 It's not going in. I don't care how much you try. Try it. I'm not going to say anything. What? Nothing. You're saying something about going in? Yeah! If you ate some Corbin and Rick and you follow us on Instagram and Twitter and Instagram and Twitter and Instagram and Twitter Come on. Juicy contest. It's incredibly filled with pus. Does that qualify as juice? It's body juice. I wouldn't call that a juice. That's more like custard. Oh! But today... We are watching a... say this for me. Sajin Singh Rangroot. I think it's called Rangroot. It could be the whole thing. But it's a Punjabi film. Cool. It's a pretty big one. It came out a year ago. A year ago-ish. A year and a half-ish. But I don't think we've wrecked it too many. If any Punjabi trailers? No. But this was supposed to be a pretty big one. With English subs? Yeah, English subs, of course. But let's just get into it because I have no idea what it's about. Cool. I think it's about Sikhs. The Sikhs. Yes. Which we've learned the proper pronunciation is Sikh. Even though we've always said Sikh. And everybody in America calls it Sikh. But it wouldn't be the first time America was wrong. Here we go! It's pretty beautiful. I couldn't see the whole night. I'd close my eyes and look at the stars. Take a breath of Ryan, put your sticks. Every soldier's mouth is full of my eyes, Mr. Subedar. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. It's got to be beautiful shots. Yeah, it had to be stylistic wise, one of the prettiest trailers we've seen. You said it at the very outset in regard to, you know, you immediately said it was saving Private Ryan, which guys, I mean that is cinematically as far as the aesthetic value of what Steven Spielberg can create, that's about as good as you can get when you create something cinematically as what you see in some of the war depictions, many people consider saving Private Ryan to be if not the one of the greatest war films ever made, that his recreation of D-Day, actually the stories of World War II vets who were there, it actually sent some back to therapy, because it triggered so much. One vet actually said the only thing missing was the smell for him, it was that, that sentence right there, sincerely, to try to think of what it smelled like. This looks as beautiful, compelling and well done at every level as any trailer we've ever seen. This just looks spectacular. A Sikh serving in the British Indian Army is deported to Europe, no, deputed, he's sent to Europe to fight in World War I. That's great because most of the World War stories we get are usually from an American person. It's World War II and it's an American perspective. Usually, or it's a Brit perspective, but mostly it's an American perspective, because we're the heroes of course, you tell yourself from your point of view so that makes sense. Until they started telling films about Vietnam thankfully, and then they started to, Oliver Stone was really one of the first to throw up the realities of what was going on. I would love, that was a joke by the way, for those of you who don't get sarcasm. But to see somebody else's perspective of a war, I think it's very interesting. Especially since this is a true story, and they were still under British rule as well. Yes, they were under British rule. Exactly, and the fact that we have a beginning understanding of what it means to be sick and like when he said, you don't hit him on his turban. We understand what that means now in a way we never would have understood. It is, he is a Buddha punjab. It is the same guy, absolutely because he recognized that. He must actually be sick. Sick. Yeah, that and at the very least, he's punjabi. Yeah, or maybe not, it could just be he wanted to do this film because it was a great film and cast and he speaks multiple languages. Question, question, question, my ignorance. If you are sick, you never take it off. So if he's sick, every single role he has, he will have it on, correct? I would venture, that would be my guess, I don't know that definitively, that's what I imagine that's the case. I would like to know what is the case and how do they normally get sick actors to play seeks or does it just, I mean I know, Akshay Kumar. Akshay is not, he's not, no. But do people that are sick, is this guy sick, does he always play? And that's a great point because as an actor, but you know, if he has a religious perspective he has to wear it all the time. Right, each character has to fit that. So I would like to know. Yeah, and I, obviously I don't think a sick would have a problem with a non-sick portraying them because I didn't hear any negativity at all about the fact that Akshay, in fact all I heard from everyone was how right it was to cast someone like Akshay to portray that and let it be a national known story that's portraying, somebody to portray a big hero. But yeah, I'd love to know that for an actor who is sick, I would assume they have every role they play is sick because they're not going to take the terminal. That's what I would think, correct? So let me know, please, because it's just my ignorance and my wanting to know. But so I thought it's a very interesting story and I love us that we have now known the history of Sikhs or Sikhs, or I'm sorry, I still don't know. I believe Sikh is singular. Is it Sikh when you say it plurally, or is it still Sikh with an S at the end and a 6? I like that we know that they're like a warrior. Right. And we know idea that they were before, like before this channel, we had no idea. We just thought it was a very peaceful religion. Exactly. All I ever thought about. Yeah. Sikhs. In fact, probably put the more into the jade category in terms of peaceful, vegetarian, everybody gets along with each other and I may be, jadeism I may even be ignorant about in that regard as well. But yeah, when we learn from that film with Akshay, the warrior heritage. If you tell us this is good, I will see this quickly. Quickly, quickly, quickly. Because 220 for a war film, that's actually pretty sure. Yeah, that's actually a pretty bright run. One time. But I would see this in a heartbeat just because it looks beautiful. The acting looks great outside of the Brit. That's a true story. I want to know this story. The Brit made me mad right when he came on screen. Of course. Did you guys even know how to use a gun? No! God, it makes me so upset. I want to know are there, there's got to be, the first British role we saw where there was a level of at least empathy and sympathy combined was in Bangarassanti. That guy who as he was torturing the heroes was journaling and realizing that these were different men and they broke any stereotype he had about them and he actually was finding himself admiring them. My question would be are there films, whether they're a military film that would be preferable for me, where there are, another one would be in Laganne, the girl, the English girl, she really, she fell in love with Amir Khan's character and had a care for his people. How many films do you have that portray a Brit as actually being an advocate and a hero and a friend to Indians? Because for the most part, because that's the way history teaches it, is that they really haven't been friendly and friends, they have been quite the opposite. They weren't very friendly to the Indians to say the understatement of the year. And even still, I would love to know, do you have any Englishmen and any British people that are actually heroes of India? Probably not. There's got to be at least one who, most people, there might be some, obviously there's some nice people of course in that whole thing, but usually especially from the perspective of the telling it from the Indians perspective, they're usually just going to heighten the Indian or the, they're not going to, like it's, I think it would be the same problem like let's say like in Hollywood when you tell slavery stories and then there's always a white hero. Yeah. A lot of people have a problem with that because, you know, you're depicting this white when there's a bunch of black people who were much more incremental and right. So I think that's the thing, it's like, you'd have much more rather tell the story than people that were actually. Of course. Of course they would rather tell that story. I don't know. I just don't know. I just don't know if there are, if there are actual historical figures throughout India. A couple. Yeah. But that would be considered heroes to India. I don't know that there'd be, we know, we know it's not Winston Churchill. That's. We, we don't, we know that. So funny that my vision of him has totally changed. Yeah. Well, I knew before that. I didn't know. I didn't know any of the battle. I just learned what the American history tells me is that he's, he's good and he's one of the greatest people really ever. Yeah. No, I didn't know about what he did in regard to India. What I did know was things he did in World War II and how he and like General Patton did not like the relationship that was going on with Russia. Patton warned America and everybody else about don't partner with the Russians. Be careful with that and things that Churchill allowed in order to further Britain's interests. Yeah. He was, he was great for Britain. And in all honesty, we got to admit the West, yeah, but you know, we, we turned a blind eye to a lot of stuff because it benefited us. Yeah. Yeah. It's America. And we still do sometimes. You don't like. But yes, this film of going back to the film, it looks amazing. I hope it's as good as it looks. So please, I'm hoping all the comments are, yeah, it was great, it was, it was crap. Yeah. That would suck. It would suck. Yeah. Yeah.