 Can you tell me what your funniest memory was? I would say that the funniest thing was watching it. It was very nice to bring it all together. Because when you're doing it sort of alone in a booth, it doesn't always feel so funny, so seeing it all together is funny. Yeah, I think I would agree with that, because when you're doing it, you're in a sort of dark room with no windows, sort of trying not to eat snacks in between different work and failing, let's be honest. Carrots next? No, we had apples for the carrots, I think. That's probably something about... I used carrots for the carrots. Oh, you did? And I'm very much a method guy. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I heard. My favourite thing, I think, is there's a cockerel in the movie that makes me laugh every time I see it, so, and that was a late addition to the script as well. Was it completely by yourself, not once together? By yourself. This is the first time we've ever met. We've really, well, we've met, but this is the longest amount of time we've ever spent together. And how does it work with bloopers? How do you try and stay in character? I don't know what it is like in other films, but each time you do the line a lot of times. Yes. So there are a lot of mess-ups. Oh, I kept getting as well, just going, OK, you know it's good, just do it quicker. Oh, yeah, and we're all going, yeah! And then writing something else because I wasn't doing it to his stash. Yeah. And when you're doing, like, weird noises, how does it work? A lot of the time, there's a lot of body-tensing. It's just doing that. That's basically it. And we're adults, you know. So. And us, yeah.