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This Month In Retronauts: February 2025 edition

Ahoy hoy, listeners! Even if February is the shortest month we refuse to deliver anything less than a full-sized community episode for you, our generous supporters. And look who's visiting the clubhouse this month: Bob Mackey! You know him from such podcasts as "Talking Simpsons," "What a Cartoon," and "Colin Moriarty, I Tread on Thee."

You overstuffed our virtual inbox with comments—particularly in response to last month's community question—giving Bob and I plenty of material to discuss. As usual, listen until the end to hear about our latest question for you to answer, but also for details concerning a special Discord activity coming up on March 1.

Specific items mentioned in this episode include:

Art & edits by Diamond (photo source: one of the wealthiest companies in the world).
Music heard in this episode:

This Month In Retronauts: February 2025 edition
This Month In Retronauts: February 2025 edition This Month In Retronauts: February 2025 edition

Comments

Just a remark, but I hope you all saw the Jeremy Parish/Metroidvania reference in the New York Times. Hope you all get some coverage in the New York Post as well.

CapNChris

QOTM: It might be "Back To The Future" as far as kick-starting canonical time-travel movies and their rules. It wasn't the first, with movies such as The Time Machine or Time Bandits preceding it, but as far as cementing itself as the de facto standard for a genre, it certainl--HEY DIAMOND! WHAT'S THAT?!?

Seán Foley

QotM: Horror films have done the Street Fighter 2 thing several times, but breaking away from that genre, one that comes to mind is 300. While not remembered as fondly as SF2, its immense popularity upon release ushered in a brief era of action flicks with an emphasis on big, stylized fight sequences, peppered with speed ramping, dramatic zooms and generic butt rock. For a time, everything needed to be this new definition of "EPIC".

Phoequinox

aside from SFA3 all of your picks were very well represented!

Diamond Feit

my streak of properly identifying Brian Clarks has begun

Diamond Feit

Dammit, I typed up my top 5 PS1 games but never hit post for some reason. They were (in no particular order): Metal Gear Solid Chrono Cross Final Fantasy Tactics Street Fighter Alpha 3 Castlevania: SOTN I was excited to hear Spirit Swap is available, but it's only on Xbox and Steam at the moment, which is especially annoying since I first heard about it on a Nintendo Direct.

PurpleComet

First off, thanks for reading my PS1 top 5 in this episode and thanks to Bob for appreciating the thoughts I put into them ! (and don't worry, you pronounced my name just fine ^^) As per the QOTM, if I'm taking it as to mean "what movie was as transformative for the movie industry as Street Fighter II was for video games", the first one that comes to mind for me would The Road Warrior/Mad Max 2. Not only did it massively up the scope from the first film, going from a more personal revenge story to a sweeping action epic about survival with car chases way more massive than anything in its predecessor, it also basically sparked an entire sub-genre. The post-apocalyptic movie owes just about everything to Miller's vision as it was laid out in The Road Warrior and you could still see traces of the film as far as something like 2008's Doomsday. Hell, the italian B-movie industry basically spent the whole of the 80s feasting on that film as it produced an endless slew of copycats and rip-off. So yeah, Road Warrior is my answer (or maybe Street Fighter II is The Road Warrior of videogames ?)

Matthieu Galley

One of my tricks for Dragon Warrior 7 was grinding for jobs in picture-in-picture mode. The lettering was big enough that I could interact with menus while watching TV

Nigel G

You're correct Diamond; I'm not the Brian Clark that occasionally appears on the show.

Brian Clark

Toy Story is the Street Fighter 2 of movies. It wasn’t the first animated movie and didn’t invent CGI but it fundamentally changed the look and tone of animation. It created something so good that critics fell over themselves praising it. It had loads of well received sequels and some not well received spinoffs. And Shrek was the rival franchise; the Mortal Kombat to Toy Story’s SF.

Sebastiano Gerace

I came here to say "Aliens!" but Patrick McClafferty beat me to the punch (and, indeed, the hadouken). So instead I'm going with my backup option: the Street Fighter II of movies is Terminator 2. Like Aliens, it's a sequel that turns a cult classic into the epitome of a Hollywood blockbuster. It looks great, it sounds great, it inspired so many works that came after it... and on the day I write this the reveal trailer has dropped for the T-1000 in Mortal Kombat, voiced by Robert Patrick. Given that Mortal Kombat was Street Fighter II's most prominent rival, this somehow makes sense to me. Make way, Mai Shiranui!

Taskbaarchitect

You’re basically there! The real kicker is that it’s actually spelled Kormákur Garðarsson, but no one can say that with a straight face.

Kormakur Gardarsson

I’d like to think I’m getting close to correct by now?

Diamond Feit

QotM: Aliens. It is appropriate because much like Street Fighter 2, it was also a sequel. The combination of action and horror as well as the effects have influenced movies for decades. Being influential on so many later video games also helps.

Patrick McClafferty

"We're basically the same guy". Thank you, Bob, for making my doppelganger dream come true. Also, apologies for making you guys read my unpronouncable name *three* times in one episode.

Kormakur Gardarsson


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