 Good, it went good. Turn that upside down. Some kuchi-buchi? I'm gonna drink kuchi-buchi, for those of you who don't know. Your mom has great kuchi-buchi. She really does, for someone her age. Let's it ferment. It does, it's usually better in the elderly. But I've often found that it can also be an acquired taste in some elderly mammals other than human. This happens to be donkey kuchi-buchi. Ooh, kuchi-buchi. It has a little bit of a pungentness to it. It's an acquired taste. Does it taste like ass? Yep, in more ways than one. Hey, welcome back, tourists, to a new episode of Corvette. We're improv lives. And you can follow us on Instagram, Twitter for more juicy content. Thanks on Patreon. Follow us, check it out, and subscribe if you haven't hit the like. Hey, Patreon. What in? And smack it. Yeah. Yeah. Today, Barack Mahastra did another video. This is more of like the director explaining the stuff again. More stuff of the inspiration. Inspirations. So it's not like a trailer or anything. Right. I still anticipate we're gonna get another trailer. Of course. I'll be shocked. It just, it would be, where what? Two, three weeks out? Yeah. Something like that? Something like that. Oh, and can I just quickly mention in case it happens, because I wasn't gonna bet him again. So we're at the theaters watching Lull, and there's a trailer for a new Catherine Hepburn. You know who I'm talking about? Her trailer, might as well be Catherine Hepburn. That you said just give her the Oscar based on the trailer? Oh yeah. Who was it? Kate Blanchett. Kate Blanchett. One of the greatest actresses living. All time. So we saw this trailer for a new film of hers we didn't know was coming out. And the minute the trailer ended, he said just give her her Oscar right now. So it was set here first by Corbett. I'm not betting him because I've lost a bet just like that before for $100. Kate Blanchett is, I don't know if she will because I don't know anything about the film. It's usually a safe bet. It's like, it's almost Meryl Streep level in terms of just let her go to the Oscars. She's gonna get it. Yeah, all right. Anyway, this is the Burma Hasta inspirations. We are obviously very, very excited for this film. Can't wait to watch it. Hopefully we get it in IMAX. They say we should, but I still have my doubts. We'll see. I really hope we get to see it in IMAX because this is one that's just like, you just, and I can't wait for the boycott to start for it as well. I know me too. I'm so excited. I always look forward to the next Bollywood film for them to boycott. Me too. And it's usually every single one. It's just become the norm now. It's like in addition to whenever this should go from theaters to OTT, how many countries you should do for distribution, if it were me and it was my film, I would tell my publicity, get on the boycott thing right now. Make some shirts. I made a tweet that said, I'm just going to predict what the next boycotts and why they're going to boycott these films. And so I said, on your Augs film, on your Aug is too smart for them. Brahmaastra, the colors hurt their sentiments. Vikram Veda, Rithik is too hot, makes me feel funny. SRK's Pathan, nipples are too yummy, and sentiments. That's probably very true. Anyways, that's how we feel about your stupid boycotts. Anyways, they are, they're dumb. They make their, in every way, shape and form, they're dumb. If this is like news to you, then I don't know why you're here. Yeah. This is not something that's like coming out of the blue. No, and I heard this too as well from the director and creator of the Kashmir Files, because on your Aug was saying he hoped RRR was the nominee. Yeah, so it's like, no, sorry. I personally also don't think Kashmir Files should be the submission and I'm not a genocide denier. So, there you go. But you'll get, right now you'll be claimed as one. I don't give a shit. Here we go. The threads with which Brahmastra is woven ran very deep in me. As a child, I grew up loving stories from Indian history. My father used to tell me a lot about our powerful gods and goddesses and I was deeply affected by them. Shiv Bhagwan and Vishnu Bhagwan, Ganpati Ji and Hanuman Ji, Ma Durga and Ma Kali. A certain spiritual depth and even science in Indian philosophy very naturally infuses the lives of most people growing up in India. As a teenager, I became a big reader. And like many others from my generation, I was very excited by certain fantasy series from the Western world. Lot of the rings and Harry Potter are among my all my favourites. We're with you. As a young filmmaker, I was enjoying greatly but also observing closely how Hollywood was regularly using technology to bring their storytelling alive as blockbuster cinema. And so, as I started to create Brahmastra, all this inspiration that was pent up within me came bubbling up. And I realised that the movie I was creating in my imagination had colours of everything I had absorbed but somehow they had all mixed together in a way to create a new, a very original colour. And even today as we've almost finished making the movie this same fact makes me feel very almost finished. That Brahmastra is a very original film. I think that last line was the key to this video and probably why they wanted to put it out. The fact that he said this is a very original movie. Yeah. Because of obviously what's going on in Bollywood right now and how everybody's basically rejecting every single remake, almost every film, honestly. Yeah. But I think that's like, this is an original story. Please go see this. Please go see it. It's original. I've been thinking about it before. There were ever any hashtag boycott and before there was ever... Yeah. I don't know why anyone would boycott this film anyways. But it's... I'm so hoping this film lives up to being India's flagship for like big massive superhero style films. Yeah. Obviously... Expectations are high. I'm not expecting Oscar-worthy stuff in visual effects maybe, but in terms of a film that I'm like, oh, send this to the Oscars, unless it's that good, of course. It could be, yeah. I'm not expecting to have a really good time and to be a really good epic. Yeah. I'm expecting what I expect from any film that is gonna be, you know, not farcical in some way, but even in a farcical one, I'm expecting above all a great story. And then I'm expecting great performances with great technology in some way, shape, or form, and that this is going to... As far as the bar, I mean, it has repeatedly in its own ads pointed to the inspiration of the Marvel Universe and Avatar. And the trailer was so good that my bar is expectations really high on all the above. I'm expecting great story, great acting, great cinematography, and I'm expecting Marvel-level CGI. Yeah. Yeah. That's what you obviously hope we're gonna get. Yeah. Once again, I so hope we get it in IMAX. Me too. I'd be very disappointed if we got to, what is it, September 9th or whenever this comes out. Oh yeah, September 9th. Yeah, September 9th. And we don't have the tickets we are... Obviously, we're gonna be able to get tickets and be able to see it is obviously distributing this like a normal thing, which is great, which gives me hope that we're gonna get an IMAX, because KGF, I believe we got IMAX, correct? I believe that's correct. Which is why we got to go to a closer theater. Yes. Which was great. Not in the film, but the fact that we got to see it in IMAX was good. But yeah, the rest of the story, I'm so hoping this becomes something that not just Indians go see. Absolutely. Like it's so good that the word of mouth is like, in Hollywood, it's like, have you seen this? You saw RR, right? Just like with RR, right. Go see Ramastra. And I'm doing that not just because of, obviously, our love and concern for and rooting for Indian cinema, but the fact that this has been this man's passion project and been formating in him since he was a young man, little boy. The weight of the world must be on his shoulders and I don't know that he's gonna sleep well the night before it opens because he's gonna so want this and I really hope that it becomes what he envisioned. Because so many times what you envisioned isn't exactly what you get in the final product and that's a very tricky transition to get to. I'm looking forward to that. In all way, shape, or form, I hope this does well at every level. Looking for the Aliya's fourth film of the year? Yeah, fourth. Yeah, fourth. The Darlings, the Gungabai RRR, technically, she's not in yet. And then this one, so it's been the year of Aliya Bhatt for this one and Ranbir, this will be his second one. Oh boy. I don't think I'm nervous. I'm more nervous for them as opposed to nervous that, because I think it'll be good. I do too. And if it's not, I'll be disappointed. That'd be so disappointing. I'll be disappointed, but I am more, after we left Lal, I said to Indrani, I said I would really like to know, and this is germane to what we were just talking about in regard to our personal investment in these artists in this film, I'd really like to know what somebody who has never seen an Indian film who does not know who Amir Khan or Karina Kapoor are would think of this film if they saw it, because so much of what I liked about it was already because I have a love for Amir Khan. I already have a deep admiration and respect for Karina Kapoor and know who she is and am so aware of Indian culture for the past three years. That helped. Yeah, for sure. And I'd really love to know, because I imagine, because it's just a good movie, people are gonna like it the same way how many people don't know a thing about Indian cinemas are, and we're like, oh crap, they had their OSR moment per se, where they're like, damn, India's doing that. And I hope this does it for them as well. I hope so, man. I so hope so. I'm so rooting for this film, because one, it's doing something original and something that's never been done in India. And inherently Indian. And the fact that it's from the Hindu lore, whatever you call it. I just don't know how, I don't know why you would put your own prejudicial agenda about anti-Bollywoodism and boycott, whatever ahead of wanting to see artistry advanced, especially the artistry of your own culture. Don't get it. Yeah, I don't get it either, man. We root for every film to be good. It must be a really sad life to wake up and root for films to be bad. It must be like a really sad life. It's about as sad as being somebody who has nothing better to do with their time but be a troll on the internet. It's pretty comparable. It's gotta be sad, man. Anyways, let us know if you're excited for this film down below. Bye.