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June 2, 2025 34 mins

1960 vs 2016 WOW!

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(00:01):
This is the Ogs and their remakes, the show where we ask
one question. Who wore it better, the classic
or the cash grab? Movies and TV shows, if it's
been remade, rebooted or reimagined, we're judging it.
Sometimes the remake nails it, sometimes it is a flaming
dumpster fire. Either way, we watched it so you

(00:23):
don't have. To, So let's get into it.
I'm Aaron. I'm DJ and welcome to O GS and
their remakes. Fun fact, this one's a really
fun one tell. Me a fun one.
I'm just saying, tell me workingfor a specific company doesn't
make you better than anyone else.

(00:45):
Can you imagine that? It doesn't matter if you are a
janitor. It doesn't matter if you are a
smoke driver or an owner operator or a cop or a
firefighter. Guess what happened?
We all put our pants on the sameway, one leg at a time.

(01:06):
Oh no, I like to hop into mine so it's like 2.
You do the whole 2. Feet thing, yes.
You're weird. I land on my face a lot.
I bet you do. I do, so I have a short nose.
Well I'm working on my gut that way.
Just bounce first. That way I stop hitting my nose.
Yeah, yeah. I'm getting there.

(01:29):
I'm very much getting there. I don't even know which.
It doesn't matter which one, they're all different.
So it really. Doesn't matter. 1100 thousand.
You know what? We're there.
OK, I think we're not #9 because#10 is our bonus episode and I
get. To do that one, that's going to
be fun, yeah. Yes, it is.
So we have decided, Just so you all know, we have decided that

(01:52):
we are going to take turns as far as posting the episode, some
movies he is more familiar with and some movies I am more
familiar with and some TV shows.So we're going to take turns.
And today was Magnificent 7, which I never saw the original
of the day. Not bad.

(02:13):
Neither have I, I've never seen it either.
Yeah, so. But the remake I've always
loved. Yeah, I've I've enjoyed the
remake just to cause the cast. Oh, as they haven't they?
So the original Magnificent 7 was in 1960 in a remake.
Get this. No big thing here.

(02:34):
The Magnificent 7. I know.
Strange, right? That was done in 2016.
They both pretty much share the same storyline. 7 gunslingers
band together to protect the town from an aggressive threat.
Yeah, but they differ in style between the 1960 and 2016,

(02:56):
they're a little different. So tell me about the 19. 601960
was was set in Mexico and the film revolves around 7 American
gunmen hired by these poor town folks to protect their their
little Mexican village from bandits led by Calavera

(03:19):
Calavera. Yeah, yeah.
Anyway, FYI, he's taking advantage so that's why I keep
them around. So the 1960 was pretty much
based on a more heroic and idealistic style and with a
strong emphasis on honor and andsacrifice, which is something

(03:39):
that most people don't see thesedays.
So it was, it was refreshing as far as the Western goes in the
1960s. And it's a typical good versus
evil battle. So I mean, it's there.
It's there for Western. But here is a fun fact about the

(04:03):
movie. It was actually based on a novel
from a Japanese writer. I can't even pronounce his name,
Akira called Rostova. And the name of the novel was
called 7 Samurai and that was written in 1954.

(04:25):
Oh wow, so they just adapted it to a modern western and called
it the Magnificent 7? Yay.
Yay, Colonicchio. You just have to do.
That don't. Yes, I do.
Don't ever hang around us if youexpect to never be made on.

(04:48):
Us, yes, we do it to ourselves 1st and then you're next.
Yeah, pretty much. So then the 2016 version is
pretty much the same thing. The only key difference between
these two counts is 1960 was based in Mexico around a farming
village a Mexican village. 2016 is around a mining town in

(05:09):
American West that is threatenedby a ruthless industrial and
industrialist, a money hungry asshole called Bartholomew Bo.
Yeah. And this one's they they say
it's grittier and darker and more action heavy, which it is.

(05:32):
Action heavy, no. Absolutely.
But there's more Comic Relief inthis.
Well, I mean, you've got Chris Pratt.
So yeah, Chris Pratt and we're about to get through who did
what where because the remake, Imean, the original was great,
but I still say the remake took this just because of cast.

(05:56):
So let's let's get into that. The 1960s Chris Adam, which was
the main characters played by Yul Brenner.
If you're not older than my grandparents, then you don't
have any clue who this is. Neither do I.
Doesn't look. Familiar to me right in 2016,

(06:16):
the main leader is Sam Chisholm,played by Denzel Washington, and
Washington plays a black US Marshall who's there basically
not really bounty hunting, but pretty much hunting.
Come back the 1960 like the the main sidekick in 1960 was Van

(06:40):
Tanner, also known as Steve McQueen.
Who does not know Steve McQueen.OK, anybody under the age of 40
does not know who Steve McQueen is.
Right. I mean I I know him face wise
and I know the name. I could not tell you what else

(07:01):
he's in. He was actually in one movie
that we did. You're not too long ago if you
up to the back go on in 60 seconds.
Like I said. Yeah, it's it's that Steve
McLean. But he didn't have long hair in
this one. He didn't wear a wig or a big
mustache, Right. So the the sidekick in the 2016,
of course, is play is John Verde, played by Chris Pratt.

(07:23):
I do a little bit of comment relief.
And in this movie, he is a gambler.
Which can we just hit the point where Denzel Washington always
plays a similar character? Not very loud, rarely ever
raises his voice, but will make you regret life itself.

(07:46):
Like there's no tomorrow. Like, no, tomorrow, yes.
Then you've got Chris Pratt. Always a smart ass, always an
asshole in every single movie. Always has something to say in
retaliation to everything. He reminds me a lot of like you.
Yes. He really does because he can

(08:06):
tell you something to your face,make fun of you, and you walk
away feeling good about yourself.
Like, yes, wait, what? This motherfucker right here.
Yeah, you do that. Yes, it is.
Yes, you do that very well. That it is.
In 1960, they got a knife fighter by the name of Britt,

(08:27):
played by James Colburn. And this movie in the 2016, it
is Billy Rocks, and he's played by, by by Young Hung Lee, Brian
Hung Lee. Anyway, he's a Hung Lee and he's
the skill Korean assassin that you see in the 1916, the 2016

(08:47):
version. Go ahead, go ahead.
You're just going to say something.
Always got to get it in there. Don't.
You always try to get it in there.
So the veteran in 1960 is Bernardo O'Reilly, which is a
very, very young Charles Bronson.
If you don't know who Charles Bronson is, go look him up on
YouTube. He was a big star in the 60s and

(09:08):
70s and he was just the shit. He made Chuck Norris look like a
baby, like a baby baby. He made Chuck Norris look like a
Girl Scout. Don't let.
Don't let Chuck Norris. Period.
I hope he does think you agree with me.
In the 2016 version is the the guy's name is Goodnight

(09:31):
Robichaux and he's played by Ethan Paul, which is a he plays
a PTSD ridden sharpshooter from the South who rode with the
Confederates and now he's like looking back on life when I
don't want to kill nobody else because, well, the dude's got
PTSD. I'm sure he sees enough dead
faces when he sleeps. Yeah, we've we've been there.

(09:54):
Yeah, then you got the 20 or the1960 version.
Chico's played by a horse. Yeah.
And then in the 2016 version is Red Harvest and played by Martin
Swimmer. The Outlaw in 1960 is is lead

(10:17):
played by Robert Vaughn and the 2016 version is Vasquez played
by Manuel Garcia Rufo. And then the tracker for
20/19/60. They didn't have one but in 2016
they put in there a guy by name of Jack Horn.
His real name is Vincent D on a Ferrio and he's been in a lot of

(10:38):
movies too. But just the cast alone in the
2016 version makes this movie just amazing.
And the only real key differences is the 2016 version
places more stronger emphasis onthe diversity of the characters
with a modern sensibility, whilethe 1960 version reflects more

(11:00):
classic western western archetypes.
I felt the 2016 had more of a storyline.
It did. It had a little more to it, the
1961. There was a lot of waiting

(11:20):
around in small talk because they were waiting for something
to happen. Yes, and also in the 1960
version they rarely spoke Spanish and everybody had
perfect English. Yeah.
What's up with that? I don't think they're real
Mexican I. Don't think so either.
I really don't think so. No accent?
No. Nothing.

(11:40):
Literally no accent. That that was the one one thing
that really got me. There was no accent.
OK, dude, you're brown. You're wearing the white
clothes, Pitbull of that era of great Mexican though.
But however, there's no accident.
None. Yeah, it's not Senor.

(12:02):
It's Senor. Yeah.
Please come help us. Not 444.
Are you serious? The way the way every white
person pronounces it, yes, that doesn't speak Spanish right.
That those guys grew up in like,Nebraska.

(12:23):
OK, not even Nebraska. It's just Nebraska.
That's where they grew up. They did a casting call.
So we need Mexicans. They're like, we're here.
Where are you from? Rochester, NY.
Can you speak with an accent? No, you're hired.
I mean, back then all you reallyneeded to do was have the look

(12:45):
and read the line. This is true in there again
another fun fact, most of your westerns done in the Fifties,
60s and 70s everybody who playedan Indian or Native American was
mostly Italian. It is just because the skin tone
and the big noses they played most.

(13:06):
They played your most iconic Native American, your most
iconic Indians in those westernsin the 60s and 70s were Italian.
Did you notice that the 1961 they had to, had to, like just
had to put a little romance in there.
Of course. In the 2016, well, you had Chris

(13:28):
Pratt thinking he's a shit and everything and all that but.
Yeah, he he, he says you're going to die by the world's most
famous lover. Just because he has to say.
Because he has to be, I mean. Which I'm pretty sure he's like
that on in real life. He was like that.
I can, I can tell you he he's probably like that in real life.

(13:51):
Guardians of the Galaxy, he was the same.
Way. Every.
Single every. It doesn't matter what role he
plays. The Jurassic Park where he's
playing with. He has to have even what?
What was that one where they go back in time or go ahead of time
in order to kill the alien thing.
Tomorrow world or something. War of Tomorrow I.

(14:13):
Think. Tomorrow's war.
Something like that anyway. He's a dad, he goes, he gets
chosen to go and and fight, but he still still finds chances to
slip those comebacks in every chance he is.

(14:34):
Of course, along with the A comehere often to fight.
I mean. I mean those guns look good, but
they look real sexy when you hold them.
The only the only disappointing thing would be if he was really
short he would go from a 10. To A2, all over 6 inches, yeah,

(15:01):
6 inches there. OK, so the villains in the 1960
was got a Vera played by Eli Wallich, and he's a kind of a
charismatic bandit with some really twisted logic.
If I keep everybody in fear and they keep feeding me and my my

(15:24):
band of reject, I mean Mr. I mean Fedeleros, then guess what?
They will continue to feed us because they don't want to lose
any more of their women and theydon't want to die.
Yeah. No, that's his way of thinking.
But he's wrong. He's very wrong.

(15:46):
Ask Stalling, he'll tell you 2016 is Bartholomew Vogue,
played by Peter Stergard, and he's pretty much a cold blooded
capitalist with no redeeming trade.
All he thinks about is money, money, money.
And he didn't even care if he had any people alive still in
the town he he opened. Fire, I'm going to shoot the

(16:07):
town, but are people still down there?
And yeah, just open fire. We're good.
Don't care. I'll hire more.
And that was looking back on it.When you do a little bit of
historical research that's that's a lot of those type of
people who are land bearing or railroad bearing or even mind
bearing. They didn't care.
They had money just to throw at the problem versus let me hold

(16:30):
on to my resource. Jesus, people.
But that's where that's where grief gets you.
Yeah. You don't give, you don't.
You end up not caring about a human life and throw money at
it. It'll be OK.
It'll be all right. I mean, it's just bullets.
Yeah, It's cheaper to buy bullets than to buy.

(16:52):
You can make another kid. You can marry another woman.
Dude they didn't have. Internet.
No YouTube, no TikTok, no Facebook, no nothing.
I mean why do you else do you think they had like 15 kids?
I mean, that's the only way theygot that much work done in a
week. I mean practically, yeah.
I mean, that's 40 acres and you want to three people if I know.

(17:13):
So yeah, you need 15 kids. That's a lot of practice.
What else are you going to do when the sun goes down?
Just saying I need my hay bed fluffed a little more.
Come here, honey. So in the 1960s version of the

(17:40):
movie, it was a slow burn. And there again, it's still like
a classic Western style movie and there's nothing real.
I mean, slow burn. Like the first half the movie,
you're just waiting to get to the Mexican town and you're
waiting for gunfire. And then the first time they
actually meet somebody, they're just they're talking.

(18:01):
Now, one thing I have noticed isthe Westerns we've actually
watched and I've paid attention just about every Western, old
Western, they they're not in a hurry to complete the story.
What's? No, we're just going to stop.

(18:21):
Well, I'll say stop and think. But when these movies came out,
somebody's paying 25 cents, $0.50 a dollar to go see it in
the theater. At that time.
I mean, a dollar was a lot of money.
Yeah. So they want to make sure they
got their money's worth. Absolutely.
And I don't blame them. No.

(18:42):
I bet you about a $20 movie thatI'm going to go see and it's
over, you know, an hour and a half.
I'm one dude. My ass ain't even numb to see
you. Mine would be.
But you, you know what I'm saying?
I'm just like, are you serious right now?
Or like another movie we just watched the all subject but it's
the new Captain America. Where?

(19:04):
Oh yeah, I. Can't remember the name the
black guy becomes. Captain America.
Great movie, great film. Harrison Ford.
I mean, it is a great movie, butfor two hours worth of movie,
you see the very beginning of how everything's going off, then
right there towards the end where it stopped, it left you
wanting more. Like, where's the rest of this
movie? Because it's a Marvel movie and

(19:26):
they always leave a cliffhanger because they're going to fill it
in some other way. Yeah, but all the other Marvel
movies that do, that's a whole other stuff.
Never mind, back to this movie. We're not going to get into that
can of worms because then you come up with people that don't
like the movies because they're not exactly like the comic books

(19:47):
and all this other stuff. So.
Like the X-Men, I got it. Depending on which X-Men you
read, Well, there's a shift in paradigm timeline, and this
timeline went off this way. That's why they did this this
time. And I'm sorry you got like 18
different sets of comic books for the same damn set of
characters. You know why I like Disney Plus?

(20:11):
They put all the Marvel movies in order so all I got to do is
watch from one to the other instead of trying to put them in
order myself. And that's great.
X-Men don't do that even with the damn comic books they have.
ABC and DA is the original. B is the split from the
timeline. C is the split from the split of
the timeline. D introduces all new B League
characters. So by the time you even get back

(20:33):
to E&F it's like I don't even know what the fuck I'm reading
anymore. Yeah, well.
That's why I stopped doing comicbooks.
You're just not into it. That's all that's.
All and that's fine. They're now for.
Everybody and it will be the 2016 movie is the the it's

(20:55):
fast-paced, more violent action with a modern aesthetic.
And you can pretty much tell. I mean, it's not a slow bird.
I mean, from the first time it opens up, because the time it
ends, it's it's something's always happened, which is
amazing. Which there there was 1 scene

(21:17):
and it's not and at least I didn't see it.
Maybe I was asleep during that Idon't know.
I didn't see it in the first onebut in the second one when
Denzel Washington and it takes abig ol bite.
I'm guessing that a forest heartor a deer heart that's being cut
out. The heart or the?
Liver. I think it's part of the liver.

(21:38):
Liver, Liver still like it's slimy, it's bloody.
It was just cut out and let's just take a bite.
Well, I mean, I remember going hunting with with my grandfather
and my uncle. My dad did not.
I remember going hunting in the first year that I ever took.

(22:02):
They opened it up, they cut the heart out, drain some of the
blood to a little cup and you drunk some of the deer blood.
That was like the rite of passage for your very first.
So see if they did something like that in this movie for the
2016, that kind of Harkins back what a lot of old hunters went

(22:23):
by that. That was like the thing to do.
Which I'm sure that came from another culture, maybe Native
American or something like that.Paying respect to the animal
that gives it to help. But it's still, it's still
stands that disgust. All right, look, people.
He's a. Little FYI, you move to Florida,
OK, there's a thing called yellow fly.

(22:44):
They suck. Kill them with vengeance because
they bite. They hurt like hell.
Then you swell up like a damn Mexican who has moved to the
Polynesian islands and you don'tknow if you're sumo or just a
swollen Mexican. And then you itch like a
mosquito bite on steroids. So because of that little chain
train derailment, he's upset because we have a yellow fly in

(23:08):
the house and it keeps botheringhim.
Dude, the. Damn thing, it bit me on my
heel. Itched all night last night.
Couldn't sleep for shit. I'm sure I got one somewhere on
top of my head because that itches.
I got a big bite right here on my arm.
I've got until it bleeds, but I'm pretty sure I got one on my
ass cheek. OK.

(23:30):
That's probably a little more information that anybody needs.
And I won't tell you what I got bit by mosquito the other day.
Well, apparently you're just tasty.
Apparently so you won't taste itlater.
Yeah, OK. OK.
So. From my final thought, the 1960
version is the original as a timeless western with depth

(23:56):
often held in high regard in a cultural influence kind of way.
Essentially a hark is back to the old, to the golden days of
western movie. You had your hero, you had your
villain, and some of you do a little bit.
Of my allergies, I'm sorry. OK.

(24:17):
I was just looking you made thatphase.
I've already sneezed 15 times a day, I don't need to sneeze
anymore. And it was pretty much that 19
section version was pretty much tall white man going down to
help Mexicans. Cool.
And the remake is more inclusive.
They have everybody from black guys, black guys, Indians to

(24:38):
Mexicans. They have everybody work
together to try to help with onemining them.
And it's very much active actiondriven and it reflects some of
the modern values in the cinematic kind of way.
So I mean, so if you're into classic storytelling and
character driven drama, 1960 is for you.

(25:01):
If you prefer high octane and action and diverse cap, then
yeah, 2016 take it. Definitely take.
It, well for me it's 2016 definitely for me, but that's
mainly because I like to be I guess, entertain, you know, if

(25:26):
the story takes too long to progress or there's just way too
much lol, I end up wanting to gosomewhere else.
Kind of like I watched the original King and I.
That is the most boring movie. It's a great movie, don't get me
wrong, but you're just like, I think I'd rather watch paint dry
and listen to it. Probably why I've only seen it

(25:48):
one time. Versus trying to watch it just
just, but I mean, back in that, well, I say back in that time in
the 50s and 60s, I mean that wasso they didn't, I don't say they
didn't know any better, but it was better to talk and try to

(26:09):
make action the last thing you have to do, if that makes sense.
I mean it to an extent it does. You know, now it's like
everybody's ready to pull out a gun and shoot everybody.
At least you're in the olden days.
It was like, I'm going to hit you.
Well, don't hit me in the nose because that shit hurt.
Stop burning your mouth. Yeah, now I'm going to shoot

(26:34):
you. Oh, yeah.
I've been shot 15 times before. It's OK.
They'll just catch me up and I'll just walk it even more of
length to be even more gay. Well, OK.
You bad? Yeah.
There's also the ones who hold the gun sideways and like try to
throw the bullets. You're not the throw.
But no. But doesn't that make it go?

(26:54):
Faster, yes. Not accurately, but yes.
Yes, he's looking at me like I just lost my mind.
No, you do not throw the DAG on bullets.
If that were the case, we don't need the gun, we just need the.
Bullet you stole my cow almost shoot at you.
Even the 1960 version, they're sitting there like QQ, like

(27:16):
from, literally like they're standing in their hand from
their shoulder straight out likea praying mantis.
Every time they go to shoot the gun, it's like they're striking.
As a praying mantis, they were hoping nobody would know it.
Oh, apparently they had. Well, I.
We did because we pay attention to a little more.
Though that 44 caliber of what cutting you know, Colt 1911 just

(27:43):
yes. Are you, are you done with that?
But there again, the the 2016 have the same things that I mean
Denzel sitting there and he's like tell the guy pull the gun,
he pulls the gun and he's shooting from the hip and nails
the pistol instantly. I've known people who couldn't
hit a paper target 3 feet in front of them, hold it up their

(28:03):
hip. I know a few people that all
they want to do is talk about how they can, how they swear up
and down they can. We don't talk about shooting.
We just. And then what happens is they
tell me I don't want to see themdo it because it's just way too
fantastic. OK.

(28:24):
That's when it's like, sure, OK,we'll go with that before
yesterday, all righty. I'm a race car driver and I can
dress better dress than you can.Just show me.
Not today. I don't feel like it.
You're not worthy of seeing this.
Action. Yeah, pretty much.
Pretty much. Smell that?
It's bullshit. Oh, my God.

(28:46):
I have way too much of it, too. Yeah.
I mean, if you're looking for a classic Western with a little
bit of romance in it and what I can and can't do and Oh my God,
and this is the proper way to dothings and Ethics and Values
1960. It is your classic.
Western, I mean the 1961 is not bad.
No, it really isn't. I mean, it is a good movie.

(29:08):
But if you're not in the mood for nostalgia.
And you want something more fast-paced, still western style,
shoot them up, Bang Bang, with some some good humor thrown in
there into the mix. The the 2016 is it.
And that's a gap too, 1960 to 2016.

(29:30):
That's a gap, yes. I wonder how bored somebody had
to get to go digging to find something to remake.
You know, there's no talent. There's probably somebody
sitting around going, I mean, I don't know this for a fact, but
I'm pretty sure somebody sittingthere going, hey, why don't we

(29:51):
do a remake of Magnificent 7 from the 1960s and somebody
says, no, I don't think so. Then somebody comes out with a
script, Doctors is up, but hey, we're going to use these people
to play these characters. And that same executive said no,
they're like, oh really? Yes, let's do that.
I mean, at the same time, because, you know, Chris Pratt
served in the Army. Yes.

(30:13):
So with all the shooting that goes on and all the blowing up
and yes, he looks like a kid in the candy store when they open
up that house shed, whatever it was and all that Bang Bang,
shoot em up. Shit is in there, yes, and when
he gets to finally blow something up again, looks like a
kid in a candy store. I don't remember what he did in

(30:36):
the Army, but I'm wondering withall that noise going on, how
many times did they have to stopand give him a minute?
To collect his. Thoughts to collect himself and
get back into? Character.
Yeah, Yeah. That just kind of hit me in the
middle of it when I'm seeing allthis stuff going on, because we

(31:00):
know sometimes we got to dial down just because we want to
watch the movie, but we don't want all the noise.
Yeah, the, the, the PTSD moments, yeah, come back, yeah.
So I'm wondering how many times,and that'd be something
interesting to look up, how manytimes they had to stop in any of
his movies that have a lot of action, a lot of noise.

(31:22):
Yeah. That they had to stop and give
him a little bit, give him a rest.
Yeah. Before they could get.
Keep going. I mean, I'm sure like on films
like this and and other films that he's done where they
actually shooting, where they'reactually shooting pistols or or
some form of a pistol or rifle. I'm sure it's probably just a a
blasting gap, nothing else. Just enough to do the puff of

(31:42):
smoke up in the barrel. No real Bay.
I'm I'm sure at some point thereis, but still there, there's a
lot of noise. There has to be a lot of noise
whenever they make these. Oh yeah, yeah, even with the
explosions like out yeah someplace else, even with a
small charge, it's still going to have a a boom to it kind of

(32:03):
like a mortar sound that. We and sometimes that little
break is like, you know, just give me a minute and literally
60 seconds later we're good. I'm not.
And then sometimes I'm here and sometimes it's, you know what,
let's take, let's, let's take 30minutes.
Yes, I, I need 30 minutes. We're losing a lot back to what
I'm doing. Don't care and we come over and

(32:25):
beat you in the face with this, with this fake pistol.
Well, no, I'm taking 30. Then I'm going to move for your
shit. Give me 5.
I'm going to take 30. OK, we're good.
Oh God, have you been there? No, but I've been to Coachella.
Hopefully I mean dance, rave music with a bunch of 16 to 25

(32:54):
year olds. You still act like they're all
12. No, I'm good, I'm good.
I'd rather go to Woodstock, be stoned out my mind don't even
know where the fuck I am. Just I'm in a field now buddy.
I got to be Where are we? Again, here's the second.

(33:14):
Just talk again. Let me tell you, listeners, if
you've been to Woodstock and youremember Woodstock, you weren't
really there. People tell you you went to
Woodstock and you don't remember.
You had a damn good time, didn'tyou?
The moon child is now here. Grown adult star child is

(33:37):
planning your retirement and where you going to live in the
facility. Oh goodness.
Oh God, I'm sure. Just to make sure you raise them
right because damn. Anyway, so yeah.
So, I mean, if you're looking for a classic question, 1960 is

(34:02):
the way. Yeah, Wisdom, iconic actors for
that day and age who later become even bigger actors in
their own right. Yeah.
If you're looking for some of those more fast-paced action
pack Magnificent 7/20/16 is the way to go.
Yeah, it is. That's a way to go.
So that's the, that's the, that's that today.

(34:27):
That's a short one, but we did it.
Not a bad movie. No.
So until next time. Have a good one.
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