The Worst Idea Of All Time - Episode Three - Croissant
Episode Date: October 5, 2018It's awards season so we discuss the 8 awards Grown Ups 2 was nominated for. We also go deep on the purpose/justification for this damn movie. Also, a new segment is introduced called Shining Light.We... float an idea for episode 25 and evaluate each others mental health as we cross the 300 minute mark of watching this hot mess of a film. Also, a delicious croissant. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to the Worst Idea of All Time Podcast.
Hello and welcome to this, the third episode of the Worst Idea in the World Podcast.
My name is Tim Batt.
It's the Worst Idea of All Time.
Hello and welcome to the Worst Idea of All Time Podcast Episode 3 with me, Tim Batt.
And me, Guy Montgomery.
And we couldn't get the cast of Grown Ups 2 in the studio today,
but that's okay.
We watched it instead.
We watched them do the movie again.
For those of you who have just joined us,
and I'm not sure why you would on episode three,
this is a podcast in which myself and Guy...
No, literally, I'm not sure why you would.
Watch Grown Ups every week and then do a brief podcast review.
Discussion.
Debrief.
Bye.
How do you feel about the movie now?
It's great to be here.
Obviously it's great to be here.
Week three.
I feel, I feel, I feel, I feel.
I am starting to not now, which is a weird feeling.
Well, I think before we start this week's podcast, we should at least talk about the
award ceremony that went on in the weekend.
Absolutely.
Today is Oscars Day.
Yesterday was the Razzies, which if you're not familiar with the Razzies, they are the
Razzberries Awards. They're the anti-Osc, which if you're not familiar with the Razzies, they are the Razzberries Awards.
They're the anti-Oscars, if you will.
So they celebrate the worst films and worst aspects in film
that has come out in the last 12 months.
Grown Ups 2 was nominated for a staggering eight awards,
which is quite a lot.
And it's absolutely devastating to report it didn't take out a single one.
Not one. Which means it's
too shit to even win shit awards.
It would have lent a certain amount of
gravitas to the podcast if we said
in which we review, we watch
and review weekly
eight Razzie winning
film grown-ups too, but instead
Do you want to hear what it was nominated for?
Yes. Worst picture, worst actor
worst supporting actor, worst director
worst on screen combo
that's all I write down but there are some
others obviously because that's not out. Yeah well
I mean they were up against some stiff competition
Will Smith and his son
I think in a Razzie first. Yeah they've
taken out both
worst actor for
Jaden Smith and worst supporting actor for his father, Will,
for After Earth, which I haven't seen.
No.
But that's the Scientology film.
But that's another podcast.
All together.
So, yeah, obviously Oscars today,
which I didn't think it would impact the way I came into it.
By the way, just for reference, everyone,
it's 11 o'clock on a Monday morning. This is how
we started the week today. We started the week
watching Grown Ups 2 at 9
and it's a weird
thing to watch any movie
at 9 o'clock on a Monday morning.
It is, I'm trying to think
of some way to relate
it to an experience you might have had
because it's, so some
people get up quite early on a Mondayay morning and they'll go to um uh what's that intense fitness regime everyone's
doing these days ludus magnus uh uh boot camp yeah that's what i said too um so it's kind of like
it's kind of boot camp at the opposite it'd be like shoving you can tell by the you can tell
i'll tell you how you can tell it's
not a great way to start the week is listen to tim batts analogy that is evidence of a man whose
brain isn't functioning at full capacity anyway this is the weird thing now the movie's starting
to have an effect on me where it's numbing what i was saying was i found it slightly i can't feel
i found it affecting that we're watching it on Oscars Day
and it's sort of just hammered home, you know,
there are other movies out there.
There are other options, good options.
Definitely.
And this is our lot.
This is what we've lumped ourselves in with.
Two hours every week we're watching this film.
It's only 101 minutes, but it feels like...
That doesn't seem like it could be true
fuck okay i actually came up with a theory for this movie while i was watching it today
um i i really think that this is possible as well i think that grown-ups too might have been made as
a tax dodge okay i think it's like a shell project that wasn't ever supposed to make any money or anything
and like the producers like yeah yeah exactly the premise of the producers not the film itself
wonderful so what can you explain that for the people like me um i haven't quite figured out
all the nuts and bolts of it but there were just a few clues firstly that this film is fucking awful and uh so a tax dodge is when you set
something up like a company or a project for for the sole purposes of using it in accounting it
doesn't actually do the function it's parading around to do so this film was parading around to
be a kind of almost family comedy but there are some real tip-offs and that it's not um number one very
early on in the film when we first meet nick who is the drug addled bus driver he announces that
his relationship was just broken up his marriage has ended after three weeks because his new bride
found him anally inserting a banana he doesn't say that though he says it's a it's a great gag he says she found me eating a banana with my butt with my butt
which oh i'm sorry man i've got i can't i got no i got so i got no very pervasive involvement in
this film also really is a signal few qualms with me yeah uh i think it is mentioned no less than three times at very different times
in the film they spend half the day in a kmart i think it might have been a kmart um kind of tax
product this movie also the fact that there is approximately 300 people in the film yeah it was
a tip-off for me so i think maybe everyone's at the trough here using this to write off a whole
lot of income
so they can lower their taxes.
And now people, when we look back on this film,
you know, years from now,
when I'd like to think we might have stopped watching it,
and it's being investigated,
will we be able to say we were there?
Let's abandon what I'm talking about
because you strike on something.
Imagine if we are watching this in years to come.
Imagine if we're still doing in years to come imagine if we're
still doing this on like a monday morning this would be but i'd like to think by then this is
all we do imagine if we were living off of this this is one thing i was thinking about is what
say this turned into uh you know um you somehow we sold ad space on this podcast now would you list would you no i know but you know
just indulge me okay would you describe your job which would be podcasting yeah specifically
watching grown-ups too and reviewing it once a week a the greatest cushiest job in the world, or B, like the worst job?
That's a really good question.
It is one of those jobs where I really think it would be like,
oh, you have to watch one movie for two hours a week?
What a cinch.
It's got like David Spade and Kevin James and Adam Sandler in it.
That sounds amazing.
You live off that? And we'd be like, no, you don't get this.
You don't understand what this is like so you think
you don't feel at home you think it would be one of the worst jobs you can have i really do man
so that means that right now what we're doing for free for nothing yeah is i get why yeah you
really painted me into a corner you're right yeah the clues in the title though i don't know why i'm
obsessing over this uh you also stumbled into another theory during the movie tim which uh we can discuss if i can remember it um i think it was something that
you uh you sparked this that this movie kind of encapsulates everything that's wrong with america
the country culturally at the moment so this film grown-ups too is actually um sort of the set piece
in terms of cultural products that you can turn to
and go this is what it's all about this is what's gone wrong yeah yeah this is what's wrong with the
country it's basic things like parental negligence uh the encouragement of settling your problems
with violence racial segregation yeah there is man i know that they pay a bit of lip service to trying to throw some interracial couples
in the mix
but there's
there's very like
set couples
and stuff
the whites are with the whites
the blacks are with the blacks
that's smaller stuff though
there's also
the idea that masculinity
is defined by violence
the whole movie
that's a very big theme
in this as well
it is
it's about
largely
it's about
you know
I'm gonna get thematic here
so bear with me for a second'm going to get thematic here,
so bear with me for a second.
I've got my thematic hat on.
It's about sticking up for yourself.
And as a man, so Adam Sandler, obviously it's an ensemble cast,
but he is essentially our protagonist.
And he is obsessed with sticking up for himself,
with sort of, I guess, winning back some lost pride that he had in school because he used to get bullied and he never fought back.
So the big climactic sort of, I guess what's meant to be heartwarming moment
is when he stands up to that bully from high school
and he's doing it in front of his son as if to say,
I need my son to see this is how you handle your problems.
The bully, of course, played by Stone Cold Steve Austin.
And so he's saying, he's setting an example in front of the whole city at a party he's hosting that this
is how you deal with your problems you stand up like a man and you you you physically have a fight
you fight with your fists that's the only way that's the only way to be a man and then before
you know it the whole town's fighting the fraternity and it's it is i before you know it, the whole town's fighting the fraternity. And it is, I think, you know, there's definitely, I mean,
the tax theories is more sort of conspiracy-based.
You know, it might come through.
But I do think there's a kernel, a nugget of truth in this.
They're not mutually exclusive.
Grown-ups too could be, A, a tax dodge,
and also, B, just a symbol that has been produced accidentally out of that process
is showing everything that's wrong with American cultural values in 2014.
Yeah, this is definitely...
Also, like last week, we touched on the fact that no one does their jobs.
They're living in some sort of weird entitlement system where they go,
I'm just entitled to get my paycheck irrespective of how much
work I get done
it is actually
interesting to me
that we're
breaking into the movie
this much
it's not a movie
that's designed to be
watched three times
let alone
it doesn't stand up
to one viewing mate
yeah
oh god
I mean listen to
how we
this is how
these are coping mechanisms
we're developing now
to get through the movie
is you have to think
about new angles or reasons it exists
or why it is the way it is
to justify your own wretched reasons for watching it
and this is after a mega 303 minutes of watching Grown Ups 2
let's drag ourselves out of the darkness
and put ourselves into the light
in a segment that I've just thought of this second
which is called
The Worst Idea of All Time Podcast Shining Light
I will kick off if you would like, Guy,
but this is a bit where I would like each of us to pick a bit of the movie
that we like and talk about.
Okay.
There is a very short bit of the film that I like a lot
where our gentlemen are at the quarry
and the fraternity is at the quarry as well,
led by Taylor Lautner from Twilight.
And David Spade's son is in the water.
Yeah, this is a good bit, actually.
Adam Sandler's two sons.
Oh, no, wait.
Fuck, there's two of the kids.
Two of the kids. Chris Rock's kid and Adam Sandler's kid are hanging out at the quarry.
And they get kind of run into by this very attractive bikini-clad chick
who's at the college, who's drunk, and gives them two beers.
And they're like, oh, we can't drink beers.
We're too young, which is weird because they're 17.
So I guess legally.
This is America.
Yeah, another cultural value, which is part of why they're so terrible.
They can't drink.
Because 17-year-olds don't drink beer.
Yeah, exactly.
You heard me.
They can't drink till... Because 17-year-olds don't drink beer.
Exactly, you heard me.
So, so, so, so.
They have to dispose of the beers in a way
where it looks like they're drinking them.
So what they do is they just take the caps off
and then turn their backs to the frat
and it looks like they're pissing them out.
They just tip them out.
So I don't like any of that.
This is the bit I like.
I was going to say, where is the shining light?
It goes to a shot of David Spade's son who is in the quarry,
which is filled with water, on a lilo, lying there.
Wearing sunglasses.
Wearing sunglasses, so relaxed.
The camera slow pans to him.
He just puts his thumb in the air and goes, summertime.
Yeah, no, that is certainly a shining light moment.
Oh, I want to...
I'm in a good mood.
Just from you describing that horrible scene, I'm in a better mood.
But just that one shot, that one bit.
Summertime.
Right down the barrel.
Yeah, man.
Right down the barrel of the camera.
David Spade's son approved.
That's good.
I like this segment.
My shining light moment today, and it's something i meant to talk about last week but forgot was uh
the gym teacher it was a very brief cameo by a gym teacher in a gym and he he throws a ball at a
kid and the kid like he goes he goes we know the names yeah we're learning them he throws a ball
at this kid bumpdy who's a bit gooberish. And he goes, can you think fast?
And he falls over.
The ball hits him and he falls off to the seat.
And then the gym teacher goes, who wants to watch me climb a rope?
And just walks up to a rope in these tiny short shorts and starts climbing.
And the delivery is just bang on for mind.
It's right up there with...
What's his name?
John Lovitz.
Thank you.
Hey, you got the name right this time.
Progress.
Mate, I spent the whole week reciting it in my head.
Lovitz, Lovitz, Lovitz.
You also downloaded the final song in the movie,
which runs into the credits at the end of the party.
I was getting my songs.
I shazammed it last week, which I completely forgot.
That's so terrible because this suggests to me that you're spending time related to the movie outside of it.
No, it was an accident.
I was downloading other songs which I actually wanted to listen to,
and I shazammed it because I wanted to know its name.
And I found out its name.
It's by a band called REO Speedwagon.
It was recorded in 1991, and the song is ironically, I think, called Live Every Moment.
So it's encouraging you to go out there and live every moment.
And the idea that this song taunts us at the end of 101 minutes
of watching this fucking movie week after week, I love that.
That's a warning that the person who was in charge of the music
for this film has put in.
They're going, really sorry about the movie, guys.
Don't fuck up again
because time is precious
and life is a wonderful thing
and you need to live
in a place where that doesn't...
Life is a fleeting moment.
You need to not see movies
like this anymore.
In the blink of an eye,
it's gone.
We also received a suggestion
for the...
And I mean,
I'd love to just gauge
public reaction to this.
For the 25th episode of the podcast,
Paul Amos, long-time listener.
Shout out to Paul.
He's been a big supporter since day one.
Never time caller, suggested we do a screening,
a public screening and record.
And I would like to bring this up with you, Tim.
I would be more than happy to do that.
I think we need something to look forward to,
some light at the end of the tunnel.
And I think the irony, of course,
would be that it will wind up being just us
in a larger, empty room
with seats that we've laid out for people.
But even that will at least provide
an interesting wrinkle or change of pace.
Yes.
I mean, what...
Yeah, I'd be pro that.
What were you...
About 25.
That's so long away.
But it does need to be something kind of away in the future.
It's not that long away.
It's only 22 more weeks.
So what I need from you now...
It's 22 more watches.
It's like half a year.
It's like just half a year away.
Just half a year away from growing up too, mate.
I think what I'm interested in is your mental state from the outset,
from my arrival at your house bright and early
with half an almond croissant to share,
through the movie, all the way to the end,
the merciful end.
What was in that croissant?
The filling.
Yeah.
They used some sort of almond or nut butter.
Because it was...
It's a bit...
Down the road from here at the, what's it called,
like the little bakery or something
the one
you've got to go like
down and around the corner
down Richmond Road
and they do
a cabernet sausage roll
which is off the chain
and what really makes it
is the chutney
they put this
like just not a huge amount
but a little bit of chutney
in the sausage roll itself
inside it
and the croissant
had the butter equivalent
of that chutney
it was like the sweet version even though chutney can be sweet you'd hope so it's a big croissant they serve butter equivalent of that chutney. It was like the sweet version.
Yeah, I mean.
Even though chutney can be sweet.
You'd hope so.
It's a big croissant they serve you, but I'm paying $5.50 for that.
Fuck.
That's a lot for a croissant.
But worth it, man.
Almond or otherwise, that's a lot for a croissant.
Thank you for giving me half of that.
That was really nice of you.
Oh, look, I thought it would be a nice little pick-me-up for both of us.
Totally.
So anyway, mental state from the arrival of myself, the receiving of the croissant, through to the credits, even now.
Yeah, okay.
I had a few technical issues this morning trying to set up the microphone.
Yeah, you were stressed and frazzled when I arrived.
I was grumpy, man.
I was on a grump, a right old grump.
Saw the movie, put me in a worse mood, and then got a coffee.
But can you tell me a little bit about the journey through the movie for you today,
the mental journey that Tim Batt went on during Grown Ups 2 today?
Film opens, and the first thing that I realise is I've forgotten about the moose,
which is at the start.
And as the film progresses progresses this happens to me a
few times where i realize um there's there's a couple of things that are happening number one is
my emotional state's getting number each time so the first time i saw it i was like felt really
passionately about how bad the movie was the second time last fall, so it allowed me to enjoy moments within the film.
This week, terrifyingly,
I kind of felt nothing for most of it,
but in the worst way possible.
Not nothing in the sense that it was neutral,
but nothing in the sense that it's like
I can't feel feelings because this film is on.
So I guess there was anger at the start, a bit of grumpiness.
You came, and that was nice to see your shining face here.
Movie started, and then I was kind of confused
that I'd forgotten the moose bit,
because I've seen this movie twice in as many weeks.
But it just, it makes, the moose thing makes no sense.
It doesn't make any sense, Guy, and it doesn't come back.
Your voice is getting louder
well i've had a little bit of coffee and i'm away from the grips of the film it's like staring into
me being turned to stone this is making you an angry man i'm thinking we should probably do
screenings in the evening so that it doesn't you know make us weird no because then i'll know that
it's coming up and i'll be reading it for the whole day i actually think the morning's when
we need to do it get it it out of the way. Exactly.
It's like ripping off a band-aid watching this movie.
And so for various points in the film,
this kept happening where I was like,
I forgot this bit was in it, I forgot this bit was in it.
Because nothing links to anything else.
Nothing fucking resolves.
See, this is why I wanted to know about your mental state.
Because it sounds to me like you're approaching
sort of emotional fragility.
And you're a pretty well put together guy together guy you got your head screwed on right um i noticed that you've
rolled up the sleeves on your t-shirt so it looks like a sort of white trash singlet right now i'm
trying to call off i'm so worked up i'm trying to do anything to kind of reduce my temperature
uh thanks maybe maybe next week we'll drink a chamomile tea halfway through the movie
just so that it keeps you chilled
although I can hardly speak
I did let out one scream of frustration
at the three quarter mark of the film
Guy just bellows
just one big scream
just a big scream
that really reverberated all around the house
yeah
because you were at your wits end, mate.
You'd had enough.
Well, I did.
My little boy was all tuckered out of the movie.
I spent quite a bit of the movie sort of turning away
and prepping my body on the couch as if I was about to have a nap.
And then I'd turn back because I'm not...
You know, I do think that with time,
it will be totally part of the movie watching experience
will be us having a little nap
having a sleep
just letting the movie
kind of wash over us
oh yeah
I think we should
it will be like that
I like to have a nap
when the test cricket's on
in the background
but we should stay awake
I think we should commit
to staying awake
while the movie's playing
we'll try
all I'm saying is
if you do fall asleep
during one viewing
yeah yeah i'm
totally fine with that it's true i don't want to put too many parameters i think we've got enough
parameters and i think even just putting aside the time each week is is commitment enough guy
tell me about your mental state tell me about your emotional uh well being well i woke up
and i told my flatmate i was going to watch grown-ups 2 at your house
and he said what a shit way to start the week and i smiled and said all right cheerio and i
and i came here and i was sort of just indifferent sort of like still waking up i guess
sure early on it's. And then the movie started.
And I spoke about this last week.
I think it's going to be the same thing.
It's like it's just something I've got to get through on a one-day-a-week basis now.
So I'm just looking out for check marks for those moments
when I go, all right, that means this is coming.
It's not that far.
Towards the end of the movie, I said, you know,
this is okay because now we've just got to go
to the party and that's only the length of one episode of something you don't like and that's
your exact words i think you said um don't worry there's only the amount of time of one shit tv
show left yeah exactly and that i mean how you know that's a digestible amount of time for
something that you don't like such an appropriate measure you know it's like at the end of at the
end of growing up so we just watch an episode of the big bang theory or something
and that's that's fine i i mean i i do you have marker points within the film that you kind of go
oh god but at least this is like the dinner the dinner party scene when it's cut or when it's
cutting between the dinner,
when the family's having dinner.
Oh, yeah.
So that's like, for me, that's like, that's the home stretch.
That's weird. That's the final market.
No, but see, fucking, you think that, because the movie kind of sets it up,
because that's the end of the day.
No, but I know that there's a lot.
But then there's so much movie left.
Yeah, there's so many wrinkles in the party scene,
but it's the party scene in my brain, and don't ruin this for me,
because this makes it easier to get through. It's just one party just got to get through one party
then you know then we've just got to get through one conversation and then the rest of the week
is my oyster tim yeah that's true that's a yeah no you're right you're right about that so once
you get to the dinner scene where chris rock uh crumples his plasticky cup full of pepsi cup
um you know that things are things are looking up yeah there's light at the end of this so Chris Rock crumples his plasticky cup full of Pepsi.
You know that things are looking up.
Yeah.
There's light at the end of this whole tunnel.
So to respond to your question about the emotional state,
I mean, largely just sort of okay.
Just sort of like, you know, I guess it's sort of,
it is almost a job.
I think we've got to look after each other a little bit.
That's why I do things like the almond croissant.
Yeah, and there are important rituals that we need to bring into the fold here.
There's a concept in mental health known as self-care where you've got to check yourself before you wreck yourself, basically.
You've got to make sure that you're okay.
You've got to set yourself up with some nice rewards and stuff
if you're going through a hard time and some goals i think you and i need
to be really a big support for each other through this i missed a lot of that because when you said
check yourself because you wreck yourself yeah it made me sort of think it's somewhat surprising
that ice cube didn't crop up in this movie i would not have batted an eyelid if i saw it
absolutely not and what i'm looking forward to is you you know, maybe Kevin Hart for him as an extra at the party scene,
you know, some sort of periphery character
that we maybe just haven't seen yet.
Yeah, they don't have any...
They should have really waited for the reveal
of Stone Cold Steve Austin at that point.
But you see...
Oh, wait.
Yeah, you see him in the supermarket.
You don't see him in the supermarket.
You see him at the ballet recital.
Yes, you do.
That's right.
Isn't it funny, though, that now, after three weeks,
after one week being like, there are so many cameos in it,
this movie is loaded.
You can fit more cameos in there.
You literally looked at the cast list on IMDb.
There's 158 listed cast members on this movie.
That's not a film. That is a tax dodge. There's a lot of movie. That's not a film.
That is a tax dodge.
There's a lot of characters.
That's too many.
They get into a great rhythm in this film,
and I think I mentioned this last week,
when a scene's not working,
throw more characters at it,
and then cross-dissolve, fade out.
And then if it's still not working, just end it.
Walk away.
What else are you doing this week, Tim?
Hey, I don't know, man.
Fuck, who knows?
Probably do some stand-up comedy at some point.
Oh, yeah, can we shout out some stuff?
Yeah, if anyone's still listening
and they're not entirely sick of us, go for it.
Yeah, no, maybe I won't, actually. Yeah, no, I'll leave it. maybe i won't actually yeah no i'll leave it
you'll leave it yeah i'll leave it okay i just want to do a tease for next week's podcast though
because there's something which i want to pick up on that we haven't delved into okay uh and i
wait i'm gonna do the tease first no you should do the tease at the end oh i guess okay i was just
gonna say no actually i don't i don't i don't want anyone to come to any of my stuff either.
No, come on.
What have you got on?
Come on.
I was just going to say, come on.
Got another episode of the TV show?
Yeah, we're not too worried about that.
If you're in Auckland this coming Friday, the something of March, come along to Snort Comedy.
It's a great time.
Oh, yeah.
We should, you know what, we'll date this less.
Let's just talk about Snort Briefly generally, in general terms.
No, because it's the podcast that we're running out of time.
I know, but let me say this.
It's a good thing, and it's on every Friday, so you should check it out.
Hopefully it will run at least the length of however long we're doing this podcast for.
Here's the tease for next week's podcast, folks, on the worst idea of all time.
There is a catchphrase in this film which they try to get off the ground so desperately.
The catchphrase is,
What?
We're going to talk about that in a little more depth
on next week's episode,
which will be our fourth watch of Grown Ups 2,
the eight-time Razzie-nominated film,
which you hate as much as we do,
even if you haven't seen it.
Yeah, if anyone does
watch um oh and don't watch the movie don't watch the movie do not watch the movie although i'm
going to say if you do watch the movie if you have seen the movie what might be fun write a review
send it in to us on twitter we can we can discuss other people 140 character review what are you
going to fit in that we'll send smiley to fit in that send us a link
send it on Facebook send an email
but you know I'm just saying
yeah we're around get in touch
look guys
what are you doing
what are you doing
we're making this thing but what are you doing
you're listening to it
can we go now
see you next week guys
All the best, take care, lots of love
This is Tim Batts saying bye
I'm not even saying my name
Guy Montgomery also saying bye
Shut up Tim
The worst idea of all time
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