 magic button opens face I'm not using that as the intro I hate what makes or some Corbin magic button opens stop it and you false and Instagram and Twitter and today we're reacting to a trailer mmm yeah it has someone come and was in the city America oh double car and James come we actually already have the movie for it what it's right here what on this up up up now yes you want to read this on this up now up now or is it up now up now 1994 on this up now up now translation everyone has their own style is a 1994 Indian Hindi language comedy film starring Salman Khan and Amir Khan in lead roles don't judge it by the trailer because it's a beloved cult classic that was a warning that was that was a straight-up warning what do we have coming for us really now you better not judge this by the trailer you idiot I'm sure we are all done here anders up now up now up the time I got put that the luck now open the lock man harsh mohler harsh mohler harsh mohler but yes here we go bring it out bring it out this is not the original frame got a son at the end of the day! Why are you laughing, Dibha? This is the influence of your own mind! She can't imagine how your heart is! I can't believe it! This is so weird! Hey! What's this shit! Take look over there, over there! He's right in that video! What do you mean? It's just a crematorium on acid, sir! Yeah, you won't get any consolation! This is our responsibility! Is that right? This Dadi isn't the same as I am! Get the hell out of here! Now why don't you get the hell out of this mess? He should be the one to get him out of here! Now get the hell out of here, Dibha! I want to say something to you. What is going on? Explain it to me. Nothing has happened to you. I forgot about your deal. And this doctor is asking me not to do anything. The time when Gulbasta will wake up smiling. This fix time will be the last one. Ten. Nine. Ten. Five. Four. Three. Four. Why is everything so far apart. You know what I just watched, the greatest trailer. Also, I want to watch this movie now. It's not really the film's fault. One, obviously this is not the real trailer. I wish it was. That's the issue. And that's a shame that that's not the original trailer. Whoever made this for some reason felt the need to put emojis every five seconds of the thing for some reason. We get it. It's supposed to be funny. You don't have to put a laugh track in a smiley little laughing face. I don't understand. Why are you laughing smiling faces? I don't. Why did you do that to that? I'm sure. Like, thank you for telling us not to judge it because... Okay, when we're ready to watch something stupid funny, this is it. Yeah, you think so? Oh, a hundred percent. I guarantee this is just campy, stupid, silly. Check your brain at the door fund. Yeah. Yep. Does it give us an option or no? And I really, I would expect this. I honestly, basically, we've seen so much about AmeriCon. It'd be fun to see Salmon Khan doing something like this because I've always considered it would be like action serious, not silly, campy, funny, ridiculous. Well, that's the 90s for you. Oh, man. I am ready. I am so ready to watch this and feel like just so stupid and laugh. Man, that trailer was terrible. It was so bad. It was good. Really. I loved it. So... Have you ever seen a trailer like that in your life? Nope. Thankfully not. Nope. Here. It's got everyone has their own style, two slackers competing for the affections of an heiress and inadvertently become her protectors from an evil criminal. I love the premise. When is it? Two and a half hours? I let almost three. Yeah. It's two hours 40 minutes. Two hours 40 minutes directed by Raj Kumar Santoshi. I don't believe we know him, but we probably do. I just assume. Has Charisma Kapoor? I'm sure she's a mother. Another Kapoor. A mother of one of the Kapoor's. Maybe. Or totally incorrect. And then Raveena Tandon. Right? I don't know her. Shakti Kapoor. Shakti Kapoor. I always forget which one is, you know... Yeah. I don't actually learn at all. Which one are the big Mahmood? Mahmood? Who? This one? Yeah. Oh, no. He was in Padosan. Yeah. We know that actor. That's the guy from Padosan. I remember that one. Oh, yeah. This is after you watched some serious ones. This is just... I have a feeling this is just three stooges, stupid funny. Yeah. Is this a good... Obviously our subbers help out and they didn't sub this one. They just sent us this. They found it and sent it to me. Um, because whenever we get stuff, I like to at least get the trailer so we can see a little bit of what it's about before we go and delve into it. Um, and so obviously this did not have a trailer when it first came out. How did they do that? Well, I don't know. I would love to know the history of trailers in Indian cinema because we know that the history of trailers here, and I would imagine they're there on some... When did that... When did they take... Trailers started... Well, that's why they're called... In case you didn't know, they're called trailers because they used to follow the films. They used to trail the feature film. And they just said, you know what? People are leaving at the end of the movie and not watching the trailers. So let's put them at the beginning. We'll call them coming attractions, but they kept the term trailer. And I don't know when India started using them because trailers started... I don't know the exact time in American cinema history that trailers started, but it was black and white era. It was before color. And I believe it even may have been during the silent era. I think they were... I think trailers would come on at the end of a feature and you know that Laurel and Hardy's next film or Charlie Chaplin's next film was coming. And I don't remember what year they turned them into the coming attractions that preceded the films. But yeah, they've become their own art form pretty much. Yeah, but obviously, we know that most of the old films we try to find trailers for aren't... They weren't official ones. No. They're people that remaster in their studios or just... This is 94. So in 94, trailers were already a... No, but India, it doesn't go on the same timeline as Hollywood. Right. And so I often have a hard time finding trailers from the 90s for Indian cinema. Correct. And so I don't know what the whole thing is about. But you can let us know. And a variable could be that they had them and then they were just done with them and they didn't save them. They didn't archive them because it was what's the point back then. Maybe. Maybe that's what they did. Yeah. Yeah. So you can let us know if this is like one of the classic... That'd be a fun class to take. History of motion picture trailers. Maybe the emojis do have something to do with it, right? Oh, if those are original... Oh man, if those emojis... If they're in the freaking movie... Watch, we're going to discover this is the birthplace of emojis. Oh my goodness. This motion picture. Because on the cover of the DVD that somebody sent us, thank you so much, there's a couple emojis. I thought those were just a stupid thing that whoever made this trailer... I did too, but if they're part of the film, like if they pop up in the movie... I don't know if I would enjoy it. Oh, I would so love that. I don't know if I would enjoy that. A funny moment, they pop up in point and... That's why I hated laugh tracks. I love that. Oh, I hated laugh tracks because... I don't hate it laugh tracks, so you're telling me you didn't like the Brady Bunch. I didn't like the laugh track part of it. Oh, come on. That's what makes the Brady Bunch is that same, especially the one guy going... Yeah, I never enjoyed laugh tracks because it's like, really, I need to know when to laugh. I really... A very bad laugh track is to me, just as good as a live audience. Budget laugh track. Obviously, you told us not to judge it, so you can let us know how this film is. I am in. If it's something we should... I'm especially in because I want to see Salman Khan be a silly move ball. And you love Amir Khan being a star. Yeah, I expect it from Amir Khan. You know, I have an Akshay. I expect him to be a star. No, I was just thinking the other day about how different that his performance and how good it was in Dongle. Oh my, yeah. Like, that was... He flexed some thespian muscles in Dongle. Yeah, because we... You didn't see any of the weird quirky face that he... Because he sometimes makes some funny Amir Khan faces. Yeah. You didn't see any of that. No. Which is... I think it was only the second film. Yeah, and there's a couple of other films we've been told by Stupid Babies that we've yet to see some of his dramatic turns that we're going to be probably pretty impressed. It won't surprise me because my favorite thing is emotional availability, so I'm sure he's going to be very good in a lot of what he does. So, but I want to see this. Let me, uh, let us know.