Ryan and Bev Ellis are partners in film nerdery who share their often humorous musings on the AFI's
Tomorrow will mark the beginning of our 13th year of podcasting, so we end #12 with another one-Ryan
Many boxing movies have surpassed what Robert Wise and Paul Newman brought to the screen in Somebody
It’s St. Patrick's Day, so Have You Ever Seen #652 gets into an IRA frame of mind, puts on some gre
Oscar Month continues! Bev's couple of weeks off begins! She's not here to talk about The King's Spe
All The King's Men is a political movie, so Ryan decided to get very political in this one-man show.
The Ellises have a next-day chat about the 97th Academy Awards in our 2025 Oscars Post-View. The ye
One of the most-legendary filmmakers of all time only directed one movie to a Best Picture Oscar…an
Our 10th Annual Oscars Preview podcast is the 647th chat on Have You Ever Seen...and it's an in-dep
As you’ll hear in this 646th dose of Have You Ever Seen, The Postman Always Rings Twice is thought
Cinderella is on the shortlist for the most famous fairy tales of 'em all. And, after a rough stretc
No one has to think Love Story is a good movie to acknowledge that it's a beloved romance that made
Witness is a tense thriller as much as it is a sweet love story, but Peter Weir's typically sensitiv
1950 was a year in which legendary classics like All About Eve and Sunset Blvd were released, but on
While Matthew Vaughn's Kick-Ass might be dated now, it was certainly controversial 15 years ago. It'
Charlie Chaplin's The Kid represents the 3rd-oldest movie we've ever reviewed, but it continues to b
Grizzly Man represents Bev's 2nd movie of choice this month, a documentary about another documentari
This is the 3rd straight January in which Have You Ever Seen has talked about a Buster Keaton comedy
The 637th edition of Have You Ever Seen kicks off the 10th Annual Month O' Bev. Joel & Ethan Coen's
To wrap up the year, Have You Ever Seen episode #636 reviews our first Peter Sellers movie in over 1
"Dread" and "frantic" are key words when describing Prisoners, Denis Villeneuve's bleak (but excelle