

The Infinity Bros
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@InfinityBrosPod
Podcast discussing TV/film/video games, giving hot takes & ratings for all things pop culture.🎤📺 🎥🍿🎮 Business inquiries - [email protected]



Mickey Mouse has officially crossed over with Bluey. The short is now streaming on Disney+. 🎬

Episode 245 of the Infinity Bros Podcast is LIVE! The Bros welcome @MrZMovies to the show to talk movies! We chat #WarnerBros sale and the effect on the movie industry, #Oscars, and our Top 6 Movies of 2025! Join us for a great conversation!

Episode 245 of the Infinity Bros Podcast is LIVE! The Bros welcome @MrZMovies to the show to talk movies! We chat #WarnerBros sale and the effect on the movie industry, #Oscars, and our Top 6 Movies of 2025! Join us for a great conversation!



The real moral of Sinners was something even the filmmakers might have missed. What’s happening in this scene is portrayed as being good until it is ruined by the white vampires. But it shouldn’t be seen this way. The preacher’s kid was blessed with a gift from God with to open people up to the “spiritual.” But instead of dedicating to its highest purpose— the worship of God—he fell for a deception and became a prodigal son. The “juke” was built upon a foundation of sin at every level, so the young man leaves the church to simply become a musical priest for different gods. So instead of making music that connects people to God, he has now opened the door to demons. The vampires don’t bring the demonic. It’s already there. The preacher’s kid survives the ordeal, rejects the vampires offer, but also rejects his father and the church to go back out and make a name for himself in the end. It’s implied that this is the right moral decision because he didn’t “sell his soul” but that still misses it. We should have every reason to believe that this young man will continue to bring hell wherever he goes by opening up the wrong spiritual doors with his gift. But spiritual “neutrality” isn’t an option. As Bob Dylan once sang, “it may be the devil or it may be the Lord, but you’re gonna have to serve somebody.”









When the Disney heads had "Basil of Baker Street" changed to the more generic and vague sounding "The Great Mouse Detective", the filmmakers did not take it well and promptly responded with the greatest memo ever written.
