The Worst Idea Of All Time - Epsiode Thirty Nine - Farrier
Episode Date: November 11, 2018Guy and Tim are joined by beloved kiwi journalist David Farrier. This week: Tim has to buy a $250 T-shirt; enthusiastic letters from fans, some Insane Clown Posse, rampant capitalism and more Paddy Sh...wartz! Also, physics, CGI animals, #instagramchat, more defence of David Spade and what's the deal with cross-dissolves? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Okay, hello, welcome along to the Worst Idea of All Time podcast.
My name's Guy Montgomery.
My name is Tim Batt.
And this week we have a very special guest.
What's your name? David Farrier.
It's nice to be here with you guys. Big fan.
And it's nice to be sitting here after
watching Grown Ups 2. For me
for the first time. That's right.
David Farrier, 3 News reporter
and kind of freelance
journalist. Freelance everyman.
Parrot owner.
Pink t-shirt.
Actor.
Actor.
Dreamer. Short poppies.
Dancer.
Lover.
Visionary.
The food critic.
All true.
I'll take any opportunity that comes my way, including being here with you guys on this podcast.
Thank you.
And the first thing I realised, I don't know how quickly we want to get into this.
Just dive in. thank you the first thing I realised I don't know how quickly we want to get into this but I
just dive in
got this film
confused with
the Hot Tub
Time Machine
film or franchise
in my head
where you've got
this big ensemble
of
comedians
in their sort of
30s, 40s, 50s
all coming together
and today
so
yeah there you go
and so
I mean
Hot Tub Time Machine
you were just expecting more time spent in a jacuzzi, presumably.
Well, no, I just thought this film, because I haven't seen either of these movies,
and I thought that, for some reason, I thought it was about a group of friends
travelling back in time to sort of relive their youth another time.
But, of course, being called grown-ups, I thought it was about that.
Of course, that's Hot Tub Time Machine.
In a way, it's not not about that.
Yeah.
No, this is about a group of men who are...
Regressing.
Yeah, regressing.
I don't know if they've ever gone, never not regressed.
I mean, I don't think they've ever matured beyond puberty.
They're just goofing around.
Just a couple of guys, could be anyone, just goofing around.
They're just having a day together.
And I mean, for me, this film was just...
You sound like Peter Dante, cast member Peter Dante.
Jesus.
An oppressor he did for the movie.
Trying to describe...
You're actually quoting a press release for the movie.
It's about...
This film is about a group of guys walking around their town
from shop to outside location to another store to a home.
Yeah.
Just living their lives.
You had a lot of questions throughout the viewing, David,
about where's the story?
It was weird for me because I listened to the podcast
and so watching it for the first time,
because I knew you could answer any questions I had
as the movie went on.
So of course I'd tap into that.
But it's such a weird experience because...
Well, a lot of your questions don't have answers though. like where's the plot there's no answer to that i can genuinely say i have not
watched a film before that's got no plot points and then mainly no conflict there's no point where
i'm worried for any of these characters in their lives that's and but that's not necessarily no
conflict that's just uh that's poorly made you're not invested in any one thing in the film.
It's both.
I think it's both.
Yeah.
But I mean, it's a lot of time to spend with something
in which you have no investment or interest.
No, and it spreads your interest.
We've done it for a year, mate.
It spreads.
It seems to just spread things too thinly.
There's so many people popping up.
The instant you maybe start to think,
oh, this is a character I'd like to spend more time with,
you're on to 10, 15, 20 other people.
When did you think that?
I thought at the beginning.
I thought the guy, a couple of them.
Who was the one that was a bit like Kevin James?
His brother, the principal, the principal cardio.
There was a guy in there.
I don't even know
that's the thing
I can't even remember
a lot of those characters
there was nothing
it scrambles your brain
doesn't it
they do
and they introduce characters
at a right
at the start especially
just like
alright
okay you got that one
now here's three more
okay now here's nine more
now here's 27 more characters
and now
but when the
and all in a new setting
here's 121 new characters to learn feel
you could feel this the directions on the script just jumping out at you it's like right now we're
in a house now we're in a k-mart now we're in another house now we're at this at this lake and
it just went you're just jumping from location someone's cousin works in like set design and
building like the mafia of hollywood is adam sandler's cousins who work in set design and building like the mafia of hollywood is adam sandler's cousins who work in set design
and building and he just like they just muscled in to hire out a whole lot of work for themselves
they wrote the script they wrote this script because there is that mystery of it's it's adam
sandler it's him without adam sandler that this film wouldn't exist yeah but he's occupies this
place in hollywood now where he can get
because people
go to this film
so he gets
a return
on these terrible films
and so he keeps
making them
well I mean
there's a few points
because in discussing it
with several different people
through the podcast
there's a few points
which are constantly raised
and one of them is that
do you not think
it looks like a lot of fun
for them to make that movie
because no one's invested
in the product
it's just because hasn't Adam Sandler talked about this he just does a movie if it's fun think it looks like a lot of fun for them to make that movie? Because no one's invested in the product.
It's just that... Because hasn't Adam Sandler talked about this?
He just does a movie if it's fun.
If it's like essentially...
He did that one with Drew Barrymore because he wanted to go to the location.
So it was a holiday with a movie tech guy.
So he'll do that film.
But yeah, they are.
They're joking around on set.
There's nothing...
There's no big investment from them.
They turn up each day.
They probably get fed quite well.
They're with their friends phenomenal catering
probably get Blaze pizza
yeah
that juice
what was the juice
they kept
oh they get Mott's
Mott's juice
that's the juice of choice
in grown ups too
I want to try some
Mott's juice now
oh yeah I'm craving
some Mott's juice
some Pepsi
maybe we can nip down
to Kmart
and see what they've got
Guy do you know
what I like to do
when I'm on Venice Beach
after I've visited
my mate Paddy at Gold's?
And I've also just got a slice...
You've had a pretty intense workout, thrown some tin around.
And you've got some Blaze pizza.
I've thrown a slice or two of Blaze pizza down, mate.
On this really perfect Sunday, Tim, what could you possibly want to top off that perfect combination of activities?
I actually forgot Rose was going with that.
You want Mott's juice.
Oh, yeah, Mott's.
Something I liked about the film, I'm big into CGI creatures in films,
and they made real good use of that CG deer
just trampling through the house.
Clearly wasn't real.
It was clearly a bit of CG.
It wasn't bad CGI.
I think it was pretty bad.
I think that was pretty bad CG.
Do you think the dog is real?
No, there were a couple of scenes where the dog was a prop,
where someone was definitely holding it up.
It was never CG, but there was a couple of points where it was a real dog.
But like, they've put a weird filter on it or something, like Mayfair.
The dog comes out looking real odd.
No, it does.
Like Mayfair.
Are you quoting Instagram filters as like color grades on one animal?
I thought it would be a funny thing to say.
That is funny.
David Spade, what's he been doing until now?
Oh, Josh Shootme was pretty good.
What was that?
Joe Dirt.
Joe Dirt, meet Joe Dirt.
He's doing a second Joe Dirt film, I think.
I think he's been doing some stand-up.
I've seen some stand-up videos.
He's done some stand-up recently.
He did a really good WTF.
Back on the club circuit.
I haven't heard that one.
I would love to hear that.
I rate David Spade.
But the other thing,
when I'm jumping around,
it felt weird.
It dragged.
It started off very pacey
and you were jumping
from location to location.
There were a lot of gags
coming thick and fast.
But I think the last third
went pretty slow.
It was just...
Yeah, man.
It was at the one party.
It drags.
God, it dragged.
And then by the time the credits ran, I was picturing people...
Because when the credits are up, I'm always reminded that I'm in the cinema.
I've just seen a great film.
As opposed to in your lounge now.
Sure.
And you're wondering about the discussions people are having when they're leaving that cinema.
Like, guys, that...
Oh, God, that was good.
You know, let's...
Oh, God, I want to see it again.
You know, it's a very different discussion
when you leave that film to when you've left Interstellar.
I thought you were going to say Interstellar, yeah.
It's such a, but people paid money to see that.
But what do you talk about on the ride home after Grown Ups 2?
I remember when that deer got a bra stuck to its antlers.
I imagine, like, a 14-year-old teenage boy
is probably who's going to love this movie.
Do you know what I'm saying?
I was way too sophisticated.
I'm thinking, as a 14-year-old teenage boy, if I left a movie like that, I can't imagine enjoying it, even though I probably would have back then.
But I'm like, you'd be quoting.
You'd just be quoting, you're going, that poor old lady.
Who wants to watch me climb a rope?
And you're just walking out the cinema, just drop parroting your favourite tidbit.
I know this is slightly a different point to the one you're trying to make,
but I love that you're grabbing catchphrases from all these accidental side characters.
They probably made it up on the day, and no one wrote that in the script.
That would be one that would stick with me.
What we're supposed to be saying is like, what?
Or burp snarting, like one of us busts out one of those. That's what they intended to be one that was Stuck with me What we're supposed to be saying Is like What Or burp snarting
Like one of us busts out
One of those
That's what they intended
To be the catchphrases
What are you meant to take away
From that movie
I guess you're just meant
To have had a laugh
Did you have a laugh
I really
The physical gags
God they got me
Whenever an inflatable boat
Was inflated suddenly
Hilarious
Twice
Shaq
Back to that water fountain Sha shack and that little playhouse just kind of his head
poking out there's shack so big and the playhouse is so small ah that's funny that's juxtaposition
jinx personal jinx oh tim bat tim back thanks mate oh thanks mate i know i took some notes i'm
just gonna have a look through the notes that I took. That fitness class with the woman.
It's Squat Robics 101.
Yeah, Squat Robics.
John Lovitz.
He, our janitor, came in and started sort of...
Because, I mean, I've been...
I don't know.
I've been reading a few essays recently,
like, you know, people talking about the roles of female in film
and sort of how in the role,
specifically in Fast and Furious,
how females are used using those films and like
males and all that kind of stuff yeah but females in this film are just kind of god it's the worst
example they've got nothing they've got they're either to do with a male character or they're
there for a gag and that particular scene was the worst case because they're just they're all idiots
you know this got the janitor wanders in uh You know There's obviously a janitor Obviously
And suddenly
Still got his bucket
They're squatting
They're turning around
They're slapping their bums
For him
Yeah
There doesn't appear to be
A Gina Davis of our generation
And then
We need one
When
When old hottie dude walks in
Paul Hudson
Then it instantly goes into
Oh you're so hot
Yeah they were swooning
Oh he's gay
Fucking leonards
They get really angry as well
When they find out he's gay.
Like, mobbish.
That scene for me, I guess, was stuck in my head
because it was so...
God, it was dumb.
Yeah.
It was real dumb.
You've got to meet the movie on its terms, though.
That's a Dom Corryism.
That's a Dom Corryism right there.
And, like, this is not a movie that is looking to...
Yeah, true.
...impact social change.
Yeah, true.
Four guys get together, and I believe, I'll quote yourself, David, they have a day.
That is the movie.
They're walking around the town.
And what a day it was.
It started in bed.
Oh, that's the funny thing.
Just back to that deer coming in.
Yeah.
Were they, because I thought when that first started, I thought they had just moved into a forest or something.
Like they'd moved house or something.
And that would be part of the plot.
Connecticut.
And there's a city called Stanton.
So there's deer around.
Well, obviously they own some land.
Because you know when they're doing the scene at the front of the driveway.
They're somewhat removed from the house.
There's trees around the house.
There's an off chance maybe they live near a nature reserve.
And there could be some deer that would wander in.
Maybe a curious deer wanders into the...
I don't think it's rural though.
It doesn't look rural but
I mean it's a leafy town.
It feels like there's trees everywhere.
Like a lifestyle block.
It was such a bold start to the film
and it didn't have a lot to do with the rest of it
except for in the end
when that deer hilariously
got the bad guy in the nuts.
You would not have been a hit
in the script writer's room
for this one, Dave.
I was just...
I don't know.
I was pissing on everyone.
Yeah.
It just starts urinating
because it's funny
when animals piss on people, man.
It's funny.
It's comedy.
That's hashtag comedy.
Hashtag hilarious.
Yeah, a lot of...
I guess, for me, the thing I take from the film was
I really enjoy the physical gags.
The poo coming out, the ice cream coming out
from the ice cream dispenser.
I need to ask you an important question, David.
Because you've only seen the film once, so this is great.
I love that about you.
Did you notice a huge amount of product placement?
Did brands pop out at you?
Things popped out.
I mean, it was the Kmart that I was in or the Walmart.
There was a store that I was in.
That is sacrilegious on this podcast.
It's so obvious the Kmart.
I didn't think Kmart was an American thing.
I thought it was just all Walmart.
Someone else said that.
I thought Kmart was Australasia.
Why do New Zealanders think that we started came i thought he started an american brand
maybe came out as launching in america now they just thought well how can we get our name out
there we'll whack a shitload of money in an adam sandler flick came out jumped out and when they're
in that uh supermarket towards the end there or the middle when was it gone i don't even know
the supermarket it's in the third movement there were products jumping out but I mean
what sort of
product placement
does that put in your brain
I mean do you leave
thinking
I saw that
juice in there
I better buy some
pizza
juice
milk
grated cheese
but it's not like
a car or something
they're driving
it's like a juice
behind some dudes
in a cinema
they're not going
to eat anything
they're just like
just go out there
and buy some shit
that's the product placement of the movie it's not they're not going to be anything specific they're just like just go out there and buy some shit that's the product
placement of the movie
is commercialism
yeah but that's
that's the beauty
of product placement
I love it
I love it
what do you want
after you watch that movie
what do you want to
walk out of the door
and buy
fuck do you know
what I could go right
I could go a Mott's
juice box right now
I could down one of them
David right now
one thing
you walk out the door
what would you go and buy
oh Mott's
hands down
that's all there
I mean it's that delicious so refreshing we don't oh Mott's hands down that's all there I mean it's just so refreshing
we don't have Mott's
we are actually
just a word to anyone
if you do work at Mott's
we are still
interested in sponsorship
from wherever that may come
we need money
because number one
apparently I have to buy
a $250 t-shirt
because someone
called me on my bullshit
that's right
good work fans
so in an early podcast
David
Tim Batt said
you know that catchphrase
what that Tim Meadows
tries out through the whole movie
Tim said at some point
I haven't heard the quote
but he said
I would spend
so I made a t-shirt
with that
catchphrase on it
I would spend
like $250 on that
and someone
a fan
has made the t-shirt
Jesus
and set the price tag
at $250
oh my
but I love that they've gone to a lot of trouble too
because they've looked at the current currency conversion because that it's a US store so they've
got exactly this odd amount which equals exactly 250 no but that's exactly the sort of audience
member you guys have got that's exactly who's listening I don't know kind of brain and I do
think you I think you should spend that money on that too I have to there's no way around it but
like it's that's a lot of money that is I'm gutted I'm I have to. There's no way around it. But like, that's a lot of money.
It is.
I'm gutted.
I'm super gutted.
But there's no way around it.
Quick stray observation.
Two things I wanted to raise briefly.
Please.
The scene where they're all sort of jumping nude into the water.
Yes.
Off Suicide 35.
Off the top rock.
They were off.
They were going.
They were doing the whoop whoop.
Whoop whoop whoop.
Which is a juggalo.
Sort of. I think it's a juggalo phrase.
That's what I'm wondering.
Because the juggalos, they're fans of Insane Clown Posse.
And their catchphrase is whoop whoop, which is what they were doing.
Maybe I was mishearing it.
Was it more of a woo woo?
No, dude.
I reckon you're on point.
It was a bit of a whoop whoop.
Yeah, well, that's a juggalo.
It does feel like an odd match
As far as affiliation
With the juggalos for grown ups too
I don't feel like they're really targeting the juggalos
But that's the beautiful thing about juggalos bro
It is like a brotherhood
It's very egalitarian
They don't look through a lens of age
Or upbringing
It's all about inclusion
And listening to the music of Insane Clown Posse.
So I'll be curious about that link, whether there's anything in there or that was purely just...
You know the ICP got investigated by the FBI for a while because they were like...
That was tax evasion, wasn't it? Or something?
I thought the FBI were concerned that it was a gang.
Oh, right. An actual gang.
There was a court case.
Right.
And they basically had to determine if the Juggalos were a gang.
Turns out they're not, I think.
I really enjoyed that moment with the Juggalos.
Oh, God, it was a terrible film.
I had some other points somewhere.
You got another point?
I wrote down some notes.
Well, listen, while you're finding that...
I've actually just dug something up I'd like to do.
Oh, yes, of course.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
While you find a point, if you would like to,
we got a message on our Facebook page.
And this is, I mean, we've received a few messages over the course of time.
This is a pretty impressive, well-written sort of bit.
From VR DLC.
It's a very unique name.
Presumably a pseudonym.
To try and hide from whoever that may be on the internet.
Okay, I'll read to you. Thank you very much for this. presumably a pseudonym. The? To try and hide from, you know, whoever that may be on the internet. The?
Vulk.
Vulk.
Okay, I'll read to you.
Thank you very much for this.
It says,
I just started listening to this,
just finished episode seven,
and I'm honoured that you have decided
to share your slow descent into madness with the world.
I have to say,
I enjoyed Grown Ups 2,
and even I don't ever really want to watch it again.
And even I don't ever really want to watch it again.
I love movies that are disasters.
Not just bad movies,
but actual shocking disasters. About once a year, i get the itch to see a genuine disaster and adam sandler surprisingly enough really provides one his bad movies are simply
so like very yeah really his bad movies are simply unfunny and boring like the first grown-ups was
but every once in a while there is a disaster there. There's an old dog, or a Nick the Bus Driver,
is a tiny dick porn star.
I don't remember the name now, but he has a micro-penis
and makes a condom out of a pen cap so Christina Rishi
doesn't get pregnant.
What I feel makes Grown Ups 2 so special is that they didn't even try.
They didn't try so hard that there isn't even a plot.
There are no real antagonists.
The closest thing to a problem that any character has
is Sandler doesn't want a kid,
and it's resolved when he decides that he does want a kid.
That's it.
And between the opening and closing scenes of Sandler and his wife in bed,
there's an endless stream of sketches.
Hearing you share your highlight of the recent viewing makes me smile,
because it makes me remember my favourite moments.
The winks at the cameras, the non-sequiturs,
and most importantly, John Lovitz,
who I'm sure you have heard by now was not merely a critic character on The Simpsons,
but had his own amazing show called The Critic.
When I watched Grown Ups 2, I had to stop and go back numerous times
in order to send the highlights of the film to my friends via Snapchat.
I lost a lot of friends that day,
but the ones who stayed will be my friends forever.
Thank you for sharing this with us.
I couldn't do what you were doing, and I liked Grown Ups 2.
Isn't that a fucking incredible message?
Thank you so much, The Vilk.
So well written, well articulated,
and all pretty good points.
Although, you know, I wouldn't call it a disaster.
You know, it's not a good film,
but it's not a disaster like The Room is a disaster.
No, and this is the point because...
So when Guy and I were kicking around movie titles
for this kind of concept early on before we started,
an early front runner was Con Air,
but I was like, I genuinely think that movie's awesome.
I completely agree.
That's a sweet movie.
And still Steve Buscemi,
which I don't think I've ever thought of.
But, and the other thing,
and then so like The Room,
I kind of came to the list and I was like,
no, because The Room's so bad that you would enjoy multiple viewings.
Because it's bad.
You're not enjoying this film because it's terrible.
You're enjoying it. There are some gags that are funny and you're laughing at the gags.
Exactly.
It's zero.
It's not a negative.
It's sort of neutral.
It's zero.
This movie is nothing.
I always wonder, what was it like for you watching it with us?
How did you feel we engaged with the film?
I felt you...
I was impressed at the beginning that it was...
Your cell phones were turned off.
But then I thought you'd be sort of right into it.
But you drifted at times.
You know, there was a lot of talk between the two of you.
And that made it difficult for me to watch at times
because I missed certain lines.
I was trying to remind Guy.
At the end where Adam Sandler is talking
to his unborn child
through his wife's stomach.
We could probably recite that.
You were talking over that.
We could do it now.
And I didn't know what happened.
And you wanted to know what happened.
Well, I did because obviously
it's him coming to terms
with the fact he's a father
and that was the one,
as your listener pointed out,
that was the one bit of conflict.
He didn't want this baby. That was
the resolution to that when he talked to the baby
and I couldn't hear. Okay, well do you want to know what he says to the baby?
Please. He makes a joke about how he
wants to sleep with the ballet teacher that he's
saying to his unborn fetus
that is... He's like
tells the unborn fetus, hey, and you do ballet
because there's a high... Because I've got to see that teacher again.
Yeah. Oh God. Yeah, and then
he's like, and he's like, no I'm just kidding, your mum's totally all good. Okay, I'm got to see that teacher again. Oh, God. Yeah, and then... Then he's like,
and he's like, no, I'm just kidding.
Your mum's totally all good.
Okay, I'm going to have sex with your mum now.
Watch your head.
And then just when they're about to have sex,
he does a burp, a fart and a sneeze at the same time.
And he says he did it for the baby.
There's your conflict resolution.
There's your foreplay.
God.
Jesus.
Is that it?
Sandler is a storm of sexuality.
Okay. He's a hurricane. it? Sandler is a storm of sexuality. Okay.
He's a hurricane.
I thought maybe there was a moment of some sort of level of empathy or something.
In fairness, we should have given you the chance to feel that.
No, you accurately portrayed it.
And you have seen it how many times?
39.
Jesus.
Foley effects was my last point.
Oh, yes.
That fight towards the end.
Yeah.
The effects were very loud.
The punching. The punching. The sound effects the punching the punching um it was overboard it was it was really effective it was like a cartoon yeah there's a weird cartoon
moment within it um and we'll go back to your your point of audio production and and just a
tick dave bookmark that where the principal, who has had blue paint
constantly poured on himself and his belongings
in some sort of weird recurring gag.
End of year gag.
So he has had paint poured on him
on the last day of school by his students.
He goes with it and dresses up as a smurf.
He then jumps out of a treehouse,
which he is inexplicably inside of at the party.
Rump swaying, looking at his wife and children.
Lands on four people,
and in the only moment of true cartoon physics in the film,
they then become completely painted with blue paint also.
I noticed it happen, but I thought I'd missed something.
You haven't.
It doesn't...
So the universe of Grown Ups 2
is not a universe where the physics are that different.
You can't die.
You're immortal.
We learned this because Nick has multiple fatal injuries.
Throughout the film.
And yet it's fine.
They all do.
When they jump off Suicide 35, they all receive what would be.
I'm completely fine with that because some movies go, let's remove death because death's a bit of a bummer.
So in our universe, death doesn't happen.
And there's cleavage everywhere.
You don't need to worry about these characters dying at any point.
But this blue paint.
The blue paint introduces a level of cartoon physics to the universe they've built,
which is referenced nary for a second in any part of the film.
No, who's David Spade in the tire is pretty cartoonish.
It's possible, though.
No, it's possible.
You can roll the guy in a tire.
I completely bought that.
The transfer of blue paint.
That's crazy.
Metaphysical.
I bought into the tire.
I was there with the tire.
No, I was sold on the tire.
The blue paint, I was confused at that moment,
but I thought I'd missed something,
and there was some other paint
involved
but yeah
you land on
someone as a
blue painted man
and suddenly
the other men
are blue
we better get
to our regular
features
before we
burn out
the clock
too much man
so we gave you
a vague run down
on what was
required
during the film
first of all
we'll go for
um We'll go for... Which is the part of the podcast
where we talk about Patrick Schwarzenegger.
Son of Arnold. How did you find out who's the
son of arnold is he we google a lot of stuff yeah and people tell us things we looked at the credits
i think what i love about our facebook um page is that we've become a real dumping ground for any
small titbit on anyone who's in the film or its production or anything people go hey did you read
this we're like no that's interesting going bananas when Paddy got with Miley
oh yeah
Miley Cyrus and her
have recently hooked up
and everyone
was just chomping
at the bit
I've said it before
I'll say it again
and I felt like a proud parent
that we'd sort of
tabbed Paddy Schwartz
for greatness
was that the photo
that Arnold Schwarzenegger
posted up on his Instagram
weeing next to
he was weeing next to his son
that's daddy
that was an unusual photo
to Instagram
real proud of
the man you've
grown into son
favorite moment
there were a
lot of sort of
facials of him
just standing
great face
the whole movie
actually was fun
watching extras
where things were
going on where
they were looking
what they were
doing what their
faces were doing
yeah but I
think for old
Paddy Paddy Schw I think for old Paddy,
Paddy Schwartz,
probably...
Paddy!
Paddy!
Paul, you know I've got
Paddy's coming over here.
Paddy.
Yeah, boy.
Probably the old
whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop.
Paddy Schwartz is a juggalo.
I like it.
Yeah, I like that.
I love where you're getting that.
Because I imagine Paddy Schwartz
going off to like
the big meeting of the juggalos,
face painting going on. Yeah. Real fucked up. Yeah. Paddy Schwartz going off to the big meeting of the Juggalos, face painting going on.
Yeah.
Real fun.
Oh, yeah.
Paddy Schwartz, Juggalos.
Paddy, I don't like you going to these parties.
Shut up, Dad.
I'm a Juggalo now.
Deal with it.
Patrick, I did not get to where I am today by going to frat parties every weekend.
You need to listen to me.
It's a bad acceptance, Dad. I'm going to frat parties every weekend. You need to listen to me. It's about acceptance, Dad.
I'm going to meet my brother.
Patrick, I love you, but you need to listen to what I'm saying.
Who the fuck is Arnold Schwarzenegger from, though?
Apparently Venice, all of a sudden.
Not Venice Beach, but...
A European version of Textedit.
Yeah, for me, kind of Believing he was
A juggalo
And had that in his background
His character made a lot more sense
To me
And so that was
Good
My minutes
Good party time
It's time for us to jump in the bus
Because
All aboard the bus
Da da da
Ba ba ba
Ba
Ba
Roll up
Roll up
Roll up
At the magical mystery tour Roll up Roll up Roll up It's a magical mystery tour
Roll up
Roll up
It's a magical mystery tour
The Steve Buscemi Mystery Tour
Is coming to take you away
Coming to take you away
Too much singing bro
Yeah man
Too much
We gotta pull it in
A lot more
Pull it in boy
Should have been in
So we told you about the Steve Buscemi mystery tour?
Yeah, yeah.
Roughly the fact we haven't watched the first film.
That's right, we haven't.
So we don't know what his character's backstory is at all.
He made some...
He references an injury.
He's got an injury.
We want to know how he got it.
Did he do goalposts?
Yeah, he did.
It was a touchdown symbol goalpost, yeah.
And he's only got 40% feeling in his body.
And his arms have been in that position for two years.
What could cause that?
What could cause that?
Dr. Farrier?
I'm imagining...
I'm imagining...
I mean, from the goalposts,
I'm imagining it was some sort of football injury. So I'm imagining it was some sort of football
injury
so I'm imagining
in some sort of comical way
Steve Buscemi
made his way onto the field
what do you call it in football
the pitch
the field
the field's good
and I think maybe got targeted
by some gridiron players
that were playing
and got
taken out
yeah
absolutely taken out
and it was comical
because Steve Buscemi's character
Was never meant to be
On the football field
He's an older guy
He looks a bit funny
And he just got annihilated
So how did he get on the field?
Was he following a butterfly maybe?
I think perhaps
This is just the whole
Referencing the water boy
He was a water boy
Perhaps
A comical sort of water boy
But maybe my brain
Is just getting confused
From the other Adam Sandler film
Yeah yeah yeah
And the water boy
Somehow made it onto the pitch
Yeah
Somehow maybe Got into uniform.
I smell trouble.
He's wearing a helmet.
That's crazy.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And then suddenly, boom,
maybe he gets given the ball accidentally.
Uh-oh, here's trouble.
And he becomes, you know,
he doesn't know whether to run or just...
But he freezes.
He freezes.
Uh-oh.
Uh-oh.
What's going to happen to him?
And then the other players on the other team,
they all tackle him very hard.
He just slams down on the ground.
He's a really solid guy on this one.
Yeah, there's probably some wires involved.
He goes flying back, hits his head.
There's a real sort of shattering moment.
And that's what happened.
That's what happened to him.
Good theory.
That's good, man.
Shit, you came in hot with the features.
Yeah, well, really, I took the lead from that
That sort of goal post
Simply made with his hands there
At some point
I was invested in that
My favourite one of those
Is that he's a time traveller
That only kicked his own ass
Yeah
That's my favourite so far
And I thought of it
So it's a really weird one
To pick as my favourite
That's alright
Very like
You're allowed to be
Proud of yourself
Self indulgent
But the one One thing And you may have discussed this before the one bit of credit
is um and i guess you know that whole i like it wrapped up where it began you know they went to
bed and that was one day and you could almost imagine them you know they wake up again does the same day
this is well i forgot to finish my sentence with you before but selma hayek actually says um we
got to get some sleep because tomorrow is a big day oh that's because you were talking over that
bit i'm sorry i'm really sorry so something important did no no no no no we don't know
what it is but just like if that's a normal day That's not a big day
Tomorrow is the big day
That was just a warm up for Monday
Has there been any talk of a Grown Ups 3?
There must be if it grows that much
We actually tried to get one started
We tried to commission it
We're thinking about submitting a script
Oh god, that's good
Jesus
We're probably running out of time, Tim
Hold on, David would like to know the status on Grown Ups 3 It's going to happen Oh God, that's good. Jesus. We're probably running out of time, Tim.
Should we just whip through our shining lights?
Hold on.
David would like to know the status on Grown Ups 3.
It's going to happen.
Guaranteed.
I mean, if it made that what you want,
made like 230 mil, made for 80 mil,
that's a decent sort of profit.
That's good for a studio.
There's been talks about the script already.
Like David Spade did an AMA, I think.
I think it was an AMA. So many questions here.
Is David spade still
doing stand-up is he i imagine he's doing stand-up in la and stuff yeah i've seen some club videos of
him doing his stuff yeah right he's good uh no it's gonna happen and i mean they ad-libbed that
whole movie so why would you submit a script he's got to deal with netflix he's gonna whack it in
there do we know The editor in that film
I picture them sitting in a little booth
And just being handed a bunch of footage
You know you've got a couple of cameras
Hey we took your video on camera
With three months
Here's what we got
Make me a movie
This editor is probably getting paid quite well
You know
And he just slapped it
There was that fucking fade
that was just like an editor just giving up and just being like oh jesus there's no transition
there's no way into this next bit i mean in a newsroom we use the fade like the sort of fade
between shots when we're pretty desperate sure because we don't use it that often but that's for a story
that you may be throwing together in an hour yeah in a feature film to do to fade out it's almost
just admitting defeat it's almost worse than that because it's a cross dissolve so it's not like it
goes too black which would not look good but it just bleeds into the next scene it crosses
us into what the next scene is so it's like you're watching a VHS family video for a dad who's just got this new bit of kit that lets you edit VHS home videos.
It's got that.
It's like a screeching brake sound effect from PowerPoint.
Exactly.
Like a star wipe would not be out of place after it happens.
You'd be like, yep, that's the tone now.
I think that's the one place where the editor really fell over.
I think the editor did a pretty, I'm not an editor, I can't talk about this, but I think he did a pretty good job.
DOP, terrible.
There was some terrible stuff in there.
There was a couple of weird zooms
and a cut to another shot.
Editor, great.
DOP.
Set design.
Set design.
I can't agree.
There was no set design.
I thought it was reasonably well shot.
There was some pretty dodgy stuff.
There was some pretty weird zooms and then cuts.
We can disagree.
That's fine. Real movie disagree. That's fine.
Real movie vibe.
That's all good.
Real strong movie vibes.
Suddenly the podcast gets really boring.
A genuine disagreement.
Oh, no.
Listen, the concept is two guys watching a movie once a week for a year, mate.
Like, this is...
It's insane.
Okay, let's do our shining lights and get out of here.
I'll finish.
I want to go to this barbecue.
I don't want to be here.
Yeah, you've missed a dinner or something.
Remotely.
Okay.
Oh, but thanks very much,
Cone and David.
It's been a real pleasure.
Hey, David.
Thanks for having me on.
Thank you.
I'm looking forward to the other episodes.
So the shining light is
we just all mentioned
our favorite moment
from the movie today.
Do you know what?
Yeah, I got one.
Guy, you just looked at me like,
Tim, have you got one?
I do, I do.
I was scrambling for help.
Well, it's probably been mentioned
in the real early on ones,
but it was something about the fact
that David was here,
the jump off Suicide 35.
I was like, yeah, cool.
All right, some stunts.
Yeah, good stunts from there
for me
definitely inflatable
boat
going up
because god
I want to try that now
I've never seen it happen
physics were a bit
messed up
he never
the guy that was
inflating the boat
never got blown
backwards
he always just
exploded out
from where he was
and everyone else
flew back
I was very good
at physics
very good that bit i've
but hilarious you know hilarious well you can get past the physics of it a very good bit a very very
good but uh mine i think it's been mentioned before but i just noticed it today and i love it
uh is sherry uh the that's your name in real life sherry terry sherry terry yeah she's wearing a
t-shirt penny you're pretty shiny penny. She's wearing that T-shirt.
Penny.
You're pretty shiny, Penny.
She's wearing a T-shirt.
You probably didn't notice it, David.
It says I, and it's got a picture of Adam Sandler and the character's Lenny Fader.
Lenny.
So it says I, Lenny Fader, Lenny on a T-shirt that she's wearing.
Isn't that crazy?
It's quite cool.
You are going fucking mental.
It's all there, mate's all there all the main
ingredients are in there for a good time um we cannot we would be remiss to finish the episode
without um also thanking paul sheer yeah absolutely being a good man and including us in his list of
24 hours of ideal podcasting very a very generous very generous man And from our home here in Australia,
I would just like to say cheers and to live every moment.
And love every day.
Because before you know it, your precious time slips away.
Bye-bye. Love every moment. Love every day. Cause before you know it, your precious time slips away.
Live every moment.
You gotta live, live, live every moment.
That was pretty full on.