today, we review the French-Italian film "Cinema Paradiso." Let me just start off by saying, if you haven't seen or heard of this movie, (ever), watch the trailer and decide for yourself if you want to watch it. Just watching the trailer makes me cry. Also, there are three different versi...

Tokyo Godfathers 29.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail Guess what? Jay finally remembered to include a honey based recipe. He felt so bad about not remembering to deliver a recipe the last several episodes that he put this one at the front of the episode. Try not to be too hard on him, he's getting rather elderly and forgetting things.  This week we watched the Japanese animated "Tokyo Godfathers." Although, this movie...

The Intouchables 21.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail We watched the 2011 French Film, the Intouchables, but before we get into that, Jay goes on an absolute, untethered tirade about a run in with a person at market who tried to steal a parking spot from a vendor. You should listen just for that. Jay becomes completely unglued. P.S. He forgot the recipe again (turn in next week, he finally remembered).  The Intouchables is a French b...

Home for the Holidays 01.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail This is the week after Thanksgiving, not necessarily coincidentally we are reviewing a holiday movie: Home for the Holidays. This movie has an all star cast, featuring Holly Hunter, Claire Danes (briefly), Robert Downey Jr., Dylan McDermott and Ann Bancroft to name a few! Holly Hunter plays Claudia, a single Mom traveling without her daughter from Chicago (her home) to Baltimore (...

All of Me 24.11.2025

Send us Fan Mail Today we review "All of Me," a movie starring Steve Martin, Lily Tomlin and Victoria Tennant from 1984. This movie falls into the categories of Drama, Fantasy and Comedy. I think that I would agree with all of those choices. Steve Martin plays Roger, a lawyer at a Law Firm where he is hoping to help represent a client that will showcase his talents and earn him a future...

Weapons Part 1 17.11.2025

Send us Fan Mail Brace yourselves. Jay made Louisa watch a horror movie! Well, okay, it's not like it was forced, but it did take a bit more convincing than usual. We got through the movie and Louisa doesn't need therapy.  Weapons is Zach Cregger's sophomore endeavor (the first being Barbarian). Pretty impressive as he took a $38 million dollar budget and transformed it into $268 mi...

Weapons Part 2 17.11.2025

Send us Fan Mail So ... Why Part 2 for the episode? Because Jay can't tell the difference between the pause and the stop button on the recorder. He graduated with honors from college (completely untrue) and he can't figure out the difference between 'pause' and 'stop.'  We have more to say about the movie Weapons so please keep listening. 

Ernest and Celestine 10.11.2025

Send us Fan Mail We're back! Today we are reviewing the French animated movie "Ernest and Celestine." Now mind you, we did not watch the original French version of this movie, but "instead," Jay and I watched the dubbed over version in English. "Ernest and Celestine" is a delightful movie about the friendship of Ernest, a bear and Celestine, a mouse. Ernest and C...

One Battle After Another 13.10.2025

Send us Fan Mail In today's latest episode of your favorite movie podcast, Louisa and Jay discuss one of Louisa's favorite actor's recent releases, "One Battle After Another." Louisa's favorite actor being the one and only Leonardo DiCaprio. She really does love him! I'll also point out now, so that I don't forget, we are very proud that this is our 75th epi...

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