 popular. Going out the nards. Don't be popular. You know the town Oxnard? Yeah. All it makes me think about is an ox's texticles. Texticles? Texticles. Yeah. I don't know what those are. You don't know what a texticle is? Texticle. What's a texticle? It's a testicle that you use to text people with. You train your testicle how to, wow, your testicles need some attention, pal. I'm packing. Hey, welcome back to our Stupid Directed Dance of Corbin. Dead weight. Kunchapan version 5.25. Subin Shahir, Saju, Suraj and Kendi Zindu. We know him. We do? Shahir? Subin. Oh, Subin. Yes. Kendi Zirdu. I said Zindu and Zirdu. Bhaskara, a conservative villager, hates the idea of his son relocating to Russia for a job. However, when his son brings a robot to care for him, he develops an unlikely bond with the machine. Was not expecting that. I wasn't either. Interesting. Interesting. Maliawanda? I'm down for it. I'm a big fan of any film that presents the moral conundrum of artificial intelligence. So if this touches on that, I'm fully in. If it goes in a different direction and just makes it funny, I'm fully in. If it does both, I'm fully in. What would you be fully out? If it's out of just the top? If they just try to do a dumb sci-fi film with a robot, I won't care. It depends because we love the trailer for that okay computer with Radhika and Vijay Varma. That was straight up funny. Calmly. You just said you don't want that. No, no, no. If they try to just do a sci-fi movie about a robot and no moral conundrum about artificial intelligence. I assumed there would be. And no silly time poolery. Hey, I didn't say this. Start yet? If you, like one of my favorite movies ever is Ex Machina. You should see Ex Machina if you've never seen it. Don't let the kids watch. Let the kids watch. Here we go. He's so good. We've seen him in a lot of things. It's a hot. What a great trailer. I love Malayalam. I like obvious it's one they make great films. But they're trailers. One they're usually well cut. Well done. They're like just like they take their time in their films to make it like art. They take their time in their trailers, but they also never give anything. You don't still don't know what the plot of this film is. Not particularly. But I'm 100% interested in this film. Absolutely interested. What a line. We rape and set our girls on fire. Are you kidding me? Holy cow. Wow. What a statement. And just so nonchalantly stated. And I absolutely loved Amasucker for editing that matches music. Yeah. And it just was what you expect. Quirky, weird, but at the same time believable. Yeah. I'm fully read. I want to see it. Yeah. So please let us know how this says. Should this will be one of our next Malayalam? We need to. It's so different. Yeah. I love that. Malayalam is they're good at that. They're good at telling different stories. And also even obviously this is I think a criticism a lot of people have for Bollywood. Obviously Bollywood has a lot of remakes. Not saying those are bad. There's been a bunch of Mimi. It was a remake of a Marathi loved it. So I'm not saying they're bad. But obviously we've noticed Marathi puts an emphasis on putting original stories out there and finding really good just to make a good film. Yeah. And obviously they're acting always grounded, always grounded, always on point. There was like one exception that we've had that even though we were like the only ones who didn't like it was the Bangalore days. And that was like the one exception and everybody else loved that film. So it might have just been us. Yes. But other than that, it's like every single film acting is great. The concept is usually pretty original. Yeah. And I feel like we need to explore him more because everything we've seen him in, he's been great. They also do a really good job of something that's really important to me with international cinema. And that's the fact that they can do. Believability is always a big one. Aside from the believability, I've noticed that they have a really good capacity in their filmmaking to take a story and make it very particular to their region of the world, yet make it a universal story. So that even if, yeah, so that if you if you don't get things culturally, you're not on the outside wishing you knew what was going on. Being a part of that world just gives you extra stuff as a bonus. But you can see it from the outside and still grasp the universal things they're trying to convey in the storytelling. Yeah. So yeah. So unique. So unique. Directed by Rafish Balakrishnan Poduva. He's associated with Badaiko, which is a Hindi film. Yeah. Can I help? Husband. Oh, husband, husband in the clinic lobby. This was his first directorial debut. What? I don't know how it is. I might do it. I don't know if it's that one, but like, dang, I feel like that happens more in India than it ever does here in terms of big films that get theatrical releases with just people that just, I don't want to say showed up, but like they're, they don't have a bunch of credits. Yeah, it sure seems to be that way. Because here that it just doesn't happen. No. Unless you know that your dad's, you know, Steven Spielberg. No, you know how it happens. An unknown filmmaker makes an independent film and sends it through all the film festivals and after they've been talked about in Toronto and at Sundance and at Cannes Film Festival, then America gets to hear who they are. It never just goes from I want to make a movie, okay, who do you know in the industry and boom, oh, who's this new filmmaker? It's got to have those film festival stamps or we'll never know who you are. Yeah. That's really the process now in American cinema. Yeah. And it's a shame because you're probably missing on a lot of great filmmakers. Yeah, so please let us know how this is. I'm very interested. Very interested. Malayalam Subhan, his name, right? Yeah, who we've loved and everything he did. We first saw him in Cumbulon United. I think we've seen him in a few other things as well. We have. Virus, I think he was in Virus as well. I think we've seen him in at least four things. Yeah, at least. Subhan, right? Yeah, Subhan Shakir. Subhan Shakir. Should this be our next for him and it should be our next Malayalam? It's just so interesting. I like it a lot. What an unusual premise. Yeah, let us know how it is down below.