Episode #190 – Magic (1978)

Out on the magical stage of the horror-podcast ecosystem, where death rattles through the headphones and the faint hiss of a cursed VHS tape somehow qualifies as atmosphere, there lives a strange and wonderful creature called My Bloody Podcast. It occupies that very specific American space between a midnight pilgrimage to Blockbuster Video and the kind of sleepover where someone inevitably asks, around 2:13 A.M., if ventriloquist dummies can legally own souls. Listening to it feels a bit like discovering that The Criterion Collection briefly entered its goth phase and started shoplifting Rue Morgue magazines.

The show is hosted by Bryan Kluger, who approaches horror films with the fervor of a defense attorney representing the entire slasher genre before the Supreme Court. Bryan does not simply discuss horror; he interrogates it, prosecutes it, and occasionally pardons it on good behavior. Beside him sits Preston Barta, drifting into conversations with the elegant calm of a man who has spent considerable time contemplating both Bergman and body horror. Together, they possess the chemistry of two video-store philosophers who survived the 1980s and emerged carrying equal amounts of trauma and trivia.

In Episode #190, the pair descend into the deeply perspiring nightmare of Magic from 1978, a film in which Anthony Hopkins gives one of the most alarming performances of the 1970s, armed with nothing more than a ventriloquist dummy, emotional repression, and the posture of a man who has not slept since Watergate. The movie itself feels like a Catskills comedian suffered a nervous breakdown inside a Norman Rockwell painting. There are discussions of Hollywood psychosis, mental illness, repressed sexuality, and the enduring terror of being trapped alone with your own subconscious, especially if it has a tiny wooden face and insult-comic timing. The episode wisely recognizes that Magic is both horrifying and faintly ridiculous, which, of course, is also true of most human beings.

What makes My Bloody Podcast so endearing is that it treats horror not as disposable junk food, but as sacred cultural archaeology. Every scream, severed limb, and haunted hallway is lovingly dusted for meaning. The conversations are sharp, deeply funny, occasionally deranged, and oddly comforting, like being told the world is doomed but at least the soundtrack is excellent. It is the rare horror podcast that understands fear and comedy are roommates sharing the same overpriced apartment.

You can find My Bloody Podcast wherever podcasts lurk, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify, or by summoning the hosts directly through the modern equivalent of an occult ritual: email. Whether you are a lifelong devotee of cinematic carnage or merely horror-curious, it’s essential listening. Just do not be surprised if, afterward, you start eyeing every puppet in America with profound suspicion.

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Thank you for listening.

WRITTEN BY: BRYAN KLUGER

Bryan Kluger is an entertainment critic, writer, and podcast host with a deep love for film, horror, and pop culture. His work has appeared in outlets such as Arts+Culture Magazine, High-Def Digest, Screen Rant, The Huffington Post, The Drudge Report, Fark, and Boomstick Comics. He hosts My Bloody Podcast and Fear and Loathing in Cinema Podcast, along with a weekly radio show, where he brings sharp insight, humor, and an unabashed passion for movies to every conversation.
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