Fun fact, I asked John Goodman to sign my copy of this and he hesitated and said "what, I'm not in this movie" and I had to remind him that he definitely was then he signed it for me...
My mom worked in post production at universal for a really long time before moving to Montana. I remember when this movie was being filmed, she would come home and be like “today they had giraffes on the backlot.” Or “I got to pet an elephant when I left my office for lunch today.” It was really fun when this was being filmed having animals on the lot. She brought me to work with her a few times so I could see the animals too lol
The Dance thing is specifically a Steve Carell signature thing. You should also remember much like this one, he ended 40 year old virgin with a dance thing to "Aquarius/Let The Sun Shine In" But Ackward Dancing has been a signature Steve Carell comedy thing, he used it in many of his earlier comedy movies as well as for his character Michael Scott in the US The Office.
2:44 That was a reference to an anti-pollution/litter commercial from the 90s. A Native American in front of a field full of garbage with a single tear rolling down his cheek.
The joke Correll made about the old "indian" ( his word not mine) in front of garbage refers to a P.S. commercial. A native American was going down a river in a canoe. The further he went downstream, the more litter and garbage was on the banks. At the end of this commercial, he turns to the camera, and has one big tear running down his check. It came out sometime in the 60s and ran for about 20 to 25 years, I think.
@@GhostWatcher2024 Oh yeah I forgot about The Electric Mist, that was a good one! Although some would argue he wasn't technically a villain in 10 Cloverfield 😉
When you annoy yourselves and laugh, it's a sign you've hit that stage when you relaxed and comfortable that this si your thing. You do excellent and naturally bounce thoguhts off one another. Amazing work. Long may it continue. Love you both.
I love a movie that doesn't take itself seriously. I enjoy this movie because I can just sit back and watch. Evan's whole getting yelled at for things out of his control is a very Job plot line too, but the ending is sweeter than the start.
Definitely love Bruce Almighty more, but I think it's because everything and everyone in that movie worked and felt "real". I always felt this was a slight cash in on the success of Steve Carrell at the time and they kinda just wrote a vague plot around him. Not to say I don't absolutely love Steve Carrell in this and it is a fun movie. Edit: Damn need to stop writing comments before you guys finish the movie.
I definitely think this was more overtly religious than Bruce Almighty as well. Like Bruce Almighty the religious aspect was very secondary, and mostly just there as a plot device.
@@robertcampbell8070 I agree, it struck me a bit like they were trying to make a cash grab at Christian audiences. I mean, they weren't wrong, lets be clear. I just felt maybe they took it a couple steps too far.
I also think the first one was better. But I like this one, because I simply love Steve Carell. They should have written more to his strengths, because "Get Smart" for example is a masterpiece and can only be played by him or Leslie Nielsen😂
the "This is really happening!" moment is my daily bread and butter. nobody ever listens, until it happens... so I'm like "I'd hate to make this the moment where I say 'I told you so', but I TOLD YOU SO!"
John Goodman, playing a bad guy in “O’Brother, Where Art Thou” is a sight to behold!!! Also, they really built the Ark on location. And then after filming was completed, they donated all the wood to Habitat for Humanity to build houses. 💙💙💙
If you can get your hands on the DVD, check out the special features. They managed to completely erase the carbon footprint created by the making of this movie.
The crying Indian reference is about a 1971 American anti-litter commercial where a Native American cries surrounded by garbage. It was later exposed the actor was an Italian American "Iron Eyes Cody" and now remembered for stereo typing.
Well I just had to read up on "Yutes". At the risk of sounding like a complete effing dork which part of the world are you using this from? Seems like a lot of places.
Out of curiosity It looks like the word "Yutes" is used a lot of places Are you guys all from the same place using the word I mean. I mean I get it I know what it means like dictionary wise.
34:52 I do think one thing that you guys may have missed about this movie vs The first one Is that this was supposed to be a flip on the original premise because in the first one Bruce was at a low point he just lost his job his relationship falling apart in Bruce's mind he has nothing to be thankful for but he learns that everything he really needed he either had or could have gotten himself Now with this movie Evan was on top of the world he just got great job new house and his mind everything was "perfect" when it really wasn't there so much happening under the surface that he need to se
There were two of each animal *and* two of each unclean and seven of each clean animal. There were originally two different versions of the story and they just sort of mashed them together so everything happens twice and slightly different. It rained for 40 days and it rained for 150 days, they loaded only two of each animal, and they loaded heaps of extra animals on board.
@@charlesmartinjr3971 It's in Genesis along with the 40 day flood. The flood lasts for 40 days in Gen 7:17, and then later in Gen 7:24 the flood lasts for 150 days. (youtube is reading those biblical references as timestamps, but they're not).
@Nick Ah, I see the confusion. The RAIN and floodgates of the deep were pouring water on the earth for forty days, but then they stopped, and it took 150 days for the water to begin receding. From that point, it took another three months before mountains became visible (8:5), and 375 days from the start of the rain until everything was completely dry (7:11 & 8:13-14). Easy mistake to make. I used to read 7:20 and think the water was only 20 feet deep!
"The dance" was a Steve Carrell signature bit, he made it up just like Jim made up his bit. I love this movie BECAUSE it's so different from the first. I don't feel like they were trying to "recreate" the first one, i think they were using its success to help boost Steve Carrell's career. They changed a number of key things that i feel make it work as it's own movie.
7:45 When I first watched this movie I thought nothing about the wood being delivered wrong. As an adult who lives on property we own... That's 80sqft of dead grass I gotta re-sow... but 6000 dollars worth of paid-for lumber addressed to me... Thanks for the Shed Fellas! Have a Good One!
Actually, the original story of the flood comes from "The Epic of Gilgamesh" the oldest surviving literary work 4000 years old :). And I lost track of how many times I had to say, "That's what she said", thanks Simone.
A flood appears in Gilgamesh, but it is probably not the source of the Biblical flood myth, and it's not the first flood myth. Later versions of the Epic of Gilgamesh took it's flood myth from the Altrahasis myth, in the earliest known versions of Gilgamesh there's a verse where he "meets the hero of the flood" instead of being the hero of the flood himself. They were distinctly different. The truth is there are flood myths from every civilisation that started on a river. It's tempting to say they are all the same myth, but there's just no evidence linking them and too many differences to make it a reasonable claim. The question of the oldest story is also a fascinating one. Gilgamesh is the oldest surviving *confirmed* literary work. There's a set of marked shells from China which may be an older example (6,000 years old), but it's not confirmed. In any case, the story of the seven sisters is older but it is an oral tradition story - it may be as old as 100,000 years.
@@Nick-pu3of That's interesting, I mean the only possible link between Gilgamesh and the Torah is that the Jews were exiled in Babylon for decades where the story of Gilgamesh would have been quite prevalent not to mention parts of the epic are verbatim the same as the story of the flood, and the Torah was assembled into one work after the Jews returned to Israel following their exile to Babylon. Isn't it likely the Epic of Gilgamesh was also an oral tradition before it was written much like the Torah was first an oral tradition, as for the 100,000 years that sounds rather speculative, and I believe you said the Chinese shells were not confirmed, so it's interesting, but it still makes "The Epic of Gilgamesh" the oldest confirmed literary work. I guess the only thing all those stories from various cultures of a deluge have in common is that they are all written about a flood.
@@8967Logan There's undeniably been a certain amount of cultural diffusion, they all lived in each other's pockets after all. We can certainly demonstrate there was a good deal of influence on the Biblical flood, but there are enough differences to make their origins very likely separate. The differences do stand out - The Biblical flood covered the whole world, while the Gilgamesh flood was restricted to just the river valley, the Biblical flood covered the world while the Gilgamesh flood smashed the lands and changed them, Gilgamesh's boat was square and carried people as well as animals, while the Biblical ark was long and narrow and only carried animals. It goes on. The Seven Sisters: Ok, this one is much more speculative. The Pleiades are a star constellation that has six stars in it, but the myth relating to them is about seven sisters. This myth is found in almost all of the oldest cultures in the world, substantially the same. The funny thing is 100,000 years ago there would have been seven stars visible in that constellation. So, the fact that the story is so far spread, and that at one time the number of stars was correct, it has led many to suggest that these stories have a shared origin that dates back to when there were seven stars. This would mean the story came with us from out of Africa with the first human diaspora. Definitely just speculation, but it is a compelling theory. Ancient stories are a fascination of mine.
@@GhostWatcher2024 There are. Those cultures are also river cultures, and as such it is not surprising they have flood narratives in their cultural canon. That's the key thing here. The first six city-building cultures, called the "pristine cultures" because they developed certain key technologies in isolation, are all river cultures. The Mesoamerican cultures indeed had flood myths, but they are strikingly different to the Mesopotamian flood myths. For example, in the Tlapanec flood myths the only survivors are a man and his dog who magically transforms into a woman so they can repopulate the world. Very different. Chinese, Indian, Egyptian, Incan, Mexican, and Mesopotamian flood myths are too different and too far separated to be connected to each other. They also date to different times.
No politician would ever read a bill himself. That was pages are for. Also, the thing about the Indian crying about the garbage is a reference to an old 70s commercial staring Iron Eyes Cody (who was actually an Italian named Tony Corti).
Floods are indeed covered by insurance in many areas where flood can be historically shown to happen. In fact, you can get insurance for anything, if you ask, and are willing to pay their price. The problem with floods, and climate change, is that more and more people are getting flooded in areas that have NEVER been flooded before, therefore few people pay the extra price for flood insurance that would 'never happen''.
it's wild how it's more logical in Bruce Almightly. With Evan with all of this happening, nobody really believing him wouldn't make sense, we can see it happening. But I love it because the animals were really cute and his hair growing
This isn't the first time John Goodman as played a politician. On The West Wing, he played the Speaker of the House who had to step into the roll of the President of the United States. Morgan Freeman has also played President of the United States.
You guys will never be annoying… even when watching one of your movies for the tenth time, you guys are still entertaining. Always like your stuff I could easily watch more content from you…
The Pillar of Salt thing is reference to when god destroyed Sodom and Gomorra he told Lot and his wife to not look back, Lot’s wife looked back and was transformed into a pillar of salt. This has been your Bible fact of the day.
2:45 - "I feel like that old Indian in front of all the garbage." - "What?" - That's in reference to an iconic 1970s PSA about littering. It starts with an American Indian (sorry, Native American) paddling a canoe down a river. He passes garbage floating in the water, and there's an industrial zone in the background. He pulls the canoe up onto a litter-strewn shore. He's then shown looking out at a busy highway as a car goes by and someone throws a bundle of garbage out the window, which lands at his feet. The camera goes in for a closeup as a single tear rolls down his cheek. It used to be on TV all the time in the 70s. The irony is that the guy in the commercial wasn't actually Native American. Just search for Iron Eyes Cody PSA here on UA-cam.
I have actually never seen this movie so I won't be watching the reaction (yet) but I just wanted to pop in to say I absolutely LOVE that thumbnail. I always love your guys' thumbnails but this one is just ridiculous! hahaha
...I'm sure the heads at Universal would love to see this comment to know just how much their very memorable opening card helps people remember their branding. 🤣
I actually got into an in-person argument with a sitting Member of the US Congress over their pay. I said that their pay should be tied to the minimum wage and only go up when a new member takes office. Everyone else would be stuck with the same pay as long as they're in office.
Politicians are definitely not overpaid relative to other high-power careers with regards to income. If anything, public service in general doesn't pay enough. The real issue is their ability to use their position of power to engage in financial corruption, getting buddy-buddy with special interests, going on big speaking tours serving the wealthy, having an unfair advantage in the stock market through insider knowledge, etc.
in the early 70s there was a antipolutiion campain featuring a native Ameriica crying on the side of a highway as drivers woulld throw trash at his feet 2:42
I prefer this to Bruce Almighty because it’s more appropriate for my kids, but both movies are funny. Two comic geniuses Jim & Steve. Crazy Stupid Love is Steve Carrell’s best movie though
The "Missed" high five at 3:59 is attentional, you miss the upper high-five to then hit hands down bellow... I know it's stupid, but it was a thing in some areas.
@@dante340 The point of the first third of the movie is the uncertainty about whether he’s evil or just weird in a creepy way. It’s a building dread thing.
The Indian looking at the garbage is a reference to an old public service announcement about pollution probably from the '70s with a native American Indian, actually it was an actor that wasn't native American.
Cool Hand Luke (1967)- Paul Newman 😎 Papillon (1973)- Steve McQueen / Dustin Hoffman🦋 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)- Paul Newman / Robert Redford🤠
I just love the guy who plays Marty, John Michael Higgins. He's so great as the spiritually confused folk music group leader Terry Boehner, in A Mighty Wind. 😀
If watered down orange juice isn't that good -- which I agree with -- why is San Pellegrino so tasty? If you think it down with carbonated water, does it taste better instead of worse? Is that the secret to mimosas?
Fun fact, I asked John Goodman to sign my copy of this and he hesitated and said "what, I'm not in this movie" and I had to remind him that he definitely was then he signed it for me...
LOL
like how Jackie Chan doesnt remember he made a Karate Kid reboot lmao
Actors are something else.
@@bludger23 I can understand not remembering being in that
"huh, oh I just remember that as rent **enter date**
My mom worked in post production at universal for a really long time before moving to Montana. I remember when this movie was being filmed, she would come home and be like “today they had giraffes on the backlot.” Or “I got to pet an elephant when I left my office for lunch today.”
It was really fun when this was being filmed having animals on the lot. She brought me to work with her a few times so I could see the animals too lol
That's awesome
The Dance thing is specifically a Steve Carell signature thing. You should also remember much like this one, he ended 40 year old virgin with a dance thing to "Aquarius/Let The Sun Shine In" But Ackward Dancing has been a signature Steve Carell comedy thing, he used it in many of his earlier comedy movies as well as for his character Michael Scott in the US The Office.
I think they were talking about this 31:41, not the end credits, at least that's what I understood.
Huh?
It's remarkably corny.
2:44 That was a reference to an anti-pollution/litter commercial from the 90s. A Native American in front of a field full of garbage with a single tear rolling down his cheek.
The scarlet Johansson joke was top tier 😂
It was very relatable too.
He ain't wrong, either.
I missed it.
Help a bro out and give a time stamp ? 🤔
@@adnap 13:35, I gotchu bro.
@@Wertsir Thank you, sir. 👍
The joke Correll made about the old "indian" ( his word not mine) in front of garbage refers to a P.S. commercial. A native American was going down a river in a canoe. The further he went downstream, the more litter and garbage was on the banks. At the end of this commercial, he turns to the camera, and has one big tear running down his check. It came out sometime in the 60s and ran for about 20 to 25 years, I think.
Iron Eyes Cody. He was actually Italian and only played an indigenous person in Hollywood. It was a controversy at the time.
@@Nick-pu3of good to know. Thanks.
@@Nick-pu3ofon top of that he was delusional and genuinely seemed to be believe he was native American
@@TupocalypseShakur Dude even gave his kids native-sounding names, told them they were native. It was super weird.
Speaking of John Goodman being a villain, I don't think you all have reacted to "Oh Brother Where Art Thou" and you absolutely need to!
@@GhostWatcher2024 Oh yeah I forgot about The Electric Mist, that was a good one! Although some would argue he wasn't technically a villain in 10 Cloverfield 😉
Hangover 3 he played the villain
I came here also to say this. O Brother, Where Art Thou needs a reaction!
@@-Gorby- I'll go back further. He's a bad guy in Revenge of the Nerds.
Ironically in that he was a Bible salesman
Steve Carrell is such a good screamer
My favourite trope is when the main character keeps neglecting his family while his wife is 11/10 and the nicest person ever.
So, every sitcom ever?
He tried very hard not to. Morgan Freeman didn’t make it easy this time.
When you annoy yourselves and laugh, it's a sign you've hit that stage when you relaxed and comfortable that this si your thing. You do excellent and naturally bounce thoguhts off one another. Amazing work. Long may it continue. Love you both.
So true
I love a movie that doesn't take itself seriously. I enjoy this movie because I can just sit back and watch.
Evan's whole getting yelled at for things out of his control is a very Job plot line too, but the ending is sweeter than the start.
Definitely love Bruce Almighty more, but I think it's because everything and everyone in that movie worked and felt "real". I always felt this was a slight cash in on the success of Steve Carrell at the time and they kinda just wrote a vague plot around him. Not to say I don't absolutely love Steve Carrell in this and it is a fun movie.
Edit: Damn need to stop writing comments before you guys finish the movie.
you described 90% of all sequels
I definitely think this was more overtly religious than Bruce Almighty as well. Like Bruce Almighty the religious aspect was very secondary, and mostly just there as a plot device.
@@robertcampbell8070 I agree, it struck me a bit like they were trying to make a cash grab at Christian audiences. I mean, they weren't wrong, lets be clear. I just felt maybe they took it a couple steps too far.
there literary works older than 4000 years ago. Not everything revolves around Christianity
Just wanna say that seeing your faces edited into characters from different movies kinda makes my day whole.
Yea i love their thumbnails too
I also think the first one was better. But I like this one, because I simply love Steve Carell.
They should have written more to his strengths, because "Get Smart" for example is a masterpiece and can only be played by him or Leslie Nielsen😂
It was originally played PERFECTLY by Don Adams.
Llama Simone makes me so damned happy. Don't know why, it just does. Really turned around a day full of nightmares and spiders. Thanks!
the "This is really happening!" moment is my daily bread and butter.
nobody ever listens, until it happens... so I'm like "I'd hate to make this the moment where I say 'I told you so', but I TOLD YOU SO!"
John Goodman, playing a bad guy in “O’Brother, Where Art Thou” is a sight to behold!!! Also, they really built the Ark on location. And then after filming was completed, they donated all the wood to Habitat for Humanity to build houses. 💙💙💙
Personally loved this movie. Thought it was fun, positive, and entertaining.
If you can get your hands on the DVD, check out the special features. They managed to completely erase the carbon footprint created by the making of this movie.
So, what you’re saying is they managed to the same thing as if they had done nothing at all?
@@walker1812
Something like that yeah. It's really interesting.
The crying Indian reference is about a 1971 American anti-litter commercial where a Native American cries surrounded by garbage. It was later exposed the actor was an Italian American "Iron Eyes Cody" and now remembered for stereo typing.
Every time these two yutes don't get a reference from my childhood, I die a little inside.
I agree, your honor. Yutes suck!!!
Well I just had to read up on "Yutes". At the risk of sounding like a complete effing dork which part of the world are you using this from? Seems like a lot of places.
Out of curiosity It looks like the word "Yutes" is used a lot of places Are you guys all from the same place using the word I mean. I mean I get it I know what it means like dictionary wise.
Yup here I go - well actually..... the original story of Noah was from the Sumerian Texts, which are the oldest known written book/stories.
34:52
I do think one thing that you guys may have missed about this movie vs The first one
Is that this was supposed to be a flip on the original premise because in the first one Bruce was at a low point he just lost his job his relationship falling apart in Bruce's mind he has nothing to be thankful for but he learns that everything he really needed he either had or could have gotten himself
Now with this movie Evan was on top of the world he just got great job new house and his mind everything was "perfect" when it really wasn't there so much happening under the surface that he need to se
That Wanda Sykes line about if he gets any crazier, he'll end up in the white house really hits home now.
Agreed. A freaking dementia patient who literally can't talk is in charge.
Both Jim Carrey and Steve Carell add their own touch to both movies, that's what makes them so great.
"Watered down orange juice" gave me such flashbacks to bible camp which is oddly fitting for this movie.
Love your banter 😂 more annoying each other for fun 😍😂
First thing that pops up in my head when I see this is when Steve was on between two ferns and his reaction to this when Zach brings it up.
There were two of each animal *and* two of each unclean and seven of each clean animal. There were originally two different versions of the story and they just sort of mashed them together so everything happens twice and slightly different. It rained for 40 days and it rained for 150 days, they loaded only two of each animal, and they loaded heaps of extra animals on board.
Where was the 150-day story found? I'm not familiar with that one.
Yo, Nick..
Ayyy!
@@charlesmartinjr3971 It's in Genesis along with the 40 day flood. The flood lasts for 40 days in Gen 7:17, and then later in Gen 7:24 the flood lasts for 150 days.
(youtube is reading those biblical references as timestamps, but they're not).
@Nick Ah, I see the confusion. The RAIN and floodgates of the deep were pouring water on the earth for forty days, but then they stopped, and it took 150 days for the water to begin receding. From that point, it took another three months before mountains became visible (8:5), and 375 days from the start of the rain until everything was completely dry (7:11 & 8:13-14). Easy mistake to make. I used to read 7:20 and think the water was only 20 feet deep!
"The dance" was a Steve Carrell signature bit, he made it up just like Jim made up his bit. I love this movie BECAUSE it's so different from the first. I don't feel like they were trying to "recreate" the first one, i think they were using its success to help boost Steve Carrell's career. They changed a number of key things that i feel make it work as it's own movie.
FUN FACT: This was the highest-budget comedy ever produced
7:45 When I first watched this movie I thought nothing about the wood being delivered wrong.
As an adult who lives on property we own... That's 80sqft of dead grass I gotta re-sow... but 6000 dollars worth of paid-for lumber addressed to me...
Thanks for the Shed Fellas! Have a Good One!
Actually, the original story of the flood comes from "The Epic of Gilgamesh" the oldest surviving literary work 4000 years old :). And I lost track of how many times I had to say, "That's what she said", thanks Simone.
A flood appears in Gilgamesh, but it is probably not the source of the Biblical flood myth, and it's not the first flood myth. Later versions of the Epic of Gilgamesh took it's flood myth from the Altrahasis myth, in the earliest known versions of Gilgamesh there's a verse where he "meets the hero of the flood" instead of being the hero of the flood himself. They were distinctly different. The truth is there are flood myths from every civilisation that started on a river. It's tempting to say they are all the same myth, but there's just no evidence linking them and too many differences to make it a reasonable claim.
The question of the oldest story is also a fascinating one. Gilgamesh is the oldest surviving *confirmed* literary work. There's a set of marked shells from China which may be an older example (6,000 years old), but it's not confirmed. In any case, the story of the seven sisters is older but it is an oral tradition story - it may be as old as 100,000 years.
@@Nick-pu3of That's interesting, I mean the only possible link between Gilgamesh and the Torah is that the Jews were exiled in Babylon for decades where the story of Gilgamesh would have been quite prevalent not to mention parts of the epic are verbatim the same as the story of the flood, and the Torah was assembled into one work after the Jews returned to Israel following their exile to Babylon. Isn't it likely the Epic of Gilgamesh was also an oral tradition before it was written much like the Torah was first an oral tradition, as for the 100,000 years that sounds rather speculative, and I believe you said the Chinese shells were not confirmed, so it's interesting, but it still makes "The Epic of Gilgamesh" the oldest confirmed literary work. I guess the only thing all those stories from various cultures of a deluge have in common is that they are all written about a flood.
@@8967Logan There's undeniably been a certain amount of cultural diffusion, they all lived in each other's pockets after all. We can certainly demonstrate there was a good deal of influence on the Biblical flood, but there are enough differences to make their origins very likely separate. The differences do stand out - The Biblical flood covered the whole world, while the Gilgamesh flood was restricted to just the river valley, the Biblical flood covered the world while the Gilgamesh flood smashed the lands and changed them, Gilgamesh's boat was square and carried people as well as animals, while the Biblical ark was long and narrow and only carried animals. It goes on.
The Seven Sisters: Ok, this one is much more speculative. The Pleiades are a star constellation that has six stars in it, but the myth relating to them is about seven sisters. This myth is found in almost all of the oldest cultures in the world, substantially the same. The funny thing is 100,000 years ago there would have been seven stars visible in that constellation. So, the fact that the story is so far spread, and that at one time the number of stars was correct, it has led many to suggest that these stories have a shared origin that dates back to when there were seven stars. This would mean the story came with us from out of Africa with the first human diaspora. Definitely just speculation, but it is a compelling theory.
Ancient stories are a fascination of mine.
@@GhostWatcher2024 There are. Those cultures are also river cultures, and as such it is not surprising they have flood narratives in their cultural canon.
That's the key thing here. The first six city-building cultures, called the "pristine cultures" because they developed certain key technologies in isolation, are all river cultures. The Mesoamerican cultures indeed had flood myths, but they are strikingly different to the Mesopotamian flood myths. For example, in the Tlapanec flood myths the only survivors are a man and his dog who magically transforms into a woman so they can repopulate the world. Very different.
Chinese, Indian, Egyptian, Incan, Mexican, and Mesopotamian flood myths are too different and too far separated to be connected to each other. They also date to different times.
This movie was filmed where I live. It was weird seeing an ark on the way to my school.
Wanda Sykes kills me to death in this 😂☠️
No politician would ever read a bill himself. That was pages are for. Also, the thing about the Indian crying about the garbage is a reference to an old 70s commercial staring Iron Eyes Cody (who was actually an Italian named Tony Corti).
11:34 George you're not wrong there is, something about that.-Ernie Moore Jr.
I like it when you do "well ACTUALLY, "
Couldn't wait for y'all to do this review - you're getting a thumbs up before I even watch the video!
A reference to Q.I. is always a good sign!
Your senses of humor make me laugh so hard sometimes I have to stop the reaction so I don't have to go back.
Politicians actually don’t make that much but they make a ton of money on the side because of their jobs and connections.
FYI, the bird in the tree at the end had an olive branch. From the book of Noah.
Thank you for an honest review.
Floods are indeed covered by insurance in many areas where flood can be historically shown to happen. In fact, you can get insurance for anything, if you ask, and are willing to pay their price. The problem with floods, and climate change, is that more and more people are getting flooded in areas that have NEVER been flooded before, therefore few people pay the extra price for flood insurance that would 'never happen''.
it's wild how it's more logical in Bruce Almightly. With Evan with all of this happening, nobody really believing him wouldn't make sense, we can see it happening. But I love it because the animals were really cute and his hair growing
I'm liking this just for the thumbnail alone.
This isn't the first time John Goodman as played a politician. On The West Wing, he played the Speaker of the House who had to step into the roll of the President of the United States. Morgan Freeman has also played President of the United States.
4:00 They didn't miss. The slap was at the bottom of the swing. That was intentional.
In Bruce Almighty it wasn't his prayer that was answered it was Jennifer's character, the girlfriend's prayer.
They had to use "Almighty" in the title so people would know it was a sequel.
I just now got the Molly Shannon “Superstar” reference with the ending song.
14:20 "BUT HE LOVES YOU!"
I’m John Goodmans son. Great reaction
it's huge.😁
thank you, Simone. love u.😁😊😍❤💛💯💛🤎💛
You guys will never be annoying… even when watching one of your movies for the tenth time, you guys are still entertaining. Always like your stuff I could easily watch more content from you…
I would love to see you guys reacting to Crazy, Stupid, Love. It's amazing!
Dan in real life, so underrated, DO BOTH!!
is that really how you spell your name? As you can see my name is Evelyn and people always try to spell it like you did lol
"Old Indian in front of the garbage" was a famous commercial in the 70's about littering
where an american italian Redface as a native american...
@@GarmrsBarking That's somewhat fuzzy but it is rumored that 'Iron Eyes Cody' wasn't Native American at all. Great commercial though.
I'm just now noticing this, George is lookin fit bruh, I need to step my game up, Shout out to you brutha, I've been tryin
I mean, seeing Simone as an alpaca on the thumbnail alone is worth my like. and I haven't seen the movie.
EDIT: that IS an alpaca ... right ?
yes... I thought it was a cat and was thinking, there's no white cat in this movie...
The Pillar of Salt thing is reference to when god destroyed Sodom and Gomorra he told Lot and his wife to not look back, Lot’s wife looked back and was transformed into a pillar of salt.
This has been your Bible fact of the day.
2:45 - "I feel like that old Indian in front of all the garbage." - "What?" - That's in reference to an iconic 1970s PSA about littering. It starts with an American Indian (sorry, Native American) paddling a canoe down a river. He passes garbage floating in the water, and there's an industrial zone in the background. He pulls the canoe up onto a litter-strewn shore. He's then shown looking out at a busy highway as a car goes by and someone throws a bundle of garbage out the window, which lands at his feet. The camera goes in for a closeup as a single tear rolls down his cheek. It used to be on TV all the time in the 70s. The irony is that the guy in the commercial wasn't actually Native American. Just search for Iron Eyes Cody PSA here on UA-cam.
I have actually never seen this movie so I won't be watching the reaction (yet) but I just wanted to pop in to say I absolutely LOVE that thumbnail. I always love your guys' thumbnails but this one is just ridiculous! hahaha
I like to think that in the Bruce Almighty universe God actually visits everyone and gives them an experience like this.
On the surface, this film is about Noah. They hammer that home several times. But it shares more biblical similarities with the struggles of Job.
26:36 now I'm really wondering if you guys have ever seen 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' And if not then PLEASE watch it!
Its literally impossible not to sing along to the WB intro😂
...I'm sure the heads at Universal would love to see this comment to know just how much their very memorable opening card helps people remember their branding. 🤣
You mean the Universal logo? Lmao.
Universal Pictures: 🤨
WB: 🤨
John Goodman is my number one tv Dad with Dan Connor! Uncle Phil being a close number two.
When i shave, it grows right back.
Good stuff guys, this movie has a very high rewatchability factor.
I actually got into an in-person argument with a sitting Member of the US Congress over their pay. I said that their pay should be tied to the minimum wage and only go up when a new member takes office. Everyone else would be stuck with the same pay as long as they're in office.
"Welcome back to 'where will our faces end up in the next thumbnail?'"
I'd definitely recommend Oh Brother Where Art Thou, John Goodman plays an amazing bad guy in that
Politicians are definitely not overpaid relative to other high-power careers with regards to income. If anything, public service in general doesn't pay enough. The real issue is their ability to use their position of power to engage in financial corruption, getting buddy-buddy with special interests, going on big speaking tours serving the wealthy, having an unfair advantage in the stock market through insider knowledge, etc.
in the early 70s there was a antipolutiion campain featuring a native Ameriica crying on the side of a highway as drivers woulld throw trash at his feet 2:42
That's What Simone said.
I just realized the mail lady is the voice actor of Naruto Uzumaki 😳 😮
I prefer this to Bruce Almighty because it’s more appropriate for my kids, but both movies are funny. Two comic geniuses Jim & Steve. Crazy Stupid Love is Steve Carrell’s best movie though
Why did I hear the lyrics eyes without a face when you said spiders on his face? 😂
Simone has STRONG t-shirt game always!
You're correct - clean animals were in 7's.
Thanks for inviting me to your TED Talk.
The "Missed" high five at 3:59 is attentional, you miss the upper high-five to then hit hands down bellow... I know it's stupid, but it was a thing in some areas.
Well, that's a thumbnail you can't unsee 😜🤣🤣
Ark for Dummies is REAL. I use to work at a use book store.
George, anytime you want to share that historical knowledge, just give me a shout! 🙃 I love that kind of topic!
Hearing you sing the Universal theme makes me hope you haven’t watched the Pitch Perfect movies and it is in a future stream 😊
If you want to see John Goodman REALLY play a villain, watch 10 Cloverfield Lane... he is terrifying.
Maybe don't spoil the entire point of the movie?
@@DragonbIaze052 How..? I thought it was blatantly obvious from the beginning that he's sinister.. might've just been me.
@@dante340 The point of the first third of the movie is the uncertainty about whether he’s evil or just weird in a creepy way. It’s a building dread thing.
"I Noah where that is from" :D
The Indian looking at the garbage is a reference to an old public service announcement about pollution probably from the '70s with a native American Indian, actually it was an actor that wasn't native American.
I think "Android Night Punch" gave us enough Simone sound bites. LoL
Cool Hand Luke (1967)- Paul Newman 😎
Papillon (1973)- Steve McQueen / Dustin Hoffman🦋
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)- Paul Newman / Robert Redford🤠
I just love the guy who plays Marty, John Michael Higgins. He's so great as the spiritually confused folk music group leader Terry Boehner, in A Mighty Wind. 😀
If watered down orange juice isn't that good -- which I agree with -- why is San Pellegrino so tasty? If you think it down with carbonated water, does it taste better instead of worse? Is that the secret to mimosas?
The mail lady is Naruto’s voice actress for the English dub
Okay seeing Evan you saying “Gandalf!” Had me dead XD
13:39 Oh George, you're my hero 🫡😅
3:59 No, it was one of those intentional misses where they catch it on the back end instead.
Definitely the best thumbnail I've ever seen on YT haha
Cool reaction as always Simone & George, you both have a nice day
So today I learned George watches QI. I have nothing but respect for a man with that kind of taste. 😁
he literally has the QI logo tattooed on his forearm....