And we're live. Hi everyone and welcome to the NERDY of North Park House. It's a NERDY podcast hosted by Northern North. I am on your host Sam.
I'm on your host Paul and we are joined by the fabulous, wonderful and majestic dressing gown wearing grants this evening. Yes mate. Majestic. Chorted on the compliments.
I did see on the chat earlier that I am feeling very tired. So tonight is probably going to go off the road with the reels a lot more than usual. So I do apologise but let's get on with it. This is podcast three of three for me this week.
Second podcast I've been involved with fourth one I've actually been editing. So yes. We've been busy. Yes.
So yes, I don't I'll get the promotion out if you haven't watched Friday night's episode yet go like watch this one first of course. Go back and watch the fabulous Coven girls who were on and it did take some dark turns. It took some interesting turns but it was very, very entertaining and them girls are absolutely lovely as well. So please go and follow them on their Facebook page and Instagram it's the Castle Coven gamers gaming.
Sorry. Also, I will lovely twitch aficionado that is the ginger ninja himself which is goodwill as finally got his way of kicking in the streets screaming outside of Donors cage. He is now star trekking across the universal grim and if you want some company entertainment go and check that out as well. And some and some too which is called now named the maiden and the bear which is all the bear and the men and all types of kinky if role players going on in that show.
We're just trying out names. It's a name and episode. I'm still just going to go with no idea of North ice and fire because I can't be bothered to say it. No, you're not.
Give us a round and podcast. So we'll just go on ice and fire. We'll just try new things out each week. New relationships you have to like try new things out.
Do you stick your finger in there? Do you poke there? It's all just trying to things out there. But yes, in everywhere.
There you go. You're hurting your first people. You just put everything in everywhere. The most important question of the week.
What are you watching? I've been watching a lot of stuff. See how I just came out naturally like just. I came out as well as well came out of these closet.
So that's fine. I'm like, oh, how dare you talk about the feeling of school like that? You've been watching. I like grand goals first.
I've finished finishing now that I get left and last. You know what it is? I've had so little time to watch TV this last week. I've been comfort watching the good place.
Right? Oh, I do. I do enjoy the good place. It's one of those TV shows that I've absolutely fallen in love with because of the way that it's kind of set up.
You can set it away like an animated show. You know what frickin' won't be a watch feature armor or whatever. You don't start from episode one of the season. You go, I want that one.
And I found myself able to do it with that. I really, really love the concept. The good place. You know, it makes you feel good when you watch it.
I'm literally watching that. Oh, it's like a sitcom version of Don Taehy's Inferno. It's probably the only way I can describe it. Is this a mama Chris and Belle?
I'm Ted Dunson. Ted Dunson is brilliant in anything he does before. I could watch him just like just be Ted Dunson. I even like these shit movies.
What was it? The one where he was trying to steal BS balls and I can't remember. But he was brilliant at it. It's about three minutes, baby.
I'm not three minutes. I'm in the baby. It's where I instantly got to. But I'm actually named after his most famous character.
Sam alone. Yeah. Did you have to think they're grunged? It's not four weeks.
That'd be interesting. Yes. I finished off the Don is in Vernal Twitch stream at the weekend. I kind of exhausted me because that is forgotten how much of a slog it was at the end.
For anybody that tuned in, I apologize for the last hour because I've forgotten how boring the end is. Wow. There's an advertisement endorsement there. Go to a friend here.
I kept the entertainment. All that boring stuff. I just kept talking and then when Satan finally gets his dick out with the end, you do get Stacey and his dick, kids. It's magnificent and that bit's amazing.
But all the build up it is just such a fucking grind. I know. I was a little bit of a chicken shit last night. I played Resident Evil 7.
I only lasted and that would be fine if I got too scared. And Beth was watching us in the stream and she was just pissed and I was laughing. There was a point where a head jumped out of the water and I fell off me seats. It was not even funny.
That needs to live in. That needs to live in. That needs to live in. It's on the Twitch channel and it is amazing.
I'm good at all the walls. Yeah. I was like a nervous energy laugh and I was like, I did not enjoy it. Like sitting there with my myself and I'll be a very good person.
Bit of the dark. I'll probably go back one time before we stay during the day. When they can't come and get you. I've been watching absolutely jack shit.
I have lost a husband to your game and I've been working and sleeping and if we're watching anything again, we've gone back over big bang again. We've literally gone to the end and come back the big game. I'm not going to be a constant recycle of it. Really much.
It's just like a comfort thing. It's just nice to have them on in the background. That is literally what I've done. I've not watched anything.
It's full. I went back to community again. I can say that's in my cycle of shows that I do go through. I've just finished only Sony.
Now it's community. I probably will be coming up back soon as well when that finishes. I am all up to date with MoonShiners for the season from last time with Sork. But as I was playing on the Twitch, we were playing with an able and we were actually going into a Moon Shiner conversation.
But you clearly don't expect to start happening. But we went back to the start for the first, because I didn't realise there was 12 seasons of it. There's 12 seasons of MoonShiners. There's 12 series of full-on content putting as well.
It's different moonshine. Some of the moonshine have stayed on throughout the seasons. Some people only on for one season. But it took a lot more serious than early stuff.
What I've watched so far. It's got a different moonshine. It's got a guy called Tim who's a moonshine in the woods and he's trying to go legal. He's trying to follow the procedures.
His father's recipe in legal stores rather than the illegal moonshine. But he's got to do the illegal moonshine to get them to be legal. He's getting himself in that trap. It would be like ashamed of him for trying to make it legal because his dad probably didn't do it legal way.
No, it just depends. The reason why he's doing it is because he wants to teach his son how to do it. He doesn't want to go through the same trials and tribulations. You can see that point.
The first couple of seasons it shows the police viewpoint which they don't do in the near. It is literally just the moonshine. The police viewpoint is like are these moonshine are doing bad shit. They're making this like a poisonous and a mix of it with bleach and shit.
No, it's not to do that. It's fucking about tax. It's simple. It's simple.
They speak like I'm making 20 grand a season making moonshine that they're not paying tax on. They want the cut. That's the main why the law is involved. I've just got the two of the moonshineers have a full note and have a fist fight.
It's hilarious. One actually broke his hand. He's a kind of moonshine. The other one had a black eye and says I'm not moonshine.
We're here no more. I'm not going to be a grand ship over. I still love you. I still love you John Paul.
Pretty Bob. Pretty Bob. I don't want to say that. I don't want to say that.
It sounds so terrible. It is unreal. Me and Paul sat down. Wasn't it last week?
Last Tuesday. I think that's a good idea. It's been a long week. We sat down in a Washington episode.
Oh my God. It is amazing. Not so. I think it's a Kardashians.
But with dungarees and less hits. In the woods. With alcohol. I'm a simple man made blood and boobs.
That's all I asked for. One of them got a pet raccoon. The pet raccoon was fighting with the dogs. It was hilarious.
Isn't it a raccoon penis that they have on there? Yes. The other one is a raccoon penis. The drawdown.
To get the shine to the floor. The other one is a raccoon penis. It is a thing. A lot of a coon penis.
I thought you were going to say the raccoon had tits. I thought you went off on my foot. It could be a quick one. That's the sweetest one.
It's very cool. This week. What we're doing. You can do your disclaimer.
Thank you. The second time I've done it today. Everything is supposed to do is episode of our opinions and opinions. If you like it, please join us in the Facebook group.
We can have an open discussion. We won't have anyone coming for us in town. The opinions are wrong. We can all agree to disagree.
Keep it fun. Keep it kind. Keep the toxic behaviour out of notism. Very well said.
I think it's also prevalent to do that. It's just how toxic and nasty notism or fine culture can be. Keep it from us. Keep the shit away from us.
That's not what we're about. That's not what we're about. So, yes, today's topic is not moonshine. It's not about British movies.
I don't know about you. That's not about you. I thought, hey, there's so many good movies. That became the problem.
Which one stand out? Which one do you remember the most? Why do you like them the most? Is that even a British movie?
What is a British movie? You're like, fuck, go down that rabbit hole. I've tried to think of the majority of the... It doesn't have to be the cast as British actors, but the majority behind the scenes of people has made the movies part of the British industry.
All the writers are being British and stuff like that. So, I've kind of looked at it that way and tried to think and not get lost. Because when I asked people at my work, they were coming up with someone's, I was like, oh, glad he was done by Ridley Scott. Can I be cast as a British movie?
I'm a British director, but I don't know if it was a British movie. That's the big thing there. So, I know Grant hasn't been on for a few weeks, but I'll give him first shot so he can go with his number one pick there. I don't know where we're diving in that quick.
How do you think about the subject matter? How did you go about it? I was in a similar dilemma. Maybe not so much as a director of the English, but if it's American director, but it's set in England and it's an English cast, is it a British film?
It's our joint promotions? It's a fucking head. So, I picked number one then. I'm not one for rom-coms, as a user probably guessed.
You don't see it. There's one rom-com that is a British film because that is one thing that we are very, very good at. It's rom-coms that actually stands out as one of my favourite films of all time. And what makes it even weirder is that I'm not only not a rom-com guy, I'm also not a Christmas film guy at all.
Oh gosh. And this film is both done by Richard Curtis, who give you a British U of a million with all of his work because he's responsible for some of the best TV and film comedy that we've ever seen. 2003's Love Actually. I thought this was going to be on your list, to be honest, I remember having a conversation about her in the Christmas period.
You actually blur it out, how much you love actually. I wasn't surprised. I think Sam was a little dictated by Love Actually, but I totally get it. The cast in that is absolutely phenomenal.
And Alan Rickman, I know there's a lot of stand-up performances, but Alan Rickman was absolutely brilliant. And Emma Thompson, like that whole story, I could have just done with that story throughout even a whole movie. It was so brilliant, perfectly done. I totally see it.
My husband is shocked. This is not on my list. Because as much as I don't like to admit it, I do fucking love this film. I haven't watched it in a really long time, so I was like, I can't, I'm not going to put that on the list.
But I do love Alan Rickman. Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson, Emma Thompson alone, that moment with Joni Mitchell will break my heart every time. There's so many iconic scenes and moments in it as well there. I think the beauty with Love Actually outside of the original concept, I'll note out a little bit about the original concept in a second.
But you start to see bits of your own relationships and your own friendships and all of that kind of stuff in it because it's so inherently British. Oh, Joni Goode show, we told the American president what law that I'll show them. I mean, as if the first Prime Minister is ever going to do what Hugh Grandad's a Billy Bob Thorne in that film. You know what I mean?
But you don't even know, it doesn't depend on what age you see it. That's the thing with Love Actually is it transcends the ages. You know what I mean? If you're seeing it as a kid, you find Liam Neeson's son in it really, really relatable and you want to be him.
You know, when you're Martin McCutchen, not Martin McCutchen, he ran out and I forgot his name. Ready, again? Yeah, you know, for all the bit about invidioiner has aged a little bit weirdly. Now we live in a world where everybody has a video camera.
There's no denying that that scene at the end with the signs, you know, you're well at that scene. You've got no soul whatsoever. You know, and then you've the cool dad in Liam Neeson. You know, so as you get older, you can go, oh, I want my son to look up and meet the way that that end looks up to Liam Neeson and get with Claudia Schiffer at the end.
Yes. You know, life you feel it with through Bill Nye. I'm going on a little bit now. That's the part I'm trying to make is you always like, as you get older, you start to relate to the difference.
You start to relate to the different characters and I can completely see where, if you saw it when you were really young, you would get that with some of the younger characters as well. No, I completely get it. It's like, it's one for all the ages and, like, say, Bill Nye, Bill Nye, Bill, the guy who plays Rob C. Nersbitt, like that relationship.
My pleasure. It's absolutely. The agent, the agent, Rockstar. The agent, Rockstar, that's brilliant.
And even like the Americanizer, I think, I think it was a bit channin thingy. You channin Elizabeth. Oh my God. Yeah.
And everything has impacts, like, and even the Colin first thing going out there and he's got a big no. But I'm just going to show it maybe no, sorry. I just might know that I just don't want to say that. But yeah.
Do you know what the original concept of the film was? Absolutely not. OK. So, Rowan Atkinson was originally meant to have a bigger part in it.
So, blimminally, Rowan Atkinson's character is supposed to be like a Christmas angel that comes along and changes things. And if you look at the couple of bits that he is in there where he's clapping around with the jewelry and all that kind of stuff, he's working for eventually and guiding the storyline from there on in with his actions. Same with the kid. At the end, it's Rowan Atkinson's in the queue when he calls the distraction that allows you to get through the gate, original, each one of the five couples that you've got going on in it would have had an interaction with Rowan Atkinson that steered the storyline in the direction that it went.
But it took a lot of his bits out. Yeah, I'm kind of glad he did. And I think it wouldn't have hit as hard as it does if all of them were in there. You're going to be in the one that hands under Lincoln.
Yeah. I guess it's almost like it's a wonderful life kind of thing, like the angel in it's a wonderful life. But I love the fact that you introduced the movie by Hugh Grant in his monologue and it ends with Hugh Grant and finishing. I love how it starts and ends.
Yeah. I like how most of the cast know that he was in the LinkedIn away. But he didn't need that point. I think it's a little bit of a disservice.
I think it's like having a look at Rowan Atkinson pointing the way it's almost like I don't adopt the dot like following the numbers. But it's nice when something's a little bit of a surprise. Yeah, it's almost like making the audience be a little bit stupid. Keep forgetting the month, Freeman's in this movie as well.
Yeah, it's the point where you want to page. You just come to the corner aspect. I forgot the point. I remember.
That doesn't surprise me. The pants was wonderful. I just I forget that he said because there's so many people to think of and the different stories that and I really like their story. They got together and they've been born standing.
I think all the stories are nice. The one like I said, I was standing there before was the element and then the Thompson one because it was so real. That was the thing because I didn't feel like he didn't get happy ending with it because you realize and you know the one together at the end. That's really like really civil each other and I'm reading.
If we're all not watching anything this week, I have actually been reading and read now that Rickman's diaries. He is like him and her are like kindred spirits. There's a reason they work so well together on screen. They are absolutely kindred spirits and he just he always any time he says with Emma because his diaries are very at the beginning.
It's like breakfast dinner tea work and then he starts writing more in detail about you see any time he mentions when he's with Emma. It's just Emma. Yeah. I didn't realize he was really good friends with Rubywax either.
Like best friends with Rubywax could not put them together if I tried. To be fair, the Rubywax got around so it's all right. What a lovely choice though to kick us off. I really like that.
That's all that will help for me. So how are you going to follow that then Sam? I have found this really hard now. I love British cinema.
I think that we can pull off some of the best movies going and I have a lot of my choices are ones that I just I love. My last one I actually have a personal connection to and but my first one is a really recent one that I've watched. Yes, I've watched a new movie everyone. And it's an oh and I picked it because not only is a British and it's got an incredibly British cast and the guy who wrote it is incredibly English.
It spawned my favorite television program in his 2001's Gossford Park. Written by Julian. Julian Bellos probably had a check that kind of a fun. The Gossford Park is the what they were going to say was the prequel to Dump Navi.
Right. But it didn't work that way. So the majority of the cast that is in Gossford Park are in Dump Navi. I was going to say this one because I've not seen it so I figured that.
It is a murder mystery. Right. And a very in a very stately home and the only one American. Sorry, there's two Americans in it.
Ryan Philip is one of them and a guy who I can't remember his name but when you look at him, you go, oh yeah, I remember him. He's been in the resort. But yeah, it's a murder mystery set in the stately home in the 1930s. Maggie Smith is absolutely phenomenal in it.
She's if anyone watches down in the norm Maggie is the Downer Countess of Grantham. She is nothing like that in this. She is sassy. She is a bitch.
She is absolutely brilliant. But yeah, it's a murder mystery that has such a twist ending. I didn't see common. Helen Merens in it.
Oh, gosh. You have this like sort and a guy you play Dumbledore he's in it. Which one? The other one.
The other one. The other one. The second one. Michael Gambopf.
Kristen Stewart Scott. What's that? It's from Four Winds and a Funeral. She's in it.
Really posh one. Yeah, I picked that one because it was the most recent one that I've watched and like I say, it spawned my favorite television programs out now. So what are you not going to get in the other ones? You're listening to the other ones?
I'll be not on your list. Absolutely not. I love the TV show. I didn't say I like the films.
I know you went to say the films but that's what I was talking about. But for all of the, it's lovely to see down on a big screen. It really is beautiful to see it. But it wasn't film.
It wasn't movie worthy. Could have been a television program. Could have been a special. But again, it was beautiful to see it on the big screen.
Richard Harris. Sorry Beth. Yeah, I got wrong. I did not see that.
But the end of the park is on Netflix at the moment. And this is just a really good murder mystery. No, I'll check it out. I'll do like a good murder mystery.
I grew up on Perro and stuff like that. It's very, very, very. It's very agatha Christi. And I got that kind of vibe from it.
So half now in and hello Mrs. weather all. I do regret sending his picture. Who am I?
So Mrs. Weatherall, what's it like having five amazing, you know? Wow. Off an hour in as well.
Guy Oh God hashtag Sammy's mom. Sammy's man has got to go. He does. Thank you.
I'm grateful. I'm grateful for all the attention that you get. It's because there's some way in here. Her jeans are there.
No, you're a pretty family. I can say welcome him. You can use that. But I was like, yes.
I was having a defensive. You got over next year. I'm some other when you posted a picture of that. Do you realize that's a big mother in the audience?
Yes. Yes, we do. I forget who I'm talking with. Yeah.
Who did the one Gossack part? Oh, that's a very classy. So I'm going to go with the first film that made me cry as a kid. One, because I loved it.
But I'm two, because it's scared as well. It was a musical. And you've got to pick up a dog too. So I'll leave her.
And I absolutely adore this moment. I used to watch this every Christmas time. It used to be a box and do a special. Oliver Reed as Bill Sykes is the most terrifying and horrendous bully of a man that you've ever seen.
And I say, I loved Nancy in the way Trello was just horrendous. And like that whole aspect, the guy who played fake and I kind of remember his name, but that freaked me out. But I was all for Oliver and Arthur Dodger and the songs. And he was a door every time I came on it made me dad use.
But I've got so many warm fuzzy memories of watching this when we died just because of like, maybe dad's a big musical fan as well. But I don't think there's a better movie that can give you all the different emotions. And I know they always try and remake this or they will do different TV show, a different spin to it. But that movie, the classic one, the 1968 version has never been better.
And it is just beautifully filmed as well. The costumes in it is stunning. The child actors aren't ever written, which is very hard to see for, like, especially movies of that era. But yes, I love this movie.
Listen, a photography in it for the time is absolutely beautiful. The make London look absolutely breathtaking. And when they want to make it look grimy and dirty and horrible, they really give a sense of complete dredge when you're in that place with them. And Oliver Reed is fucking terrifying.
And that's seen when he kills Nancy. Yeah. My god, spoilers, by the way. And it's absolutely haunting.
We used on this on VHS and I can still do this day a picture that I probably still have it. I have all of our VHSs in the back bedroom. And I probably still have it. I do love this, but I'm sorry.
I have to disagree. One child is very annoying in this and it's full of punchy space. And sometimes he's got a proper dumb face. You've heard it here first, guys.
Some hit opens. I can turn that around. Well, I totally get it. I know it's down to personal preference.
A lot of these ones as well. And that's why I loved him as well. But since I thought about top five British movies, I had to make sure that I was a British movie because I know how old it was. I was like, it definitely was from the UK.
It was British production and everything British actors and everything. I like to say this was number one with the bullets and just for them warm fuzzies. And I can never get tired of watching it and like listen to the songs as well. Even like the awful dodger and the bless of after he had a horrible life.
The poor actor, I'd say lots of bad things happened to him, but absolutely amazing. Like, and so I don't think Charles Dickens has been done better. Well, probably his mother's Christmas carol, but that's in cold. Yeah, I was going to say.
But for all of that, this would be the only one I'd watch. I don't think I'd watch another adaptation of it. I don't know about this one. Have you seen it, Grant?
Very quiet. You do like a good musical about Oliver, great on me. I don't know if it was over exposure when I was a kid or something like that. But then they opened them out and it's like nails down a fucking job.
What do you mean? I would say I would sing it for you. I would say I'd be respected for what it is. But as far as personal taste, it's concerned that I haven't watched it.
And so I was in single figures and I've got no desire to do so much. So the next watch along, we'll go get a grand in. So just to say that's the pain and the younger. Yes, that's my first pick.
Oh, that's a good. I did some strong first pick. How are you going to top that one, Grant? I'm going to keep all of our reads dick.
Why not? It is. I don't know. Absolutely.
He's going to be at a powerhouse of British cinema. And my next pick is also Oliver Reed in a musical role. And the way that he's cast and the way that he's portrayed in this film is absolutely astounding as a villain, which after what you've just said about him and Oliver, I think only goes to show that the way that Oliver Reed can be utilized in musical sense because he's got that kind of almost distorted and sounds to his voice. You know what I mean?
He can sing, but he can make his singing sound like he can't sing. And we've got a little bit of a North East no idea up north there trivia in this because one of the scenes in this movie was filmed at Hilton Castle. Everybody of a certain age and someone knows somebody that was drafted in to be one of the extras in it. But I want to be favorite fans with an unbelievable cast in 1875.
Tommy by the who. That didn't even come into my mind. That one. I think I've fully watched it a handful of times as well.
Yeah. Can you get my answer? That was easy. This film got bounced in and out a good few times as I was prepping it and a lot of the who a lot of the musical.
The cast to this is absolutely unbelievable. I've got it open for it. It doesn't case. I forget anybody.
So you've got Jack Nicholson, you've got all of the who and all of it really to you. But Eric Clatton, you've got Tina Turner in there playing a crazy post prostitute that gets a blanket full of LSD and gives him superpowers. And the song that she sings acid queen is one of the best songs that I've ever heard. And here in Tina Turner, saying that song is absolutely open, breathtaking.
It's the imagery in this film is absolutely astounding. Like I say, Oliver Reed playing Frank Bernie, whatever you want to call him, kind of the evil step that he's just he's breathtaking in it because of this horrible kind of the only character in modern cinema and think of that pulls off the same vibe is I don't remember the actor's name, but it's the guy that plays the durlish Lee in is it the durlish Lee's in Harry Potter? Yes. Aaron's uncle, whatever that's the God.
Of course, his name is he was in. Even in a color, because in Pisgai, slavery, all the results were negative. Yes. You know, the way that he plays him and that word stuff just kind of swaggering, kind of blotted awful.
Everything about Oliver Reed screams villain in it and the utilize the ones that can't sing really well halfway through because it's a music album. It's a concept album tells the story. There's a bit where Tommy's abused by an uncle and they get Keith Moon. This thing is wicked on glory because he's a drummer.
He couldn't focus. It's very rare that we get to fill the columns out with them. You know what I mean? No, jokes aside, rumours are talented as well.
But because he couldn't sing, that's why they gave him wicked on glory because he just sounds as bad as that act. Yeah. Make you feel. And yeah, right at the end, it all goes a little bit off on the completely out with the blue and the writers riding around in castles and all that kind of stuff, which is the bit that was filmed at the castle.
I didn't know that was filming. And I think I had an affinity with the movie. So it's never been to be able to talk to him. I didn't know it was filmed at the castle.
So I don't need a verse. I might go and check that out a bit. Didn't know it existed until two minutes ago. You know, I've heard the songs or pinball, wizard.
Yeah. Yeah. So John, man. Yeah.
Of course, John plays the champ. He's up there with the goose plane pinball against Roger Daltry. He was blind. It sounds like one hell of an acid trip.
I think the whole thing. That's a big. It was almost like it was brought by Pink Floyd. Yes.
Very good second. Second pick. I didn't say that one comment. So already getting a few surprises at the window now.
So that's got all fearful, shall we? Oh my gosh. That's what I am. And this one, my second pick, is purely just down to how much I fucking love it.
And it might not be everyone's cup of tea. But it is from 2003 against our stars Helen Mirren. And it's kind of the girls. I'm in for it all day.
So it's fine. Absolutely. And I absolutely adore this movie. I love a true story to start with.
And the fact that it's British and it's also set in the countryside. And there's Marmalade. Like I am living for this. Like that's the life I want to be in the WC.
I was going to say that like the first two picks of our yoga class, British, actually what I'm better than to doing is the other classes. It's probably trying to be above their station. You're working class last from the North East. Me last pick will prove that as well.
But no, I just I love the truth. Obviously it's true story. I just I love the friendships. I love the women in it who were just absolutely fantastic.
It's not one bump, no one in it. It's just and it's such an easy watch as well. No, the castes are me as an impact, too. It's got, oh, gosh, it's just there's so many faces you can see.
And you're like, oh, my God, you're from that. Oh, my God, you're from this. And oh, I just I absolutely don't. It does give me the woman for these.
I do break my heart in so many places in this movie. Obviously spoilers and when he got what's on him, Julie Wolders, when her husband passes that absolute break, but when her and Chris's and her and friends, friendship starts to break down. And that like really like hits an order, but it just it's so lovely that without saying a word, they can just patch it back up again. No, everything's is like the friendship is that strong.
Yeah, that they can just patch it up and just move on and know that life's too short or shit like that. Like, I think if anything, they prove out that whole movie is that life is too short? No, that's the thing. No, that's the thing.
That's the thing. Always the message when it comes across is like, you've got to let like, I've found off the ground, she never let things go. But, um, but the message. That's what that's just in like in general.
That's how we live. Don't ever cross me. Um, but no, I like to show the whole grudges and like to be angry a lot. And I think like when we're getting to, to an age, because we're no longer 21, as Sam tried to pretend that she was on Friday Friday.
All the Friday night, Granddad was 21. I'm going to be doing off the podcast by the Coven girls because I wouldn't accept that Sam was 21. No, I can handle that. Well, really make that go my anxiety a little bit.
When they say, no, you're 21. I'm like, I can't go through starting my job. I started my job at 21 and I've been there for 19 years. I'm like, I can't go through that again.
I'm already being wearing right now. Less, but yeah, it's like not a whole them but just letting score. Like say in the frozen song, like let go. I've learned so much about that like the last few years, even just even the early on North type shit, like not being pissed off at as people as much because I know I do come across as a angry man.
It's an all the knac, it's just a facade, really. Don't you dare try and argue goodwill. Um, This is what you see, he's twitched stream. He's a chicken chick.
That's a little hole in the hedgehog. So it all changes. Anyway, so yes, the calendar girls don't hold a good. Don't hold a good.
So I can't really that. I don't think it's a nice film. It's like a lovely film. It's a lovely film.
It's very much a remiss with me self if I didn't add it because I love it. I watch it at least once a year. It's just an easy watch. Right.
So let's bring this one back to where we're from, from our roots, for the next film. OK. 1969 Sean what true Northern people are like, yes. Well, I thought you'd say you're really soon Bob too.
I was like, no, I was like, I was a fucking green. I can't believe I was gonna be list. Yes, I use the same case. I think we had to watch it in school.
Yes. It was working for us. I think I was just in English class. So we had to watch as well.
Yeah, I generally can't remember it all. But I know it's about a bird. Yeah, it's about a young lad. I'm sure he's called Billy.
I could be wrong. It's Billy, isn't it? Go on, get the net. No, because we think I was called Billy.
I was right. So I don't like the doubts there. Just living in the Northern family. His brothers are Dick.
That's why he's the best way I can put it. And just basically life shit, life, generation normally going to school, getting picked on pretty small and rainy. And one of the truest representations of what he used to be like at a Northern school in the Northeast. She's best in pants.
She's best in pants. If you don't have your pick, it you teach you always trying to prove he was the best footballer. And that's that scene when I've got his name. And he says, I'm going to be team captain.
I'm on your way and red. You can be livable. And I'm Bobby Chan. They're starting to name him like football players, which way we used to do at school.
And it's so reminiscent. And I remember so far because that used to be what he used to like. And if you were shit, you used to get tortured. Like I was probably the one fortune you were shit.
Because unfortunately I was good at sports. So I was that dickhead. And I say myself so much in that now. It is a little bit upset, but it's how I remember it.
And that relationship with Billy and Cass, the casual, was just so innocent and so perfect. And I remember being absolutely broken when his brother killed the bird because he didn't like to say it didn't do what he was meant to do. So I was punishment, he killed the bird. And you don't say the bird.
He's just it's in a trash. You know, like he says, because he's gone, whereas, where's Cass and you say Billy kind of raised brother, obviously, and mom, he's killed me bird. He's going to be bird. And he's like, it's just a shoot with bird and stuff like that.
But it's absolutely heartbreaking. But if you want to know any Americans or any one that's not from the North East or even the Northwest, you want to know what it was like, like, even like, it was a settlement at the 60s. But that's what it was like, even in the 80s and early 90s, living in the North East, it didn't change that was our lives. There's so much and it was represented so well.
And it's just a beautiful film. So yeah, I guess. Wow. I really I'm like proper, probably the key about the fact that the bird I couldn't remember that part.
If he showed me that in school, I must have been removed because I would never have been able to emotionally handle myself like that. But I do, I think I've seen clips and pictures. It looks it looks like home. Oh, I watch it as I was kidding.
I think this is just like life in the Northeast. Like, why is it not changed? Like, I remember me grandad and stuff taught in the way they used to do. Like, probably not as mancunian or as Yorkshire, as the accents were, but the language they used and the way they'd like terminology.
And like my family, like, were piers, like, grandfather, weapon, the pits and the wind for the pits, pit strikes as well. So anything that was going on, just heavily connected with me on a level that makes a lot of films do. I wouldn't say it's a favorite film because it's a hard watch. It's not something I would watch over and over because you can't enjoy it.
But it's going to die. But it's beautiful. And if you watch it as well, it is exactly like what I was like for a lot of people. And I'll always be go back to it for that reason, if that makes sense.
Yeah. Yeah. I get that massively. That's very much linked with my last pick, like how I feel about that.
Certainly. Yes. So that's my second pick. So we're doing well guys, no, no, no crossovers yet.
No, no, no, any streams or doing anything like that. Got it. Right. I'm quite quiet here because I can take it from our childhood in the early 90s.
Up to what life was like in our teens, and the late 90s and the early 2000s where regardless how much some of us might try to distance ourselves from it, the UK was governed by rave culture. And was it was? It might have gone out the window now. So we're crushing the stream.
Yes, it might be. It might not be. All right. I think it's two films that on our very description and probably get in there.
Features the debut were probably the worst British actor working today. And what it is. I know what it is because I'm your husband's picks. Yeah, human traffic.
Human traffic. I'm still getting the same. I'm getting the same. I'm getting the same.
But that's fine. I'll do it. I mean, as well, it was the same. You were the same type of thing.