 Everything in my house sings. Including your weenie. Every, nope. That's a shame, mine does. Mine makes a groaning noise. Why, what would you want out of this? That's good. The IMAX theme. Getting a little too in detail of my sex life. Hey, welcome back to our two direction. It's the Corbin. I'm Rick. If it isn't loud, you're doing something wrong. We're spam Twitter, choose content. Patreon, Twitter account. Hey! Hey! The notification squads. Woo! We're doing a movie review, you little. Yes. Little what? Is that? Yes. The 2009 film, rocket-sync salesman. Yeah, for the years. Of course. Directed by Shum. Set lift his ball on the floor. Yeah, he did. Wow. Say his name? Schmidt Amen. Amen, who, I don't know if he directed Chalk Day, but let's see. He did. Okay, he was the director of, I don't know if we've seen him anywhere else, other than that, the director. But it's starring Ranbir Kapoor. And then Premchopra and a whole bunch of other, this is a big ensemble cast. But it's 2009 film. It's a comedy drama. A story of a fresh, graduated, trying to find the balance between and the mundane, mundaneing? No maddening. Maddening demands of the professional way and the way of his heart. He looked great in a turban. I'm gonna be honest with you. But, a hundred cents more the view came out 2009. I assume most of you have seen it. So if you haven't watched it, go watch it. Come back, unless you'd like to be spoiled. Rick, your initial thoughts, please. When Andrani first got here, we went to Olive Garden. Because she heard a lot about it. I hadn't been in a few years. And my mom had said, let's go there. So we went, okay, we'll go to Olive Garden and try it. I'm using that as an example because the experience we had at Olive Garden was like, oh, it's like there's a hurt a lot about Olive Garden. But when it was done, we were like, oh. And that's what happened for me watching this. For me, I just thought everything was basically okay. Everything. I thought everybody did fine. I thought the acting was fine. I thought the directing was fine. I thought the cinematography was fine. It wasn't anything that really engaged me. It was too long. And then ultimately, there were things I had problems with the story as far as believability and some moral conundrums I saw. So ultimately for me, I didn't enjoy it. No, I enjoyed, I do agree it's long. I did enjoy this one though. It's surprising to me that you didn't like this one because this one actually felt to me a lot like PK and Three Idiots. Oh my goodness, not even close. In terms of the style of film it is, in terms of, it came out the exact same year. I believe Three Idiots came out in 2009. But in terms of how it was filmed and the story that has a moral to it and then it's kind of like a feel good in the end. It's one of those things. So it's not something that I would ever consider like an awards worthy film. No. But those kind of films as well. So like the Amerikans, it's like, this is gonna be an enjoyable ride and I did enjoy it, but I do agree it is long. It definitely could have probably chopped off at least 30 minutes of this film. Easy. I totally agree with you on that one. But overall, I did enjoy this film. But this film I know did not do well at the box office but I think it's because it came out the exact same week as Three Idiots. Oh. That would help, but it also may have been and I'd be interested to know what, I mean, I'm assuming there's enough stupid babies who like this film that it was recommended enough for us to watch it. So clearly there's enough of you who really like the film and I know you get excited when I like a film and disappointed if I don't, because it's one you really like and give it to us because you want us to like it. Yeah. But yeah, I just, again, I didn't have a problem with, like nobody was blaringly bad at all. In fact, most of the performances were fine. Again, there wasn't anything particularly captivating in any of the performances. I also, the moral conundrum I have was the prospects of why he did what he did and how it ends ultimately, which is also a believability factor for me. So I don't know what part you wanna get into first, because basically across the board, whether it's the writing, the directing, the score, the editing, it's gonna be pretty much all across the board for me, just okay. Well, for me it would be story, would be the largest thing I have to talk about. Yeah. But you would probably give it more of a C. It's a C. Okay. Yeah. Because sometimes you have an ability to harp on something and make it sound like you ate something. Right, no, no, no, you didn't. No. No, I give it a C. I wanna give them the knowledge to know that you didn't hate the film, but you thought you didn't enjoy it like you would have enjoyed another film. Absolutely. But sometimes you have this ability to harp on something and it sounds like you absolutely despise it. Right, because I talk about the thing that bothered me most and people assume that's the only thing I took away from film. I just wanna clarify for everybody. Thank you. No, what I do, either whether I like the film or I dislike the film, I will accentuate the thing that is the biggest for me, whether it's my biggest joy or my biggest problem, and many people can assume that's my only takeaway, but thank you. But I actually really enjoyed Rand Beer and I know you might not agree. I actually, this is one of my favorite performances of his. I actually really, I got invested into this film, which is why she's kind of shocking to me that you didn't get invested into it. And you know what? It was all cliches, but I set myself like almost immediately. It like frames-wise, it felt like a three and it's PK. And I'm like, okay, so this is, well, we're not going in for a bunch of stereo types. There's a bunch of all that. I thought about something that may have shaped it and I tried hard to not allow this to shape. So I have been watching a lot of movies that are up for awards in the past month. Almost, if I'm not watching a movie for the Sags, I'm watching a movie for, oh, I'm sorry, I'm watching a movie every single day. I was trying really hard and I may not have been able to do it to not allow the caliber of cinema I've been seeing this past month influence this because if I was to compare this to the stuff I've been watching. Yeah. Yeah, it's very possible. And especially if you were trying to make it like some awards-worthy film. I wasn't. That's not why. No, I wasn't. I really wasn't. I enjoyed this film the same way I enjoyed PK and three idiots in terms of just, it's an enjoyable film to me with a good performance by the lead. And I think like you said, everybody else did well. There's not anything that's, I'm like, that's the amazing performance, even though I did really enjoy rent beer in this in terms of I enjoyed his ability, I enjoyed his performance, I enjoyed it. As much as you enjoyed Amir in PK? Yeah. You enjoyed PK. Ars. Way more than that. Or even three idiots. But, you know, I had some blaring issues with three idiots in terms of performances. Yeah, you particularly did like principle. But, so for you, you'd recommend this in the same breath as PK and three idiots. If you're looking for an enjoyable film like that. Holy crap. Yeah, I would, yeah. Wow. Yeah, I'd not even in the same solar system as those movies. Not even the same solar system. But yeah, I did enjoy his performance quite a bit. I thought he brought an endearingness and a difference, because we've seen a lot of good performances from rent beer. We've seen Barfi. We've seen the. Probably my favorite is Tamasha. An overall performance in three. We haven't seen anything bad. The only time I ever disliked a performance of his, I corrected myself on which was Barfi. And then I saw it again and realized that was all. Even though we didn't appreciate Rockstar. His performance in Rockstar was really, really good. Correct. So I think he, this brought a very different performance. He brought it like an innocence. Maybe it's because he was sick of Punjabi. Maybe that, maybe that. I just, I love those people. But he brought this kind of vulnerability to him. And I thought it was so unique and so different for him. And the overall film, I just thought had a really nice, even though it was, you know, predictable, you've seen this kind of stories told out many times. Sure. Of a guy that company shits on essentially and decides to, I mean, Michael Scott Paper Company, the exact same thing from the office, right? Also, Martin Scorsese, did you steal a line from this movie? I do want to know that. Was that, sell me this pen? Oh. Was that a famous thing before? Well, because only other place I had ever heard it was Wolf of Wall Street, which came out in 2013. Yes, but there's also another film that came out before that, which is, oh my goodness, Alec Baldwin's in it. And I think it's in there too. No, no, he is in that. It's a sales movie. Got you. Very famous and it was a play before it was a film. And I believe it's there too, but yeah. So it's a popular sales thing. Yeah, but when was Wolf of Wall Street though? 2013, which was not four years after? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Four years after. Which is why I'm curious. It could just strange coincidence, strange coincidence. Right when I saw it, I stopped the film and I'm like, when did Wolf of Wall Street come out? Cause that's how that line was made famous for me and probably most Americans. It's a very famous scene now for Wolf of Wall Street. Yeah, it would be comparable to having somebody be like, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, right. And then a couple of years later, you see it in the film. Right, exactly. I'm just curious about that fact. But yeah, his performance, even though you probably thought it might have just been after, I thought it was very different for him. I thought it was a very endearing performance. And I thought everybody else, like you said, was a unique cast of characters. They were all, you know, stereotypical mean boss. The guy with the crazy mutton chops, the pretty secretary. But I thought they all did well in their roles. Yeah, they were fine. Yeah, I agree with you on that. But there was no glaringly bad performances. There was some dialogue that was stereotypical, like who in the office would all throw stuff at you. But that's kind of what I chalk up to the 380 It's P.K. style of film. Because those had those exact same, like the peeing thing. Fucking 380 It's, that was so weird. God, it was so weird in that film. But so yeah, that and then the overall story, it just kept bringing me in. I think it's probably because I cared for Ranbir's character. Even it, so exact example, even did you, so here's having had experience in sales, there were parts of his character that I was like, really man, I mean, I agreed with his dad at the end when his dad said, why don't you just quit and do this on your own and stay here? I would have taken care of you. And I had the exact same thought. I'm like, why are you using the other company's resources to do this? But you seem to be a pretty upright moral guy that you're doing something that's illegal to the point of going to jail for. And I also don't know what it's like in India. I know in the United States, if you work for a company that is involving sales, you typically have to sign a nondisclosure agreement that not only it says you won't be in competition while you're working, but most of them say you won't be in the industry for two years if you ever leave. So if you're doing, I did outside sales of first aid supplies and CPR training. I did also some outside sales in terms of public speaking and personal development projects. And with both of those companies, I signed nondisclosure agreements with both Sintos and captivating that said, whenever I'm done working, I will not be in this industry for two years because I could take trade secrets I learned from them as well as when I was a financial advisor with World Financial Group. I worked for them for a couple of years and was signed an agreement that said I not only won't compete while I'm with the company, but I won't be in the industry for a couple of years afterwards. So the fact that that would even be a consideration to me is highly, highly immoral to do that while you're working at a company. And then it was just too easily wrapped up in the end in terms of the main boss guy, who again, I thought was fine, did a good job, having such a drastic moral compass change in his character on such a simple thing was very hard for me to believe. Well, yeah, I agree, but that's the style of film that it was. We had those same films in the 80s that like everything is, you knew exactly where it's going, even if like this like the crazy boss and whatever film it was, you knew it was gonna end all happy. And I knew 100% how this film was gonna end. I knew too. And I was like. I knew how it was going to, I was just waiting to see how they were gonna do it. And so that's why that didn't bother me. So I was like, the same things happens in this style of film all the time. This is a film that in my opinion, is meant to just be enjoyed and not really thought about outside of, oh, I want a little bit of motivation to do what I want to do. What's the moral to the story for this for you? Follow your dreams and or like believe in yourself more. I'd probably say. Okay. The only reason I'm asking that is because PK is such a clear message of so many important things with, I know you didn't cry, but it has such an emotional element to it comparatively that I don't have a, if somebody liked this, I'm surprised. And it's one of those, hey, you know, what appeals to you doesn't appeal to me, but that you equate it with PK and three idiots is truly amazing. Why equate it with that style of film of that we're made at that time in terms of this is a film that's gonna be a little quirky, right? But it has a good overall message in the end, right? And a good performance from Lee and you're just gonna, you're gonna enjoy yourself. Maybe I miss understanding. It's one thing to say, I consider them to be comparable stylistically. It's another thing to say that you find them to be comparable artistically. I thought you were saying you find them comparable artistically. I do. Yeah, that's what I thought. I do. I 100% do. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, I don't think there's, in those films, even though they're, I think they're good films, they both have all those glaring problems of performance, dialogue, but I don't harp on that because of I enjoy the overall feel of the film and the end point. You know, I PK's little monologue when he's talking to God about, I've looked for you everywhere and you're not answering to me. That three minute monologue is better than all of this. Okay. That's, I'm really shocked that you consider that artistically comparable. I do, because I don't consider those artistic films either. I know you do, I do not. I consider them good, enjoyable films. This, I put in the same breath as I was because I just, I can enjoy a film without one, needing a message from it. Two, loving everything about it. And I overall, I was invested in Ren Beers character and the overall film because, probably mostly because of him and the likeability he brought to that character. Yeah, and it very well might be a big contributor, but I really tried to set that off to the side and I can do that when I know it's happening. It's one thing for me to look back in retrospect and make a recognition of, oh, that's what I was doing, but I knew it the outset. I told myself, I'm five minutes in. And I said, do not measure this by the films you've been watching. Let this be what it is. You recognize the genre. You know the style. Let it be what it is. You still didn't like it. Yeah, no. You still didn't like it. But regardless, let us know what you thought about this film. What should be our next Ren Beer film? I know he has quite a bit that we haven't yet to see obviously Sanju. That's The Anatic Muscles. One that plays a dud. Yeah, Sanju. Sanju. He also has Wake Up Sid, which we haven't seen as well. But I think he has one coming out with Aulia that they're about to announce. I think I've heard, which would be interesting. I don't think they've done one together Definitely not since they've been together. Yeah, not since they've been together So that would be interesting. I don't know what style of film it is I don't know if it's no if it's like the Keon Johar Renvier Yeah, I'm not mistaken. He also because we mentioned this about Amir He hasn't released something since we started the channel. There's a few that haven't with him not mistaken True because he did Sanjoon 2018 right and that was basically his last yeah Animal is barely come out to him 23, but it went straight to video I Don't know what that is that comes out in 2022. Yeah, those are in production. This is the big one Yeah, those are in production. Oh, is this the one with all that might be is that what she did the post on today? Where she was showing the visuals for something well, we've got is that we've reacted to I think a motion poster for this Yeah, because it's it's gonna be like a big film like our right right right massive, right? But yeah, it's alia. Yeah, that's her. Maybe that's what it is dimple. Yeah, it says a ton of people in it Anyways, I know who there you go Let us know what you thought about this film and what your next Ranbir Kapoor film We still need justice for Ranbir because you know Rick hates them Let us know down below