Bill Corbett, Mike Nelson and Kevin Murphy at a RiffTrax Live event. Image courtesy RiffTrax.

It’s time for RiffTrax!

RiffTrax, the bad movie-enhancement service, has made a deal with independent streaming service Nebula to stream its existing content as well as new originals.

Not only that, but beginning today, October 5th, RiffTrax launches a weekly series on the streamer called Saturday Cinema. This week’s movie is the riffed version of Night of the Living Dead.

For those not in the know, RiffTrax is the brainchild of Mystery Science Theater 3000 alums Mike Nelson, Kevin Murphy and Bill Corbett. Like its progenitor, during the movies, the three, or their fellow comedians, intersperse jokes (usually at the expense of the film’s directors, writers, actors, or general premise) thus improving an otherwise dull or dreadful film.

RiffTrax has a library of over 1,000 short and feature titles, all available on their website, which also hosts select Mystery Science Theater episodes. RiffTrax produced five primetime television specials for the National Geographic Channel, two apps and an official game, RiffTrax: The Game, which is available on Mac, PC, PS4, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch.

RiffTrax also hosts a sort-of annual live event, where Nelson, Murphy, Corbett and sometimes guests, riff a movie live, with the show simulcast into over 700 theaters across North America.

Nebula streams videos, podcasts, and classes and is creator owned and operated. A subscription to the ad-free service is $6.00 monthly. The RiffTrax site also offers its own exclusive “RiffTrax Friends” streaming deal for $5.99 a month.