 Hi everyone, this is Chico. Welcome to my channel and welcome to another live stream. Today, today is October 9th, 2020, and it's movie club nights. Let's talk about Forbidden Planet, Tombstone, The Black Breakfast Club, and El Topo. Okay, those were the four movies that we chose to watch in previous movie club video where we did the choosing of the videos and or movies. So we've had about over a month now to enough time to watch the movies and in our own leisurely time. Some people watch them faster than others and we're going to talk about them today and in a couple of days we're going to do another movie club live stream and we're going to pick the movies. Okay, now while we wait for notifications to go out and what not, let me tell you what this is all about. I am on patreon, patreon.com, four slash chico, c-h-y-c-h-o. If you want to know what this work is about, you can follow the work on Patreon. I don't put anything beyond paywalls, everything's creative commons, share and share like Elder God, how are you doing? You can follow the work and after following the work, seeing the type of content that we're sharing, if you think this work is worth supporting, Patreon is a fantastic way to do so and for those of you who are supporting this work through Patreon, thank you very much for your support. It is in large part because of your support that we are here and able to do this. We are live streaming on Twitch, twitch.tv, four slash chico live, c-h-y-c-h-o-l-i-v-e. If you want to participate in these live streams as they are happening when you see the chat pop up, Twitch is where you want to be at and for those of you who've been supporting this work through Twitch, subscribing, following, commenting and coming to the live streams, thank you very much for your support. I do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on LOMinds, VK Gap, Parler and Twitter. You can follow the work there, we do share additional content and for unscheduled live streams, I announced them live streams a couple of minutes, a few minutes before we go live. Notifications both sent, awesome, thanks Elder God. We will be, I better turn on the recorder. I don't forget to do this. And for those of you who are listening to this live stream, after the fact in audio format, Graham, thank you very much for the tier one sub. Appreciate it brother. And for those of you who are listening to the audio of this live stream discussion in podcast format, we do upload these files to soundcloud.com forward slash Chicho and these audio files should be available on your favorite podcasting platform. And for those of you who are listening to the audio version of this, it is October 9th, 2020, and we're doing a movie club live stream. We're going to talk about four movies. We're going to talk about El Topo. We're going to talk about the Breakfast Club. We're going to talk about Tombstone and we're going to talk about Forbidden Planet. Now Forbidden Planet, classic sci-fi from 1956, I believe. Tombstone, classic Western from 1993, I believe. Breakfast Club, classic, what do we call this? A classic from 1985. An El Topo classic from 1970. And we will be uploading this video to both Bichute and YouTube. And for those of you who are supporting this work through Bichute and YouTube, thank you very much for your support. Thank you for subscribing. Thank you for sharing. Thank you for liking. Thank you for turning on notifications, commenting. And for those of you who are on YouTube, thank you for joining YouTube membership. Aside from that gang, welcome to another live stream, Starsky Yo Chicho. I'm glad I made it this time. Awesome Starsky. Glad to have you. I like your shirt, Bichute. Thanks, Graham. I've had this shirt for a long, long time. Coming on to, coming on to from the, I've had this shirt from the early 1990s, I guess. It's been around. It's been around. Made it. I thought, how are you doing? I've missed every live stream this week. School has been rough. Oh, I can imagine. I can imagine Elder God. I'm going to take these things down, gang. Hey, we don't want to take brows down. We want to take YouTube down, Bichute down. Yeah, I can imagine Elder God. I can imagine. Salute to the teachers out there. Okay, who are trying their best to make sure no generation is left behind. Let's put it that way. And they get a better education than previous generations. The same combo as last night gang. I got lemon liqueur going on. Okay. And, and, we still got meringue pie going on. And we got meringue pie going on, right? We still got meringue pie going on. Let me hold this so it doesn't slide away. Take a look. More meringue pie. And it's fantastic. It's taken us about three days to go through a pie. I'm going to topple it over so it's easier to cut. Okay. Very nice. I hope you guys got amazing, amazing eats going on. I'm going to make it last. Crack. How are you doing? That was cheeky. I wish I had some right now. I planned ahead. Every now and then I go off on one of these. Crack. I had my CBD dose for the night. Big glass of water, so set to go awesome, awesome. And I got some tea going on as well. Diet thug. You got steak pizza. Yo, that's nice. You know, American cuisine. I think maybe I've eaten steak pizza once in my life, if even not. It's 4 a.m., so too early for breakfast. Too early for breakfast. No drinking. Well, it might be seeing the night off, Elder God, right? Salut, salut to the night owls. Gang, did you guys all watch the movies? I shaved my head and most of my beard today. Oh my god, Graham. It's winter coming on. You should be keeping the facial hair. Stay warm, stay warm. What? Gang, which movies should we watch? Or should we watch? Should we talk about no alcohol this evening? Okay, awesome, Elder God. Management, management. That's a great way to go. Management, management. Which one should we talk about gang? Should we? Wow, we'll wait a couple more minutes for people to roll in. Okay. It's a slow night maybe tonight. Forbidden Planet, a very young Leslie Nielsen. Yeah, for sure. A Forbidden Planet was, it was a good movie. It surprised me. I've seen it before. There was one part that was cringe-worthy, but the rest of it sci-fi was very good. I'm having some weird reaction from this weed. I'm tired, but I can't sleep. I feel like alcohol would fix it. Possibly. Possibly. In moderation of course. Starsky, right? The soundtrack for Forbidden Planet is so good. You know what? The soundtrack for these movies, all of them were fantastic. Breakfast Club was very, you know, nostalgic and stuff like this. El Topo was crazy soundtrack. I didn't get to, oh, you didn't get to Forbidden Planet. I watched Breakfast Club like a few hours ago. I held off, held off, held off. I wasn't sure, you know, I knew I was going to watch it and I just, you know, I had certain memories of it and sometimes when you rewatch something that you liked, initially when you saw it or second time you saw it or third time you saw it, that you haven't watched for many years, you're not, I'm so sure if it's if it's still good, right? If it stood the test of time. And Breakfast Club, wow, some heavy moments for some very intense moments and some crazy slapstick funny. Let's go chronologically maybe. From Time, sure, let's go. El Topo is great music wise for sure, for sure, crack. I watched it three hours ago. Which one? El Topo? Or, no, Forbidden Planet. Elder God, for sure. I watched Breakfast Club three hours ago. Wait, I did watch it. I just forgot you forgot one of the pinnacle science fiction movies of all time. No. So we go chronologically, Forbidden Planet would be it. Should we go with Forbidden Planet? Oh, Breakfast Club, Elder God, you watched it around the same time I did. Yo, Chicho, have you seen Genghis Khan, 1965. That's a classic. Is that Kurt Russell as well? Genghis Khan, who is that? That's the Hollywood Genghis Khan, right? I'm pretty sure I've seen it, but I haven't seen it for long, long time. Long time. If you're here Monday, make a recommendation, Starsky. I wouldn't mind watching it again. John Wayne is it? Oh, John Wayne, yeah, yeah. Oh, maybe he's got the crazy, really thin mustache going on, right? Yellow face, yeah, yeah. I don't watch John Wayne movies anymore, man. I watched some John Wayne movies when I was younger, and they gave me a little bit cringe-worthy moments. And then I learned about John Wayne's actual real life history, and I can't watch John Wayne again. No John Wayne. John playing Genghis Khan. That's a very strange movie. Yeah, yeah, I remember seeing it. I remember seeing it. It was interesting at the time. I was young, but I never rewatched it. John Wayne crack size. Hilarious. I got a feeling we might not be watching any John Wayne movies in this movie club. I really can't remember any John Wayne movie. There's one John Wayne movie. He's crazy, man. He's like a cowboy on a Mexican border, and they ride their horses into a Mexican land, and they're by the river, and the Mexicans come over, and they say, gringo, you know, what are you doing? This is our land, and it goes, I don't see your land or anything like that. They end up killing all the Mexicans. I told you this was my, this wasn't your land. It's like, what the hell? Then we're gonna start it. Let's go, young bollocks. Geng, should we go chronological? The oldest movie first? Should we go oldest movie first? Let's do, let's do Forbidden Planet. John Wayne was a racist on screen, racist on screen and coward off screen. Sure, Dandil. 1965 was Omar Sharif as Genghis. Was it Omar Sharif as Genghis Khan? Oh, I don't remember that. I remember the John Wayne one for some reason, but I remember Omar Sharif Genghis Khan. Was John Wayne the earlier one? Are you talking about Lawrence of Arabia? Lawrence of Arabia is a brilliant movie. I gotta look into that. I gotta look into that. Geng, Forbidden Planet. 1956, I believe. Let me give you the stats on this thing. 1956, right? Director, Fred M. Wilcox. Okay. Writers, Cyril Hume, Irving Block. Okay, the two that based on a story by, by who? Based on a story by who? Based on a story by Allen Adler, William Shakespeare play, credited, really? William Shakespeare, what is that all about? Stars, Walter Pigeon and Francis Leslie Nielsen. Those are the three top ones, right? So, classic, classic, one of the classic science fiction movies of all time, right? Louis and Bebe Barron, doing the amazing early electronic music for, for this movie, Forbidden Planet, yeah, the soundtrack. It's inspired by Shakespeare to Tempest. Is it inspired by Shakespeare, Shakespeare Tempest? Wow, wow, wow. I didn't know that. I didn't look into the history of this thing. The, the, the, the music. Oh, this doesn't have the soundtrack. I would have to go to Wiki to see the soundtrack on this thing. John Wayne was 1950s. So, what do you call it? Omar Sharif played in 1965, Genghis Khan? I need to watch that. Smug wasp. How are you doing? Spoiler for those who didn't watch. Spoiler for those who didn't watch. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Geng, if you haven't watched these movies, you don't want spoilers. Don't watch. Don't be here on the live stream and definitely don't watch this after the fact. But wasn't the alien thing the manifestation of the hatred of others? It wasn't hatred of others. It was manifestation of, okay, we're going, we're giving you spoilers, of course, we're going to give it of the scientist, the top scientist from the scientist. Yeah, hatred for others maybe, right? So, it was a manifestation of the scientist because he had plugged into the instruments that technology and the technology had created this entity that attacked anything that challenged his life, his existence. So do I. Crack, the music was so groundbreaking in the world of modular synthesizers. There's still a patch called the Krell patch where the synth basically plays itself. Really? Is that how they did the music for that crack? I wasn't, I didn't know too much about the music. The only, it was, it's a brilliant movie as far as I was concerned, right? It's amazing. I've seen it. I don't know, this would have been at least the third or fourth time I've seen it. Cheryl, how are you doing? Right? Oh yes, I've tuned in just in time. Awesome, lark bark. The music is entirely done using modular synth, really. Not synthesizers by early electronics, magnetic tape. Done with magnetic tape, unbelievable. I had no idea. That just kicks it up. Huge, huge. I found FB very Star Trek in style. Yeah, there was a huge amount of that, elder god. So I guess we would say Star Trek was taking a fair bit of creative license from Forbidden Planet. Forbidden Planet, what a movie, what a movie, what a movie. The only part that really didn't stand the test of time is the relationship between the male when they first saw the daughter, right? When the, this, what do you call it, the earthlings that the people were traveling, the astronauts, when they went onto the grounds and the way they, it was very 1950s, I guess, movies in that realm where the interaction between male and female was very cringe-worthy now, I think. Lost in Space 2 seems inspired by Forbidden Planet. Yeah, Forbidden Planet, I think is superior to Lost in Space, in my opinion. But I haven't seen Lost in Space for a long time, so I would have to watch Lost in Space again, for sure. Lost in Space came after Forbidden Planet, yeah, for sure, must have been because of the way you wrote it. Yes, I think I saw bones on that ship and was waiting for Spock the whole time, yeah. Bones was there, 100%. There was no Spock though. There was no Spock. Kirk was there. The captain was very, Kirk was very reminiscent of that, right? There was no, I guess Spock would have been the robot. The robot would have been Spock, Elder God. Could we say that? If in that case it was totally Star Trek, totally Star Trek, Salute Gang, or Mobius. Robbidden Robot was kind of a sci-fi staple before this movie. Where did Robbidden Robot originate from? That was Lost in Space, right? Cheryl or Mobius. I don't know the reference. I know Mobius, but I can't place it with Forbidden Planet. They used the Greek mythology as well, which gave the end away for me. Really? They used Greek mythology in the end, that gave the end away. Cheers as for me, I'm having a Perrier, awesome. Perrier and Morang Pie would go well together too. I don't think I'm going to have another Morang Pie for Monday. Asimov Story, 1940. Also the Fantastic Island, 1935. I don't think I've seen Fantastic Island, 1935 I haven't seen. And Asimov, I've seen some of his movies, especially some of the older ones as well. But I didn't. The stories he wrote. Story from 1940. Which one would have been, Graham? What's the story from 1940? Mobius from 1940? Is that Asimov? Strawberry Rhino. Hey, hey, hey, smoke green crack every day. Oh, that looks delicious. Yeah, Lark. I love pie. Me too. Chicho is a short story called Robbie. Is it? I haven't read it. I haven't read that Asimov story. I've read some of the other short stories. And I haven't read any Asimov novels, so I should. I don't know why. I've never seen either of those, Graham. Yeah, Asimov must be the story. I don't know. What was the earliest Asimov movie that they, or story that they turned into a movie adaptation? Adding to this, adding to this crack. Nice. Mobius. Sorry. He was, he was so critical that I could see Spock. Oh, okay. Mobius connection. Oh, okay. I follow you. I follow you. Okay, Cheryl. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, for sure. For sure. Right. For sure. Spock was there. Elder God. iRobot is his most famous one. Oh, the iRobot you're talking about. Yeah, yeah. We did a reading of Weird Science Fantasy. It was the second part of iRobot. But iRobot is Asimov? I didn't realize iRobot was Asimov. The original one that I showed you guys in the amazing astonishing stories? The pulp magazine? That's Asimov writing iRobot, man. I gotta remember the stuff. Wow, wow, wow. Now I really gotta read it. I've, the reason I knew that one I could find was because I had pulled it out to read it, to do a live stream reading. But what's up, Gijo? I bring death. How are you doing? Sorry. Like the Will Smith film? Yeah, that was a I guess it was B. It was okay movie, but nothing like what it could have been. Yeah, Will Smith. Yeah, the old, one of the best Will Smith movies was the one where it was a superhero, drunken superhero. That was good. That was good. But Forbidden Planet Gang. What a fantastic movie. It would have been absolutely groundbreaking during the time, 1956. Absolutely groundbreaking, right? Spot of tea. How are you doing, Spider-Man? Whoa, new film, film location. This is where we do the comic book readings. We're gonna do comic book reading here, just looking this way. I actually set it up by the library where we have the books, but the people downstairs start, they're throwing a party, so they're playing. Oh, lots of music. So I was like, oh man, I gotta change locations. Since we're talking about sci-fi films, I highly recommend checking out Hardcore Henry and Upgrade. Hardcore Henry just recently came out, Lark, right? Looks different. Now, the lighting, I guess. Hancock is that movie? Yeah, Hancock. Hancock was a good movie, yeah, Spider-Man? I bring that almost midnight here, was just about to go to bed. Glad I caught the stream. Awesome. I bring you that movie talk. Why not? The effects were awesome for 1950s. Phenomenal for 1950s. Like really, absolutely brilliant. And the contraband, the guy getting, what do you call it, his bourbon or whatever it was he was getting, and setting up the electric fencing around. It was interesting. Cheryl, has anyone brought up the Forbidden Planet Tempest parallels? Someone mentioned that that was, it was based on, that was Graham? I've actually, I don't know the, I don't know which story the pentampus refers to. I would have to be given a refresher. Spott and I rated you, but it didn't show up as a raid. Oh no, thanks for the raid gang. Diet thug, it was good. It was good, but the reaction of them seeing the grow reminded of high school boys. Yeah, and that to me threw me off. That to me was, that was the only part that really didn't stand the test of time, right? It was like little 13 spoiled boys. Gee, it was very weird, right? But it was 1950s. And if you were able to somehow modify that, that you wouldn't, you wouldn't by the way. But if that was filmed now, everything with that movie would be identical, except that interaction between the astronauts and the daughter. Yeah, hardcore irony and upgrade are great films, okay? Recommend them to us Lark in our discord. Recommend them to us in our discord. I like it a lot, Spiderman. Yeah, me too. Upgrade looks cool. Upgrade, that's the one, I saw that one. That's the one. Yeah, the upgrade I've seen. That's the one where the guy, should I give spoilers? I'm going to give spoilers gang. If you want to listen to this, don't listen to this. That's the one where the AI takes over control of the creator and fools, hires out the, what do you call it, the assassin, right? And he plays a trick out of our, that was a really good movie actually. The robot suite was one of the most expensive props of his time. Really? The robot suit was one of the most expensive props of his time. Excellent. Excellent for a sci-fi movie of the 19th. Excellent. Excellent. Yes, the father and daughter connection. Okay, the father and daughter collection. Grab. Making the glass dome for the head would have been extremely time consuming and difficult. Okay, okay. Never thought about that. Oh, Tempest from Shakespeare. Yeah, yeah. Who mentioned that? Oh, yeah. When I read the description, Cheryl, I said Shakespeare. It didn't make sense to me. And then Graham, I think, mentioned that was based on Tempest from Shakespeare. Strawberry runner. Total recall is amazing, in my opinion. Shout out, three boob alien lady. And I can't, I swear, I've seen the play Tempest and I've, like, during a Shakespeare festival, but I can't remember the story arc on it. I bring that. Have you ever seen Life of Pi? Yeah. One of my favorite. Life of Pi. I think so, maybe. Gang, if you got movie recommendations, recommend them on Monday. We're doing a movie recommendation video, right? Lark Barko. Absolutely. Total recall going on 30 years. Very relevant. Very relevant. Their interaction cracked me up. So quirky. So kooky. Yeah. The, what do you call it? The daughter of the astronauts. It was like, what is going on? I personally couldn't wait until that interaction moved on to the sci-fi aspect of things. Such a peaceful background. Emily, how are you doing? Oh, my God. I love the background tonight and the relaxing rain. Yeah, you can hear the rain. Yeah. Yeah. It's nice. It's going to be raining for the next few days. Looking forward to it actually. Graham, I wouldn't make the movie recommendation stream. Can I have a write in vote? What do you put it up for us on discord? But what's your, what's your vote? You can't, if no one recommends it, Graham, we can't put it in for you. You have to be there. I think that's a rule that we put in. So, however, if, which movie is it that you want, someone else might recommend it. So they'll use their vote to recommend your movie. Yeah, that's rain. My dinner with Andre. You recommended that last time. I didn't go far. I voted for it doing one of the rounds. My dinner with Andre. I did. Yeah, you did. I voted for it once, but it didn't go up too high. Okay. My dinner with Andre. We'll see if someone remembers to recommend it. Emily, I'm doing well. Just trying to sleep, but snoring mad next to me. I love Swami here. Roll them over. Hold their nose. It's a Spider-Man repeat. Haha. All the God says. Any movie recommend, we're doing a movie recommendations on Monday. We're doing a movie recommendations on Monday. Should we go to the next movie gang? We're about 30 minutes in. Next movie is 1970s El Topo. Any final words anyone has to say about Forbidden Planet? Aside from, for sure, check out the soundtrack gang. Supposedly from what we've been told, it's revolutionary. Revolutionary, right? So I actually wouldn't mind listening to the soundtrack just by itself, just to see where it goes, right? El Topo. He's got the vomit going on. Check it out for sure. Okay, Craig. Thank you for the info, by the way, gang. Let's take down Forbidden Planet. For anyone who hasn't seen Forbidden Planet, check it out. Larkbark, 100%. For anyone who hasn't seen Forbidden Planet, check it out. If not for anything else other than the historical significance of that movie. A really, really important movie for his time. Gang El Topo, 1970. One of the classic psychedelic, psychedelic movies, right? Directed by Alejandro Jodłowski. Okay, I'm sorry for a pronunciation. Horrendous. Horrendous. Okay. Then he was the main actor in it as well. So he was starring in it as well. Okay. And I'm just checking this out. And his son was his brother. A Topo's son. And El Topo means the mole in Spanish. Okay. So it was, it needs to be experienced, in my opinion. Okay. It needs to be experienced. Crack. El Topo is just such a legendary flick. When I finally saw it, it all those years ago, I liked it, but it didn't blow me away. Holy Mountain, Fando, unless those two blew my mind. Yeah. Holy Mountain, brilliant. I haven't seen Fando unless. I need to see those. But Holy Mountain, wow, wow, wow. I think El Topo was more digestible for the first exposure to Dorowski. I can't pronounce his name. I'm the director of this movie. But Holy Mountain, what an insane psychedelic journey that is. Elder God's favorite movie Cheryl says. Its first DVD release wasn't until 19, 2007. Serious? 2007? Thank God for the pirate bay. Right. Elder God. I have to come clean. I couldn't find El Topo except in Spanish with no subtitles. So I had to just watch a review to fill in the gaps. Oh, are you serious, Elder God? Oh, it's, but you don't speak Spanish, right? You speak multiple languages, but I don't think Spanish is one of them. There's a deep meaning there. There's a whole story arc of the boy becoming a man. And it's all looped together. And it's just, there's supposed to be lots of deep meaning behind it and stuff like this. And I think you can just take anything from it. It is literally a pure artistic movie in both the, what do you call it, bad and the good, right? Some people say, oh, it's an art film. And it is an art film, but it is a brutal art film. And for the budget, the budget they must have had for this must have been like nothing, nothing. There's a comic out now, Son of El Topo, written by Dorowski. Haven't read it yet, but I like to give it a shot. Yeah, I saw it. I almost ordered it, but I haven't ordered it yet. After watching El Topo again, I think I might order it. I think I might try to get my hands on it. Elder God, not Spanish. I saw a lot of religious connections. Huge. Amen. If you want to go religious with the director of this, you got to go to Holy Mountain, but huge religious overtones. And that's related to the, I believe he's Spanish, right? He must be Spanish. I think I was mistaken last time of what nationality he was, but, oh, he's Chilean. Sorry, Chilean, right? So South America like crazy influenced by Catholic Catholicism, right? So it's insane down there, the South American culture and religion and the programming down there. So there is tremendous amount, lots of religion all through his movies. Yeah. Yeah. Holy Mountain is insane. Like, like really, I haven't seen Holy Mountain for a long time. I actually wouldn't mind watching it again. Personally. And Elder God, if it comes up in our streams that it's part of our movies, must watch, you have to watch it. Have you seen Tusk? That is a lot. No, I haven't seen Tusk yet. I've seen parts of it. I've never seen the whole thing that I heard is absolutely amazing as well. Even the spanking with the cactus, but I was too busy laughing. The sexual overtone in this thing was insane as well, right? The religious aspect of it, the sexual overtone of it, the breaking of taboos and whatnot, the lack of dialogue even, right? The imagery, the captain in the bed stretching and getting jazzed up. It was very well done, very well done. I rewatch Holy Mountain last year again, and it was incredible crack. I bet, I bet, I agree Chih-chou. Breaking of taboos is a big one. Breaking of taboos is a big one. He did, like, that's one of the things, especially in 1970s. Just imagine going to the movie theater to watch that, right? There were certain groundbreaking movies that came out during the flood of garbage that was coming out in the theaters during those times, right? El Topo would have been one, especially coming from South America. The edits were so rough and neat, Cheryl. I kept thinking there must be a reason for keeping it that way, other than the add to the feeling of confusion. I think it was there was stain within budget. I think it was just budget constraints. I think it was just budget constraints. Elder God's suicide by castration was a bit nasty. You mean execution by castration? Oh, suicide, yeah. Punishment castration, suicide castrated. And the whole male-female interaction and the conflict, it's just groundbreaking, really groundbreaking. How long did it take for them to shoot it? I think it was pretty much an art collective of them that made it. I might be wrong, though. That's the feel I got from it. Like, the set was the desert. The most expensive thing would have been breaking, the most dangerous, I guess, would have been tumbling the old building. And I'm pretty sure they didn't get any license or anything. They just found an old building that they broke apart, a little shed thing. Elder God, bean sex was so hilarious. Bean sex, bean sex. I can't remember now what the bean sex. The monks with the soldiers, the chaos soldiers grabbing the boy monks and like the link-up with, and take this into consideration. This was in the 1970s, right? And the message of young boys and religion and abuse and it was, like, if you put it into the time period, it was, wow. Well, he's been a silhouette on the ground. Emily, okay, so I want to watch this now, but at the same time, I'm scared because of what Elder God said. Emily, it is, it's underground. It's underground that has become to be recognized as one of the most important movies for its time, right? And after the fact as well, right? So, it's very unique. Go into it with the feeling that you're about to enter, just go through a psychedelic journey, right? That would be my take. For me, I have, I don't know, this would have been probably the fourth time I've seen it and I just watched it two nights ago and I was just chilling with it, right? I have experienced this movie from the realm of anthogens with psilocybin, fungi, okay? Heroic, almost a heroic dose in El Topo and from the realm of the chemicals with LSD, pretty serious and El Topo and with non-influenced or whatever, it is brilliant on all fronts, okay? If you can handle your heart going on a journey, the realm of anthogens and El Topo will take you to some scary places. Everything was better in the 70s art-wise, so adventurous, so adventurous, right? They really broke taboos and they did it without, with, they weren't seeking material wealth, they were, they were, they wanted to rattle the cages, right? Which I think we're starting to see right now happening in our societies where people are telling big money to go f itself, they're gonna make a statement and they're gonna make it flat right in your face as hard as they can, right? I love the dark night rises moment. Uh, oh from the, when they went into the, I think the one you're talking about, when they went into the, the cave, is that the one? At which moment? There was a few of them. It's a man with a very singular vision doing what he wants to do. It's incredible with that in mind. You are really getting into another human being's brain. Yeah, in far, as far as the director goes, he had a vision, something he wanted to create and he did it. He directed it, he wrote it, he started it, he brought in his brother to start it as well, right? So he wanted to get it done and he got it done. I would, I, you know what, I haven't looked to see what the budget on this was. I wonder if, I wonder, sometimes Wiki has the budget, a budget of one million in 1970. Okay, so I, you know, take anything from Wikipedia with a grain of salt. It says the country of origin was Mexico, languages of Spanish. So the director was Chilean, born in Chile, but he shot it in Mexico, right? Okay, he shot it in Mexico. He's Chilean, French, the director actually. So he did it with a budget of one million dollars, which is pretty damn cheap. I think anyway, 1970s, if you consider what some of the movies Hollywood was putting out, how much they cost, they must have cost, right? I will keep that in mind. It's weird, but not as graphic as modern films. Yeah, not as, it's, yeah, it's very cartoonish in terms of graphic goes, right? But in terms of acting goes, it's very impactful, right? So the, the special effects are childish at best, right? Like, compared to now, like someone in high school making the special effects, but the impact, the emotion put into the acting and the dialogue and the plays and it was very intense, very intense. It was his son in it with him. Oh, his son in it with him, not his brother. Okay, his son in it with him. The ending was a little too close to fact for me though. Yes, the cave climb. Yeah, indeed. Oh my god, the dark night moment. Emily, I'm not good with graphic films, to be honest, and I appreciate that, Cheryl. Not good. Yeah, this doesn't, you don't see huge gore or anything. The only gore part you see is when they're going through the town where there's a massacre. And the massacre is not, it's people lying around with blood, right? The only gore you see is horses that, with entrails and stuff, and I'm hoping that was just, I don't know, it was 1970 or I shot in Mexico, so who knows what it was. I was born on an important Chilean date and I have a Chilean animal as a pet. I should visit Chile. Oh my god, you should visit Chile. Fun. As far as the soundtrack goes, gang, who made the soundtrack? Do you guys know the soundtrack on this? It looks like, I'm just, at least they're in there. Attempted to make a sequel to El Topo, nice teaser poster, but apparently no shooting was actually done, the original working. The son of El Topo was changed sometime between, to Abel Cain. I don't know what Abel Cain is. Stalled film, okay. So the son of El Topo would be the continuation of El Topo. Don Cherry, I think, for soundtrack. Don Cherry. I don't know. Have you watched the imitation game, Chicho? Imitation game, which I highly recommended. Miro, imitation game. I don't remember, I know the name, but I haven't seen it. And he also helped to put in the soundtrack together, very cool. Sorry, I was busy with my Google translate. Jazz musician. He played with Ornette Coleman and others, really. So that soundtrack would be, I know it stood out, but it wasn't as trippy psychedelic as Forbidden Planet. He had very Eastern influence on his music. Now I gotta check out the soundtrack for El Topo. El Topo. Nina Cherry is his daughter. Nina Cherry, I don't know Nina Cherry. Now I gotta look this up. Oh, very cool. Oh, I know this. She does some amazing hip hop, right? I think she does some amazing hip hop. I've heard some of her tracks. Some of her videos I saw, they're very political, and I believe. Miro, I enjoyed a pop singer from 1990s. Singer 1990s. Seven seconds. 1990s, okay. I don't know her music too well, to be honest, Chicho. Okay, crack. I've seen her, but I can't place it. I can't place it. I gotta get back into soundtracks. Some amazing soundtrack. By the way, one of the greatest soundtracks ever is the mission. Phenomenal soundtrack. And what do you call that? The Passion of Christ. Buffalo Stats. You know Marciano on the mission? Mm-hmm. So good. So good. I used to listen to that album so much. Or tape, I guess. Amazing soundtrack. You know Marciano? Moreconi, I think. Moreconi, I can't read. You know. He did some amazing soundtracks. And I think the mission would have been one of his greatest. One, anyway. One of his greatest. Any final words regarding El Topo again? Any final words regarding El Topo? While I munch away on my lemon meringue pie? Yo, Chicho, vocalist. How are you doing? Welcome, welcome. We've covered a couple of movies so far. Hey, you know what? Big bites of lemon meringue pie. Elder God. One thing about El Topo, I think some of the acting was real. The acting was fantastic. Really. I think not all of them, but the key players, they did a, it was very passionate. To me, it was more like a play, watching a play. Elder God, you still hate it as much as you did before this discussion? He claims that one scene in particular was real, but that might have been a little bit of a lie on his part to court controversy. Which scene was that crack? I'm getting sleepy and I may fall asleep soon, Emily says. So calming. Awesome. I hope you have fantastic dreams, Emily. You're eating cake again? I am eating cake again. Would I buy the lemon meringue pie? It's like this big. So we have it for like three, four, five days. It doesn't last more than five days. It was so much better than I thought it would be, Cheryl says. I may venture into Holy Mountain. We'll see. Okay, Cheryl, I'm actually thinking about recommending Holy Mountain on the next one. So Elder God, I mean real, real, real, real. Okay. Okay. According to crack, well, according to the director son, there was one seal that was real, real. I hesitate to say which scene she show. Have a read of wiki. Okay. Can you let us know on discord? That way I don't have to go through all wiki page. I had your rain about 10 hours ago. Elder God, I'm going to recommend it as well. Cheecho. Awesome. Mondays, you said Monday crack. I'll vote it up. Awesome. Let's fill the, fill the recommendation with Doroski's movies. Get elder God, elder God, you're going to have no choice. You're going to have to wash Tusk Holy Mountain and some of the other ones as well. We are right on schedule. Awesome. Awesome. Gang, should we go on to the next movie? The next movie, the next movie. Let's take El Topo down. The mole. Let's take the mole down and bring on the breakfast club. Breakfast club. I'll give you my opinion. I was hesitant to watch the breakfast club again, right? Because I seen it a long time ago. I wasn't sure if it was going to stand the test of time. I had good memories of the breakfast club and I didn't want that ruined because sometimes I've watched older movies that I really liked and then I watched them. I go, oh man, that was not good at all. Right? Breakfast club. It was seriously heavy at certain times, seriously. Oh my God, over the top at certain times. But what really made me appreciate breakfast club was the humor in it. Oh my God. There were parts in there where I was laughing my ass off, especially the geeky kid and the dandruff girl. Question, which one was you at school to all? I was all of them. Like I didn't do the click thing. I like the 90s vibe of this movie. It was 1980s, 1985, 1980s feel. And the director, the director did Ferris Bueller's Day Off and he did some of the other classic movies. I've actually believed, I've seen all the movies the director directed. His name is John Hughes, okay? And here's the movies that John Hughes has directed, right? According to IMDb anyway. He's written the whole bunch, but directed only eight movies. 16 candles, which I've seen. Breakfast club. Weird science seen it. Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Plains, Trains and Honorary Beals. Hilarious movie. She's having a baby seen it. Uncle Buck. Hilarious movie. Curly suit. Not so good. Those are the only eight movies that he's directed. Okay? John Hughes. I'm not sure if you guys have seen his movies, but I liked it. I liked it. Thank you for whoever recommended it. I would have never watched it again if people hadn't recommended it. Crack. It is so good. How many times have I watched that in my life? I have no idea. Such a great movie about these outsiders. Yeah. And insiders, right? Elder God. Allison, Brian, Andrew, Claire, John. Nice. This is Elder God. Emily, yeah. I'll see you get that too. I enjoy different movies as a teen. Some just do not feel the same anymore. Yeah, some don't. Diet thought, oh man, I missed the El Topo discussion. Oh, diet. You missed it. You can drop in whatever you want right now, but it was a good discussion. Cheryl, I love how much it's changed for me from first watch as a teenager, 20s, 30s, and now love it. You love it. Did you love it every time? 16 candles was funnier. 16 candles I thought was fantastic too. Oh, it's 999 nice. Elder God, I have seen them all. Have you seen them all too? Nice. You got soft hearts, right? Hollywood fish. The tray show was smoking tonight. Hope you check it out. I totally forgot about it. Hollywood fish out. Check it out. Oh, I totally forgot about it. Yeah, dang it. Dang it. Should I set up a reminder? Oh, it's 999. What about crazy, crazy movies? A crazy movies? Tombstone was pretty crazy. The next movie we're going to talk about was pretty crazy. El Topo was crazy. El Topo was insane. Diet thought, if El Topo was written today, 80% of the script would be written in emojis. And it wouldn't be distributed. It wouldn't have been funded. It would have been shelved. It would have been shelved if Hollywood was involved in it. Just consider, Holy Mountain was made in the early 1970s. And then you had Passion of Christ and people were freaking the f out with Passion of Christ. And then you have Holy Mountain. Take it to another level. And Holy Mountain came how many decades, a couple of decades before Passion of Christ, right? Okay, in my opinion, Breakfast Club was about peer pressure, the family dynamics, and how to escape it through group thinking. Possibly. I thought the thief guy, what was his name? John? Andrew? Brian? No, not Brian. Andrew. John, I think. The kid with issues, I think he was a real dick. And he did a pretty good job being a real a-hole, right? What up? You just didn't like that kid. Cheryl loved it every time Cheryl says, but tuned into different aspects and connections. As my life perspective changed, I think the viewer's self perception is a huge alt character in this movie. Yeah, you know what? I, for me, I found the Bender, Elder God says. It was made in 1970. Yeah, El Topo 1970. Absolutely, Cheryl Crack says. Yeah, well said. What do you call it? One of the things about this movie was the portrayal of the teacher and the custodian, the janitor, the wise wizard that's been around, the one who hung around too long, lost his way, looking at these kids as enemies instead of kids, right? It was a good movie. It was a good movie. The sexual overtone in this was over the top. Holy cow. Whoa. Whoa. It was intense, right? There was a few parts where I was like, right? Like this movie made now, it wouldn't be made. They'd be politically crack people that would probably boycott this movie, right? Horny teenagers crack. Yeah, these kids turned me, turned on me. These kids turned on me under the table, under the table incidents. And when he came out and he was leaning over Molly, the redheaded girl, and the way that interaction when he was telling her what she would do in a sexual, it was like, Oh my God, that's like, that's on the, that's abuse, verbal abuse, right? Like I can't see that even being, and this was, this was mainstream Hollywood movie. There's no way mainstream Hollywood movie would ever put out anything like that right now. I can't see a teen movie on that level. I haven't seen any teen movies on the, you know, that's come out. I don't think so in the last 10 years or 15 years, 20 years, 15 years. This was the first watch where I emphasized with the principle. It was an odd feeling, Gerald says. He was a dick. He was, he was such a clown. He was just there for the money of it, right? But yeah, you sympathize with them. You did. I got to watch this one again. Crack. You haven't seen it? Yeah. It's worth it. Man, the funny, like I'll give you one spoiler. One of the things that cracked me up where the black haired girl was telling her story and stuff like this about going to see a therapist and stuff like this. And Molly, the redheaded girl goes, Oh, you did that. Oh, you did that. What are you crazy? And the geeky kid goes, she's, Oh, I can't give you the punchline. Of course she's crazy. Close the door. Let's get the prom queen impregnated. I know. Oh my God. 2020, that's plan. Like it was crazy. Like really, it was like, I was watching that. I was like, don't remember having this feeling of discomfort in previous viewings. And I haven't seen this for at least 20 years now, right? It was like a serious discomfort feeling. And then they would throw humor in there and you would start laughing. And then the discomfort scene, another uncomfortable scene would come in and then letting loose scenes. So it took you all over the place. I found it interesting. I found it very well done. More, more so than I thought. And threatening a pupil in the cupboard, you locked them in. Insane. Right now, the kid would just yell something and the teacher would be fired, put on suspension. How the tables have turned, right? Like now, the teachers are afraid of the kids back then. The kids were afraid of the teachers. The rain is going to knock me out. It's Cheryl's sweet dreams. It drink sounds good right about now. Diet thug. Indeed. Salute, salut. Very fun. Very fun. And by the way, gang, all the directors for all these movies except El Topo, two of them died in their 50s. One of them died in their 60s and the El Topo director is still alive. Like John Hughes died when it was like 56 or something. The director of this movie. I believe so anyway. He died when it was 59. He died when it was 59, which is fairly young. So I found out weird as well. We picked mostly directors, three quarters directors that are dead. Fun. It was a very pleasant surprise, Breakfast Club. Pleasant surprise, lemon rind pie and rain. And there was a lot of slang used today in the movie, which meant other things in 1985. Yeah, some I can't say here. Yeah, there were some things that like really there was a few discomforting moments in Breakfast Club as a few phenomenal moments when they're puff puff and they're sitting around talking and the geeky kid and the bad kid and the redheaded girl and they're talking and the geeky kid was so funny. So funny. When he puts up in hand to give a to give a high five, he goes boom when he falls over. The slapstick aspect of it was awesome. I always loved the song playing in the end in Breakfast Club. Yeah, the soundtrack was great, by the way. The soundtrack was great. I'm almost taking an old pie down. Neo Maxi Zoom, do we be? I have no idea what that means. Cheryl. Suicide by Flaregun. Difficult plan. Difficult plan. And he was so emotional about it. Found the gun and everyone was like freaking out. And the scene just before that with Emilio Esteban, Charlie Sheen's younger son, when he was telling his story, man, that was pretty intense. That was pretty intense. That was beautifully done, by the way. That was beautifully done. It had a certain amount of depth. Tapping buns together. Yeah, taping buns together. Yeah. And the way he said that just seeing the father of the other kid that has to see their son go through this and he turned around and said, how can you apologize for that? You can't. Like, and that character would have had to carry that, right? Win, win. And tell you the truth, I've known people like that, right? That, yeah, it was crazy. Son of a bitch. Son of a bitch. So thumbs up gang. So far, which by the way, so far, which movie was, well, we'll talk about it afterwards. I want to find out which movie surprised you the most. The edgy. I always liked Bender describing Christmas at his house. Smoke up Johnny, another banner, banner year in the Bender house. Grabbing his collar, right? Grabbing his collar. Good movie. Very good movie. For me, Breakfast Club surprised me most because I wasn't expecting that much from it since I hadn't seen it for a long time. And the other movies I remembered well and enjoyed them very much, enjoyed them very much. Gang, should we go to the fourth movie, the last movie? I want to have a little bit of water. I'm glad the people downstairs were partying, so I moved over here. It's really nice here. We've got the skylight, you've got the rain hitting, we hear it better. Elder God, I watched it over 200 times. The witch scene, that scene though. Diet thug, let's do it. And I always find something new with Tombstone. Are we going with Tombstone or Breakfast Club Elder God? Which one? Oh no, Mandalorian Tombstone. Breakfast Club, yeah. I haven't seen it 200 times. I've seen it, this would have been probably my fifth time or something. Tombstone. What a fantastic movie. What a fantastic tribute to Spaghetti Westerns. What a fantastic movie. Really. And Val Kilmer, what an amazing job. Without him, this movie wouldn't have been mediocre at best. With him, fantastic. And Kurt Russell relationship to me, that relationship was gold. It was everything. Tombstone is my dad's favorite movie. He loves Kurt Russell as wider in it. Yeah, the edgy, fantastic. Can we watch a movie on there? On where? We don't watch these movies together. Crack. I've only seen Tombstone once and can't remember much of anything from it. Crack, watch it again. Okay. I've seen, this is probably my third time watching Tombstone. Third or fourth time watching Tombstone. It did not disappoint. Okay. Val Kilmer and Kurt Russell's relationship with me was everything in this. 1993. I'm your Huckleberry. Yeah, I'm your Huckleberry. Fantastic. Fantastic. What a badass. The old, like, you know, when people say who's someone, you know, named someone the the biggest badasses in movies. I'm surprised. Val Kilmer's character, Doc Holiday, doesn't come up in Tombstone. One of the greatest badasses ever in movie history. I'm your Huckleberry. Regarding Val Kilmer, 100% agree, 100%. You're so drunk, you're seeing double. See? Well, I got two guns here for you. One for each of each of you guys. So good. So good, edgy. So good, edgy. And man, one of the greatest scenes ever when they're going, by the way, spoilers, of course, when, when they're going with Wyter, they're tracking down these people and stuff like this. And there's four of them. And Wyter just pulled a miracle out of his ass, right? And one of the, and they're resting. And one of these people turns to Val Kilmer and says, why are you here? He goes, he's my friend. And one of the other guys says, I got a lot of friends. And then Val Kilmer says, I don't. I love the interaction in Latin and the cup pistol moment. Latin and the cup pistol. Oh yeah, that's right in the bar where the guy does his, the gangster does his tricks with his gun. Everyone's like, oh, Val Kilmer brings out his cup. Phenomenal. You were at the edge of your seat going, what is he going to do? What's going to happen? Like you knew he wasn't going to walk away. And then he does the cop. You've called down the thunder. Well, now you've got it. Diet thug. That was a great scene. Phenomenal scene. And gang, if you don't know what we're talking about, you're missing out one of the greatest scenes in movie history, really. And the sets were amazing. And the shooting was amazing. The sense of the movie was phenomenal. Phenomenal. Have you seen anything like that? I haven't even heard about anything like that. That was when they were going in the river with Kurt Russell just going crazy. Have you ever seen anything like that? I haven't heard of anything like that. Phenomenal. Really good. It was a spaghetti Western with a, and by the way, the director is Italian or was Italian. I believe he died when it was like 56 years old. Who's the director? I got a, uh, Greg P Cosmatos and Kevin Jar. Okay. Written by Kevin Jar. Great P Cosmatos. He died when he was 64. Sorry. 64. And I'm not sure if Kevin Jar is still alive. Kevin Jar, Kevin Jar. Kevin Jar died when he was 56. Jar, Kevin Jar died when he was 56. And he was an American director. Oh, that's why he had the American field. And, uh, George P Cosmatos was Tuscany, Italy. So it was a collaboration between Italian and American. So that's interesting. Tombstone was, was good as entertainment, but historically accurate. It doesn't know. I don't expect anything from Hollywood to be historically accurate spiritual answers. Like Wyatt Irr wasn't a nice guy, right? From what I understand. He wasn't a nice guy. And the okay corral, the way it went down, uh, it was a massacre. Uh, and this was a massacre as well, I believe, right? But I don't think anybody was, uh, was sad about killing anybody else, but we weren't there, right? Elder God. I love the hidden, uh, gay, yeah, could have been relationship between two characters, very rare in the 1990s. Yeah. He was a fairly self-serving guy, as were his brothers. Yeah. Yeah. They weren't nice guys. And Doc Holiday was straight out from what I understand, murderer. So, and he was portrayed that way here. He was a straight out murderer, but they showed him as someone who was little, lovey-dovey and stuff like this, like cuddly to a certain degree. And he only killed people that deserved killing. But from what I know of history, Doc Holiday was just a ruthless murderer, right? Elder God. Many of the characters were in the wrong places during the okay corral battle. Doc was a dangerous man. Doc was a dangerous man from everything that I, in the past I looked into at Doc Holiday, but Val Kilmore, it was, it's lower basically. I think it's Hollywood style based on a true story. And that's the only thing that is true from that story that they're bringing in the characters, the bad guys, or the good guys, and the good guys, or the bad guys, and the situation is totally flipped around and whatnot. So it's interesting. Salute. Salute. Spiritual answer, I think I read of Doc that he was likely the most prolific killer of the group at the corral. I think that's what they portrayed in Tombstone as well, didn't they? I think Doc Holiday took out most of them. One of them, he just went and it was pretty brutal. How long it took them to die, which was actually, from what I understand, very accurate of the time. During those times, they didn't really have exploding bullets and whatnot and calibers were different. When you got shot, you could still continue unless you got shot in the spine, took you out and whatnot. So I think that aspect of it was great where it took a few bullets to take people down. And one thing I know of Western from what I looked in the history long time ago is you rarely ever had equal, you know, mano a mano, they stand and they kill each other. Usually it was someone shooting someone else in the back or the side or surprising them. Oh my god, quote, does that mean we can't be friends anymore? If I thought we were, we weren't friends, I don't think I could take it, kills his friend. Fun, Doc Holiday, Doc Holiday. Great movie. It was a fun movie. And by the way, gang, great selection. Like, we had totally different movies in large part, right? Very well done. So by the way, gang, okay question, which movie were you disappointed with? And which movie surprised you the most that you really were glad you saw it? Really nice varied selection, for sure. Yeah, spiritual answers. A lot of those law men in the West were former and present criminals, left law enforcement to form a posse who hunted his enemies down and murdered them. And they try to portray this as a valiant thing that they were doing in Tombstone, where they were hunting down, what do you call it? The really bad guys. But you know, it's Hollywood, right? I love the actress who played Wyatt's wife. Very good acting, very good acting, very good acting. And the girl that Wyatt fell for, she made it big in the TV series that came out, MASH, that was sort of a MASH thing that was a remake of the original MASH. I don't know if they called it MASH. It was like a doctor on the front lines of war. I forget what it was called. Spiritual answers. The black breakfast club looking back on it is disappointingly silly. Not even as good as my teen self-remembered laugh. Okay, spiritual answers. For me, I found it better. China Beach, Cheryl. Yeah, did you used to watch China Beach, Cheryl? I used to watch China Beach. I liked it. It was fun. Yeah, thumbs up. Thumbs up. I'm a huge MASH person. By the way, gang, there's some amazing TV series that came out in the 1970s, which are absolutely brilliant. Barney, not Barney the Barney, but the police station one is fantastic. All in the family is fantastic. MASH is fantastic. My family fleet, Barney Miller, yeah, Barney Miller. My family freed a southern state after a shootout gone bad. It was not deemed fair and a bounty was placed on the family members by crooked sheriffs. Welcome to policing. It really hasn't changed much. Okay, it really hasn't changed much. Barney Miller was phenomenal. I, man, Barney Miller. I think I need to take a Bill Hicks break and watch Marathon Barney Miller. I love the reference to the Cowboys being the earliest form of organized crime. Yeah. Yeah. That was pretty cool actually. And man, they were ruthless. They were brutal. Damn. My folks watched Barney Miller all the time. They loved it as well. Yeah, crack. When I was a kid, I used to watch it. Awesome. Awesome. Awesome. Fish was the best character. Fish was awesome. They did a full-on tribute when he passed because the series, he passed during the, I think, second season of the series or something like this. Fish was awesome. You know what he was like? He was like Winnie the Pooh, the donkey, Igor. He was all depressed. He was like Winnie the Pooh's Igor. I think it's called Igor. I forget the character's name. The donkey. That's all depressing and stuff. I was mostly surprised by Tombstone. I remember watching it. Igor. Igor. Thank you, Cheryl. So Cheryl says, I was mostly surprised by Tombstone. I remember watching it. Within a few years of its release and not being impressed, but the human relationships are excellent. Yeah, the relationships were phenomenal, really. And Wyatt Urban, the girl, the actress, the relationship there was pretty good too. And as Elder God says, Wyatt Urban is wife. Just broken relationship. Eeyore, yes. Spiritual answers. Strawberry Rhino, organized crime had to be in China and Japan, much before the Western world. Also, the Sioux were a savage gang tribe that would ravage the land of many other natives. Yeah, there was pretty brutal tribes around, but I think the British Empire was pretty much one of the most brutal empires there ever was. So and they were a gang. Like the royal family is a gang. Like the royals are a gang, right? So I don't know if organized crime originally from China and Japan, I'm pretty sure organized crime has been around since humanity has been around, right? I'm pretty sure it was organized crime during the Greek period, right? Eeyore, these are, there's a guy we work with. That's the nickname we have. I gave him. Eeyore, oh no. He was, he was good at the Godfather. He was good in the Godfather, Mr. Hyde. He was great in the Godfather. Elder God. I love the use of red sashes to identify the members of the cowboys and the last cowboys dropping his sashes to save him from being killed. Yeah. And then he got killed later on. They announced, they said he got killed later on or something, right? Cheryl, I wish they would have either step some of the female characters back or develop them further. I know they weren't the focus, but they only hinted at their importance. Yeah. Yeah, I agree, Cheryl. I wonder if there was any major scenes that they were left on the cutting room floor, right? Because Tombstone was two and a half hours long or something, wasn't it? And it's weird. Some movies, the movie industry has gone through periods where there was a period where most movies were making an hour and a half. That way they could show them on TV to make it two hours and cut it with commercials, and then some directors would break things, break the mold and do two-hour movies and stuff like this. I really like the Deadwood series. Very abruptly ended and the film meant, a film meant to close it out years later, was it done? Oh, that's too bad. I heard Deadwood was supposed to be really good. And I think they said first example of organized crime in America. Oh, in America? Yeah. I guess, would it be? No, the Cowboys came long after New York was established. Actually, during that time when New York was established, when they first landed on the East Coast, there was no America. It was still a colony and stuff like this. So, America, maybe, maybe. Whatever happened in days of 86 minute movies, those were days, yeah, crack. They had to put in commercials in the, what do you call it, for TV, make room for them. Strawberry right now. I ate a tombstone pizza after craving my tombstone, craving my tombstone while watching the tombstone stone. The rain is picking up hard. Spiritual answers. Unfortunately, most Americans no longer have the attention span for that. Oh, I think most people do. I think that's why TV series are such a huge hit right now because they're not one movie. People are doing marathons and when they release like 13 episodes of the season, they watch the whole thing because they have a longer attention span. I think it's a fallacy that most people have a short attention span. I think we are growing to have a longer attention span for what's really important in our lives. Maybe an amazing show or not, right? Maybe an amazing show or not. Fun gang, fun. For me, I think Breakfast Club surprised me the most because I wasn't expecting too much from it and I really enjoyed it. Tell that to millennials. Yeah, unfortunately, some millennials, some of the new generation, have been cheated by corporations and our education system and I think it's up to us to try to provide something else for my generation anyway. Yes, Bill Paxton was killed indirectly by Michael Bain who were both killed by a terminator played by Arnie. By the way, Bill Paxton is a fantastic actor, phenomenal actor. The Breakfast Club was the best movie of the group. Strawberry, I know. I'm glad you liked. 86 minutes long, that's prior for short attention spans. Everything these days seems to be two hours plus. I personally like the two hours plus tell you the truth. For me, the best movie of the lot, I don't know, they were all so different. They were all so different. Like Forbidden Planet, it's absolute classic. A must watch if you want science fiction and historical, see historical place in movies, right? El Topo, phenomenal ground breaker movie. Tombstone, great western, phenomenal western movie. And Breakfast Club, classic. There were some amazing actors in Tombstone, for sure spiritual answers, some good actors. Game over, man. Strawberry, I know. Crack. For me, it's about a concise, well thought out story. If you need three hours, chance or you could use an editor and a rewrite or release it in two parts, right Crack? Sometimes I like the two hour plus, don't get me wrong. Some movies, no, they shouldn't be two hours, right? But for example, Crack, Loader Rings, is a nine hour movie, right? Part one is three hours, part two is three hours, part three is three hours. The extended versions, right? And you needed that to tell that story. Some would say you needed longer. For me, Tombstone, Elder God Tombstone, cool. Chicho, remember Bill Paxton in Streets of Fire? Streets of Fire, what a great movie. I love Streets of Fire. I watched that recently, well not recently, I think like a couple of years ago, I watched it again. Fantastic. Streets of Fire and Warriors. Streets of Fire is, Warriors is better known. Streets of Fire is a little bit more underground. Yeah, that's epic for sure. Yeah, Streets of Fire is phenomenal. To be honest, Spiritual Answer says, if I never see a film with whole Molly Ringwald in it again, I'm okay with that. I liked her. See, don't watch 16 Candles. That's my next nomination, I think. Streets of Fire, I'll vote for it, Elder God. Streets of Fire, Streets of Fire. And what do you call it? Warriors would be fantastic to watch. Warriors is a great movie as well. Yeah, that's the kicker, right? Lord of Rings movies were incredibly abbreviated, so you could have taken, you could have, Lord of Rings could have been a 20-hour trilogy, right? I always laugh when I think of Bill Paxton as Chet in Weird Science. Was he in Weird Science? I can't remember. There was one movie, there's a couple of movie plays, it's like, they're dark, it's like, oh, Disagree Molly is a timeless, hell, the strawberry. Elder God, okay. Best Actor Award for all four movies goes to, for me, Val Kilmore without no competition. Val Kilmore and Tombstone. The Chichonian Award for Best Actor goes to Val Kilmore. That's my vote. But Lord of Rings is a pretty specific example though. It is an epic tale for sure, but not every story needs to be an epic tale. Agreed. Like for example, Dune should be a five-hour movie. Strawberry, Rhino, Val Kilmore's best movie in the door movie. Oh yeah, Val Kilmore in the doors was fantastic. Dune is going to be two parts, nice, unpumped, me too. No, Val's best in, real genius, real, I don't know real genius. The TV miniseries of Dune was great. Actually, crack, you've seen it? I saw it too. Fantastic. I really liked it. I really liked it. Very Shakespearean. Val Kilmore can be my actor wingman anytime. Maybe during the time when he didn't do the Marlon Brando one. Like, I don't know what happened to Val Kilmore. I haven't seen him in anything for a while. TV miniseries is pretty good. Baby James McCoy, McCoy. Yes, his line, I'm your Huckleberry, is wildly known in news. Iceman. That was in, what was that movie called? That was with Al Pacino. Heat, I think, wasn't it? Iceman? Crack, did you see the Dune documentary? I've seen half of it. Man, very unfortunate that they didn't, wow, you know what? I like the Dune movie, but I like to see his version of it as well. That is on my list now. Cheryl, real genius. I've not thought about that in years. I can't remember what movie that is. Drop too much acid. Maybe not enough. So much fun. It is so good, Cheryl. Can I say something? I love him in The Saint. The Saint, ah, funny. He was a thief in The Saint, wasn't he? Kebabs, Chico, would you say you're more left leaning? I don't know. I don't know. I'm not bipolar, so I can't say left or right. I'm just, like, seriously, I have hundreds of hours of video out there. Pretty sure my beliefs are pretty much out in the open, what I consider our way of being should be. I love the bastardized Lynch version of Dune, as well as G. Choy and Crack. Give it to David Lynch. Very 80s. Perhaps not enough, actually. He needed some spice melange. Absolutely, absolutely, Cheryl says regarding spiritual answers. It was a punk scene in the 80s, and we could, we would watch Real Genius when we're smashed. Oh man, I gotta, someone linked this up in our Discord under film. I can't remember Real Genius. What is this thing? Okay, I gotta look this up, man. I already got my folders opened up. We haven't had any glitches, so hopefully we're not gonna have any glitches. Real Genius. Oh man, I know this movie. I didn't realize it was him. It is him. Oh my god, that is too funny. I gotta watch this again. I gotta watch this again, gang. Hilarious. Cababs. I don't hold any opinion when it comes to politics. I'm a centralist. Can't be bothered for all the stress that comes with defending an opinion. Cababs. Cababs. By the way, politics and politics streams. There was one dude in it who lived in a wall or something. In Real Genius. I gotta watch this again. I don't remember it at all. I've seen it though. The dude Harkonnen spitting on the girl in the lynch dune is the funniest and grossest part. The Harkonnen he did good on when he pulls the plug of the heart of the of the slave and just bays in the dark blood. It was it just laughs and goes, floats up. The saint. Was he an assassin? Am I a missing plus? The saint was, I think it was, wasn't a thief or something? Or am I six? Am I six or something like this? Oh shit. It's movie club, my bad. Yeah, I kept up. It's movie club. Oh my god, one more thing about the breakfast club. There was supposed to be a movie based on the group meeting in the future, but John Hughes hated Judd in the end, so he was canceled. Are you serious? Larius. Funny, funny. Judd, he slipped through the cracks, man. The guy, I don't think he made too much. He made some stuff, I guess. Crack. There was so much that lynch nailed in that. It's a shame it got taken away from him. Yeah, you know what? What do you mean taken away from him? Like people, there was a lot of hate for Dune movie. I don't know why I tell you the truth. I saw it in the theater when it came out, by the way. And I loved it. And then people would trash it. I'm like, what are you guys talking about? That's hilarious, Trevor says. Oh my god, he was a thief who worked for himself. Yeah, that's what I thought. Saint was a thief. A good classic sci-fi series is The Prisoner. Yeah, old school. 1950s The Prisoner, isn't it? Wow, Tollimus read that one. Judd and Boondock Saints too. Boondock Saints was fantastic. Boondock Saints was amazing. I think that might have been what happened with Val Kilmer. I've heard he may have been incredibly difficult to work with. Oh, really? That's unfortunate. He's a phenomenal actor, or he was a phenomenal actor. Fun gang. Should we call the stream? Should we call the stream gang? That was a nice little discussion. Nice discussion. These movie things are pretty sweet, man. Pick four movies to watch that ... Some of them we've never seen. Some of them we never watch again. Then you re-watch a new context and you would go, wow, he was a perfectionist, that's all that God says. Yeah, I don't know too much about him personally, but I know he was a phenomenal actor. That was a great chatter. One thanks. Yeah, you too, Crack. Darryl Stone. But have you seen the searchers? And if so, can you explain to me why it's not boring? Because I reckon it is. I don't know the searchers. Like all the great actors of history. Okay, wait. Like all of that. Freshness without being a ... Oh, hold on. Alada. Crack. Auto-mod zapped one of your things. Thanks, everyone. So much fun. So much fun. Breakfast club. No political and no political correctness. No, not at all. Can you be a perfectionist without being an asshole? Though I think possibly. Tombstone safe. Okay, cheers. Val Kilmore was probably last in a Ricky Jarvis comedy about a dwarf. Oh, really? And the other one I liked Val Kilmore in was what was that science fiction one that didn't go anywhere? Willow. Willow. Did you guys remember Willow? That was a fun movie. I was very disappointed that it was supposed to be a trilogy and they stopped. They didn't do anymore. Sorry I cursed. No worries, Crack. Willow had Val Kilmore. Yeah, Willow. Willow. Fun movie. It was a dwarf from Willow. Forbidden Planet. Very sexist. Very sexist. But 1950s gang. Gang. Willow. I forgot about that Cheryl. Watch it again. It was fun. It was an epic. It was good. If you have kids, you might enjoy it a lot. Oh, you do have kids. But other people, if you have kids, they'll enjoy it a lot. El Topo, WTF. How the God says. Gang, thanks for being here. If you want to know what all this is about, I'm on Patreon. Patreon.com forward slash chico. C-H-Y-S-C-H-O. Strawberry Rhino. Great minds think a lot. Willow is on Disney Plus. I'm on Patreon. If you want to follow this work, you can follow the work through Patreon. If you want to support this work, you can support this work through Patreon. And for those of you who are supporting this work through Patreon, thank you very much for your support. Okay, we are live streaming on Twitch.tv forward slash chico live, C-H-Y-C-H-O-L-I-V-E. If you want to participate in the chat, Twitch is where you want to be at. And gang, thank you for the follows. Thank you for the subs. And if you want, we've got two more days of streaming left. Tomorrow morning, we read a comic book, okay? Western comic book with aliens in it. Jack Kirby, Stanley, Dick Heirs. Can't go wrong, right? Tomorrow morning from 10am to 12pm, we're reading a comic book. And on Monday, we're picking four new movies to watch. So if you want to do movie recommendations, Monday, pop in and we'll pick four more movies. I do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on L.O.M.I.'s V.K. Parler Gap and Twitter. You can follow the work there and all the links will be in the description of this video. Dwarfism is what my Corgi has. Wait, wait, one. Yeah, that's a spiritual answer. You have a good night, Chicho. Thanks for the conversation. Always appreciate it. I appreciate you guys as well, man. Monday it is. Monday it is. Tombstone had no black actors. Didn't it? I can't remember. It was supposed to be Western place and it was a brand new town. So maybe that's the way it was. I'm going to go and gang and Chicho, enjoy your weekend. You as well, young Polax. Come for the horse race, if not for the movies. Ha, yeah, come for the horse race, if not for the movies. Cast your vote, right? Wolf of Wall Street is Dorfist. Three inches long, but what? Gang, the audio for this will be put on SoundCloud. SoundCloud.com for more slash Chicho. C-H-Y-C-H-O has a podcast. And the podcast, the autofiles should be available on your favorite podcasting platform, including Spotify and iTunes. And this live stream will be uploaded to both BitShoot and YouTube. And you can support this work through BitShoot and YouTube by subscribing, by following, by liking, by turning on notifications. And if you're on YouTube, you can join YouTube membership with a button there. Gang, thank you very much for being here. Mods, thank you for taking care of business. Tell them I'm coming, and hell's coming with me. Yes, great line to the clown. Bill Paxton is twister. Sweet dreams, gang, and good morning for those of you who are in the morning. Okay, and I'll see you guys in less than, ah, almost 12 hours. Bye everyone.