Half in the Bag: Quarantine Catch-up (part 4 of 2)

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well mike it sure has been a great year for movies what happened oh nothing i would i didn't even hear what you said i just like it went down the wrong pipe oh as they say you know was it a cough or a sneeze it's just just like was it a dry cough do you have a fever i i don't have any any symptoms of of covet oh but yeah i was just just a coffee just they really like appeared to be what they call a spit take yeah like a reaction i say something outrageous right right yeah it's a staple of comedy right and um it in no way was a spit take because i i did not hear what you said you said what oh i was saying it's uh sarcastically i was saying it's been a great year for movies [Music] oh sorry it happened again it just i don't know something's wait hold on it's weird so it's just a coincidence that it keeps happening whenever i sarcastically say that it's been a great year for movies you thought it was gonna happen again oh my god half in the bag i put pizza rolls in my vcr so i could watch them on tv but it didn't work in case you're wondering i'm not drinking out of the java hot coffee mug that has a chip in it no this is a brand new one that you can break a chip off of right the old one is right here with the chip and as you can see all the leftover coffee in it has horribly molded as coffee always does i just wanted to make sure no one drank out of it what have you been watching oh my god i've been watching movies uh you've been watching movies you've also been watching some tv shows more tv than movies yeah which makes sense it fills more time during the empty void that is our existence tv a lot of tvs long movies some of these like these limited series things uh there's eight episodes it's a long movie some of them are too long some of them should be a movie some of them feel just right some of them feel like they could go on even further but that's what we're here to talk about today what is going on in the world of entertainment what is out there there's basically nothing except for a movie batman with mel gibson and a movie where russell crowe is is a is a road rager oh unhinged i watched unhinged russell crowe should never start a film called unhinged as we all remember he he beat a hotel employee unconscious with a phone is that true yeah i never heard about that how did i miss this exciting news russell crowe flipped out and he smashed a phone on a hotel employee and he went crazy and then he was banned from the us for like a decade what everybody knows about russell crowe in the hotel phone i honestly did not know that i know speaking of fat man i know a lot about bel gibson but that's a whole other story yeah mel gibson i hear he once put his hand up the ass of a beaver well jody foster watched um do you remember the last film we we saw in the theaters i'm trying to try it was rise of skywalker like a year ago yeah december december that's the last movie i saw in the movie theater but the coronavirus like january february there wasn't [ __ ] out we didn't go see a movie that's right okay okay weird oh my gosh rise of skywalker was the last film i've ever seen in a movie theater in my whole life that you will ever see in a movie theater right but i think now people after the last year are getting more accustomed to watching stuff at home where it's like you don't need to go to a theater yeah that model will change it's it's yeah it's going to change drastically even when theaters do reopen yeah so i mean something like wonder woman like sure i can see the appeal of seeing that in a big theater um something like unhinged which i watched was perfect to watch at home where people could not hear me laughing at the film and russell crowe who looks like he's made of silly putty these days [Music] can you go please but unhinged was entertaining it was bad and i know this was like when they first after the first wave and they reopened theaters this unhinged was like one of the movies they put out and it flopped horribly and i can see why it's not it's not a particularly good movie but it's pretty entertaining like the old days of like a like a b movie like a classic b movie where it's got a high concept but it's really stupid but that's what kind of makes it entertaining well the trailer didn't make it look stupid i mean it just it i actually like the trailer a lot they don't think i've seen the trailer there's this like remix of um uh heart-shaped box yeah there's russell crowe lady honks at him or something and it's it's road rage the movie road rage yeah i i say it's stupid because it it requires all the characters to make stupid decisions at every possible turn in order for the movie to happen because otherwise this whole incident would be over in 10 minutes he's not chasing her the whole movie he has like her phone and he's tracking her and stuff but he goes at one point he goes to a diner and sits down with her lawyer and just kills him in this diner and then just walks out the cops don't show up so it's stuff like that and like the kid towards the end of the movie he's hiding in a there's like a hiding like a hiding spot in this house where it's like you open the closet and there's a little trap door thing and he hides in there if you just stayed in there nothing would happen and if the woman didn't park her car in front of the house that they were hiding in he wouldn't know they were there like simple things like that [Music] that's the whole movie but russell crowe is like hamming it up and it's funny because the the kid it's a mom and her son and the son in it is the same kid from the child's play remake and his mom in this is also super young and i remember in that child's play it was him in aubrey plaza so that's like it's always like him and his super young mom and i was like they should have just had aubrey plaza and just haven't been the same characters well uh i guess i want to talk about i got apple plus tv apple tv plus oh yeah um and uh i saw a movie was coming out this was a pandemic casualty and i was like oh cool i'd watch that even in the movie theaters you know uh it would be fun to see that number then the coronavirus happened and um it it uh it got it disappeared for a while and then it ended up on apple plus or apple what is it called apple tv plus apple tv not to be confused with apple tv which is their physical device their streaming device okay whatever it's a giant mess um and uh oh so it's greyhound with with tom hanks okay i thought you're gonna say that on the rocks movie the sofia coppola movie i know you saw that too but it's like why would that be something you'd care to see in the theater uh no i was like oh cool tom hanks world war ii uh and then and then went away and then i was like well whatever and then it's it's just straight to apple plus and then nobody saw i don't know plus nobody subscribed to apple tv plus but i i enjoyed it uh it's it's basically a world war ii porn with tom hanks um it's uh gosh it's not about a bus uh it's based on an old book from like the 1950s and which is it's very like tom hanks wrote the script right oh i didn't know that and and it is it is like shockingly bare bones okay and there's like one scene in the beginning where he meets up with uh elizabeth shu and and then she's like well you marry me elizabeth shoe she's like not now that we just got into world war ii it was like two months in into the war the u.s part part of the war and um he's like okay i gotta go do a thing i'm a navy captain uh so basically he's a navy captain um and and he was him and two other ships his ship it wasn't called the greyhound those are code name there's two other ships and they're protecting the convoy a big fleet going across the atlantic uh from german u-boats and that was our job is to just kind of like fight the u-boats off so they don't sink as many ships yeah but lots of them get sunk um but that's that's it as far as the plot it's like it's like okay one scene in the beginning and then later on he thinks about her he's like she gave me a pair of slippers i'm gonna put my slippers on and then the whole movie is just technical combat target bearing zero nine two range was too i mean that's just sort of matter of fact and simple and stripped down yes but um there's a lot more going on in dunkirk there's a lot more story lines there's characters yeah it is very it's cutting back between a few days it doesn't um it doesn't ham in the the schmaltzy hollywood like plot lines and this and that like it sounds like greyhound barely has that it just barely does you got to put something in right it's it's that tom hanks wrote the whole script himself okay so he doesn't i don't think he understands like the the robert zemeckis-esque like your audience he just wanted to do this like really really specific and it's not even like a true story per se like like this captain was a real person so that's the same private ryan esque where it's like fictionalized yeah but it's like real thing like a real scenario that happened where boats had to protect you know fleets from u-boats um and so it's just like him like go down so it's 22.2 degrees this way and blah blah and they're calling down to the room and the guy's doing the thing with the like the calculations of which way the ship should turn they're launching the depth charges into the water and i mean if you love world war ii stuff it looks great it sounds great it's got explosions but but really that's like a big mess for anyone who doesn't love world war ii porn yeah it's interesting to see these these uh theater casualties the movies that were supposed to come out in theaters and where they end up who's willing to pay for them right because i know uh someone was trying to buy the james bond movie it might have been apple it might have been apple tv plus and they're like we need like like 700 million dollars you want to buy it from us for that like never mind yeah because they know they know you got to make that box office money and they're all they're doing is delaying the inevitable all these movies are going to flop the good thing to come out of this is hopefully the the return of mid-budget movies because movies are too [ __ ] expensive when you set up these movies where they have to make a billion dollars in order to to make a profit like it's out of hand avengers end game feels like the end of an era that's the last blockbuster and that's funny yeah yeah it does feel like it's kind of that at least a pause yeah on that era but um yeah i have hbo max is that what it is and there's lots of good content on it hbo like shows are the best in my opinion i've watched shows on apple plus uh oh god the worst i think is show time but hbo has a lot of good stuff and they have like all the dc rights yeah um because i've watched doom patrol just real quick throw out their doom patrol seasons one and two excellent program oh i i'd hope to discuss it someday with with our friend rich evans he hasn't found the time to watch it what's he busy doing i have no idea but i'm sure a number cruncher said oh my gosh wonder woman comes out right i bet you they cancel their their month free trial at that point um you know what i mean well that's yeah i feel like this this will be helpful to hbo max but probably not helpful to the wonder woman movie as far as making its money back well money's money it doesn't matter where it comes from if they make if they projected wonder woman to pull in 700 million from theaters and they project that uh x amount of people will sign up for that first month and pay what twenty dollars or whatever it is yeah to what just to get access to see wonder woman right away and then they say well how many people out of those you think will cancel or how many people just forget about it and keep it on um and then somebody just got a microsoft excel spreadsheet and figured it out and said hey we could we can make about the same maybe more if we release it now well that's the advantage of that is you don't have to give the theaters half of your box office that factored into their mathematical sure it did i mean universal has been the studio that's been trying to get away from theaters they tried like a decade ago with the movie tower heist if you remember that with uh ben stiller and uh eddie murphy that was going to be universal's first attempt to release something in theaters and vod at the same time and the theaters were like no yeah i remember that and at that point the theaters held the cards they were still a major source of revenue so you had to kind of bow to them and now they're starting to get to a point where they don't need theaters anymore it's good when theaters reopen theaters are going to need the studios more than the studios need theaters yeah is what i predict is going to happen it'll flip there's there's that but then you you risk not making nearly as much as you would if it was in the theaters right right it's all up in the air it's all kind of exciting with what a mess it is it's all interesting it's interesting it's interesting and then you have apple tv plus which kind of reminds me of an outdated model of it's kind of like what happened with quibby too or it's like we'll just throw a ton of money at all these big names and all this big talent and and that'll drive people to our service because it's got all these famous people on it but nobody's watching apple tv plus how do you know that jake how do you know that do you know anybody that has talked about any of the shows on apple tv plus or any of the movies well that's the thing is like when you say talked about unless we had hard data and i i think i think the government should force streaming services to share their data that is the difference between streaming and theaters you don't get those numbers right or something like that i'm just saying i look at all the lineup on apple tv plus regardless of what anybody else is saying i look at it and i just see uh people burning money and all these big name celebrities and all this big and all of it looks so bland all the other like original shows i watched one episode of amazing stories because i remember that from when i was a fetus the original amazing stories and it was fine it was a fine episode but it's just so bland it's like apple in general everything's so like slick and minimal and clean looking it doesn't have that grit or that heart to it servant was good it was weird up until a certain point and then it became like annoying and then it didn't end it's gonna keep people coming back for more seasons it kind of ended is it about like a like a fake dead baby yes there's a really good it feels like a very limited thing for a series it feels like a movie idea it was definitely a thing where it could have been told in a two-hour movie because it was stretched and that that kid from uh harry potter was in his [ __ ] terrible oh yeah you're telling me about it he's trying to do an american accent right i was a terrible terrible actor why do you have to call him the kid from harry potter i know you gotta call him the kid from thunder pants uh well you mentioned jordan peel earlier speaking of uh wishing they were jordan peele i saw antebellum oh this was another theater casualty did he slap his name on that he has nothing to do with it but they want you to think he does didn't say from the producer it says like from the producers something like that he had nothing to do with it and it shows these sapphires are here to fulfill your ever need it's not very good speed of germ appeal and speaking of m night shyamalan it feels like mid-career i'm not shyamalan which isn't a compliment so what is it a a black lady from modern times gets sent back to the antebellum south there's no time travel uh it's it it does kind of an interesting it starts out in yeah this is slave era his character is a slave and then about halfway through the movie there's like a narrative shift and we're in modern times and for five seconds you're like oh what is what's going on here this is interesting and then your brain catches up and you're thinking about what the twist is gonna be whereas like are you open sorry what what happened i must have too much coffee oh so just something weird imagery flashing in my eyes oh uh oh okay so uh a cheap knockoff of the jordan peel project knock off of jordan peel uh wannabe m night shyamalan quality and hitting you over the head level of the twilight zone the new twilight zone so all the the worst of the worst in this movie and nothing nothing to elevate it above that that's the thing is let you look at like the german peel movies he clearly likes horror and he's creative and comes up with these weird ideas this movie is so basic and so it ends up almost being uh insulting because there's been so many movies made about slavery there's been really good ones and there's been ones that are like if you want to show the horrors of slavery you have to show the horrors of slavery and this movie felt like it was like walking on eggshells to be about what it was about it felt so sanitized which is like i mean i get it you don't want to turn into like torture porn but you have to if you want to make a point you have to show things as they were and this one is so timid to do that and then on top of that it has this dumb twist to it well what's the connection to modern day like is that in in in her own way in modern day society she's still a slave kind of like because of racism or like do you want to know the twist do you care sure so if the audience doesn't mind spoilers everybody for antebellum the whole movie has been modern times and they've taken her to this compound where they reenact slavery reenacts being slave owners because racism against her will yes but it's all like antiquated everyone's wearing little tiny costumes yeah it's just like the village just like the the shameless it's like a secret society that has slaveries slavery they kidnap people and they then they treat them like slaves when you said it's like the village it made sense what the what was happening yeah exactly like the village okay i thought maybe it was like a civil war reenactors like reenacting slavery no no no it's like yeah it's like a secret secret group that does this modern day like southern racists that is a classic example of it sounded good on paper yeah um but if not handled correctly no the only saving graces that lead uh janelle monae is her name the singer she's a musician she's a singer she's very good with what she's given but that's about that's about all i got out of antebellum if antebellum was a swing and a miss uh uncle frank was a i don't know maybe a foul ball i guess that's equivalent to swinging a mess basically a bunt no bun bunt has its purpose okay you're bumped to get a guy in first base so that you know your second baseman could advance the third and you get to do the whole thing um uh uh maybe maybe maybe push maybe just a line drive and uh you know thrown out the real question is what the hell is uncle frank i never knew why daddy mac was so mean to uncle frank he was the kind of person i wanted to be smart and funny and considerate you're going to be the person you decide to be are you going to be the person everyone else tells you you get to choose uncle frank is a new movie i think it's on netflix or amazon i think it's amazon amazon original uh it starts paul bettany aka vision and it has a little girl from it and it's like a coming-of-age story coming out uncle frank is a closeted homosexual in 1969 he lives in new york city he's a professor uh with with more you know progressive advanced enlightened people and he his family is from the redneck south okay so i feel it i don't know what it was based on i think i don't think it's based on a novel or anything it's about from alan ball i think he wrote it i think it's just original screenplay okay this is weird everything's based on a book everything's based on a book now or from some other source material i think alan ball allen ball won an oscar for american beauty yeah he did the show six feet under um there's always a component of uh homosexuality and it repressed homosexuality on lots of different characters in his stuff so i think that's that's his thing he's he's the real samurovich he's the real deal this is ignorance and completely unfair this country [ __ ] sucks it just [ __ ] sucks but this is paul bettany you know his father is is an [ __ ] a homophobic [ __ ] he you know he the girl this revolves around a funeral roles aren't a funeral wow he's really treading new ground with this one isn't he he loves funerals he loves caskets and dead bodies and overall a lot of his stuff has been darker more dramatic um more risky and this felt kind of safe okay feels like there's always kind of a i don't know if whimsical is the right word but there's something a little unrealistic in a lot of his stuff too like a surreal element i don't know if that's fantasy-like um dreamlike yeah and this is this is more like straight and narrow and it's more like you know i don't know spoilers i don't have time for this the girl is is is young she's about to go off to college but you know she's surrounded by rednecks and people that are just kind of stuck in where they are and he sees potential in her she's smart she's she's she connects with him all of her other uncles are all just like uh drink beer watch sports uh hate them gays and the dad is the even worse and he's very enlightened and smart and he's like come to new york come to this college that i work at and you know learn about the world and she learns that he's gay and um all sorts of stuff happens but then the father passes away the the homophobic awful father and he has to go back for the funeral to the to the podung town and then there's a whole thing where it comes out and at first everyone says no and then it becomes like this like warm like happy ending wow that's a high drama kind of corny a little sure this isn't a samurovich movie no no i'm sure is it better or worse than ben and arthur it's better than betten arthur but which would you rather watch again but in our third so there you go no the performances in this are all good paul bentoni was really good at uh american accents you know it's one of those like despite the heavy subject matter it's kind of like a light watch nobody nobody dies nobody gets murdered boring nobody just blows their head off with the shotgun boring expected some more uh some more gritty [ __ ] from uh alan ball i don't want to say a lifetime movie that's too insulting but you know just a little too well wrapped up not a lot of like um more like canned dramatic situations that seemed uh below his uh his level of talent uh well i watched a documentary called belushi which is of course a documentary about dan aykroyd because they were in that that movie together men at work yes exactly where they played garbage men that was them that was definitely them even when things were difficult he always promised that he would try to do better i had to trust that he loved me now this is a show time you're talking about all the bad showtime programming but this was a showtime documentary time programming i don't know i don't aside from twin peaks i don't know i think i've watched anything on showtime until this documentary because i was interested in seeing it because i've had a long time fascination with john belushi um it's kind of that first generation of like comedy actors because before that you had like bob newhart like jonathan winters like these real straight laced guys and then 60s into the 70s you had the rise of you know comedic actors that were more like personalized for more like rock stars and he was kind of the first big casualty of that dying at the age of 33 from drug overdose very much a rock star lifestyle because isn't that thing with all rock stars die at the age of 33 isn't that a reoccurring thing 27 27 27. oh you know what i'm thinking of belushi and chris farley both died at 33.33 yes um so it's it's i read the book wired in high school which is uh written by bob woodward about belushi's life and so a lot of the stuff in the documentary had already known but it's kind of nice to see it all just contained in a very if you're not familiar with him covers just about everything it's comprised of audio interviews that were apparently done for some sort of like oral history thing that was never made so you have people like i don't know how long ago they were recorded but you have people like harold ramis and carrie fisher like people that are now gone and they're talking about him and lots of photos and home movie stuff i had never seen before and no recreations well they did do some animated segments first like they show because he grew up in wheaton illinois and he had a band and so they showed like animated segments of that and it's pretty well done that's the new the new thing to do in documentaries is animation is there other than other movies oh yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah a little kind of artistically recreate something as opposed to hiring an actor and all that unless you're talking about their stuff on the reels channel oh god they get some really good look-alikes on the reels channel those death of a celebrity documentaries so good so good i know there was a there was a show called like the last 48s do you remember that it's like the last 48 hours and i only did one on john belushi i don't think i ever saw it after filming neighbors belushi's cocaine addiction took hold again with each hit he was slowly killing himself and on his final day he was far from those who could have saved him but they did a movie adaptation of the book wired it was only a few years after he died and everybody in his life was like outraged and the movie's terrible [Music] [ __ ] uh so up until this documentary that's been the only kind of real encapsulation of john belushi's life and death and that movie's terrible so this is good it's a good documentary that covers pretty much everything has lots of his wife judith is involved she does a lot of interview stuff so it's it's good it's a good balance because i know the book kind of deals mostly with his his uh substance abuse problems and then his eventual death and it's a big part of him but this covers a lot of the early stuff and a lot of his comedy things too to balance it out it's really well done [Music] uh well jay you did not watch the beastie boys documentary i didn't add one of the few things on apple plus hello everyone what we're gonna do right here is go back way back back into time and you said you you don't really care much about the beastie boys or you didn't know a lot about it that's the thing is is okay so it's not so much a documentary it as it is a recording of a live performance uh or four you know they do they shoot a bunch of them and they use the best bits from all over sure but uh yeah they're in a live theater and the live thing is directed by spike jones of course okay um and it's just it's it's almost like a presentation they're showing clips they're cut into stuff they're narrating it so i don't know anything about the beastie boys i know the basics of you know a couple other hit songs the early stuff the license to ill you know brass monkey uh girls um i'll fight for your right to party all the old songs and then i know like oh yeah they had some hits in the 90s um you know and to me beastie boys kind of always sounded like you know yeah i mean i like fruit and pebbles and i'm here to say it never really hooked me you're the first person to associate the bc boys with a 30 year old fruity pebbles commercial rap i'm the master rapper and i'm here to say i love fruity pebbles in a major way [Music] yes the fruity pebbles commercial because that's what was popular at the time and so of course uh uh adam one of the beastie boys died uh he had cancer he died probably about five six years ago now uh the two remaining bc boys are there um and it's basically just like them on stage like going back from where they started to where they are now and so now they're 58 year old men and they're all grown up and in a strange way and it's it's it's just sort of vibes i got from lots of the different things they've they they brought up the it feels more like mo it feels mostly like a retrospective of their whole career but in the same way it feels like kind of an explanation of all the things that they did and said and how they acted and why they did it we had a song on our first record that was supposed to be this like stupid and ironic joke but understandably it wasn't that funny now i'm gonna tell you the lyrics to that song girls they had like it's just like songs like the girls song girls to do my laundry yeah and they were very pointed and saying oh weird that was a parody of of dude bros that would sing a song like that you know because you listened to it today yeah that came out today like nope canceled immediately context is completely removed from everything and so they're like and then for a big part of their tour they had like a giant penis inflatable penis on their stage and all this like crazy [ __ ] and they'd throw beer in the audience and and so they're like well okay when the stage manager asked what do you want on stage so we just came up with the craziest [ __ ] just to see if it would happen and it's like okay [Laughter] sure you did so we didn't know what was a joke and what wasn't a joke at that time i mean [ __ ] got really blurry ironically the the most interesting beastie boys the one that died um the other two i don't know were that interesting but it was basically them talking a lot about him he was kind of like the guy who was just like i'm i'm going to research this i know all about this and why does he have time to learn all this stuff he's really smart he's the guy who who got in the tibetan stuff i don't know if you remember any of this vaguely uh they did a like a free free tibet stuff kind of started with that guy yeah um the the free tibet concert with all the big rock bands and that happened in like the late 90s yeah um he was the one that started that he went met the dalai lama and sort of like the i don't know john lennon of the group more culturally aware of of the world around him as opposed to just being a musician yeah um and so yeah it was sort of so it was like kind of like a story of how they evolved from being bratty kids that like punk rock and rap and were really immature because someone like the old videos of them or something cringy oh sure but you know and then they're now they're grown ups and they went through this this this process of um of growing up yeah there's this whole interesting segment where they discuss how they stopped for like two years and just learned how to play instruments and actually learn music because you know they really didn't know that much and they're like okay and they they bought a studio and they lived in this house in los angeles and learned how to play guitars and drums and bass and like kind of experiment with different sounds and so there's evolution that's that's what's interesting about them because especially like starting that young you compare it to a lot of the like uh like the hair metal bands of the 80s where you go to a county fair today and they're still doing the same shtick oh yeah they never really evolved that's all they kind of know so yeah that's that's always interesting to see like a an artist or a group like that that it's constantly changing what they're doing right right um and lots of funny stuff i mean it's really good it's really entertaining um but in a small way i kind of felt like hey maybe we should explain ourselves because let's get this all out there before people start digging up our old [ __ ] chapter five dicks in a box you mentioned like the hair metal bands and like going back to like cringy stuff and i i forget which one of the beastie boys it was being interviewed and the interviewer said um well now you you know you talk about um you talk about women's rights and you know feminism and progressiveness and all this but then when you go back and look at your old stuff and it's kind of like smutty and dirty and filthy and childish and and all that and he's like don't you see don't you think that's kind of uh hypocritical don't you think you're a hypocrite and and he's like he's like i'd rather be a hypocrite than the same person forever there you go like that's uh that's that's the point [Music] so mike i have breaking news breaking news this will not be breaking news by the time the video comes out because we have to edit it but uh this is literally this story came out while we were filming this video yeah we just took a break and i don't know what he's going to tell me uh warner brothers has announced that their entire slate of movies for 2021 will be put on hbo max concurrently with theaters the entire thing so that's [ __ ] like uh uh was it the godzilla versus kong movie mortal kombat [ __ ] dune and matrix four what they just this is this is a crazy they've given up on theaters well i mean they're gonna they say it's gonna be concurrently with theaters it'll be on hbo max for like a month and then it'll be removed so you can see it in theaters or on hbo max oh okay oh wow so that's that's a pretty [ __ ] big deal we were talking earlier about wonder woman and so it's funny that that happened while we were filming this discussion of everything being on streaming hmm that's a that's like bigger than just wonder woman going to hbo max that's like a game-changing move that's like the death rattle of theaters even more so than than it's been yeah yeah we don't know what a post covered world looks like though jay maybe everyone just wants to go to theaters all the time because of because of being cooped up for a year yeah and it could be like which is why it's smart of them to say they'll be in theaters too yes and and it's something they can always change that's true yeah um so it could be a situation where it's like i don't know a competing movie company and a paramount or whatever they have no uh what's coming out soon oh well let's say black widow movie they decide to release it in theaters after everybody has been vaccinated june right sure and just those gangbusters it brings in a billion dollars two billion dollars and then and then they go maybe that doing movie we should put on the theaters you know dune of all of those dune is like the one that i mean that that's denis villeneuve he's uh visionary meant to be seen on a huge screen so that being hbo max is a pretty big deal well i wonder how that will affect like filmmakers wanting to work with certain studios like especially like your christopher nolan's because warner brothers is who he is associated with the tenant and the batman movies and what like if if christopher nolan has like a big project he wants to do in the future you know and he knows it's going to be on people's home tvs instead of on imax he might shy away from that everything's changing it'll be funny i was looking at the list of movies they're releasing and like when theaters finally do reopen like he said maybe june or something mid-year when things are completely open again and one of the movies that's slated to come out is the hybrid live-action animated tom and jerry movie what if that's the first one to come out in theaters and it makes like two billion dollars because everybody just wants to go see a movie and that's the movie that saves theaters the movie that killed theaters was tenet and the movie that revives them is tom and jerry that'd be hilarious that'd be pretty [ __ ] funny
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Channel: RedLetterMedia
Views: 982,643
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: redlettermedia, red letter media, red, letter, media, plinkett, half in the bag, mike stoklasa, jay bauman, rich evans
Id: Pe03wFRySok
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 40min 41sec (2441 seconds)
Published: Mon Dec 07 2020
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