 Do your best impression of P.K. or Tipsy? Well, I need first of all the stuff on my lips, but... Welcome back to our Stupid Rex, you idiots. I'm Corbin! With me, as always, is this alien named Rick. His lips really freaked me out in the film. I hated it so much. Really? Yeah. Uh, they were always stained? Yeah. With the stuff? Yeah, grossed me out. If you're new to our channel, go back to like button, subscribe, and ring that little bell to be a part of the notification squad. Instagram. And Twitter! Today, we watched P.K. You betcha. And this will be our review of Seth's movie, P.K. You betcha. Starring our favorite. Yes, we do love him. Yeah, I've gotten attached. We're gonna be going through a lot of his stuff. Daniel, some other ones I can't pronounce. But we'll be going through those. So yeah, we watched it, and here are our thoughts. It was absolute garbage. We hated everything about it. Your work on just sucks at acting, right? You're a liar. Right? You agree? What did you think? I want to know what you think. Um, because I have a lot to say. I actually, I think, liked it more than three days. Um, certain parts. Um, obviously I think all the acting in the film was far and away better than three. And it's a very similar style of comedy. They do a lot of that. Like, one of my least favorite things are like when something is like strange and people go like, huh? It has that little weird brrr, of course. Especially a weird con. Yeah, something happens and he goes, yeah. So yeah, um, it's all that. Obviously this character was an alien, so it was kind of fitting really well. Sure. But I did love the, um, Mirkan from what I've heard in the comments. Oh, spoiler alert by the way, for those of you who haven't seen PK, please stop watching, go watch it. We don't want to spoil it for you. You've all seen PK. Not everybody have. So we're spoiling now. He likes to do films that have a message. For sure. Sure. Like a powerful message. Power for sure. And in the comments, they've also called him Mr. Perfect. Or Mr. Perfection or something. Mr. Perfectionist. Yeah. Perfectionist. Yeah, it shows. But he likes to do films that have deep messages. It shows the one, the three idiots was about, you know, stress, suicide. Right, social change. Yeah, social change. Speaking of three idiots, I don't want to get off on a bunny trail, but did you recognize somebody in this film from three idiots other than Mirkan? Was it the girl? No, it was the main newscaster guy who's her boss. Oh, was that the trident in the butt? That was the professor? Yeah. Yeah, that makes sense. He was much better than this. Well, it showed his depth. The show was like, I first saw him, I said, is that? And then I realized, oh, okay. That guy's really good. Yeah, he was much better than this. But I loved the commentary this thing gave on, obviously not just one religion, every single religion. And we both obviously grew up in the church. And throughout our lives, I've been in the church. And the issues, no matter what religion you're in, I think they're very similar. The line at the end about the God who created us and the God you created was a phenomenal line. Because that's obviously the biggest issues I have with big religion is it's not, I think, what it should have been. It's been, no matter what religion you are, it's systematized. Yeah. Yeah, or even better, more well put in this film of his God's managers or God's sales managers or God's agents, I forgot the specifics of what they call them. I thought several things. First of all, I thought the script was absolutely brilliant. Yeah, it was. I just, the whole wrong number. Yeah, that was great. It was a good way to kind of segue into the whole thing. Yeah, and did a fantastic job of pointing out the things that are wrong without insulting people. It was very, I'm wondering, I'm guessing this was received very well in India. Yeah, I've heard it was a blockbuster. And all that kind of stuff. And so obviously, I think y'all are a lot more open-minded in a lot of people in America because if you did a film like this in America, that was critiquing the church. Oh, people would burn theaters. Well, you'd get a combination of things, and none of them would be pretty. Yeah. Yeah. And so if it was well received, and I think the film had the right intentions behind it. It's clear from, and I even wondered if Amir Khan had been part of the writing, and I looked at it, and I'm sure he had some input to the content, but he wasn't part of the screenwriting team. His portrayal, I thought everything about this movie was so genuine. So honest, especially him. I thought his portrayal of this character, he had some moments that, like his moment when he's in the shop with all of the statues, and he's genuinely saying, why won't you answer me? I just, okay, I got to know. Did you even get moist in the eyes? Oh, no, not at all. Not even close. Guys, I don't know. I don't understand. Okay, I didn't get emotional in the movie at all. When would you have? Are you kidding? Yeah, I don't know when you have. I openly wept several times in this film. Oh my, stop. That moment. First of all, when he's in the shop, the moment when he's, the moment when he's about to reveal that he loves her, and he's written, I love you on the card, and before she gets to his card, she gets to the other guy's card, and he can tell something's wrong, and he holds her hands, and he's reading her thoughts, and he can see all the flashbacks that we saw of her with the love, and he realizes she loves somebody else, and that moment that Amir Khan has of realizing she loves someone else, so I can't say this to her, because I love her too much to hurt her, and she's not mine. That killed me. Then when he's sharing what he's sharing, when he's having that contest, and she gets the whole sequence, that moment when she calls the embassy, and they say her name, and she says, how do you know what's mean? And he says, every day, this, that didn't get you. No. Right here talking about it. I actually, Every day he calls at nine, whatever, and asks if there's been a phone call, and then hangs up. I enjoyed it. But no, it destroyed me. That's not my favorite type of films. Because it's all tied up in a little bow. I have it, oh, I would have rather than just to end that at a relationship. There are several films where I have like, I can count how long I cried during the film. This movie is at the top of films that I've spent a lot of time crying in the movie. I spent a lot of time crying in the BK. Did you cry in the film? Tell me. Come on, India. Wow. I didn't. You passion-filled emotional, I thought 380 was more emotional than this. That was emotional, but this was way, it was especially emotional because of the sincerity of Amir Khan. And what I felt was the sincerity of the script of genuinely wanting to know the answers to this question. Because I know for me, very personally, I went through a season of that in my life many, many years ago of, I felt and I would think rightly so. There really should be no more important question about who am I? Why am I here? And why do I exist? And did God make me? And can I know God? I mean, what becomes more important? That's life and death and eternity all wrapped up in one. And I really felt that that, this wasn't a comedic attempt to try and cover that. I felt like this was a genuine attempt to point out all of the harmful fallacies in organized religions that take truth and pervert it in order to control people rather than actually help bring about answers to life for people. And that for me was, because I could feel that throughout the film, it just was way beyond anything I was expecting. Yeah, I thought the whole religion is fashioned basically from the aspect to it. And how beautifully he innocently points out the contradictions just would point them out and she recognized the brilliance of it. And he did it in such a sincere, that was the most important thing is this alien was so sincerely just wanting no truth. And at the end, I'm getting emotional. I can't believe this didn't make you cry. When she says, there were two things that he learned. Did it not dawn on you? And did you not get emotional? This is another point where I cried. He says all of these recordings, I had the sounds of the horns and the cars, and I believed him. I thought, oh, he really did that. So sweet. We need to take those things not for granted because those are beautiful things. And then she's listening and all she hears is her voice. And I realized at the same time I went, he lied. They don't lie on this planet, but he's lying because he can't let her know. And then she said, he didn't turn around because I don't think he wanted me to see him crying. And then when she's reading the book, I was just, from that moment, I was in tears. I mean, I was wiping tears, screaming down my cheek. And you felt nothing. You're killing me. I was so certain. I was certain this was the film that finally got you to cry. No. Not even close. Not even close. Three idiots is honestly, would have been closer. Wow. Yeah. No, I cried way more in this than three idiots. I mean, we're talking. I have to see tragic films like Schindler's List to cry more than I cried in PK. And this movie for me is at the top of my favorite movies ever. I love this movie. I immediately wanted to get my entire family together and have us all sit down and watch this. I want everybody I know to watch this movie because I think the script is great. The filming is great. The acting is great. The story is great. I just, I can't, I am blown away by this movie. Yeah, I mean, I love the film too. Blown away by this movie. I didn't cry. I don't cry. No, apparently not. I'm dead inside. Please let us know if Amir Khan has a bad film. Yeah, really. And boy, I got to tell you, that guy, we've only seen him in a couple of movies, but I can't, in the United States, if we think somebody is an absolute treasure is the word, which for us would be people who a legendary film like Julie Andrews, we would call a national treasure. Tom Hanks is a national treasure. Please tell me Amir Khan is a national treasure for you guys. He is. Because first of all, his face, man. You just can't take your eyes off of his face. I'm waiting for, I think it'll be the film, will be dangle of him in an all serious, right, no comedic, no face or anything. Well, I'll tell you, you know as well as I do, anybody who can do comedy nails drama, because comedy's harder than drama. It's true. So he, to see him, and now I kept looking for shades of rancho, and there weren't any. Yeah, there weren't any. None at all. Purely, pure new character. So I'm deeply, deeply impressed with Amir Khan. Thank you for that recommendation. Thank you for that recommendation. Please let us know what other films we should watch next and review. And you have a goal now, everybody. You know what your goal is? Get Corbin to cry. And you know what you need to do? Send us a movie that has a military dog that dies. I wouldn't watch it.