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Season four, episode two keeps the promise of what this “Best of 2025” format is supposed to be: a quick reality check between critics, audience buzz, and what it actually feels like to sit down and watch the thing. Cade and Kit come in already knowing Sinners is getting serious love—97% on the Tomatometer and 96% on the popcorn meter—and the early review scroll backs that up. It’s basically unanimous praise, with the only real outlier being one guy who found it “boring,” bailed early, and then tried to convince himself it must be his fault. Their recap lands clean: two twin brothers return to 1930s Mississippi with plans to open a juke spot, pulling together friends, exes, and community to make the opening night happen. The cousin—gifted on guitar—becomes the hinge point, because the film’s core idea is that truly powerful music can “lift the veil” between time, the living, and the dead. That’s the magic… and also the danger, because it draws something hungry in. Once the night kicks off, the movie shifts hard into vampire territory, with the threat building outside the door until the invitation threshold gets crossed and it turns into a full siege: bodies pile up, the crowd becomes a horde, and survival turns into improvisation—garlic, silver, stakes, whatever works. Where they start to wobble is the lore congestion. Kit clocks that the film is doing a lot at once—music mythology, vampire rules, segregation-era Mississippi, KKK terror, witchcraft/voodoo nods, Irish oppression parallels, Native American warnings—and while the movie is clearly smart and intentional, they felt like they had to do homework afterward to connect some dots. The ending is the biggest “wait… what?” moment: the present-day tag implies characters survived (or made deals) in ways the movie doesn’t fully explain, which leaves them asking how the vampire rules actually work if sunlight dusting is real, but staking “individually” still matters, and the “creator” logic doesn’t fully track. Still: they recommend it. They land at a 4/5 because it’s genuinely worth seeing—beautifully shot, exceptionally lit for dark environments and darker skin tones, strong performances, and the music is the glue (and the reason they’d rewatch and replay the soundtrack). Their knock isn’t that it fails—it’s that it’s crowded. A little trimming before the party, a little more clarity on the supernatural rules, and a sharper final beat would’ve pushed it into “locked” territory. As-is, it’s a film that assumes a smart audience—and mostly earns that confidence—even if it leaves you googling a few things on the walk out. 🎧 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2kaH2Bp... 🍏 Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... 📸 Instagram: / cadeandkit info@CadeandKit.com