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April 28, 2025 54 mins

We analyze whether The Accountant 2 improves upon its predecessor as Ben Affleck returns as Christian Wolff, the autistic mathematical genius who serves as both accountant and assassin.

• Ben Affleck delivers a more nuanced performance of autism in the sequel, showing detailed mannerisms and speech patterns
• The movie portrays autism almost as a superpower rather than a limitation
• John Bernthal returns as Christian's brother, with their relationship forming the emotional core of the film
• The plot focuses on solving a Treasury chief's murder and rescuing a kidnapped Mexican family
• The sequel features more hand-to-hand combat versus the shooting-heavy approach of the first film
• The storyline sets up potential for a third installment
• We also discuss Hot Tub Time Machine (2010) as a perfect background comedy with nostalgic 80s references
• Modern comedies struggle to match the unfiltered humor of earlier decades
• Both films receive similar ratings (6-7.5/10) but for very different reasons


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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
excuse me, is anybody sitting here?
Sorry, this needs to take him.
Sorry, pat.
If you can go back to the 1980sand you can record any song to
claim as your own, what songwould you claim as your own?

Speaker 2 (00:18):
holy shit throwing.
It could be from the 80s tillnow that's.
That's a question just out ofthe blue man.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
Okay, I'll make it easier.
Which artist's career would you?

Speaker 2 (00:31):
steal.
Okay, which artist's career?

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Yeah, you would sing all of their songs.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Honestly Michael Jackson.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
He's already in the 80s though.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Dude his career, though he's the GO career,
though he's the goat, he's thegoat you think you can perform
billy jean hell?
No, yeah, no, I couldn't.
But like I'm assuming, I'm justtaking over all of his
abilities and talents, sure,sure okay, okay, I'll give you
that all right.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
Um pat, welcome to the podcast.
This is this.
He's taken where I'm your host,rob miranda.
First time, no second time onthe podcast you came on with
glenn once for an open tabssecond time.
I don't think we talked aboutany movies that time, we just
kind of bullshitted that wholeepisode.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
We bullshitted, we talked about diddy and oil and
yeah, that's just all going on,yeah it's gonna go on for a
minute.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
I don't think it's trial until next may dude, or is
it this may?
It's crazy, it's crazy yeah,with all these conspiracies like
that, he burnt out hollywoodand now with kanye's ass acting
crazy again bro kanye.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
I didn't listen to the what he said, but just
seeing the stuff on twittertalking about his cousin and
stuff yeah that's wild that isvery wild, um, are you gonna
listen to the song now?
I mean I can.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
A big thing that's on my Twitter feed right now is
all the reactions to the NFLdraft, specifically that one
quarterback.
You know who I'm talking about,I don't know his name?

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Oh yeah, Shadir Sanders.
We definitely know about him.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
Yeah, I've been seeing a lot of shit Like how he
thought he was going to be thefirst round pick, been seeing
like a lot of shit like how hethought he's gonna be the first
round pick and, uh, not just thefirst round pick, like probably
the first pick I think hethought he's gonna be yeah and
then uh, no, he's like one ofthe last people yeah, he.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
He was projected to be the first overall pick, like
last year, and then he wassupposed to be a first round
pick this year and some, so hedid something or something
because he fell to the fifthround, which is crazy well, not
just him.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
I heard his dad had a lot to do with it too, because
his dad was like I'm going to becoaching that team, you know.
So he come, he's coming withbaggage and which kind of turns
off a lot of teams this is verytrue, this is yeah do you think
you deserve to get picked in thefifth round?
Because of that okay, I heardhe's an okay quarterback I don't
know.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
I I kind of think he's a little mid, to be honest
yeah, that's what I overhypedbut he's probably not a fifth
round pick, he's probably moreof a.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
He's probably a second round, maybe late first
round pick, in my opinion but Ilove seeing the t like how like
he right he had the whole bigass party and like whole stage
set up and everything.
Yeah, I love following that ontwitter, like that and like I
really I'm not a big into NFL atall, but I like hearing the tea
with Patrick Mahomes' brotherall the time.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
I don't think he's been doing anything lately, but
when he first came out, you knowwhat?

Speaker 1 (03:12):
I just realized too this episode's 169.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
69.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
You know what that is ?
Two people leaving 169 with acuck.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
I never heard of this .
What are we talking about?

Speaker 1 (03:25):
nothing.
Uh, pat, we're here to talkabout the accountant too.
Like we talked about the, Itold you I was gonna have you on
like two months ago for thisepisode.
Um, and for a throwback episodesome people pick like a similar
kind of movie or something likethat.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
You went totally opposite direction and we're
talking about hot tub timemachine, hot tub time machine
just saw it for the first timelast week I'm excited to hear
because I've seen this severaltimes.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
It's come like, came on 2010, but I want to talk
about just the first accountantfirst, because there is a very
big difference between theaccountant and the accountant
too.
Yeah, there was, the accountantwas filmed a little bit more
darker, I would say.
And ben affleck, he played, hewas good in it.
Don't get me wrong, he playsnot like an autistic guy who I
think shine a very good light onautistic people in this one,

(04:11):
because they don't use it aslike of something to hold in the
back and more like almost likea fucking superpower.
How he's using it or he hasability to do and he has like a
whole freaking school of likelittle kids learning the same
stuff as him.
And we've seen similar stufflike this, like why does this
intrigue people so much, likethe, the corks, and like how

(04:34):
they not just like in real lifebut like on screen, specifically
like the OCD?
Why does that intrigue us asmuch as an audience versus and I
thought about this hard hischaracter, ben Affleck's
character, christian Wolfe, anautistic man?
If you replace Ben Affleck withan actual autistic person, do

(04:57):
you think the movie would be thesame?

Speaker 2 (05:03):
Probably no I mean you need it to be Ben affleck?
Yeah, honestly, as bad as thatsounds, but yeah, they
definitely did a good job ofshining a light on, like, how
autistic people can you knowspecifically more the second
movie because, um yeah, thefirst one ben affleck does his
research.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
He's like a method actor I can tell from these
movies, but the first he doesn'tseem as autistic as the second
one, if that makes sense.
Like he, he definitely picks upthe corks like blown on his
hands and like writing on themirrors and like kind of like
spazzing out when he can'tfinish something he started.
So that was only like a handfulof quirks he took.
But this one he went, I feellike he went full more method,

(05:41):
like the way his speech patterns, the way his posture and
everything like that.
For account two, he killed it.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
It was a little bit more detailed but that also made
it stand out a lot moredifferent than the first movie
definitely I felt like in thefirst movie they tried to like
he tried to just be like underthe radar and they showed a lot
of his like backstory where as akid he was like damn near
non-verbal and when he went tothe do his job in the accountant

(06:10):
one you know, with that uh firmor whatever, and they didn't
let him finish what he started.
And that's when, like, youreally saw like his uh super
autistic side yeah, because itaffected everything he did after
that.
Like you, you couldn't performtask, simple task, right uh, he
was like freaking out, likerolling his shins and stuff.

(06:32):
I was like cringing doing that,oh my god, yeah, with the wood
stick, yeah, yeah, and like thefirst one you get flashbacks of
more of the kid, childhood andas well as their dad.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
Like the dad didn't want he had good intentions.
Like he didn't want his no onefucking with his kids.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
So he taught them to be like stand up for themselves,
but like they became likemilitary trained and shit like
that and they were littlebadasses and their mom was just
I don't know if she was a pieceof shit or like, if they just
she just didn't like their dador I don't know what the
situation really was.
It's kind of hard to tell, butthey she left them, or if she
just didn't, couldn't care forchristian, you know at that time

(07:12):
, or whatever.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
But it's tough.
I mean, I have um, uh, anautistic niece.
She's not doing this stuff, no,she's.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
There's definitely levels to it.
Yeah, I have a cousin that hasDown syndrome and he ain't doing
this stuff either.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
Yeah, I mean, it's not a default at all, it's more
of just they're looking at theworld differently.
You know it's.
You know, definitely,definitely.
Every major character came backfrom the first movie to this
one, except anna kendrick yeah,the girl.
I thought we were gonna see herright, because it seemed like it

(07:53):
was almost like a love interestin the movie but I mean, I kind
of like that they made a morefriendship kind of thing too,
because it seems more realistic,right, um, but at least not
mention it, because like he's hebefriended, like the little
girl from his school whofollowed him, his like entire
dollhood, and um, that's when hekind of like left hanging.
Like he left her, didn't heleave her money?

(08:16):
In the first one on thekendrick's character, he left
her something.
Uh, yeah, like to just get awaytype money yeah, on top of that,
he left her some left somepaintings too that he collected.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
Yeah, the dog painting, the dog's playing
poker.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
Yeah, but there was an actual painting underneath
that that she ripped off.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
Yeah, yeah, like the one that he used to keep above
his.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Yeah, I forgot what kind of artist it was, just like
splatter type stuff.
Yeah, art's so overrated.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
I think it's all just a scam.
Not a scam, but it's just likea way to launder money and shit.
Like it's just a.
It's a black market.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
Yeah, because that's.
That was something that looklike me and you can make, true,
but anyways, let's go to accounttwo just slap some paint on a
freaking canvas and it's worthmillions the accountant too I
want to talk about too, becausethe marketing was pretty good
for this movie.
Most of the time for a goodsmall movie like this isn't a
small movie, but for a goodmovie like it can be hard

(09:12):
marketing like I think theycould have done more fun stuff
with it.
Maybe they have been after likeactually go around like teaming
up with turbo because this isalso on tax season too like he
could have teamed up with turbotax or something like that.
You know turbo tax yeah, hecould have our H&R Block.
He definitely could have donesomething fun.
But, like the trailer spoke foritself, in this movie it looks
cool because not only that, wealso saw John Bernthal's

(09:32):
character have a more of animportant role in this movie
yeah, um, john Bernthal'sfucking the man dude.

Speaker 2 (09:38):
Yeah, and John, like in the content one he wasn't
like really super big back thenno, he, he wasn't.
Oh for his career.
Yeah, at the time he didn'teven do Punisher or anything.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
yet yeah, that was like right before Punisher yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
So he kind of blew up after that.
Yeah, he had much minor rolesoh he's been a badass, though
he's a badass in everything hedoes.
He has his own podcast too.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
Do you know that?
No, he talks not just like hehas a podcast where he talks to
well a celebrities, but two likejust local, like badass
policemen or firemen, somethinglike that.

Speaker 2 (10:09):
That's cool yeah, he's.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
He gives back a lot, but I can also see him being a
douchebag in real life too.
He kind of does give them kindof vibes uh, but the account to
christian wolf applies to hisbrilliant and illegal methods to
reconstruct an unsolved puzzleof Treasury Chief's murder,
directed by Gavin O'Connor,written by Bill Dobik, the

(10:32):
Accountant 2.
Just that title alone.
When is the last time you'veseen a sequel with a name and
just the two at the end of it?
It's usually a sequel the nameand a subtext underneath it, or
something like that.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
That's true.
They did have a little play onit, because they made it like a
little squared two instead ofjust like oh yeah so yeah, that
was more like for like thecharacter being like a math nerd
and stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Yeah I think the first one came out 2016 and in
2020.
Ben affleck was interviewedabout a possible sequel and he
said he would love to do it, butthe script wasn't ready.
There was also talks aboutturning this into like a mini
series too.
I could see it.
Would you like to see thatbetter versus a movie?

Speaker 2 (11:12):
I could see it, because then he can go through
like all his clientele that wereally know nothing about you
don't learn anything reallyabout his clientele at all?
You just know that they're likesuper not even just illegal
people, you know, like drugdealers, arms dealers, stuff
like that, and he just does thebooks for all these people
across all the the world, noteven just in the us, and also,

(11:33):
you could also like dive deeperinto john burton, his brother's
character.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
Uh, braxton, let's see some of his work, because he
kind of seemed like a fuckingpussy in this movie yeah, they,
well they I say pussy, but henerfed him.

Speaker 2 (11:46):
Yeah, when they open up the scene you know with him
talking to the girl at the tableand that's when Christian calls
.
You don't really see what'sgoing on until like the very end
of that scene and that's likereally all you really see
besides like a couple littlefight scenes here and there in
that movie.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Well, I think when you first introduced the
character yeah, he's lookingcool, checking in the hotel,
he's like laying out all hisweapons and he's making this
important phone call you thinkhe's making some kind of deal.
No, he's literally just buyinga puppy and he's just not even
like a pit bull or anything likethat.
It was like a corgi.
He wanted yeah, he wanted acorgi he wanted.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
He wanted a corgi.
I don't remember the dog's name, but the.
The lady was like you gottawait two more weeks because it
needs the bond with his motherright, yeah and that he was like
what's two more weeks gonna do,when he's never gonna see his,
his mother again?

Speaker 1 (12:35):
and that had me thinking like, damn, that is
kind of true, yeah I mean, it is, it is true, so it's kind of
fucked up.
I think about that all the timewith my dog, like I, I think I
looked up once like if my, if Iwere to introduce my dog to his
mom again right now, would heeven recognize her?
I think they said, like theycan remember the scent up to
three years.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
Wow, I'm mistaken never had a dog, so I don't know
, don't know a lot about dogs,nah I couldn't breed.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
I couldn't have people breeding uh, or buy a
bred dog People adopt versusbreeding, and then to nerf his
character, to make him a catperson at the end too.
It was just not only cat Shoutout Cat Williams too.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
Shout out Mexican Cat Williams.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
The plot of this movie was very forgettable.
The whole point of this moviewas to um rescue this missing
mexican family yeah one by oneyou find out different tragic
stories.
One was dead, like the dad wasdead, the kid was in the
constant like a concentrationcamp kind of thing, kidnapped,
held up for ransom I don't evenknow, because they're gonna kill

(13:40):
him anyway.
And then the fucking mom theyturned into like the winter
soldier.
She got in a car accident andthen they rebuilt her Like she
forgot all her memories.
So they changed her to be anassassin.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
They didn't even train her.
She just did that.
They said she had savantsyndrome and her brain was just
constantly in flight or flightmode.
Well, she was a badasscharacter.
She was bad.
Yeah, she was a badasscharacter.
She was bad.
Yeah, she was a badass.
It's crazy when you see thepicture of them as a family.

Speaker 1 (14:08):
She looks nothing the same.
I was thinking the same thingshe looks nothing a little bit
more like fuller in the faceyeah, yeah yeah she, she was
fucking badass.
I think she had definitely hadher own bucky barnes moment,
like when she was looking at thepicture.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
It's like oh shit, this is my family.
She remembers yeah.
Yeah the the plot was like alittle all over the place at
first.
It's like where is this going,you know?

Speaker 1 (14:27):
I feel like if you would have walked in halfway
through this movie, you couldhave put it together that's true
.
Yeah, that's probably and theykind of made this movie more
focused on brotherly love thanan actual action movie.
Yeah, they had a lot of weirdrandom moments and it had
nothing to do with a plot likethe whole dating scenario.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
Yeah, the like speed dating thing, the speed dating.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
It was an interesting thing and I was like, okay,
there's no way he's reallyinterested in dating.
I thought he was like trying toget intel on somebody.
But, no, I think he was theretrying to find a companion and
they never did anything likethat.
He meets this person, squaredancer, which I'm gonna come

(15:08):
back to that scene in a secondand he meets him.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
He gets her number.
Never heard from her again.
No, like what was the point ofthis movie?
Yeah, I mean that that stuffadded to the movie.
The speed dating thing wasweird because like every single
girl was in line only to see himyeah, when she rigged it yeah.
Then he said he just like.
What did he say?
He said he like changed thealgorithm or some shit.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
He mastered the algorithm.
He like he knew what womenwanted, or like by strategy,
like most women want, like aprovider or so-and-so, and he
like rigged it to answer all ofhis answers like to what most
women want.
On top of that, he also riggedlike his photos, like the most
suggested photos that people areattracted to and this guy made

(15:45):
game.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
That game dude.
Yeah, was it just a game forhim?
Like, did he just want to see,like, how women would respond,
or like was he actually lookingfor somebody he was looking for
like a dating companion?
Because like, so he is gettingtired of being alone.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
I would think so and on top of that, like well, first
of all, like when he we'retalking about the speed dating
thing, women line up to see whothey want to date and there's
like probably 30 guys there.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
That is bogus.

Speaker 1 (16:08):
And like all 30 women line up to take turns with him
and after a while, like hestopped talking to them, like
they were dates and like givingthem accounting advices and
stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (16:18):
Yeah, he couldn't do it.
He could do the dating thing.
I mean, it was a funny scenealone.
So so I asked this does thatmake the, the autistic girl
that's at the whatever it'scalled thing, the school,
jealous because she has to likelove him, right?

Speaker 1 (16:34):
I don't she does call him dreamboat yeah yeah, I
wonder.
That's kind of I don't thinkthey were gonna say why
dreamboat?
I don't know either, um, butshe gives him advice like don't
wear the black suit andeverything.
So I'm assuming she's alwayslistening to him or something.
Yeah, so I don't know.
I they, they don't.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
I wish they gave more backstory in her a little bit
yeah, you, you really only learna little bit about her at the
very end of the first movie andit's like she's her, his handler
, basically.
Basically, yeah, and christiangot her like a supercomputer,
because that's how shecommunicates is through the
computer.
Yeah, and the guy that theywere bringing in a new student

(17:16):
at the time and the guy was likea computer engineer and he was
like holy, you have this crazycomputer and that's when you
learn that the britishquote-unquote british person is
her, the non-verbal chick.
That's like what like?
Probably like 17 to 20 in that,the first movie.
Yeah, she's like definitelylike in her late 20s or early
30s in the second movie I thinkthey did replace the actress did

(17:38):
, did they, yeah, yeah she,although the first actress did
like do the actual voice for thecomputer stuff.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
Uh, they did replace it, though, and then she goes
downstairs.
It's like fucking the X-Mansionfrom X-Men.
They're like a team of five orsix autistic kids all thinking
this is a game, first of all tohack into people's phones and
computers and stuff like that.
Let's stop here and back up alittle bit.
Let's talk about the theaterreaction, because we went there

(18:05):
and it was a semi-packed theater.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
I was generally surprised and happy that there
was a lot of people in there.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
I think that makes the experience more fun.
Even though I like going to themovies, and sometimes it's just
myself, you don't go to themovies a lot, do you?

Speaker 2 (18:16):
I used to Not as much anymore.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
What kind of movies are you into?

Speaker 2 (18:25):
Well, I've uh, well, I've seen all the marvel movies
and stuff like that not all ofthem, but I would say about 90
of them, mostly that I likeaction, action movies action
movies are tough.

Speaker 1 (18:30):
You think um, you're in the fast and furious movies
I've seen all of them.
Yeah, I just startedre-watching like uh, I think the
fourth one nice yeah, I I don'tknow.
I don't have a favorite type ofmovies, anything like that, but
this one I had three in a rowback to back.
I had the amateur, I hadsinners and now this one.
There it's.
It's pretty good so far, andthen next week's thunderbolts,

(18:51):
where I heard nothing but greatthings about it.
So I'm excited for it.
Yeah, I'm excited forthunderbolts too.

Speaker 2 (18:56):
And then we have lilo and stitch coming, yeah um, how
about?
At home you streaming a lot ofshows uh, I I'll into shows
occasionally, but I'm currentlydry on shows right now.
I finished.
What did I finish recently?
Well, daredevil ended.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
You know what?
I've only seen like half of thefirst episode.

Speaker 2 (19:16):
Oh man.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
It's good.
I mean, I heard nothing butgreat things about it and I
can't wait to finish it.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
Great season.
I'm not gonna give you anyspoilers.
I know they're filming season.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
Well, if not done season two already.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
I think they said they want a daredevil season to
come out every year yeah, so soare they considering it like a
new series, or is thistechnically daredevil, daredevil
season four?
I guess you say daredevilseason four, so okay everything
that happened on daredevil still, still applies, yeah yeah, and
I heard like season two.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
I don't think this is a spoiler, because it's a rumor
right now, like they'rebringing it back to defenders
see that's.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
I don't want to get into it because I don't want to
spoil anything oh, that's cool.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
I like all the defenders except iron fist.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
I hated his show iron fist was probably the worst,
but, but I've seen all those Ihad also heard rumors that iron
fist would show up in shangchi's new second movie, which
that makes sense.
Yeah, because they, they'rekind of like similar.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Yeah, yeah, that would make sense which shang chi
is gonna be in the new avengersmovie.
So that's pretty dope.
We talk about like avengers atthe end of this movie let's go
back to the account too.
Yeah, yeah uh, we talked aboutben f, like a little bit like
his character.
He does kill it in this movie.
He.
He has his mannerism, hisspeech patterns, like he does.
I feel like he spent more timemaybe with autistic people or at

(20:28):
least done more research on it.
We talk about major peoplecoming back.
Jk Simmons is coming back.
As a matter of fact, he's likethe very first person we see in
this movie.
He is badass in this movie,like he is kind of like a rogue
cop a little bit trying to dohis own investigation.
He was looking for this familyand he got a little bit too
close to it and it cost him hislife.
But the whole bar scene alonewas pretty badass.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
Yeah, when they met the chick, the Winter Soldier
chick, I had no idea where theywere going with that at first,
because I'm like why I thoughthe retired first off in the end
of the first movie.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
Yeah, which is why I said like he kind of goes rogue,
yeah, yeah but so when they,when they talked to medina,
didn't they say deputy director?
For reiki yeah so he was stillthe the director at the time and
it was like eight years later,I think he did say like he was
semi-retired yeah and he wasonly taking cases that he felt

(21:26):
personable to yeah but like Idon't think he was off payroll,
like he was still getting paidfor that stuff, I would say
speaking of the the like,whatever the treasury department
.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
That's crazy to me, like those two knew that
christian was doing superillegal things and they just let
it happen, because they werebasically getting their pockets
greased in a way.
They were in a way they weregetting like the high profile
even uh, medina said like yeah,he goes up, christian goes on.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
Medina like yeah, I put you in that position exactly
, and that's why she keptreferencing the chair.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
She was like I can't find a good chair that, you know
, can I feel good in, becauseshe doesn't feel like she
deserves to be there, damn.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
Look at you with that symbolism.
That was pretty good.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
She doesn't feel like she deserves to be there.
And then she finally finds thechair at the end where the one
guy gifted her christian gifted.
I was assuming that was a giftfrom Christian right.
No, that was from.
That was the guy's chair.
He was just sitting in the fishmarket he was just sitting in
that chair.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
I thought, like Christian put that there for her
, I mean he might did he?

Speaker 2 (22:29):
no, he never.
He was never at the fish marketdoesn't mean he can't like have
something delivered, that'strue.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
I thought the whole like scene with the chairs, like
because I was the first ummedina.
Like I thought the whole likescene with the chairs, like
because I was the firstintroducer, like I thought the
whole scene was the chair.
I was like because I literallythought to myself like why the
fuck are we seeing this?
Like who cares about this?
But then I like I talked aboutmy last episode like the movie.
I was like this is random asfuck.
Why don't we seen some of thestuff?
And he's like I think the wholepoint of it is to show like,
yeah, this stuff can happen onany random day.

(22:56):
And like, yeah, that shithappens.
Like randomly, you're going tolook at chairs and like oh shit,
next thing, a murder happens onyour fucking desk it's crazy I
don't know, uh, but how do youfeel about marybeth?
I didn't the actress herself, Idon't care for a whole lot like
I, like I think I told you inthe theater it's like there's no
way that's her her realspeaking voice.
Like I felt like I don't knowwhat she was trying to do.

(23:17):
Like there was her and anotherguy like the sniper, like trying
to do a tough accent mary beth,the assassin the mary beth and
the assassin, the sniper thesniper guy definitely was.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
He had a crazy voice.
I don't know what he was tryingto do with that, but yeah, they
, we didn't really get a lot ofbackground about him, he just
was no, they did presume him tobe like a main character kind of
thing.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
I don't even remember how he leaves.
If he gets killed, he dies onthe bus yeah, like he was very
forgettable.
That's a case 100.

Speaker 2 (23:48):
He was just there to like randomly shoot people and
he would just pop into a scene,shoot somebody and then just
disappear he was also the onewho killed ray king and he was
praised for it was like you know, all, like out of five of my
men, like only you kill this guy.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
I thought there's gonna be a big showdown between
them, maybe, nah but he wasn'teven supposed to kill ray.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
He was.
They were there to kill thegirl right, right and she.
He couldn't get a shot, so hesettled for ray to like kind of
throw her off them.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
Kind of yeah, it's very strategic guy.
Yeah, I mean, uh, we can talkabout Justine before we get into
the to John Berthold'scharacter.
Justine, like the one who playsum her, his handler, the
nonverbal.
The nonverbal one.
She was very good about like Idon't think I'm pretty positive,
not actually autistic herself,but like moving back and forth
like her movements yeah, uh,non-verbal.

(24:39):
She was speaking, communicatingthrough an ipad.
I was like there's no way thischick's typing everything
because she was speaking wayfaster than she was typing or
doing anything like that.
So I was kind of curious howthat happened, what they, how
they do that yeah, then I wasthinking like when she was in
the lab like computer typing,she was probably using one of
those like special um keyboardsthat they use in courts.
So you know, in courts I can'tremember what it's called.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
I know what you're talking about.
Or maybe she had the Neuralinkand whatever she thought went
straight to the computer.
That'd be nuts.
That'd be nuts, but I think shedid In the first one.
Going back to the first one,she was like that might have
actually been an autistic person.
That actually just did theon-screen stuff.
Yeah, that she might haveactually been autistic.

(25:22):
And then the second one I thinkyou're right, it might have
been a different actress I knowit was a different actress.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Yeah, um, would you have one of those neural links?

Speaker 2 (25:30):
no, no, I don't think I'll be saying some
out-of-pocket shit because I'vebeen thinking about random shit,
yeah, but it would be crazy tohave access to like everything
in the world dude at the sametime like they show them how
they hack into a computer like arandom woman's like laptop just
to find a selfie.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
I hated that whole scene.
First of all, too.
Like they're looking for thiswoman, the soldier is like look,
there's a woman taking a selfieand I was like it's so
obviously posed.
Like they were almost liketrying to get this person in the
background, yeah, definitely.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
And then they, when they're hacking into her
computer and they're likeringing her doorbell and stuff
like that, it's like wow thatwould have known this shit out
of me.
That that's like another thing,like is technology too advanced
now?

Speaker 1 (26:10):
like your whole home is set up to one to wi-fi,
basically yeah, yeah, like hertv, her ring and um her printer
like yeah like what did theyhack into?

Speaker 2 (26:20):
they said they hacked into the thermostat to get into
the system.
And then it's like what?

Speaker 1 (26:25):
like you're hacking into a thermostat, right, right
right, and I think that's thepoint, because the reason that
they keep distracting her islike we're bouncing all over the
place in the storyline too.
Yeah, we are, but um, but thereason they're hacking like I
mean not the reason, but likethey're hacking into this
woman's laptop and I guess shecould see someone's in her like
laptop just because the lightson in the camera.

(26:46):
I was like you can do all thisstuff, but you can't turn off
this one light.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
Yep, yep that's what it's, just the the freaking um,
it's not that they emailed apicture from her computer to
them.
I was like wouldn't you see itin your sent mail, right?
But then again, how often youlook at your sent mail?
That is true like I I mean I.
I run two email accounts forwork and, like occasionally,
I'll go back through my sentmail to see when I send

(27:10):
something yeah, but why wouldn'tthey hack their phone instead?
You know what?

Speaker 1 (27:15):
because that because you took the picture with their
phone yeah, it sounds.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
It seems like it'd be easier to be honest.
That's what I was thinking,instead of the laptop.
How did that?
How did they know that it wason her laptop already?
Probably it was an apple phone,because it was just all linked
through yeah, it's probably Ithrough iCloud.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
Um, now we can talk about john burthold's character.
He was cool, I mean the, the,they.
They kind of nerfed him likewell, yeah, it's all.
But yeah, he's trying to buythe puppy and he gets a cat
person.
But like the whole movie he'scrying, like why don't you come
say hi to me or send me a carand I?
Was like yeah come on, you'resupposed to be this big tough
guy he played like the lonelybrother in this one.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Like he was like.
I just miss my brother.
You know they grew up togetherbeing badasses well, not
beingasses, but that's how theyhad to live.
He grew up looking afterChristian.
His older brother.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
And then for him to turn his back on him, which I
can totally see.
I could totally see, but thatwas the third or fourth time him
asking about it.
I was like shut the fuck up guy.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
I'm tired of you bitch and cry.
It's just the way thatChristian's brain works.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
He doesn't compute that he doesn't even think he's
doing anything wrong.
He doesn't exactly, yeah and um, and that just bothered him.
He's like like he even askedlike is it because of me that
you don't want anything to dowith me, or is it because of?

Speaker 2 (28:26):
your like your autism that you don't feel anything
yeah, and then I was a littleconfused as well, like because
in the first one john'scharacter uh, he was like it
looked like he was the head guycontrolling everybody, yeah,
like he was like a guy not forhire, but like he did defense or
something like that, like helike helped people security type

(28:48):
shit.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
And then the second one, he's like literally an
assassin no, I got the sense ofthe feeling that he was a hired
protection, like you said.
But like yeah, he's not afraidof his hands dirty though oh
yeah, definitely.

Speaker 2 (28:58):
And then what it was in the first one, when he
learned that it was his brother,when he's watching him on the
cameras, that was such a goodscene.
That was like he's like wait asecond, Like he's just looking
at the mannerisms, how he'staking these people out, and
he's like anything in that firstmovie besides like send

(29:20):
everybody after him.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Um, this one christian did a lot more
physically like fighting thanthan his brother did, like that
whole scene with it in thatfactory when he was like, uh,
auditing, like he uses his mindto like oh he shit on those guys
in that with the with the pizzasizes and stuff like that like
that's wild, you know, like, oh,the whole scene was awesome,
yeah that was a good scene.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
That was a really good scene and Medina, part of
the government, is just like.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
Yeah, and then she didn't see nothing.
There's a scene where they dokidnap somebody and then
Medina's like I gotta wet myhands clean of this, and then
she just lets them go, likeKrishna and his brother.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
I was like yes, you guys, you do whatever you guys
want, yeah, because it's part ofthe thing.
Well, like, she's in thatposition because of them, yeah,
so, but I don't know, it's justthat's just.
That dynamic was weird to me,because it's like, if you're
really, if you're really a truecop by the book type person,
you're not going to let thathappen, but so no.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
And then, um, let's talk about how she or he,
christian.
Like I said, there's a lot ofbrother moments in this movie,
which is a good thing.
I like that, I've seen that.
But there's a whole scene wherethey go to a bar just to have a
drink and, um, one of thewaitresses is flirting with

(30:40):
Christian and then he talks himup to go.
He actually doesn't he, like he, she's hitting on him and it
goes over his head and he, shewalks away.
He's like what are you doing,dude?
And you can tell he wanted tosay something more.
But like he was just nervousand he's like he swallowed his
pride and like, all right, 15seconds of confidence, and he
goes up to her on the dancefloor.
It's a like a western, like aroad, like a honky-tonk kind of
place yep country and then, umhe, then he sees her dancing.
I think she was talking toanother guy too, if I'm not

(31:01):
mistaken.
But he goes there and just likea mathematician, he's going out
there studying the movementsand counting the steps and all
that.
And I think I told you ain't noway we're about to see this guy
dance in this movie right now.
Yeah, I couldn't believe it.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
And sure enough, he line dances.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
But even before then, if I see this guy just like
looking around like he's in themiddle of the dance floor,
that's kind of weird.
But we see this guy landdancing and he's having fun with
it.
It was a good scene.
At the end of it I think hegets her number.

Speaker 2 (31:26):
That's the last we ever hear about that yeah, it
was a good scene because you cansee like, because he everything
is like numbers to him.
He realized that that dance wasjust all, just in coordination,
like one, one step at a time,and he just like memorized the,
the, the dance within like 30seconds and then he went up
there and started just bustingit out and his brother's like
that's my brother out there, andthen yeah, the other guy came

(31:49):
up trying to claim that girl andshe's like we're not even
together.
yeah, and then he's like, goahead and hit me and the guy's
like what he's like hit me, mybrother will be very excited.
Yeah, he's like, go ahead andhit me and the guy's like what
he's like hit me, my brotherwill be very excited.
He's kind of bored right now,and then they start fighting.
That was a funny scene too.
They just whooped their ass.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
And they just drove off.
You don't really see the fight.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
Yeah, they just get thrown through two windows, yeah
.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
They just throw him through the windows and then
they're driving and he pulls uphis sleeve and she wrote his,
her number on his arm.
But that, yeah, like you said,that was the last we've seen.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
You mentioned that going home man got beat up by an
autistic guy?
Yeah, that's not a good look,his friends are.
His friends are talking shitforever like yeah, boy, you got
beat up by a dude that can'teven make a verbal or by an
account like that was the thing,a joke in the middle of.

Speaker 1 (32:41):
Was it the first or second?
I think it was the first one,when someone was on the phone
like oh, it was the second one.
The prostitutes were callingtheir pimp and the pimp was like
what are these guys who looklike?
And she goes accountants.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
That was a pretty funny line, Accountants yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
And there was a random ass line in one of the
prostitutes who gave up all thewhy she said that.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
But this is so fucking random and funny at
first I didn't understand, butthen, like once, you learn a
little bit more, going furtherin the movie, it makes sense she
probably did have kids.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
She's probably protecting them.

Speaker 2 (33:11):
That's what I was got out of it I think she was
basically hinting like if theyhave kids then they're gonna be
like held somewhere, like that'swhat they're.
She was hinting at to to themto try to figure out.
So she was saying, like I don'thave kids, but like some of the
other girls do yeah and thenthey put the connections
together.
On the one, the picture of theboy in the fence that was like

(33:34):
he's 13 and the other picture hewas like eight or whatever or
something like that.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
And then they figured out like they're holding the
kid somewhere against you yeah,so so the girls have to be
prostitutes yeah, but then, likethey find the busload of kids
and they know they're gonna getkilled, why would they kill?
That was fucked up, by the way.

Speaker 2 (33:54):
I don't understand why they were killing so the
white dude at the fish market,the head of everything or
whatever he was like, kill allthe kids.
So there's nothing to attachthe kids and the girls to me oh,
that, which is fucked up.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
Yeah, that was okay.
Um, this is a good movie.
Would you like to see a thirdone like a trilogy?

Speaker 2 (34:13):
yeah, I think there is going to be a third one okay
just the way they if they endedit with with the girl they
really didn't like.
They killed, go ahead theykilled the white dude, the fish
guy I don't even Did they evenever say his name.

Speaker 1 (34:26):
I don't think so.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
In the movie.
I don't know, but yeah, it wasthe white dude, the fish guy,
and they killed.
She killed him and now she'sjust.
What is she?

Speaker 1 (34:37):
I was like do you think she's that's?

Speaker 2 (34:38):
what I was going to ask you Do you think she's?
Or like head of, like this druglord, and also do the counting
at the same time?
The girl medina, medina, oh,medina is going to continue
doing what she does.
But I think the third movie isgoing to be about probably the
two brothers and the the wintersoldier girl, and because they

(34:59):
saved her son, because her sonhad the autistic stuff I think
we've seen them Because her sonhad the autistic stuff.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
I think we've seen them driving to show that meetup
, yeah, but we never see thatmeetup.
But I was like what the fuck?

Speaker 2 (35:10):
Yeah, but they set the room up for him and it had
his name above the bed and theyset the little Jackson ball up,
which is what he was playingwith in the movie.
So yeah, he's definitely goingto the.

Speaker 1 (35:22):
I bet you, if there's a third one, it's going to pick
up exactly where it left offand they're never going to get
that reunion.
Something's going to happenbetween them driving to the
meetup point.
Someone's going to attack them.

Speaker 2 (35:35):
You think it's going to be the mom.

Speaker 1 (35:36):
No.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
No.

Speaker 1 (35:37):
No, I think someone's pissed off that he fucking
killed everybody.

Speaker 2 (35:41):
Sure.
I think it's, and then, likethe end of that movie, it's
gonna be like a reunion and atthe end they had the british,
the handler, called the russiansupreme guy that was setting up
everything which was john's bossand told him to basically call
off the hit on medina.
Yeah, and that allowed.

(36:03):
Uh, it also allowed the girl tofind the white guy and they
were in some random remotecountry, because I think they
set him up.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
Would you go see?

Speaker 2 (36:15):
this movie again in theaters, in theaters.
I don't like watching a movie asecond time in theaters.
Yeah, I'll re-watch a movie,but not two times in theaters,
no.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
You're going to change're gonna change your mind
.
When you see Sinners, dude, yougotta see it in IMAX too.
I'm gonna see it.
What would you give this movie?
1 out of 10, 7.5.
I'd probably give it 6 out of10.

Speaker 2 (36:41):
I thought it could have been a lot better, but
they're doing what a lot ofmovies and shows are doing right
now and they're settingthemselves up for the future to
have more.

Speaker 1 (36:51):
Yeah, but I think they're trying to get more
demographics.
If you cut out all the brotherstuff, I think it would have
been a little bit better moviefor me.
It's more action, more straightto the point, versus you have
all these side stories about himgetting closure from growing up
and then you have the wholerelationship story, like if,
like, the first one didn't haveany of that stuff and that's why
I think it was a little bitbetter movie for me.
But, um, yeah, this is a goodass movie.

(37:13):
This is.
This is the action kicked up anotch.
Uh, there was more hand-to-handcombat versus, like the first
one, he was established as ashooter.
He was just shooting everybodyyeah, this, he was badass in
this movie and I love benaffleck, yeah, and he's so.

Speaker 2 (37:25):
He's so surgical with everything that he does.
It's just, it's awesome.
Are you a?

Speaker 1 (37:28):
big ben affleck fan too.
Yeah, I like ben affleck, he'sdope, he's the man.
Um, now let's switch gears,switch, switch gears to a
completely different kind ofgenre movie oh yeah, this movie.
I are account two.
I talked about, like how youcan start maybe midway through
the point and catch on fromthere.
This movie is the exact same.
This is like definitely thedefinition of a background movie

(37:50):
, like something you have on inthe background you can look at
over at any point and understandthe plot of what's going on.
We're going to be talking abouthot tub time machine.
Uh, came out 2010.
This movie's about amalfunctioning time machine at a
ski resort.
Takes a man back to 1986 withtwo of his friends and nephew,
where they must relive a fatefulnight and not change anything

(38:12):
to make sure his nephew is born.
Directed by Steve Pink, writtenby Josh had man, this is like
right at the hype of the Office,2.
Or like right when the Officeis finishing, kind of Because
Craig Robinson and Clark what'shis name?
Right at the hype of the Officetoo.
Or like right when the Officeis finishing, kind of Because
Craig Robinson and Clark, what'shis name?
Clark Duke, who's played Jacobthe Nephew those are household

(38:34):
names that drew everyone in andRob Cawdry, who plays Lou.
At this 2010 time, I feel likehe was in everything.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
He was a lot more stuff than, yeah, he really was.

Speaker 1 (38:43):
And I haven't heard from him maybe like the past 10
years.
Same thing with clark duke,sorry, uh.
Yeah, clark duke, uh, theglasses kid, he wasn't
everything around the time.
He was in super bad for alittle bit too super bad.
Yeah, I remember.
Yeah, he was in um, what's thatone like?
Uh, when they do a road tripabout something sex road?

Speaker 2 (39:02):
trip, oh um, will they do a road trip Something?

Speaker 1 (39:08):
sex road trip.
Talking about Wild Hogs Was hein Wild Hogs?
Wild Hogs was John Travolta.
I don't fucking know, are you?

Speaker 2 (39:13):
talking about the Vegas trip?
Yeah, I think so.
He was in a lot of things, notthe.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
Hangover, no forget it, but anyways.
But they had household namesaround the 2010s in this movie,
which I think is why it was abig hit.
Um, this movie's definitely.
Even though there's not reallydrugs in this movie, it's
probably listed as a stonermovie definitely.

Speaker 2 (39:33):
It's a more of a.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
It's a comedy first off, so that immediately hits
the stoner fan base yeah, theyjust we were talking before this
like they just don't makecomedies anymore they're not
that good anymore.

Speaker 2 (39:45):
Comedy no, they're just, they're not.
They don't hit the same becauseeverybody's woke now.
Everybody's woke now they don'twant to get canceled.

Speaker 1 (39:51):
They're like oh, that's just fucked up.
We shouldn't have said that.
I just listened to like this.
Actually this movie I didn'teven know this version of the
black eyed peas song existed.
It's like let's get it started.
It's hot, you know.
The real lines is like let'sget retarded in here.

Speaker 2 (40:04):
No, I never knew that .

Speaker 1 (40:05):
It's in the movie.

Speaker 2 (40:06):
Oh, that's the real lines, I guess, or they just did
that for the movie.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
I would imagine they just took a real song.
I was like that shit would not.
You can't say the word retardedright now.
You can't say that, no, that,and the F word is used a lot.
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (40:25):
I love that word.
Yeah, you do.
It's a funny word.

Speaker 1 (40:28):
Because you love it.
We can't say it now.

Speaker 2 (40:30):
Yeah, no, it's fine, but I don't mean it like it.
Yeah, I don't mean it, and theydidn't mean it in this movie.
Yeah, it's something you justsay to your boys, like, oh,
you're a.

Speaker 1 (40:39):
Yeah, but you it like that it's not like, yeah, so
yeah, there's this.
There's a lot of funnyone-liners like that in this
movie.
The plot itself, like thesethree best friends who grew up
together, just like normaldollhouse, you know, you kind of
fall apart, like you don'treally keep in contact and stuff
like that.
What's?
They're going through differentthings.

(41:00):
Like one's getting a divorce,one is like just not happy with
his life.
The one is like he's marriedbut he's not happily married
because like he kind of feltlike he gave a part of himself
up to be married and he'smissing that part.
So there's all three differentstages of life and clark's like
the nephew of the one who gotinto divorce.
So to try to preserve some oftheir manhood and their

(41:20):
friendship, they go back to theski resort, which was 1986.
And there's not a morerelatable thing when you go to
somewhere where you went as ayounger person.

Speaker 2 (41:28):
It's not going to be the same.
It wasn't even close to thesame.
It was run down, everything wasboarded up, dude I went to
Wisconsin Dells last November.

Speaker 1 (41:36):
That's exactly how I felt Really.
The magic wasn't there anymore.

Speaker 2 (41:40):
That's part of life.
It's crazy when you just getolder and things change,
especially in like friendsgroups like that.
At least they uh I guess theyreally weren't super close
because they really weren'ttalking until the guy tried to
like kill himself damn near,yeah, uh and they go to this
resort.

Speaker 1 (41:56):
And this is a hilarious running gag too, with
a bellhop missing an arm and ifyou look at him like, it's
pretty obvious his arms in hisshirt.
You know it's pretty bulky.

Speaker 2 (42:05):
It was obvious, but that was a funny running joke
Throughout the whole movie.
He almost gets his arm takenoff.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
And then they get in the hot tub together.
I had some with our friendGlenn and Brandon.
We bonded in the hot tub, justlike that.
Hot tubs are magical.

Speaker 2 (42:24):
Hot tubs are dope.
Glenn needs to get a hot tub.
I that like.
Hot tubs are magical.
Hot tubs are.
Hot tubs are dope.
Glenn needs to get a hot tub, Ithink he has the room for it on
his uh dude.

Speaker 1 (42:29):
They had them on amazon like those inflatable
ones I've heard someone has themlike because my thing is like
that's cheap, like it's gonnacome apart.
Now I heard they're pretty goodyeah, they're only like a couple
hundred bucks yep, glenn shouldget one you hear that glenn,
you should get one so then thenthey get in this hot tub and
then they party all night.
That scene looked fun, Like thecamera work, I should say them

(42:51):
panning back and forth andspinning around stuff like that
that was a good camera work.
And then they wake up, find outthey're in 1986.
I like how they do find out too.
They're skiing and they had apretty bad accident.
They get up.
I feel completely fine and theyhad a pretty bad accident and
they get up.
I feel completely fine, they'reyounger bodies, and then they
start looking around andeveryone's dressed up in 80s
gear.
I think that would be prettysick.
If you can go back in time,we're still pretty young, but

(43:13):
any point in time in your life,which time would you like to
wake?

Speaker 2 (43:16):
up in.
That'd be sick.
I'd probably say I don't knowif I'd want to go back that far,
maybe like late 80s, beginningof the 90s.

Speaker 1 (43:28):
No, I mean like in your time.

Speaker 2 (43:30):
Oh, my time.

Speaker 1 (43:32):
Yeah, any point in your life, because 80s is there
like out of college or just outof college or something like
that.

Speaker 2 (43:38):
My time.

Speaker 1 (43:39):
Yeah, what year?
I should say.

Speaker 2 (43:43):
That's a tough question.
I'd probably say I enjoyed likesenior year of high school,
like around that time.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
That was those peak like man, I feel like I would go
back only six years like maybe,yeah, I would probably say the,
the, the years after highschool, like beginning of
college.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
The years after high school like beginning of college
.
That's pretty good.
That's where I would go.

Speaker 1 (44:07):
The 2012 to 2014.
That's pretty good.
That's pretty good.
Now the question is, becausethe whole point of this movie is
you can't alter anythingbecause things are going to
change.

Speaker 2 (44:17):
Fuck that shit.
Yeah, what are you changing?
I'm changing everything,because I ain't got nothing
attached to me.
I don't have kids.
I ain't got nothing attached tome, I don't have kids, I don't
have nothing.

Speaker 1 (44:23):
One of the bits is like they're betting on a sports
game a random sports game.
That happened in 1986.
And you remember every playoff.

Speaker 2 (44:31):
There ain't no way.
That wasn't random Rob, thatwas the catch.
So it was like a very bigsports history.

Speaker 1 (44:41):
I didn't know that.
That's probably why it alwayswent over my head.

Speaker 2 (44:43):
The Broncos came back to.
It.
Was the Broncos, right?
Yeah, the Broncos came back towin.
Was it the Superbowl AFCchampionship?
Yeah, guy made a spectacularcatch and yeah, yep, that was a
big sports moment.
But it was funny because, likehe, he, he remembered it so
perfectly because it's such abig moment, but because he was

(45:06):
trying to change it, everythingwas changing a little bit in
real time.

Speaker 1 (45:09):
Well, they already changed a lot of shit up until
that point.
Yeah, yeah, man, I woulddefinitely change it a lot.
You know, chevy Chase makes acameo in this movie.
He's the repairman.

Speaker 2 (45:22):
Yeah, yeah, the old guy, yeah yeah.

Speaker 1 (45:24):
Chevy Chase is a comedy legend and he I don't
know.
The whole thing was random andweird.
With him as a character, he wasnever on point.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
Why couldn't he just fix it?
Why did they have to find that?

Speaker 1 (45:37):
drink that they were drinking or whatever.

Speaker 2 (45:39):
What did it say on the?
Can Chernobyl or something?

Speaker 1 (45:42):
like that.
Yeah, yeah, you know.
Sebastian Sand Speed of theWinded Soldier, sebastian Stan
is the cameo in this movie.
He's the only character in thismovie.
He's the bully who beats him up.
That was yeah, that's Sebastian.

Speaker 2 (45:51):
Stan yeah, it was, this is a young one.
This is before the oh.
Wow, it is a really young one.

Speaker 1 (46:05):
Yeah, he's been in between this because captain
america.
When a soldier came out 2014actually, even like the captain
america the first one he was inthat one and that came out 2011
or, yeah, 2011 I believe so,like right after yeah so I mean
this is the point of his lifelike where he's kind of just
started branching out his own.
But he was funny in in thismovie, like just a douchebag.

Speaker 2 (46:28):
Like a super pro-American.
They thought they were Nazisbecause they found the can that
has Chernobyl or something.

Speaker 1 (46:34):
Yeah, or something.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
Yeah, that's funny shit.

Speaker 1 (46:39):
Like count backwards from 60 and then you see him,
hide him against the wall.

Speaker 2 (46:43):
But it's a bomb walking backwards with the can.

Speaker 1 (46:48):
But when they're walking through the ski resort
for the first time to see likeand that question, like where
craig robinson asked like whatcolor is michael jackson?
Apparently that was improvisedyeah great line that made the
movie instead.
Also that line when they'rerealizing it was a hot tub time
machine.
He was like it's some kind ofhot tub time machine.
He looks directly in the camera.

Speaker 2 (47:02):
That was also improvised I didn't know that
that's good yeah craig robinsonis the man you know.

Speaker 1 (47:08):
He's around from around here.
He's so funny.

Speaker 2 (47:10):
He's from around where is he from?

Speaker 1 (47:11):
like chicago.
Okay, like I, he used to teachschool like I.
I know people who he was theirsubstitute.
Uh, music teacher, no shit yeah, that's cool yeah, like he used
to teach, like in hammond knee,chicago, so he's a sub.
Uh, I think he did teach, buthe's slid around a little bit.
Okay, that's cool.
Yeah, he's like he's a.
He's one of favorite charactersin the office.

(47:33):
He's a.
He's a hilarious man.

Speaker 2 (47:35):
I you'd like the office a lot, don't you?

Speaker 1 (47:37):
I love the office a lot.

Speaker 2 (47:38):
You just see my dwight pillow right there you
had that and you've referencedit like a couple times already.
Yeah, yeah.
You know what.
You're going to hate me forthis, but I've never really
watched the Office.

Speaker 1 (47:46):
Oh man, it's a good show, I've never liked that type
of genre.
Like I can see what you mean.
And when people are watching itit's always hard to get into
the first season because it iskind of dry.
But once you get a sense of thehumor.

Speaker 2 (48:04):
It's hilarious.
It's good.
Yeah, yeah, never really gotinto it.

Speaker 1 (48:06):
Definitely give it a try uh, there's actually a
spin-off of the office comingout pretty soon, very soon.
Um like it's the same world,just like different kind of
company like is it any of theoriginal cast?
Or I think a couple have beenconfirmed so far.
I don't know about like beingmajor characters, definitely
cameos though cool yeah, niceyeah.
Um, I didn't.

(48:27):
There's not even that much tosay about hot like it's it's a
funny movie and it's funny bitswe can talk about, uh, but this
is definitely one like you justhave on in the background, even
like if you're having that withyour boys, and just have it on.

Speaker 2 (48:37):
It is a funny watch with a group of people,
especially too it's funny, likewhen they first went back and
they're like, like you said,they're all wearing like 70s,
80s stuff and the guy's comingdown the mountain with that huge
brick of a cell phone yeah andhe's like I'm calling you from
on top of the mountain and hegoes.

Speaker 1 (48:53):
You owe me two dollars.
That line was specific.
I did read a fun fact aboutthat line.
That was specifically.
It was like a reference to themain character, uh, john
cusack's old movie I can'tremember which movie, but it's
an older movie, like they saythe same thing.
So that was a reference to him.
Yeah, and, but Craig Robinson'scharacter going back and
claiming old songs to be his.

(49:14):
That's why I asked you thatquestion in the beginning
because, that's okay.
I would a thousand percent dothe same thing if I had the
talent to do that.
I mean, yeah, you want tocreate Google.
If you were to create Googleright now, if no one knew about
Google, but only you did, Istill wouldn't even know how to
start it up.

Speaker 2 (49:28):
Oh, it'd be so difficult.

Speaker 1 (49:30):
Like just trying to explain it to somebody.

Speaker 2 (49:31):
But if you got the idea, though, and you just get
the right people around you,they can make it happen.
It's just all about knowing thepeople, because he knows
exactly how it works inside andout.
He just doesn't know how to getthat done.
All he's got to do is just findsome people.

Speaker 1 (49:45):
I would definitely use software engineers and
knowledge.
I would make movies instead oflike music.
That would be my thing thatwould be my niche.

Speaker 2 (49:51):
See the when he just made that song like that and
like raw dogged it.
I don't think I could do thatbecause I don't know if I'd be
able to remember a whole songlike that and just off the dome
like that there's a lot of myfavorite songs.

Speaker 1 (50:02):
I don't even know every single lyric, yeah yeah,
plus I'm not good at singing, sowell, this craig and robson
real life.
He's a very talented man heplays a lot of instruments and
um, yeah, yeah, what would yougive this movie?
one out of ten hot tub timemachine, probably like a five
there's also a sequel, too thatI've never seen, but I heard the

(50:23):
main cast comes back and wetalked about this like I don't
know where they're gonna go fromhere, like what else can they
do?
And they come back in time.
They do, change a lot of stuffand then like and benefits of
them it could be funny to dolike a darker movie, like to see
what they really fucked up andlike you know, like let's see,
you can see jeff basil's likeliving like a homeless shelter
or something you know.

Speaker 2 (50:43):
Yeah, I never watched the second one, but if I had to
take a guess, if I was thedirector, maybe they go back in
time to try to fix everythingthat the one dude changed.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (50:54):
But I don't know.
I've never seen the movie, soyeah.

Speaker 1 (50:56):
Maybe next time you come on.
Yeah, yeah, it was a solidmovie choice.
I'd probably give it, like yousaid, a 5 out of 10.

Speaker 2 (51:03):
I said 5,.

Speaker 1 (51:03):
Yeah, I'd probably give it a 5 out of 10 as well.
Yeah, this is something I knowI'm going to watch again, but
I'm not going to go out of myway and watch it.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
Yeah, yeah, we were just taking place last.
Let me see, it was last Sunday,I believe, so it was 420, also
Easter.
And we were part.
We are partaking in 420activities and that's why we
watched.
On Jesus' birthday we watchedHot Sub Time Machine Went back
to the 80s, 70s on Jesus'birthday, his second birthday he

(51:34):
came back.

Speaker 1 (51:37):
Yeah, I mean, this is something I'm going to put on
when I'm cleaning the house, orsomething like that.
It's funny.

Speaker 2 (51:42):
It's funny and it's even funnier if you forgot some
of the jokes from before, like Idid, and you know, just
reliving it it's a pretty goodmovie, yeah, but you're not
gonna sit there and lock in onit.
Exactly.
There's some movies that yougotta lock in on like the
accountant two well yeah that'sa bad one, the accountant one, I
would say counting one,definitely.
Um, I recently watched dune two.
I watched dune one and dune twoand I felt like I had to lock

(52:04):
in on those.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
Definitely because it was boring as shit.

Speaker 2 (52:07):
Well.

Speaker 1 (52:08):
I thought so.
It's a long movie, but I thinkRobert Pattinson just joined
Dune 3 too.

Speaker 2 (52:14):
Did he?
Yeah, I mean, I'd watch Dune 3.

Speaker 1 (52:19):
I think you got like A long ass time, I think next
winter, if I'm not mistaken.
Are there any movies coming outthat you've seen in the
trailers?
Maybe that you're kind of gosee?

Speaker 2 (52:29):
the one coming out next week.

Speaker 1 (52:30):
I want to see thunderbolts, thunderbolts, yeah
definitely our friend glenn'scoming back on last time he just
up as captain america.
Uh, maybe we can do it again,get him to do it again yeah,
glenn is a stony baloney, yeahstony baloney.
I like that, yeah, but anyother movies that you're
thinking about, like, like, uh,you excited for the fantastic
four, for superman, for themission impossible movie?

Speaker 2 (52:49):
you know what, when we were watching the trailers
before the accountant, I had noidea that was a mission
impossible movie.
So, and it's kind of wise of mebase on this.
Are they like giving him like?
Did you see the last one?
No, I don't think I did.

Speaker 1 (53:02):
The last one was like supposed to be a part one, part
two, because that was FinalReckoning, part one and this is
supposed to be part two, butthey just changed it to the
Final Reckoning or somethinglike that.

Speaker 2 (53:14):
I forgot.
So in the trailer they shot himup.
He went in that thing and didhe get superpowers?
Damn near.

Speaker 1 (53:23):
I don't know, because there's a lot of footage.
I haven't seen all of them.
There's a lot of footage frompast Mission Impossible movies,
so I don't know which one wasold and which one was new.

Speaker 2 (53:30):
I don't know.
I mean, it looked pretty decentthough, Honestly, when I saw
the trailer.
It looked all right, but thenthat's a series just like Final
or not Final.
Fast and Furious, Fast andfurious.
That's just that's you knowdrawn out.

Speaker 1 (53:42):
Man, I think about it and you.
It's like all those cliches,like when you're like thinking
about it's like a story, likelike comic books almost.
Like it's not always the samecontinuous story, like it's just
random stories at the point oftheir lives, like that's exactly
what the mission possiblemovies are, like they don't
really have to connect, whichmost of them don't connect this
is a random story from thesuperhero, or, yeah, super guy,

(54:03):
um pat, thanks for coming on.

Speaker 2 (54:05):
Dude, yeah, thanks for having me.

Speaker 1 (54:06):
I'm excited to release this episode.
Um, next week is thunderboltsand I'm excited to get into that
with glenn because I just lovemarvel.
I'm ready for more to come back.
I'm hearing nothing but goodthings about this movie.
Uh, the count two worth seeingagain.
Maybe not in theaters, but it'sworth seeing yeah, it was a
pretty good movie all right.
Well, thanks for ever listening.
Thanks for ever listening.

(54:28):
Uh, subscribe to the instagrampage, the tiktok.
Follow pat, I'll tag you andeverything.
Um, stay tuned next week whereI'll be saving the seat Outro
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