Hi everyone and welcome to the NodioF podcast. It's a NodioF podcast and it's supposed to be by their northern nerds. I am one of your most son. And I am the other host Paul and hopefully not coming across like a demon.
I did check me Mike but it likes to follow. I'm very tired because we're a little bit earlier than usual. So thank you for everyone who's joining in as well. So at our unusual time of 6 p.m.
which is ridiculous. This is where people have food and stuff. But now they've got to look at our beautiful faces and talk about beautiful faces. We've got a very sexy, very sprightly, a very blonde tipped ginger.
The lovely Captain Goodwill. Now it's a shame that Captain Goodwill wasn't on last week's episode because we were giving each other call meums. Oh yeah. Because actually it's Sami is a great boy.
Lee is now a noise tigger and I am known as the goonie. Goodwill if you were a top gun top flight attendant the best of the best. What would you say? If I was a top flight attendant.
Yes. That's how shit I am a top gun. Yes. You said the drink attendant.
Yes. Okay. But that's the exit for the fighter plane. Yeah.
Yeah. I'm fucking here. My call sign if I was a flight attendant I don't know. All sign messy tree.
Messy tree. Strike and theme in the heart of all the Ontavians. Yes. But I'll call them one.
Now we'll not make any more references. We'll call them Did I? That's what I think. Is the dead eye.
Did I? Yes. I like that. It's so hard as fuck.
I would want to mess with you. Hang on. Is this because I'm partially blind in one eye? This is quite offensive.
Good. We all feel targeted from you. Goodwill. I feel seed.
Okay. Well I feel critic now. Goodwill. You have to get my anxiety.
Oh, for all shit. Boys be here. Yes. Be here.
I just want to say before we start kicking off this episode to thank everyone for last night. I had the best. So I know that I have the best birthday with the bestest people and don't I have my cup. I have my cup out today.
So thank you. Cup more. Good. Drink and utensil.
Drink and utensil. I have it. I'm so happy. Thank you.
Everyone. Cheers. Oh God. Kelly's not the judge.
She'll be freaking out now. Bless her. Roll the cost of a be damned. Kelly did win a magnificent teapot last night.
And if you look on her one of her pours she did do a story of Phyllis getting worn. Yes. The Phyllis the teapot. Yes.
My wife won a teapot as well. She was leaving with that teapot. Yeah. She was fighting people for the teapot.
She actually bullied a little girl last night as well because her total little girl was not bidding on it because she was going to take it home. And I was like, oh fuck. But so do you want to get the same out of the way with her Sami? Yes.
But oh yeah. Yes. I will. So everything discusses in today's episode.
Here's our opinions and our opinions alone. If you'd like to discuss anything from today's episode. I believe he's coming join us on the Facebook page of the discord or the comment section or where we can have an open discussion. But what we won't have.
Here's anyone coming for us and tell us our opinions are wrong because we can all agree to disagree and find them. So let's give it a fun. Keep kind and keep the toxic behaviour out of Nurgism. Very well said by a lovely Sami who had turned 46 yesterday.
So very happy birthday. And very many happy returns for people. You've changed someone I was 51 and then almost believed you. Like a cheeky bastard.
Do you turn yours off that please? Well, two thousand. Someone did see her. You look very good for 51.
So the person who we saw on the restaurant went, I wouldn't have put you down at that age at all. I was like, because I'm not. Yes. You can't eat up that love.
Yes. I can feel it today. I'm really good to see you. Let's be honest.
Sami was a dirty stockout last night. She like to say normally the normal person at her age goes home at a respectable time. No. Sami stays out half one.
She is becoming the party animal of Nurgia of North. I'm not going to lie. I thought what you were going to say dirty stuff out. She was like, she stayed out until 10 30.
That's just my usual going home time. That's pretty fucking lit. That is my usual going home time is around about eight nine o'clockish. But that's not it was quarter one one o'clock.
We finally got in. Yes. But it was just a case of like every two minutes. Just one more drink.
One more drink and one more drink just kept topping up on top. No. It was a fun fun night. Yes.
And thank you everyone who took part in the near-the-earth quiz. Our second one first one went well. Last night was even better. We were as a greener, we had over 400 pounds for his charities, which is absolutely amazing.
We did finish second in the quiz. The Sweet Queens did okay. Because there was a ring out. I'm going to put a formal complaint in as well.
Because Graham's roommate. So the guy who picked the questions finished first. And he got three questions wrong. I smelled skull, duggery against this.
Yes. I mean, I would have been very bitter if we got what was very bitter that we didn't win. Because I really, really wanted the mug. It had the monsters logo on it.
And then I got presented with my own mug. And so I'm going to wait off until monsters to reveal the mug. Yes. Even though if you want to go on me Instagram is on them.
And so on numerous pictures of Sammy's feet. Just get more subscribers. You never know. Is that why she's got 300,000 followers?
Yes. Sammy's feet. My feet. My feet.
I did it. Yes. I did it. It wasn't Richard Crim, Kimball.
It was his feet. To tease up no. To tease up no. I love that.
Before we get into the movie, I have the tagline. It's only one tagline. Right? Okay.
So not multiple taglines. So I'm kind of thinking, this is a top-tier movie in the rotten tomatoes. It's got 95%. So I'm recommending the higher the rotten tomatoes or the less taglines that they need to promote the movie.
To be fair. This was Harrison Ford at his prime as well. So to be fair. And this is the Lamborghini of...
Why do I say that? Because you never see an advert for a Lamborghini. Well, the tagline is a murdered wife, a one-armed man, an obsessed detective. The chase begins.
A one-armed man. That's very similar to how they used to tag the original series. Yes. Yeah.
Only just like it was a TV series to do. Really? Yeah, really did not know that. This is the remake.
The first remake of the future. Dr. Richard Crimball was now wanted Mac. Yes.
Yes. The one-armed man. The one-armed man. Yeah.
I did not know that until today. Because I was having a read thinking, should I get? Because I really enjoyed being taken from last week's episode. I had a shitload.
But there's not a great deal when it comes to the background and the making of it was a lot of things were improved. You know, they had this amount of time to do things. But nothing like that. Oh shit, I need to make sure I remember that.
And then I was like, this is from a TV show. I was like, Oh, what? Well, now? I remember when we were discussing the movies we were going to pick up for the blockbuster season.
You basically went, I want to do the fugitive. This is my number one pick for anyone. Which kind of took me a little bit, because when I was younger, and again, don't judge me too hard on this, the fugitive kind of passed me by a little bit. I didn't have the love of the fugitive as when we said the good world.
This is what we're doing. He was like, fuck yeah, I want to be on this one. If you don't come on this one, I'm going to go on strike and throw a dirty pants on everyone. I was like, OK, go on.
You can come on the podcast. We're not going to. We don't need dirty products tonight. But yes, I'm just in my life.
I'm just going to go ahead. But that'd been more like a monkey phone shit. But yes, that's fine. Oh, and can you pick up on a bit delicate a deal?
But watching it back to the year, I fully understand and fully get the love of this movie. It is like, say one of things, I think at the time, and I know, like I made the comment just a few moments over the 90s was the season for busy Harrison Ford and action movies. Like, I think at the time, there was that many Harrison Ford action movies that was coming out. It was hard.
It was kind of easy to get lost in the shuffle because, as you said, you had that plus one, Cleo and President Dinger. And the one like very similar to this one, why you frame these wife for the Kellen and stuff. There was a thing was called witness. Witness happens about, but by us, there was so many Harrison Ford movies coming about around about that time.
This one, I think, with it being probably the most, most advertised, I didn't really gravitate towards this one. And again, I know that on the advertisements, they focused a lot on one of the main action scenes, which was the train bit. So, yeah, that kind of got rose in. Probably when I watched it, when I was younger, I didn't get the whole mystery part, because the mystery for this movie is done a lot more differently than other movies.
It busy normally builds up to like the Kellen and then you work out like the who'd done it. At the start, it's kind of implied murder. And then you're trying to put the pieces together then because you're watching the film, and there's no bad guy till the last part in the movie. That's really quite interesting.
And now we're kind of blooming head a little bit. I totally get that. I didn't watch this, but I'm not going to be a grown up, which is not a shock for anyone, let's be honest. But the reason I wanted to do this one today was not only because it was my birthday, my pick, basically.
And it's also Harrison Ford's birthday. I shared her birthday with Harrison Ford. And I was like, that's perfect. But this movie, I only watched it a couple of years ago.
And it absolutely got me. You know that feeling of you move along with it. So your whole body is like, oh, down. You kind of keep still.
You're cheering. You're crying. I don't think I cried. You're doing it all your emotions come out.
You don't just sit back and I get me for when I was kind of thing. No, I was absolutely and it was all for one person. And it wasn't Harrison Ford. It was Tommy Lee Jones.
And then the week after we watched US Marshals, because I could literally watch him and his team alone. Because it wasn't just Tommy Lee, it was him and his team. I could watch them on so many adventures. You could take them into anywhere and I would follow them.
Because that was a team I wanted to be a part of. There was a lot of talk after US Marshals that this could well have legs. The film has it was never really further. The fugitive for me is the very definition of a remake done right and it proved upon.
They harken back to the original TV series from the 1960s, the flashback at the beginning. I'll swipe some more there. But also just it's the same story distilled into a movie but improved upon immeasurably. And it's a fine example of Gordon.
He was the original source material. Let's improve upon it in our own way. And they do it right. And I remember seeing this in the late 90s.
We had it on VHS. I saw US Marshals first. And I absolutely loved it because the chemistry of Sam's team was just... Like Sammy said, you could watch them on multiple adventures because they just gel so well what they get shit done.
And I remember saying to my mum, I'm fantastic. She was like, oh well, you know, you're going to absolutely love the fugitive. And we watched the fugitive later on and it was just... He was brilliant.
I mean, as a 10, 11-year-old watching his, it was full of action, it was full of suspense that he had. Just Tommy Lee Jones being Tommy Lee Jones at the time where he's just like, you know, I don't care. Like he just doesn't give a shit. Well, he's one of those, he's one of those, I am in charge.
I don't give a shit what you think because I am always in charge. He was just brilliant the way he just... The way that they carried out the investigation, they were so driven to hunt Richard Kimball. How easily they could pull the bullshit apart from other people.
When we see the prison ward, he's like, do you want to change your bullshit story against them? They go, give a shit. They are not there for like the bones of it. They are there because there is someone on the loose and they have to catch them.
But this was just full of... There's one huge action scene. This is a film about tiny little moments of suspense, danger of anticipation. And they just do it so fucking well all the way through the movie.
Like the staircase scene where Kimball's going down one and then Gerard's going down the other and he's just a passing glance and it's just like, oh my god, he's got a scene. And it's just stuff like that. It's nail biting all the way through. I watched it today for the first time in a couple of years.
I'm caught. You watch a good well. Well, because I got rid of a Lord of DVDs three months ago, right? This was one of them because I went, it's on streaming service.
It's one of others. It's going to be anywhere. Nope. Absolutely.
You could buy it on Apple TV Plus for $7.99. For two things. One, I don't have $7.99. Two, I detest Apple TV Plus.
So no. So I even was like, right? OK, see, yes. No fucking DVD in a 50 mile radius.
I was like, right? You have forced my hand internet. Got you up now. Got you up.
Yes. Yeah. It was a blue way. It was a blue way.
It was a blue way. A blue riff. But yeah, just going to 4K version of this. Yes.
No. No. No. I don't think it needs it.
I think the certain movies that need to stay with almost the way they came out. Like really? Yeah. Yeah.
And how that. Yeah. You don't need a crisp this one up. It's not needed.
The thing is, though, when it's set and where it's set, you need that dirty grittiness. Yeah. And obviously, if it's, or res, you sort of lose the magic with things. All 100%.
I don't need to see strings and shit like that. You know, because you do, you will see them. If you're not meant to see it, the 4K is going to make you see it. Yeah.
But this is a film like, I've seen it for a couple of years, but when I watched it today, I was just, I was still full of suspense. I normally would have. Yeah. Like tiny little moments.
No. There we go. Oh, absolutely. Absolutely.
Yeah. The one thing I really love about this movie is the Orb and Insane, is the Orb and Insane set up, because instantly, as a viewer, you know he's innocent. But to be fair, with that, the scene, I think it's been replicated and copied by every single crime American TV show afterwards. Colombo.
Colombo. SVU has probably done it a fair few times. That's especially headless. Yeah.
I think if it's back and all this murder is probably done a few years of there. I think it's going to be a good one. Come on in, put seven of the details. Guys, guys in the chat, how many people want to diagnose this murder?
Just. I can't even know what time it was murder. Yeah. I'll prove your ears.
No, but I love the fact that you know instantly isn't innocent, man. To be fair, the only way that I've broken good will diagnose this murder there. No, but it changes the open and changes the gameplay of the movie itself, because like you said earlier, it's not a typical set up. It's instantly, we know he's innocent.
But I know what I read from the TV show is that the open end is the same, but it leaves parts out to make it you think, oh, shit, could you have done it? Yeah. They didn't do that with this one. The TV series, because it was very much, I believe it was Quinn Martin.
Or Quinn Martin production. So it was very like the fugitive, act one, peril on the train track, and then look two, and then the fugitive, Evelog, and then it always ended the same way. Dr. Richard Kimball, a wanted man, a fugitive on the run.
And that's how it always ended with this movie. They did that, obviously without the voice, but they did that where they just basically see. He is someone who has been charged for a crime he didn't commit. They do it in the most awful way, because you know he's innocent.
He knows he's innocent, but you see a systematic feeling of the criminal justice system. Oh my god, that's this man. Then fucking detectives. What a bunch of fucking idiots.
We found his prints all over the crime scene. I mean, it's his fucking house. Of course he's going to find his prints all over it. I know what he appears.
I say no, but the scary thing is, when you watch these real life American documentaries about crimes and the first 48 hours and stuff, I have, they don't give a fuck about, like shall we say the truth? All they're thinking about is getting a collar, or in the case. It's a number. So I can totally understand where that makes the element comes from.
But again, we're probably going to be jumping about because it is one that was filmed as well. There's just three things. But one thing I wanted to talk about before we start getting in the movie as well is the cast. Because I think with a movie like this, because it is very paired back, suspenseful, driven, it is living and dying on the cast and like the people in it, like Harrison Ford, as somebody said, he's not the most thing that draws you to this film.
No, he's not. The one thing he does make you do is care. And that's like one of the key things that what could have went so wrong with this movie. Yeah.
We didn't give a shit about Richard Kimball. Yeah, what's the point? What's the point of even going with that film? Yeah.
The best part about it for Harrison Ford is you think, you know, he's in an action film, it's two Harrison Ford's in the other one's in the same. So this is a completely different, I can style for him. He actually doesn't kill anyone in here. He's kind.
He's a kind person. When there's no arrogance in him, there's no bullshit in him. You can actually hear what he's saying when he's talking. It's like, this is a different, this is a different side to Harrison Ford.
And this is half the reason this movie gets the praise that it does is because of taking, they've given him an action film without actually putting him as an action star. There's a vulnerability to him as well. Matively, uh-huh. It's a, you know, he's an action hero, but the action in this film is clever, suspenseful, it is methodically done.
And you just see the whole action here is how he goes about solving the murder of his wife. And how he can do that, you know, sneaking around the hospital, how he adapts to his environment, how he changes his hair, how he gets close, how he, do you know what I mean? Like the way he methodically evades, yeah, being caught. I mean, that's him methodically, then he jumps out of the dump.
Yeah, he does do some silly stuff. But he's Dr. Friend said, you're not going to find him because he isn't used to clever. And he was, and it was such a, it was such a refreshing change to see Harrison Ford not being a typical duty, alsoly action star that we have seen him do many times before.
And, and also his occasion on things was brilliant. He could, because he does have a tendency to mumble. Yeah. And, but he, in this, no.
Because it's always, there's always, there's always, there's always, there's the rules he's legendary for that he always, that he always, that'll get the kudos for. But then there's the rules where he performs. This was one of the ones he performs in, and he performs music. I would put this, and again, this is maybe, I've given it high praise.
I would put this up with Decker in Bladerner, because he performs in Bladerner. You get every single facet of Harrison Ford in Bladerner. You get like, yeah, you get the angry star. You get the vulnerability because he gets his ass kicked out a lot in that movie.
And this one, you see someone determined, someone broke, and someone, again, not just Harrison Ford. I know we're going to tell him, he'll be like the bit part players, like Julian Moore plays a great, as, as. Oh, I can't remember who Julian Moore is in this film. I was like, where is she?
I know that the end, the one, I believe, yeah. Something happened with the studio I thought they didn't want that. Or something along those lines. Hence the reason why a lot of us, she's not in a great deal.
She had part was actually a lot bigger than what it was meant to be. And, but I was like, why can't I remember the Julian Moore's in this film? And, Dean Lynch, Dean, I know, Dean Lynch is only in it for a few minutes, but it's, it's Dean Lynch, Dean, he's wrong of my eyes. No, like, it was like the strong part of this film, because if someone had been convicted of killing the wife, like the one thing I know, it sounds bad, but your friends will turn on you.
And the fact that these friends didn't turn on him. And I kind of stopped surviving, like, with support and as well, it shows you what kind of character that Richard Moore. Yeah, but yeah, but like, Jane Lynch was great. And I know she was only in a small bit, so you only got like flash rings.
But, uh, so what, uh, Helen Kimball actually, the performance, because you believed how in love they were and what, like, they were so that way they do even more angry that he was getting, like, free him for this kind of, but then, you know, even like the detectives, the detectives were so annoying and so on blindside, but the performances were so well, you got angry because, like, they just want to think. And then the guy, then the one I'm on, like, you would think, well, I'm being scary, fuck off. When he was terrified, he was literally fine. Yeah, he was a creep, creep, another fuck.
I mean, the film, as I mentioned earlier, the film shows the failure of the criminal justice system, but then it also shows the redemption and the strength of the criminal justice system, where you see that the marshals, their singular walkers, he's capturing Richard Kimball and, uh, what was he all called, called, Coleman? Yeah. That's good. Yes.
Um, but then we see, you know, they question why he is doing what he is doing, and then they conduct their own investigation into everything that's going on, and they put the pieces together and then they pull up the bullshit of the CPD, where, you know, they didn't fully do a deep investigation. They just believed it was Richard Kimball, they got their man, they did what, unfortunately, some police departments in America do, where they just not bully you, but they just drill and drill and drill until you just break down and you confess. Mm-hmm. It's been done 100, 100 times over before, and it'll continue being done, but because they can do it.
Yeah. They are allowed, it's not unlawful for them to do it the way that they do it. It's just morally fucking wrong. Right.
Yeah. Mm-hmm. It's interesting you're saying with the US Marshall team, because, as I just said, their driving focus was just bringing them in, hog, and again, the famous language would window. Um, but the investigation changes when Harrison Ford's Richard Kimball doesn't act or fit the patterns.
Yeah. For the Gillyman would do in these types of situations. He goes back to where, like, say, it would be the most recognized person there, and he starts doing things, and that makes them think, does a Gillyman or a man who's desperate do these types of things? Or is it an innocent man trying to prove, or an innocent man, shall we say, a man who's had his world taken away from him?
And just one of the people who did that to come to justice? Because he had plenty of opportunity to take his revenge as well through this movie, and it wasn't a revenge movie. No, it's not. It was going to be just to get the right, the wrong, was that the justice system.
It was just this. Yeah. Yeah. See, you know what?
I understand the whole seeking justice, but I think it's more how much he loved his wife. He doesn't be. He can't have anyone regardless of if it's the justice system or not believe he could do this to her. That's the crux of it.
It's, yeah, I don't think he would have cared. Any of the circumstances, I think he would have taken his punishment as he would, but it's his wife. It's a whole different ballgame. Yeah.
It's the passion that he has for his wife is evidence. In the small scenes that we have with them, like the foot- the foot- the foot- raising gala. Yeah. That was much.
I think I was watching that now. Where he, where he interjects in the conversation with the two gentlemen. You know, excuse me, gentlemen, she's just like, thank you. I was down to one while Jork.
It's just like, hey, yeah. But it's, it's the very start of that scene he has been lying in for her. Oh, yeah. And everyone gets in his way and he just pushes, all he's doing is pushing through the crowd to get, to get to her.
She's the most important thing. I, I get that as well because that would be the bye scenario. If Goodwill was across the room to me and pick the world around and I'm not letting me out my Goodwill, I would have to just part the sea of nerds to bring Goodwill into my arms. That's as much.
That's as much. I can't see if I'm a Goodwill. Don't worry about that. Do you motherfucker get out of my head?
I was just about to say that. Right. Chat, die not to murder. Murder she re-roars.
Well, we could combine a whole like murder. Like a murderous kinder. It's a guy. We could do, we could do murder mystery week.
Oh, that really weird one called monk. I fucking love monk. Oh, I love monk. It's weird.
I enjoyed it, boys. No, I love it. You should have had some face. Oh, yes.
And loves monk. I'm an SVU Lauren autogull. So I go for the, I go for the really fucking British it. Not the nice and fluffy merger.
Just consider it especially hateless. When I was a kid, I remember the most, I remember the most, when I was off school, I'd say go or anything like that. I used to watch the daytime TV and that used to be the daytime TV shit that used to be in all the time. Lauren autogullull.
Oh, that's good to see you. Hey, no, sorry. Lauren autogull. I'm doing the day.
No. Hey, you so tell ya. Can I be working for more? I'll be working for more.
I'll get it. It's me now. Listen from five action and you know, you said 11 30 and nine morning. Don't don't.
Don't. Don't. Don't. The user to the other spot.
Because they've got that kind of stuff replaced with Jeremy Kyle. I don't know. Where did we go wrong in the society? It's all right.
We can't deliver it. Yeah, he's gone. He's gone. He's got a radio now.
Anyone called him there? Oh, yes. Richard Kimball. He did not kill his wife.
Yes. Nobody cares. No, no, no, no. We get it.
But the set pieces, I actually pointed out, it's an action movie with very little action in, but it does take you on the roller coaster. And with anyone knows, a good roller coaster doesn't always bash out like rules and spins and big drops all the way through. There's got to be a build. As you said, the first part is the big one with the train.
And that whole build up with the train is just so well done and so well orchestrated. Then the next big set piece is the dam, which. I thought you were going to roll a roller coaster. What you were building.
Hilt. Hi. Hi. Hi.
We're going to get to the tip. And then we roll back. Anyway, the train. Can we just go about the train for a second?
One shot. One shot. Could only do it in one shot. Only had the capability.
Couldn't really put the train back together and blow it back up again. So literally one shot. Yes. Was that was part, I think it was part practical part special effects.
I know I've seen how they did it in the past. It was in a carasin forge. Well, there's some double sorry, no hands forward. Jumping off and land on the bags and stuff.
And then the kind of super forth in. But they did actually use a train hidden. Of course. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. And shot. Which again, these days they wouldn't do that.
Because it would cost the fuck to know money and probably cause a lot more problems. But yeah. The spectacle of it. It looked for now.
And it's always great when you get to the ones where. Because as you said, with movie magic, like the sensual part of Harrison Forward going through that window. At the sensible, but we're sorry. The sensible way of Harrison Forward getting out that window made no fucking sense.
Nobody does to me where he puts the arms up to use that as way to like. He's a body friend. Try climbing through something that way. No, because you want to go.
It's the hardest way to get through it. Like a small area where you put your hands and feet and you're like kind of birthing yourself. But I don't want to be wiggling out of anything. Well, let's not forget his feet are chained.
So he has limited mobility. So he's only got like that much width to his feet. So when you try and get out, you would obviously put one leg out first. Well, he has to put both legs and he can't get the purchase.
So he's having to essentially move so much weight out in a hurry. You would do whatever embarrassing move possible to get out. I would go for his head first. I would be like diving.
I would even say half your body got food. You can then use your weird. No, I don't want to be wiggling out. I'd probably be yeeted out of a bus now.
I'll tell you what I'm saying. Well, I'll see what I can do. I'll try and get a video and I'll put it on the page of me diving through something and then me trying to crawl out the Richard Kimball way and see which way is the more sensible way. Oh, we'll do the fugitive experiments.
Which is all and a small gap. I'm contacting Gornoff East now to see if we can lend a bus. For reasons. Not telling you.
There's going to be a burnt-out car somewhere. So, yeah. Oh, actually, probably around mine. I live in a dodgy area.
So, well, I didn't even do a dodgy area. But I'm not going to use your juke for as a risk. I was just going to say that. I was just going to say that.
I can't do a piece of shit. Just about to say that. We shouldn't say that because when we've been in Lee's car, he treats us like kings and queens. Bless him.
He's great. Yes, but we'll do it fairly as well. We'll tie me legs up. So we'll do the angles.
We're not getting done or involved because this will be too kinky. You've done or gets involved. We'll tie his open stuff like that. You've done with your own chains.
Yeah. She knows all the fuck in my retirement. Not she, though. She'll have an early half-winter and everything like that.
Oh, wins. That's why I didn't know. We've just seen that. That's done as a very good...
Sailor. Shall we say it? Yes. That's it.
And it's done a deal. I like to fuck with you. Hey. Can I have a sale, please?
And... Half-mast. Donna did mention in the comments about the decade-caught. Yes.
The problem of earlier. Water twats. So, you see, if that guy went, he absolutely just... Nah.
I'm out of here. Nah, I'm not having this. I had infuriated me. And then he's going, oh, well, he would have done it for me.
I tried to do it for me. But we see what I love is instantly it's turned on him. And then... Yeah.
Just sits down and just in front of everyone. And this is what I love about Tommy Lee Jones, the way he portrays Gerard. He will look dead in your fucking eyes and pull your bullshit story apart. Yeah.
And he doesn't care who you are, where you are, how many people are around you. And that's what I love about that scene, where he's just like, you know, he's going up at the story and then next thing we see the trends. And he's just like, well, well, well, well, why don't we have it? You want to read it?
You're a bullshit story again. So, and he just does it. And it's just brilliant. The way he's looking at it just breaking down like that.
Yeah. And I love the way Tommy Lee joins players, this character as well. Because it doesn't really change his outlook or his... I'm trying to put the thing away, where he comes across.
It's the same way he is with every single person. He treats them all the same. And he... He has his team no differently.
Yeah. The only time you see a difference in him is at the end when he's in the car with Richard. Yeah. Because he's very much, as you said, the most bloody minded person.
Like, he knows what he needs to do. He's probably has done a million of these cases in the past. He's probably like... Because everyone's escaping out of the American jail system because it was so easy to do.
So, he's probably had all these cases, went on man hunts and dealt with so many different things. And he tried to even his superiors were in the car on the phone after he shot the first time. And he's just like, well, I didn't want one of mine to be gone. So, you can put it on me and he puts the phone down.
Yeah. He's like, you can tell him I did his kind of thing. And... When he's...
I kind of disagree. Right. In the way that he treats people because he treats Newman like his son. Right.
Yeah. Is that the guy who... The one with the ponytail. Yeah.
So, we have... This is a dysfunctional, functional team. Yeah. Those are the best teams to be in because they have instant chemistry.
And it's almost like a telepathic link with one another. All know what they need to do. And they get it done. But they still argue.
They still have their own unique cosmo always. It's like, ah, shit, I just bought these shoes. Shut up. And it's just that type of thing.
But with Newman, Newman is the rookie in this show. He's a baby. We get the scene where they won't have to call them. And Gerard shoots Coleman.
And it wings Newman. And you can actually see in the jacket. What I look before I get into that. But what I look before is by the approach of the house that he comes to Newman.
Shh, be drunker. Yeah. Yeah. And I just like, no problem.
But it's the way that Gerard saw committed to getting his man and he knows how to get his man. That he snuck around and he shot Coleman. Winging Newman. And Newman is obviously...
He's got the ring in his ear from the gunshot. And he goes, you know, you could have missed. And we see this scene where like, he could have berated it. He could have treaded like he treats anyone else.
But when Newman, he's very... He's a little bit more gentle and he's just a little bit more soft with him and he goes, you know, let me have a look at that. Can you hear me? I never...
What does he say? Like, I never... I never bargain. I never bargain.