 You actually got me in the eye. Oh, sorry. You're actually the idiot. It's I'm Corbin. Nice. There's always done it with the other eye. Tooderecand. If you haven't seen Robin Williams' Popeye, you should because it's awfully great. It's one of the worst movies ever made and it's enjoyable because of it. I love that movie. Watch it. And Tooderecand. I get that a lot actually. People say I look like Popeye which is incredibly strange to me. Couldn't tell you. Yeah. Tooderecand. What are we doing Corbin Miles? We're making a trailer called Kedvi-Kedvi-Hawa. Kedvi-Hawa. There you go. I think it's Kedvi-Hawa. Kedvi-Hawa. Mala-Hala-Shakanlaka-Waka. Uh, anything else? Nope. Kendi, Tamil. No idea. Marathi. Don't know who's in it. I don't reckon it is anybody. All right. Here we go. Ranveer's in it. No. Yes but no. Here we go. I'm guessing. I'm guessing. I don't know what I'm guessing. I'm guessing it's South India somewhere. I think it is. I think it's South India. Here we go. Let's see. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... movies and then there's films. That looks like a film. You know, film festival, what has it? Did it garner any attention in film festivals? Because it feels like it is that. Yeah. Earthy, real, natural, a lot like Newton with no, you know, just long periods of just quiet walking and walking and thinking and being. All the acting looked really good. Wonderful. Wonderful. And and what's and then the subject matter. Climate change? Yeah, well yeah, the central element of that is that and I'll tell you what, I mean that's a whole other topic, but when it said we reading our books there were four seasons and now there's only two, I talk about that a lot here in LA. We've always kind of been that way. We really compared to the rest of the continental US. We only really have two seasons here as far as our temperature changes are concerned. We really don't. I've heard our weather's a lot like Mumbai and that we have, you know, our summers are hot, but our winters are not cold. Our winters are like the East Coast's fall. Yeah. But yeah. 60 degrees, basically. Yeah, it's 60 degrees Fahrenheit. It'll get late at night. It'll get cold here. It'll drop down into the, you know, it'll get subzero Celsius here, but not often. We don't get snow, but it does feel like we've shifted to that and obviously there is a lot of changes going on with the planet's climate. Yeah. Looks like very interesting. Want to read this and I'm saying. Yeah. A blind old man and a young man, a lone recovery agent, ironically, both coming from two extreme weather conditions, having zero contribution to the global climate change, fight for their survival. Once famous for its farming, the people of my stars, that's a long, he just unlocked the entire synopsis and the synopsis itself, I think, is a book you can check out at the library. My word. It's basically dark wind. I knew Hawaii was clearly wind, so I'm guessing Kavya is dark. Dark wind. So it gives you not just a synopsis, it gives you a breakdown. 95 minutes, dang. Yeah. Directed by Nila. And it says here at the end, Nila Madapanda. Dark wind is not just a fiction. It's an eye-opening portrayal of the suffering of people and it is a wake-up call for the society still unprepared to face the consequences of their actions on climate change. I want to see it. Yeah, that looks, and it looked, it, under the poster, it says it's the winner of a special mention. Yeah. Special something. It's got a Seal. 64th National Award. So it looks really, really good. I hope it's really, I'm sure a bunch of people haven't seen it. I'm betting it's a smaller film. I bet it's one of those beautiful little small films that when you see it, you're mad that films like this are missed and then other giant blockbuster pieces of garbage. Student of the U.D. Yeah. I was going to say it and didn't, but you did for us. But at least sponsor us, Student of the U.D. It just, this is artistry. It's something that looks great. I could feel it. The acting of the passionate message. The old man looks phenomenal. Everybody looks great. And it just, the cinematography as well looked really, really, enjoyable film to look at. Yeah. Even if it's like a desolate land that's deprived of what the planet needs. It looks like it's beautifully shot. And I feel like the old blind man we've seen in trailers before, he looks his face to me as he kept showing who he was. Is it Sanjay? I don't think so. I think it's, he must be older than that thumbnail, that actor. I don't, I mean, unless, there's no way he played that character as Diddy. I look really old. Is the writer and director the same? Sorry, I don't mean to, no. But it says it's from the same people that brought you Newton. So it's the same production house or filmmakers? Yeah. Yes, I don't know. Maybe it is Sanjay that plays him. My stars, if it is, what an extraordinary amount of makeup they did on him. Yeah. I believed him 100%. We've seen him in other things. Masan and Dilawal, I believe we've reacted to both of those. So, let us know please, if it's worth a react, react to a review. Worth a review and other films like this because I mean we love these types of films. And are we at a place yet because we should be where there should be some buzz about any submissions from India that are coming into the film festivals right now for the award season here in the United States? Because it's begun here. The beginnings of that, well, the beginnings of that process began at Sundance back in January. But we're now late August. You're going to start to see the trailers for the contenders for Golden Globes and Oscars, which would also include the foreign films that are being submitted. I wonder if your review is going to be submitted. Yeah, I don't know what that is, but I guarantee whatever's going to be submitted is in the canon, has been released, and is now going to be one of the submissions. I'd love to know what films are in the running for the foreign film submission from India and how that process, I don't know anything about that process. I wonder if URI would be under foreign film. You're calling it what we did when we first went. No, no, I'm just that's where it would be submitted. Yeah, I don't know about URI versus URI. Remember when we went to see it? Oh yeah. Yeah, we went to see it. The lady behind the thing selling us a ticket. She said, you're here to see URI? We're like, oh no. We're seeing URI. We know how to pronounce those Indian film names. She looked at me like, you freaking idiot. It's URI. She didn't know. She didn't know either. She didn't know. But she said it right. She didn't say URI. She did. But yeah, I'm really excited to see what are going to be submitted and let us know about that as well. Thank you.