 Well, God Shame Shame down there Daria Daria and today boys and girls Done done done done done done done done done that yeah, why not? I don't know if that fits We've watched our 100th Indian film 100 we're making our mark. That's more than all of you combined. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, nobody has ever seen Nobody's Indian films ever ever anyone in the history of the world. We are the first ones to do it. Yep, you're welcome Anyways, but for the hundredth film we wanted to do something I don't know if it's special, but like more Come on out of all the Indian film industry right celebratory of it, which was why we chose to whom three. Yes, exactly Which should have done Student of the year to Student of the year to yeah, of course. I'm classic and then Kalunk. Yeah, I'm right after that would have been Anyways We watched I believe it's our third Marathi film. You are correct in that So Sirat Not some rot and then now How should I curse your nationality factory? Corbanize. I'm gonna try that. Can you pronounce that? No, I can try. I'm guessing it's How Russian drachy factory and did they say it was like a Cursed word like a cuss word how Russian drachy. No because they kept calling it like a They're using a different word for the guy Yeah, no, I thought they kept calling him that calling him Yeah, they called one of the people that because he was portraying that character was he was portraying Something was like a curve up anyway But anyways, yeah, so it's a Marathi film that came out. I believe in 2009. Yes starring I would say the Nandu Madhav. Mm-hmm and As Saraswati it was the I want to pronounce her name, right? The Gware Deshpandi Okay, and it's about the 1913 Indian cinema Industry started by this specifically gentlemen Falke. Is that he pronounces name properly? Is it Falke or Falke? but the man who is the father of Indian cinema and Directed and written by Peresh Mokashi So this will be a spoiler of you if you haven't watched it's on Netflix currently at least the United States It's also only an hour and a half, which I was shocked that it was an hour and a half when I Because I was like, okay. It's something like this. It's gonna be two and a half three hours That's what I thought right ended up being an hour and a half. So yeah, watch So if you haven't go watch it come back and then unless you'd like to be spoiled like a naughty little Not a little boy not a little girl Because we're gonna spoil you. Yep. Here we go Everyone died Wasn't that sad? Yeah, when everybody died. It's true And the film industry never started And that was it the rest is history Anyways, Rick initial thoughts do you have a paragraph at all or no? I have one word. Yes Benod. Yes, that's right. Good night everybody. Good. Bye. See you later everyone. Good night. Bye. Thanks for joining us When old people figure out internet Ah So to be serious, I Really do have one word that you just repeat over and over and over and over again for this. Yes Yes, love love love love love love love love love love One of my favorite films we've watched really. Yes interesting love love love. I wouldn't I wouldn't say that I did enjoy a lot. I love it I was I was groaning for the first about five minutes because I didn't fully understand and then I fully understood got you Because obviously because they were doing the some of the over-the-top kind of stuff And then also they were doing and I it was on purpose if it wasn't as it was a great coincidence But I'm pretty darn sure it was on purpose. They made a lot of a very chaplain style. You got it Acting and and and all that kind of stuff. Yes. So once I figured that out about five minutes in I was like, okay That's what we're doing. Yeah, and then I actually really really enjoyed it Actually thought it was a really sweet and deering especially the main guy Not not do is I yeah, Nando. Yeah, Nando my dad. I thought he was great Yep, I thought he did a fantastic job, especially making you care for him And it I thought the director blended that weird stuff because it was stylized This is a stylized film because they were trying to make it they were making a film about that time But making the film that is telling you about that time Like a film of that time, correct, which not easy not an easy thing to accomplish Not easy not at they did some of the speeding up things Slowing down. Yeah, so I thought it was really really interesting. I liked it a lot. I I wouldn't say I love love love I actually in terms of the Marathi films. Um, I Still like Cyrat more. Okay, but this would probably be my second Over knots and run and I this is one of those where I I If somebody doesn't love it as much as I did that's okay It's there's you know, there's films that I love that if someone else doesn't love it I get really upset. I'm like, how can you not love that film? I do them three exactly and I I This one I would love for everyone to love it, but if I'm the only one that does that's okay I think if you get people to understand it like yeah, and I have admittedly if you're if you're not somebody who just adores old cinema and the history of film and Just to see the old cameras being used Yeah, and and watching that and watching people at being teleported to when people were first seeing motion pictures It makes me emotional So the content and the subject matter in and of itself had me just like I love the movie Hugo Because it's Martin Scorsese's love letter to the making of movies three hours long Two and a half. I love Hugo. Oh, I just love you. Go I I Really love everything about this even to the point I would have been upset if the white guys were good I was so happy the white guys were bad because it made it exactly what it needed to be now Here's the other thing I love about the movie that I don't know if it's That I don't know the historical accuracy in terms of particularly Falke's personality I Hope the depiction that we got from Nandu that he did his homework and based on what we know of the man as well as The girl yeah, who plagues our sweaty If that was really Praying it is if that was really the personality traits of the two of them that guy 100% is the Charlie Chaplin of Indian cinema, but even more so because Chaplin was the innovator of film. He didn't invent it But he was the one who who basically did stuff with film no one else had ever done before and he had The same level and it's crazy to say this It's the same reason you say something like to people like she has the same charisma as Lucille Ball It's like come on really he had the same kind of spirit The actor and the character of yeah, I was wondering if that was him or if he was just taking inspiration from Chaplin Right either way. Yeah, that's great If he didn't know definitively that this was this guy was that way That's the perfect person to borrow for an innovator of cinema as your personification of the character. I I loved their Relationship, I love that she and I do know this is true I remember reading that they sold everything and it poured themselves into it I'm pretty much died penniless because this is just what they both wanted to do and and the fact that I'm hoping it's true Is that at the end when you know, he turned down all the money to go come to London? Yeah, he's like I want to develop the so I'm guessing that's well I don't know if that Situation is true, right? But I'm obviously I'm guessing it is true because obviously he did start the industry here Yeah, I just love this really sad though if he died penniless. It doesn't make me sad because they just like Charlie Chaplin and his his wife in Modern times There's this moment. There's all this striving that's going on in modern times and Chaplin and his girl are in the shack And they have nothing and they just eat a piece of bread with ham in the middle And they're so happy and it's when they go to try to pursue what everyone else is doing and compete with the Joneses and Try to you know do what everyone else is doing that they start to lose sight of what really matters to them And then when they have nothing again, they're happy So that the whole time for them the only thing money was was a resource Yeah to fund what they felt passionate about doing together. And so yeah, if they died penniless If they died doing what they loved Happy happy. I thought the director did a phenomenal job one It was really interesting because most a lot of it. There's almost no score behind it I don't know if you noticed that a lot of it was like talking like you're talking talk talk There's no score, but then obviously it would come on it came on during the fast motion points Yeah, and I thought it was flipping Magnificent all the strings, but you're correct. Yeah anytime other than the fast motion stuff Which there was a lot of yeah, there wasn't a score. Yeah, yeah, and it was also very funny Very funny. There's a very funny very funny Like especially obviously when they're trying to get all the actors to you know, dude What they need to do like I love be the women which is actually historically one for Shakespeare Yep, as we know but then a early film I love when the priest shows up and he's there to help them out and he doesn't know what's going on And so there's the guy who's up on the thing just sitting there like and then there's the guy passed out on the front And it's a man dressed as a Freaking love this movie and then when when they went out Which was a hilarious one to watch them, you know when they went out to set right? before they got arrested But they were all in costume. Yes, all the actors And then they do it for they put on the show and the officers he's like excited and he's watching I Genuinely love this movie so much that I'm like there's several films that we've watched that obviously we've had like our top 10 And then I put them in my favorite films of all time, which I have almost 400 in that list I'm putting that in the list because this is something I would go back to over and over This is a film I would want my kids to see and Evie to see in terms of you need to know the story behind How Indian cinema got started and that's the only question I have is the historical Accuracy and if they did justice to it and if they really captured the spirit of the man and his wife And if they did they knocked it out of the park. I I just loved it. Yeah, I thought it was I was actually talking to Steph because she watched it with me When they were watching the the plant which is great if that yeah, he kind of almost invented that in terms of People in India seeing like stop motion basically. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah But when the audience was watching I said I was I could go back to Time where I knew nothing about cinema and that would be impressive to me right because obviously we've changed and we have Avengers now In in just a little over like 120 years like not a long period of time and we have the Avengers looking Right like more than realistic exactly and I the first You know the old adage story is one of the first motion pictures ever seen by people here in the United States Was a train coming at the screen and people actually screamed and got up and ran because they thought a train was coming From the other side of the screen of the thing that was hanging out. Yeah Which is hard to believe now, but yeah, I would so and I thought they did a beautiful job Capturing that I thought the people watching the films and the the excitement that was there and I just most especially I love the relationship between him and his wife and how everything they did You know, they'd reach rock bottom and they're like, what are we gonna do? We'll figure it out and then when they've got enough to live on for the next few months. They're like We're taking care of we're good. We're happy. They have a happy family And I do want to applaud the director because like I told you in the beginning I Assume this someone be two and a three hours the fact that he cut this up and made it basically an hour and a half which is So digestible for anybody anybody and it doesn't feel like it feels like an hour. Yeah when it ends, you're like, oh, we're done Yeah, he really made it. I mean, he could even made it longer. He could have and that's rare for us to say Yeah, he could have added 15 20 minutes easy But I want to applaud him for doing it not doing it because that's hard for a lot of directors to cut their own stuff Yeah, I'm Scorsese Poor Marty. I love Martin Scorsese. He's one of the best directors ever. He's got the right to do it every once Also, he hates cutting anything. It's true And that's why all of them are three to three and a half hours now the older he's gotten He's gotten this I don't give a crap and he why should he he's Martin Scorsese He's like, I'm gonna make whatever thing I want to make and if you don't watch it I don't care. He's so I wanted to make it. I want to talk to the director that I thought the director did a phenomenal job Say his name again Parish Mukashi and the score I over and over again when they did the fast-emotion parts Which really helped because we didn't get to hear a lot of the white actors talk. I Thought the music was absolutely spectacular. Just so so good So so that was great. It's good to do a good one to have it a hundred It's always great when you have like a milestone and you know, it's a good film I was thinking that when we started watching like I really hope this doesn't The hundredth film we picked. Yeah, that's crap. No, it was good So Let us know the next Marathi film We want to watch more more more more more more more more of every single region But Marathi, it's our third one. So we need more I think court is one because that's nois. He said that's his favorite. Oh, that's right. Yeah And that's a Marathi film and I've heard a lot about that We've watched a trailer for and also from this actor. I thought it was really really good He did a great job. I'd like to see him and the director as well Yes, and her and her I really really liked her character. She's gonna love her portrayal. Hold on Hold on. She was in Sacred Games. What the shit? What the shit? How did we not she must have had a small part unless we're just Did she play VJ Ross? He was not in Sacred Games. How do you know? Hold on. It's like where's Waldo? Because we miss him constantly. Oh That was her when she Nawaz had sex with her. No, I mean well, he was trying. Yeah. Yeah, he was trying to have sex with her. Wow So she's actually in a lot of Hindi cinema and she was really good in that too. Obviously, it was just a small part Yeah, but she was solid, but she did a really really good job. She's in commando three. She's in Section 375, so she's actually looks like a working actor Let me see. Yeah, that's funny. Quite a lot on her resume. That's funny that we she was at Sacred Games and We had no idea, but we're done. Yep So, you know, that's what happens when you don't but it actually does work because we started off I had the one word and and that one word that benog that actually means happiness means happy It's a name, but the name actually translates to so it did make me happy old people ruin the internet