
Stuart Little (1999): Power Levels, Cat Videos, and a Talking Mouse That Still Works
Theme: Live Action Talking Animals
This week on NAFC, the crew somehow manages to cover everything from social media lawsuits to why cats have completely won the internet.
Mox and Gibbs continue their descent into Mewgenics, while Gibbs shares a bizarre church marquee message that feels like it was written by an NPC. The gang also touches on the Meta vs Google social media lawsuit—because tech companies fighting each other is always entertaining from a distance.
Izzy checks in on the latest season of Invincible, and the crew gets into a broader discussion on comics and shounen anime—specifically how exhausting endless power scaling has become. They also weigh in on the Black Severus Snape casting discourse and why people are, once again, losing their minds online.
Somehow this all leads into a debate on why cat videos dominate the internet over every other animal, and a bit of reflection on how certain older movies we grew up with still hold up surprisingly well.
Finally, they dive into Stuart Little (1999)—a cozy, surprisingly well-crafted blend of live-action and early CGI that proves sometimes the simple stuff just works.
This week on NAFC, the crew somehow manages to cover everything from social media lawsuits to why cats have completely won the internet.
Mox and Gibbs continue their descent into Mewgenics, while Gibbs shares a bizarre church marquee message that feels like it was written by an NPC. The gang also touches on the Meta vs Google social media lawsuit—because tech companies fighting each other is always entertaining from a distance.
Izzy checks in on the latest season of Invincible, and the crew gets into a broader discussion on comics and shounen anime—specifically how exhausting endless power scaling has become. They also weigh in on the Black Severus Snape casting discourse and why people are, once again, losing their minds online.
Somehow this all leads into a debate on why cat videos dominate the internet over every other animal, and a bit of reflection on how certain older movies we grew up with still hold up surprisingly well.
Finally, they dive into Stuart Little (1999)—a cozy, surprisingly well-crafted blend of live-action and early CGI that proves sometimes the simple stuff just works.
- NAFC
- Not Actually Film Critics
- Best Friends
- Just Chatting
- Movie Review
- Movies
- Media
- Cinema
- Anime
- Video Games
- TV Shows
- Entertainment
- Gaming
- Gamer
- Comedy
- Entertainment News
- Gaming News







Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.