 What's up everybody? Welcome to One Take. I'm Gil, I'm Alun, and this is where we talk about movies, TV shows, sometimes video games, basically all entertainment that we've been consuming, what we thought of it, we talk about entertainment news, let's get right into it. First off, we recently watched a Marvel film, Spider-Man Far From Home. Alun, what did you think? I thought it was good. I thought it was entertaining. I felt like it didn't have the amount of depth that I wanted out of it. Maybe it didn't have as high stakes as maybe I wanted. I'm still forming my opinion a little bit. Still sort of processing. I thought it was a really fun movie. It didn't feel like one of the most important movies in the Marvel universe, and Spider-Man used to be my favorite superhero, so I kind of hoped there would be more impact from a Spider-Man movie. Overall, I really enjoyed it. I'm kind of in the same boat. I liked it, and I've been trying to put my finger on what it is about it that I didn't love. It's hard not to always compare back to the Tobey Maguire, Sam Raimi, Spider-Man movies, and that always feels like an unfair comparison. I always think of those as like Spider-Man 2. That was the best, but I was in middle school when I saw it, so I don't know how much that's just nostalgia talking. But earlier today, I was watching Spider-Man Into the Spider-Verse, and I was loving that movie, and so I think part of the problem is that Into the Spider-Verse felt like its own movie. It felt like it had a unique voice and unique style, and it was all about Spider-Man. Far From Home has the same problem that every other MCU movie has, which is that it felt kind of like Marvel Episode 23. It felt like it was beholden to the tapestry of the whole Marvel cinematic universe, so it was good, but to me every Marvel movie feels like it has a little bit of a limit to how good it can actually be. And also, you can tell they tried to separate it a little bit, try to give it its own voice. The way they, and this is in the trailer, the way they kind of explain that all the other superheroes are busy or unavailable, they're like, oh no, it's all Spider-Man this time, and it seems like they're kind of trying to separate it in kind of a cheesy way. And actually, the further it got away from Superheroics, the more I liked it. My favorite stuff in the movie was when it was Peter Parker, high jinks on his class trip, him and MJ, I thought that storyline was really well played out in that movie, so I guess I wanted a Coming of Age Peter Parker movie. I love the whole romantic relationship between his friend's name, Ned. I like the whole thing with Ned and his girl. Yeah, that was great. That was fun. All that stuff, that was the stuff I loved. I would have liked more of that, but I guess it's a superhero movie, so someone's got to punch someone. Yeah, I mean, I think another thing I really like about these Marvel movies in general, besides the over-the-top time travel and Thanos stuff, I think they do a really good job of making you feel like all the technology components is actually realistic in our universe, which I think is kind of cool because you can kind of picture this stuff happening. Yeah, even all the Thor God stuff, they'll make offhand remarks of, yeah, science always seems like magic if you don't understand how it works. Yeah, well, maybe the Thor stuff is a little over the top. Yeah, and the Doctor Strange stuff. Yeah, that too. It can all be explained by nanotechnology. I'm talking about the technology elements, like the nanotech. Yeah, exactly. Nanotech solves everything. There you go. You no longer need to watch a superhero put on his entire costume. You just press a point and it goes... Yeah, exactly, exactly. Which is pretty cool. All right, so Spider-Man Far From Home, we both give it, what, a D plus? I would give it a B, B minus. Give it a B. Give it a B. Yeah, all right, yeah. All right, so we walked out of Spider-Man Far From Home, you had a big grin on your face, and I said, I want to wipe that grin off your face. I want to see some tears. I want to see you shaking your boots. Yeah, that's exactly what I wanted. I want these boots to shake. Yeah, so what did we do? We saw Midsummer, the latest horror film, the second film from Ari Aster known for hereditary, another hit, I don't know if it was a hit, but it was definitely critically acclaimed. So Midsummer, what did you think of Midsummer? I mean, it was fine. I think similar to you. I thought it started out very intriguing, but once I could tell where the story was going, I felt like I've already kind of seen this before. At first it seemed like, oh, this seems a little original, but then at a certain point, I knew where it was going, and they felt like they were just showing us the same thing over and over. So overall, I enjoyed it. If it were rare for me, if it was shorter, I think it would have been better. Really, I wish a movie is longer. We should say this is a horror film. It's two and a half hours long. And I would say the first 60 to 90 minutes, I thought were great. They were even purely from a film, from a technical standpoint, some of the choices he made, where to put the camera. I remember the first five minutes of the movie, there's a shot where it's from the sky. You have a shot of a city, and there's a phone ringing. Every time the phone rings, the camera cuts closer. It rings again. It cuts closer, and you're sort of zooming in on the house where the phone is ringing. And even that, I thought, man, we're in for a wild ride if we're going to have interesting stuff like this. And there was a lot of things like that throughout the movie, but partway through, without getting into spoilers, you do start to piece together. I kind of see where this is going. Certain things happen, which made me feel really detached from the story. And for the last hour and a half, I was kind of, last hour, hour and a half, maybe I was kind of like, this is a little intriguing. It's kind of somewhat interesting, but I'm kind of waiting for it to end now. I was kind of bored by the end. Yeah, I kind of feel like this movie did the same thing a lot of horror movies do, which is they try to seem original and unique, and then they end up falling into the same trap that all horror movies fall into where at the end of the day, it's like, okay, it's just like all these other horror movies I've seen. I mean, I don't know the answer to that necessarily, but yeah, you know, it reminds me of Cabin in the Woods. Yeah, it was super unique. And then it ends up being exactly what they're trying to priority. We're going to subvert your expectations by seeming to subvert them, but then do the expectations. Basically, you all understood what that meant, right? I get it. I will say one more thing we should say about Midsummer. It was a pretty hilarious movie. It was funny. Which was surprising going in. I mean, yeah, the characters in this movie seem, they're aware of the situation. They're aware of how weird everything seems. It's funny to see them react to it, but then at the same time, you're like, okay, if you are aware of how messed up this is, why are you still here? There was, okay, without getting too spoilery, there is a situation where somebody is invited to go on a trip by one person who's in the group that's going on the trip. And you can kind of tell everybody else doesn't really want that person to go. Just hit a little close to home for me because I just went on a trip to Greece where I was invited by one friend. And then during the movie, I was like, wait a minute, what if I was the friend and they didn't really want me to go? I'm sure they are all happy to have you. Yeah, it was very believable. They should have put a trigger warning on that movie. And then just one more thing about Midsummer. Ari Astor, the director, even though we had a few complaints about the movie, I think he's an amazing filmmaker. I can't wait to see whatever he does next. I'm going to be fully on board to see it. I agree. I like this movie enough to see what else comes from him. Right. And he actually had it read at AMA recently. And he said he's probably going to step away from horror for a little while. He said he's interested in making a full on comedy next. And I think he's he's shown he can pull it off. Well, there's a lot of crossover between the horror and comedy genres. You're laughing because you've heard me say that several times. It's true. You always have these comedians like isn't Chris Rock producing the new saw? Yeah, yeah, he is. He is. I think he's going to be in it as well. Yeah. Yeah, he's actually it's funny you mentioned Chris Rock. I also just read that season four of Fargo, Chris Rock is going to be in that. And Jason Reitman is going to be in that as well. So just speaking of comedians crossing over into other territory. So interesting. Yeah, I thought about bringing that up for today's episode. But since neither one of us watch Fargo wasn't going to you don't watch Fargo. I watched the first season. Thought it was awesome. I started the second season. I thought it was even more awesome. But then I got really busy at work. And it's one of those shows that's so dense. If you walk away for a while, it's hard to just pick up where you left off. So at some point, I've got to go back and rewatch season two, especially now that you have a YouTube channel where people expect you to talk about it. Yeah, exactly. I have to sometimes for a show like Attack on Titan, for example, I have to do a lot of reading and like if you see my wall, it's covered in papers and string. I'm trying to figure everything out. All right, we're going to go a little out of order here because this is just relevant now. We talked about subverting expectations. What expectations were just recently subverted in the last 24 hours? Well, I wouldn't say they were subverted because it's not surprising that this happened. Right. So what happened? So, Benny Offenweiss, who people have been calling D&D for a while, David Benny Off, and what's his name? It's also David. I think so, yeah. All right, Benny Offenweiss, the showrunners of Game of Thrones. We're going to appear at Comic-Con and they decided not to because of scheduling conflicts. So just man to man. Do you believe it was scheduling conflicts? No. Before the finale aired, they were asked in interviews how they were going to handle it. And they basically said, when that finale airs, we're going to go to a cabin far away with a lot of alcohol. Stay off the internet for a while. And I have a feeling they just crept out from under that rock and they were like, never mind. I'm good. Going back to that cabin. We're going back to I'm picturing like Patrick Starr. He lives under that rock. Yeah. I don't really know. I'm okay with them not being there. I don't know if I need to see people. I think if they were there, I think it probably would have been fine. Maybe one or two people would have asked questions where they were like, why'd you do it? Huh? Why'd you do this to us? I mean, I think they're making the right decision. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think one day, years from now, we'll start hearing some of the actors maybe giving some honest opinions. I don't know if we'll ever hear from D&D. But it's okay. I don't blame them. I think, I mean, I blame them for what they did. I don't blame them for not talking about it. I don't need to hear anything from them. I think. Yeah. It's fine. Whatever. I mean, anyway, a year or two from now, once we're in that theater and the lights shut off and Star Wars comes on, we'll say, you know what, it was all worth it. Yeah, we'll see. I never cared about Star Wars as much as I cared about Game of Thrones. Yeah. And for those of you who don't know what we're talking about, Benioff and Weiss have been hired to create a trilogy of Star Wars movies. They don't know anything about what they're going to be about. Well, we know it's going to be about Knights of the Old Republic. I actually think they announced they're developing a Knights of the Old Republic film, but I don't think that's the one Benioff and Weiss are doing. There's a bunch of Star Wars movies in development. There's also Ryan Johnson who directed Last Jedi. There's also been slated to create a trilogy. So there's a lot happening in the Star Wars universe. Yeah. I can tell you're excited. That's my goal in one take. My big goal is to find a thing that you're excited about one day. All right. So let's talk about, so speaking of things that you're not excited about, Terminator Dark Fate. So there was a feature at release 90 seconds, a little bit of new footage in there, and it peeled back the curtain a little bit, revealed some information. So are you now this now you saw the trailer? You were like, meh, that you saw this feature at, are you now excited for Dark Fate? I mean, I'm a little bit like meh still, but you know what? I do think I'm excited enough to see it so far. I'm going to wait for some reviews. Right. But I would say if it's over 60% on Rotten Tomatoes, I'm willing to go see it. Okay. All right. I've actually lowered my bar for Rotten Tomatoes. Well, so I watched. I've always been intrigued for some reason by Rob Zombie as a filmmaker. I don't know why. I just I've seen trailers for his movies and they always feel like they have a little bit of an interesting aesthetic. I think he usually tries to make them look like throwback 70s horror movies. But anyway, recently I watched House of a Thousand Corpses, his debut film, which I remember it came out when I was in high school, I think, and I really wanted to see it. So 16 years later, I finally made it happen. I think that movie's sitting at like a 23% on Rotten Tomatoes. Yeah, I thought it was all right. So I've kind of rethought my whole philosophy on Rotten Tomatoes. That's a valid point because I love Ninja Turtles one and two. I love Mighty Ducks. Yeah. And those have awful reviews on Rotten Tomatoes. Exactly. So it's definitely not because of nostalgia that I love them. Having said that, yeah, if Dark Fate doesn't cross the 60% barrier, I don't know if I'll see it. But okay, yeah, I want to hear you say something good about Dark Fate, though. There was one sequence in the featurette that you were like, okay, yeah, I like that. Was it when she said, what did she say? I hunt Terminators. I hunt Terminators. You metal motherfucker. Yeah, like, I mean, obviously it's a little over the top. But, you know, it's fine. I can picture Sarah Connor ending up like that. Absolutely. I mean, she was basically already like that in Terminator 2. She'd already become a badass. Now she seems to have even more confidence in her abilities to do so, though. Right. Right. Okay, but remember the scene with the machine gun with Schwarzenegger? Oh, okay. That's what you were talking about. Yeah, exactly. No, that was awesome. He just close, close range. That's what it's called, right? Close range. Close range. Just shoot some machine gun right at that Terminator space and just blowing his all the flesh off his face. That was awesome. What do you think about Arnold Schwarzenegger? It's called Carl. That's cool. I'd love to see just, you know, Carl roaming around. Yeah, exactly. So I have to pat myself on the back here because if you go back and watch my review of the Dark Fate trailer, I theorized that the Schwarzenegger robot Terminator in this movie was placed in a cabin to basically hang out there for a while in case one day he's needed. And I think I heard through the grapevine he's screened some footage at Comic-Con. The feature that they released online that was only some of what they showed at Comic-Con. I believe my theory has been confirmed. And in fact, Arnold Schwarzenegger Terminator, he hangs around town and people have taken to calling him Carl. I'm hoping there's a really funny scene of him just walking around town shopping for groceries acting normal. He's like picking up baguettes. He's like Sylvester Stallone in Creed where he's running the restaurant. Yeah. Yeah. He's got like his glasses on. He's like counting inventory. If that's in it, I'm giving it a 90 percent. We need to order more baguettes. He's got like employees. He's like, oh, I don't want to be a Terminator. If only one day I could taste the food I create. His Terminators don't have taste buds, I'm assuming. Maybe. I don't know. I'm sure that'll be explored in Dark Fate. Okay, but there was one other piece of news that I was really excited about. And as always when I'm excited about something, you got to get your bucket of water out and rain on my parade. You get your wet blanket. Edward Furlong, John Connor, the kid from Terminator 2, he's back. He's going to be in Dark Fate. James Cameron casually dropped that bombshell in a video message at Comic-Con. That's cool. Yeah. That's cool. I like it. I love it. I'm so excited about that because Edward Furlong, he's on the list of people where every, I don't know, a couple of years, I think to myself, I wonder what happened to that guy. Then I read the Wikipedia article and I always thought I wish Edward Furlong would come back to Terminator. I remember when Terminator 3 came out, I think. Everyone was asking, is he going to come back as John Connor? Then I saw all these paparazzi pictures and I was like, yeah, I hope he doesn't come back as John Connor. Who I want to see come back is John Connor's friend from the beginning of Terminator 2. The guy from Salute Your Shorts, is that what he's in? Oh, Pete and Pete. Yeah. I want to see where he's at. They just kind of forgot about him. Yeah. You figure John Connor away. Why isn't he friends with him anymore? You're so hard to please. James Cameron is at Comic-Con. He's like, we're bringing back Edward Furlong. You're like, boo, what about Pete and Pete? The person we all really care about. Yeah. He helped them hack that ATM and everything. That's right. That's pretty much all John Connor. That kid just watched. They should do, so the same way they did Cobra Kai, the Crotty Kid sequel series where it's about the bad guy, do a sequel series where it's about that kid. Maybe that's what Pete and Pete is. Pete and Pete's in the same universe. Wait, yeah, that's my theory. Wait, is that not what your theory was? No, it is my theory. Okay. I don't know which came out first. Terminator would be my guess. Terminator 2, because that was 91, I think. I don't know. These are the insights you tune in for on one tick. What are we talking about next, the one? Memories all alone in the moonlight. I was really hoping you'd join in there. We could harmonize for a second. But I think everyone knows what we're talking about based off that, right? Yeah. All right, moving on. So what the hell was that? Why did I just sing all of a sudden? That is a song from the musical Cats. That's right. And Cats is it was a Broadway show and they're doing a film directed by Tom Hooper. He does all kinds. He does musicals. That's like his thing. He actually did Les Mis, the live, I don't know why I keep having to stop myself from saying live action. Did anyone think it was going to be animated? So he did Les Mis, which I was actually a pretty big fan of because the Les Mis musical did something that most musical adaptations don't do. Most musical adaptations, they film everything and then they dub the music in afterwards and it gets that kind of fake studio polished feel. Les Mis, they recorded everything live like right there on set. So I like that. So I went into Cats, you know, with high expectations. Not really. I don't even know, to be honest, what the Cats musical is about. Do you know what it's about? Cats. It must be about memories is my guess. What do you think of the trailer? Just look the weird aesthetic of the live action kind of CGI. So for those of you who haven't seen the trailer in the play, they wear cat costumes. In the in the movie, they basically use motion capture to do these humanoid cats. Yeah, it's just seeing celebrities we know, but it's like the cat version of them. That Taylor Swift. You got James Corden. You got Idris Elba. Oh, Ian McKellen. Ian McKellen. I think there was another. Yeah, I forget who, but they all look very happy in the trailer. They do look very happy. That's very true. Yeah, I guess I don't have a lot to say about this one. I was mildly curious what they were going to look like. I don't know. I didn't like the look of the cats. It just looked weird to me. I'm gonna have nightmares about those cats. Yeah, honestly, it looks like it'd be a hard sit. Let's put up a picture. Okay. All right. There we go. All right. So if this one crosses the 60 percent barrier on ride tomatoes. All right. It also had a new trailer. And first off, the first it, what did we think about that movie? I really liked it. Yeah. One of the better horror movies to come out in a while. I remember really actually kind of similar to my take on Spider-Man. I think I liked the non-horror stuff the best where it was just the kids hanging out. And the horror stuff was great too. But even that was harder for me to appreciate because one of the few books I've read is Stephen King's It. And that book was so dense and in the movie, they split it, right? The first movie is the kids. The second movie is the adults. The book went back and forth and did a lot of interesting things with the cutting back and forth. So, you know, it's hard to watch the movie and forget about how great the book was. But I liked it. It was great. Been excited about the second one. And I don't know, this trailer looked like it's very in keeping with the tone of the first one. I like that there was a lot of the kids in the trailer. So it seems like some of the cutting back and forth that happened in the book, they'll bring some of that element into the sequel. And yeah, I'm excited for it. Anything to add to that? If it gets higher than a 60%, I might check it out. I think this movie I'll see no matter what. That's probably, I've already seen the first. I want to see how the story ends in the new movie. Yeah. And I think that the casting for this movie is like perfect. James McAvoy, he looks, I'm a big fan of his. And they didn't really do right by him in Dark Phoenix. Yeah. And who's that comedian that plays, you know, that show fairy? Bill Hader, perfect casting for that character. See, comedy and horror. Cross over constantly. Told you. Yeah. Jessica Chastain. I think the actress, the kid actress was like, I hope Jessica Chastain plays me. I don't know if she knew that she was going to or not, but ever since she said that, it was kind of like that would be perfect casting. And then she is that character now. So okay, we're psyched about it. You ever heard of a little service, a little web service called Netflix? Yeah. So how many subscribers do you think they gained in the US this past quarter? I don't know. A lot. They didn't gain subscribers in the US. They lost 130,000. Why? And globally, they only added 2.7 million, and they thought they were going to add like 5 million. You thought with Stranger Things Season 3. Yeah. This is what I think happened. This is punishment. You think you could take my favorite character as Daredevil Punisher, Jessica Jones, Iron Fist to a lesser extent, Luke Cage. You think you can just get rid of them? No. This is what happens. I don't think that's what happened. But Netflix themselves, they said, we think it's due to not having a great slate of original television, and it's too expensive. It seems like a reasonable opinion. I mean, the service is too expensive? Yeah. Well, they kept increasing the price. Yeah. But it's funny. They don't mention, I guess, all the competing subscription services. Well, they probably don't want to mention that. Yeah, exactly. They don't want to bring your attention over to those. Hulu, HBO. The thing is, all those services have been around for a while, so I don't know what suddenly changed. You know? I don't know. House of Cards is gone. That could have been it. I don't think that was it. No. All right. So I guess I don't feel too bad for Netflix. I think they'll be OK. All right. Here's a news story that I really care about, that I'm excited about. Not that I didn't care about the other ones, but you know Quentin Tarantino? Yeah. One of my favorite filmmakers, I'm assuming one of your favorites. Yeah. He, a year or two ago, there was a bizarre news story. One of those news stories that every time you hear about it, you say, no, that's not. That's not a real thing. No way. Apparently Quentin Tarantino pitched a concept for a Star Trek movie to J.J. Abrams. And they liked it. And they said, yeah, we want to do this. We want Quentin Tarantino to make a Star Trek movie. And supposedly one of Tarantino's stipulations is I want it to be R rated. And they said, yeah, let's do it. So we keep hearing about it every once in a while. Now, one thing is Tarantino has consistently said he's only going to make 10 movies. Once upon a time in Hollywood, which comes out in about a week, that's going to be his ninth film. So people have been asking him lately, if you make this Star Trek movie, I mean, does that count? And he's like, yeah, I guess like I could, you know, use it as a loophole. And he doesn't count. It's not my movie. But he said, no, I think I should stick to my guns. If I make this Star Trek movie. And I'm not saying I'm definitely going to. But if I do, that's my last movie ever. I don't want his last movie to be a Star Trek movie. I know exactly. I'm still intrigued. Right. I don't want it to be his last. I want to see a Tarantino Star Trek movie. But if it's going to be his last, I'd rather he do something original. Yeah. Agreed. And they've asked. So there is a little bit of news on the movie. It's still not confirmed. What he basically said is I've been keeping my head down, working on Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. I've been busy. Once I get out of this, I'll go back and I'll talk to those folks and see what's going on and see if we can make something happen. There's also a couple quotes here. I'll read from him in a second. Actually, I'll just dive into those right now. So first they asked him about the R rating. And here I'm going to try and do my best Tarantino impression. Deadpool showed that you can rethink these things. Do them in a different way. That doesn't sound like Tarantino. I'll do it in my normal voice. Deadpool showed you can think of things in a different way. So really, even before JJ knew what the idea was, his feeling was, if it wants to be an R rating, fine. If it wants to be the wild bunch in space, fine. So it sounds like he has total creative control. Whatever happens, happens. I get annoyed at Simon Pegg. He doesn't, I can't do the Tarantino voice. I was really hoping I could pull it off. I had a great Mark Hamill impression on the last one. So I wanted that to be like a regular thing. I get annoyed at Simon Pegg. He doesn't know anything about what's going on. He keeps making all these comments as if he knows about stuff. And by the way, that's something I noticed. Every once in a while, there'd be a news story where people would ask Simon Pegg about the Tarantino Star Trek and he would comment on it. But apparently everything he said has been nonsense. Okay, so Tarantino goes on. One of the comments he said, he's like, well, look, it's not going to be pulp fiction in space. And then Tarantino says, yes it is. If I do it, that's exactly what it'll be. It'll be pulp fiction in space. That pulp fiction-y aspect. When I read the script, I felt I have never read a science fiction movie that has this shit in it ever. There's no science fiction movie that has that has this in it. And they said, I know, that's why we want to make it. It's at the very least unique in that regard. I never thought I would see a Tarantino-Pegg conflict. Yeah, I know. And the other thing to pick out there is he said when I read the script, so I guess that means somebody else is writing this movie, which is another thing. If it's going to be his last movie, I don't want it to be the first movie where he's directing someone else's script. I saw, so one of Tarantino's first movies was True Romance, where he wrote the screenplay, somebody else directed it. I'm a little bit more okay with that, because I think Tarantino's writing is so awesome. I love his directing too, but if I had to pick between directing someone else's work or someone else directing the work he wrote, basically what I'm saying is I want him to write it if he's going to make it. Yeah. So excited for it? I really don't want it to be his last movie. One thing that's reminded me of is that when I was a kid, I would always imagine that one day technology is going to be so good with machine learning and algorithms. Eventually there'll be like an entertainment system where you can just say a movie you want to see and it'll produce the best version of that movie possible and show it to you. So I could say, you know what? I want to see what would happen if Rocky Balboa had to fight aliens. And I want to know what it would be like if that was directed by Steven Spielberg. And then this machine would produce that movie and I could watch it. This feels like one of those things. Yeah. But I could be like, okay, Star Trek, and the machine's like, okay, no, okay, all right. Directed by Quentin Tarantino. Do you want it to be written by him as well? No. Surprise me. Do you want it to be rated R? Yes. NC17. R. Let's go with an R rating. All right. That's a lot of stuff we just covered there. Yeah. What was your favorite one? Your favorite story? Favorite news story? Uh, I think that last one, because I didn't know about that. And I am intrigued. Yeah. Hey, we did it. We found something you're excited about. Oh, well, I mean Tarantino. Right. I'm going to be excited about anything by him. So you're excited about Once Upon a Time in Hollywood? Absolutely. All right, awesome. I love that part where Leonardo DiCaprio does that little dance. Yeah. I will show that right here. I noticed that's funny because that reminds me of the Joker trailer. Robert Downer, Robert Downer. Robert De Niro does the same dance. Oh yeah, he does. Yeah. We'll put up a clip side by side. Yeah. That'll be one of those clickbait YouTube videos. We compare the Robert De Niro's dance from the Joker to we compare that to Leonardo DiCaprio's dance. That's a really long title. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. You won't believe what we found. It's a six hour video loop. Okay, we're going to go ahead and watch it again now. This time in slow motion backwards. Five hours into the video. I was like, is everything okay in there? Yeah, yeah, I'm fine. I'm going to watch it again though. This is a very special episode of One Take. Okay, I think that's it for One Take today, right? Yeah, that was pretty good. All right, well, if you enjoyed this video, make sure to subscribe and hit the bell icon so you get notifications whenever we make more videos like this one. And thanks for watching.