In the most recent installment of My Bloody Podcast, that delightfully macabre auditory salon where horror meets hindsight; hosts Bryan Kluger, Preston Barta, and Wade Davis crack open the crypt of the year 2000’s The Skulls, a cinematic relic best remembered, if at all, for its glossy paranoia and unnerving proximity to America’s Ivy-cloaked corridors of power.
As the podcast’s host, Bryan Kluger delivers his signature mix of sharp wit and dark humor, offering pointed commentary on both the filmmaker and his film. Kluger’s approach is unflinching, yet undeniably entertaining, as he addresses the film’s enduring legacy with a combination of irreverence and insight. Preston Barta, the show’s resident horror analyst, offers a more thoughtful critique, examining the narrative structure and thematic undercurrents of the film. Since Chelsea is notably absent in this episode, the stage is left for Wade Davis, a Seattle-based podcaster and part-time hostage negotiator, to dive deep into the terrain of “so bad it’s good” cinema.
Amidst the thoughtful analysis, the hosts also dive into a slew of hot topics in the horror industry.
This Week’s Highlights:
- The Phillipou brothers have a new film called Bring Her Back.
- There are two new scripts for the sequel Talk to Me.
- Lionsgate picks up Titan from Mike P. Nelson.
- Kenau Reeves will star in John Wick 5.
- Val Kilmer Tribute.
It’s a lively, fast-paced exploration of the horror world, where no topic is too taboo or too strange.
Movie Analysis: The Skulls (2000)
Directed by Rob Cohen and adorned with the youthful faces of Joshua Jackson, Paul Walker, and Leslie Bibb, the film centers on a semi-fictional secret society whose ties to real-world institutions like Yale’s Skull and Bones lend it a frisson of authenticity that few teen thrillers dare approach. Add to the mix Craig T. Nelson and William Petersen, not to mention a particularly oily turn by Christopher McDonald (forever Shooter McGavin in the public consciousness), and you’ve got a film that ought to have been something more than a box-office curiosity.
Kluger, Barta, and Davis approach The Skulls with a blend of ironic reverence and forensic enthusiasm as if excavating a long-buried time capsule of the early 2000s. Their conversation turns hilarious and oddly poignant, and wonders aloud: How did a film with so many promising elements arrive to such critical indifference? And more provocatively, was the film simply ahead of its time?
What emerges is a compelling reassessment. The trio explores the film’s unsettling narrative arc, college ambition gone sociopathic, sealed by blood rituals and hushed cover-ups; and connects it to the broader cultural unease of our era, where elite networks and their unchecked power have become less the stuff of conspiracy theory and more a staple of the news cycle.
They dig into the performances, which in hindsight feel more sculpted than anyone gave them credit for at the time, and they revel in the anachronistic joys of early-aughts aesthetics: technology, collegiate culture, and money. Beneath it all, though, there’s a recognition that The Skulls, clunky and overwrought as many thought it was 25 years ago, was, in fact, reaching for something urgent. Something that, in 2025, feels uncomfortably familiar.
By the episode’s end, My Bloody Podcast achieves what all good criticism should: it transforms a forgotten B-movie into a mirror. And like the societies it depicts, The Skulls might just have known more than we were ready to admit.
Of course, no episode of My Bloody Podcast would be complete without some fan-favorite segments. Listeners will be treated to an engaging round of Horror Show & Tell, where the hosts reveal the latest genre-related items. The gang even digs into the all-funny question: What horror movie wasn’t about what you originally thought it was about?
Listeners who crave more behind-the-scenes industry insights, unfiltered opinions, and plenty of laughs will find themselves addicted to My Bloody Podcast. You can catch the latest episode on iTunes or Spotify, or reach out to the team at mybloodypodcast@gmail.com. Whether you’re a seasoned horror fan or a casual viewer looking for something to spice up your movie night, this podcast is a must-listen for those who love their horror served with a side of humor, insight, and a touch of irreverence.
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WRITTEN BY: BRYAN KLUGER
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