 I want to react to something. Come on give me something. React to this. Hey, welcome back to our Stupid Reacts with the Itz. This is Corbin. This is Rick. And you can follow us on Instagram. I got it, I got it, I got it, I got it, I got it. And follow us on our personal YouTube channels. Yeah, or with stabby and nipples. That's true. Link's always in the description below. Today we are reacting to a new trailer that dropped, I believe, a day ago. It's on that. Did you just call me a dago? Yes, it dropped a day ago and it's on that Z5 app. Huh? And I believe it was made by the AIB people. It's not presented by AIB, but I believe it was made by those people. Okay. And it's called Chin Tu Ka Birthday. Okay. In a war-torn Iraq, an Indian family awaiting their turn to return to India, decides to celebrate the youngest son's birthday. Amidst all the chaos and danger, the family struggles to celebrate and make the day memorable for him. Cool. Okay. Interesting. So it's a family that's stuck in Iraq trying to get back to India? Yeah. Okay. That's epic. Iraq, not always fun. Not a great slogan for the tourism industry there. All right, ready? Three, two, one. Chin Tu Ka Papa. Chin Tu Ka Papa. You can't do it, can you? Tell us, Ramachandra. Adorable kid. A little boy. Chin Tu Ka Papa's birthday is today. Happy birthday to you. I don't want to go to electricity. Don't go to electricity, don't worry. Smile a little. Dad, I'm talking to him that he'll become a best birthday. He's so cute. He's really cute. Huh? 25. And we were talking about 50. We were talking about the same thing last year. Chin Tu. Now you remember, it's the grandma's birthday. Yeah. Dad, I remember, grandma. They're going to break our hearts. They're going to break our hearts. They're going to break our hearts. They're going to break our hearts. They're going to break our hearts. They're going to break our hearts. They're going to break our hearts. Yeah, I knew it. They're going to break our hearts. It took you so long, buddy. Oh, God. We'll check the room. I can explain. Shut it down! Is he part of your family? See, there is a mystery. Say one more word and I'll blow your goddamn head off. Vika, I'm for Chin Tu birthday party. Best friend. Girlfriend. She go to school. You destroy this morning. Oh, God. Welcome to Bump Guy Rai. My name is Madan Tiwari, sir. We're Indian. Where's your whole family working for these insurgents? Happy birthday, Chin Tu. My Chin Tu is crying on his happy birthday. It is wrong. We're going to bring him back to school. Whatever is wrong, it's wrong. We're not going to stop Chin Tu. Damn. That looks good. I want to see that. That looks good. Yeah. Looks powerful. It's also interesting, just from an American's perspective, to see a film where the American is the bad guy. It's obviously, you know, usually from your own stories that you tell, you usually, especially the military, you don't make them the bad guys. Correct. Just because it's just not something, and you know there's people that are awful people, obviously there's awful people everywhere, in the military and everything, but it's just not something you normally see outside of that's the villain in the military and the rest of this military is good. You know, like the generals is the bad guy. That's basically what you'd see, but not this guy is racially profiling these people and interrogating these people, even though they're Indian. Or maybe it may have gotten bad intel. We may find out that they didn't get bad intel. We may find out something about Chin Tu's dad that we didn't know about. You know what I mean? Yep. And I'm very interested to see this because that's one thing we have yet to see that deeply intrigues me, is something that comes out of India that depicts the American military. Yeah. I really would like to see that. That's one of my favorite things, I've referenced them before, of Clint Eastwood's films that he did back to back, which were the flags of our fathers and Iwo Jima. If you guys aren't familiar with that, Eastwood told a story of a critical battle in World War II, and he told it from the American standpoint of the battle when he made a completely separate film, and told it about the Japanese standpoint. And it's a really beautiful depiction of both sides of the picture, and the insanity of war. So this is, I'm very interested. Yeah. This looks really, really good. The one, the kid looks adorable. All the acting looks really good. I am nervous about those Americans. That always just makes me nervous. I know. Me too. What we're referring to everybody, if you didn't know, is we don't see good actors who are white in Indian films, and the fact that these guys play a significant role is going to piss us off if they're not good actors. Yeah. Let's see. It's one of the black military men. His name is Reginald L. Barnes. Okay. He was in Blue Bloods. Okay. It's not too much outside of that, so obviously it's a smile. And then Nate Skoles, who was in NCIS, Criminal Minds, and Grimm. So he's been in quite a few. He has quite a... That's encouraging. He has quite a repertoire, which is great that they're actually getting actors that are from America that are... Good. I mean, he's not like a huge guy, obviously. But he's been in a bunch of stuff, so that's encouraging. But I do feel like the dad we've seen before. Have we seen him? I did too. I was feeling the same way. My name is Khan. He was in my name as Khan. Oh, okay. Well, that's where. Yeah. He was in my name as Khan. And I feel like there's more, though. Maybe it was just trailers that we've seen him in. Dude, dude, dude, just checking his IMDb here. But he looks familiar. But he looks really... He looks really, really good. The entire thing looks really good. I love... Because, like I said, you don't see that perspective here. If there's an Indian family and the people that are the antagonists and the bad guys almost in this, are the Americans, which is I'm sure actually how, like, if you have any films in other countries that depict American soldiers, I'm sure it's not a good look. Because obviously, you know, we see the best sides of us. We oftentimes choose to ignore the bad sides. Correct. It's something that I enjoy seeing because you don't want to be blinded by... Yeah. You want to know what people think about you and the realities of what's actually happening, not just what your news is telling you. Yeah. And Stupid Babies, what I was thinking about as you were talking, Corbin, was, correct me if I'm wrong. I don't think it was the first, but I know one of the first films to depict American military in a not attractive light was Oliver Stone's Platoon. Mm-hmm. Johnny Depp's first big role. Right. Which... It was just a whole lot of big names in that thing, but it not only depicted some people who do things that aren't the right thing to do as soldiers because there are some of those, but it also talks openly, as did many films afterwards, about the atrocity that was the Vietnam War. And it's just a good film. If you guys haven't seen Platoon, it's a really good American film that shows you pretty raw reality about good and bad soldiers and bad things that America have done. I feel like that's the war that we've seen the worst like in terms of film, because it was basically an illegal war that we decided to start. And so that's why I feel like that you've seen a lot of bad light of Americans about that one is because it was so awful. Oh, yeah. It's so awful. Yeah, but there, if you want to... I don't know why they haven't made a film. Christopher Nolan, if you're watching. They should make a film. I just watched a segment of a World War II documentary that's on Netflix. It's an in-color documentary. And it's a segment on the battle of Dresden in Germany. And I didn't know much about that battle. You want to talk about gross, what the Allies did there with under Winston Churchill and Franklin Dillon Roosevelt in killing 25,000 innocent people in Dresden and bombing it because it was a civilian target. Woof. And I asked my friend Rich, I said, why haven't they made a movie about this? He said it's too brutal. And it also doesn't portray America and Great Britain in the most beautiful light. Or Churchill, which as you guys know... Or Churchill. We are only... Obviously you guys know Churchill in one light. And that's... I've seen people call him their Hitler, basically. Yeah. And so that's a pretty high mark from coming from an American perspective. He's the greatest Britain of all time. That's how he's taught to us. He is the greatest Britain of all time. And so, obviously what you see in your films in India and in every all over the world is what you want to see. Yes, it's the old adage and it's sad but true that history is told by the victors. Yup. It's a sad fact. But this looks really good. So let us know anything that we need to know about this down below. And thank you. Thank you very much.