I am a professor of math and of film. And my favorite film about math is the documentary "A Mathematical Mystery Tour", 1986. It features interviews with real creators: Diedonne, Erdos, Toom, Moore, Atiyah, and others. This is the best film "If you want to see geniuses dealing with mathematical concepts."
All of these movies are fantastic, but it was a damn shame that the women who contributed to the space program of the United States went unacknowledged and unknown until someone wrote a book about their work and their personal stories, with that book eventually being made into a movie. Before the making of this movie, you could've uttered the names of Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson and Dorothy Vaughn, and ninety-five percent of the country's population would not know who you were talking about or what contributions they made to the N.A.S.A. space program.
I loved "Hidden Figures", but those women were not mathematicians. Like Einstein, Hawking, and any accountant, they were users of mathematics. It's akin to naming Sherwin Williams as one of the great painters. There were and are many true female mathematicians (Sonia Kovalevsky, Emmy Noether, Julia Robinson, Mariam Mirzakhani, Ingrid Daubechies).
@@lila2986 'some people' who really make sense and oppose your world view, but you don't have any solid arguement to disprove them* Here ya go corrected it👍
Good Will Hunting shouldn't even make the list. Its representation of mathematics is naive and incorrect. The script itself is written by young men who have no knowledge of the subject and just some vague, fantasy like model of a universal genius character - unrealistic and not a movie about math or mathematicians. The Man Who Knew Infinity is a favorite in the actual mathematical world. If you want to see an excellent, authentic movie about mathematics and one of the great geniuses - this is number one.
Personally I loved "Little Man Tate". I think this movie should be in this list, perhaps even in the top 5. This beautiful movie shows the emotional difficulties of an advanced student in a normal school setting. I remember watching this movie with my 8 year old son, who at 3 1/2 years old was tested at 6 grade math level. He loved math but was afraid to show his talents when he started school, since it made him feel different. At the end of the movie, my son said "That's me" and walked out of the room. I knew at that time I had to pay more attention to the emotional impact of his being gifted. An accurate and great movie!! Underrated.
Thanks for updating the original Top 5 to a Top 10 - there are too many good movies of this genre. I have seen all the 5 movies from #5 through #1 - each has a fantastic story to tell. Especially I liked John Littlewood's statement when Ramanujan looks aound in awe at the campus of Trinity: "Great knowledge often comes from the humblest of origins." Thanks again.
The movie "Colossus: The Forbin Project" (1970) is my favorite. It deals with computer learning and how a computer quickly overtakes man's knowledge of mathematics. And everything else.
How did you get the ratings of Good Will Hunting as No1. ??? Ramanujan’s work is *still* providing fruitful new insights today. Turing imagined and kick started the computing world our civilisation relies on. Nash was an extraordinary mind. And then there’s the 50 greatest mathematician films never made…. About Hypatia and Pythagoras of Greece, Newton, Gauss, and so many others.
Gifted seems nice. A bit unrealistic with her abilities, rapid multiplication is more savant, early reasoning is genius. But the gist of this film, that life is much more than being gifted, is spot on. While many of the other films glamorize or tragedize genius, the reality is much more human. I've been to math camp with the smartest kids in the world, I've competed with them on equal footing though perhaps with less preparation. Their and my success or failure is mostly determined by the support we got as kids in picking up essential human skills like patience, responsibility, discipline... and it doesn't take a genius to teach us those.
4:23 i solved it my head! basically what you do is calculate the integral from -infinity to +infinity of -e^x^2 in which is going to give you that answer as square root of pi over [A] other wise known as the gaussian integral, then you notice that 2 rho squared is a constant so you can cancel the squares and then substitute to get {square root of 2 pi rho}!
When you get the integral as stated on the board without a negative exponent you get imaginary error function, so nope. Gaussian integral is integral from -infinity to +infinity of e^(-x^2)
I wish gifted was rated higher. I think it gave an emotional connection beyond some of the other movies. And isn't having an emotional connection to the characters what movies are all about ?
'Einstein and Eddington' (2008 Andy Serkis) explains Einstein's theory of general relativity, Planck's help and its proof, very entertainingly and accurately, with an all star cast. (Made on the centenary of it's publishing). It shows the politicisation of science (and maths) during WW1. And there are two good Hawking biopics: 'Hawking' (2004 Benedict Cumberbatch) and 'The theory of everything' (2014 Eddie Redmayne).
It's really interesting to note that the most awesome mathematicians will never be known in this generation and maybe the next two. They are usually employed in national deep end strategic research agencies of the US, Russia, Israel, the UK. They also have them in the crypto departments of their national intelligence signals institutes
What complete and utter nonsense. Outstanding mathematicians are exceptionally rare, possibly the rarest kind of people there is, and the very best of them usually stand out already at a very young age, but certainly very early on in their academic careers. They don't suddenly disappear when the finished their PhD just because some spy agency would like them to work for them. If Terence Tao or Peter Scholze were asked to give up their scientific interests in favor of cracking codes (which is a mere movie trope and impossible in reality anyway, unless we're talking Turing and WWII times) they would most definitely tell whoever asked to fuck off.
Stand and Deliver (an Australian Bushranger's demand) is not only unlikely but based on the true story of a high school mathematics teacher, Jaime Escalante.
Well, I saw a few of them, and none of them are as good as Little man Tate, the development of the story of being a genious at such at youg age is really good.
Sometimes in the grand scheme of things, it's all rather sad ! Geniuses and the like seem to only appear Geniuses only in a narrow band in a given field the rest of their life seems adversely affected. Some cope, Some adapt, Some Die, Some live in the dream, Some are tormented their whole life.
Yaa thoery of everything and man who knew infinity r greatest not only on screen but in real life ramanujan and stephen hawking r grstest scintist born in human race
Good Will Hunting was mostly fictionalized but was loosely based on a true story. The school was U.C.L.A., and the professor was Doctor Dye. He wrote the problem on his blackboard at the start of class and then passed out the final exam. The problem was solved by someone that had worked as a janitor (just not at that school). The "janitor" got a Ph.D. in math, married the woman of his dreams and left academia behind to work in the defense industry.
How about "The Mirror Has Two Faces", in which Jeff Bridges played a Columbia University mathematics professor? (Just kidding, I didn't think it was very good.) And what about "Jurassic Park" with Jeff Goldblum as a mathematician?
@@bowtangey6830 Good point. STEM subjects are a path towards better lives. I wish kids could access more maths-related movies and realise there are wonderful careers in maths & science. I'd like to see more shows featuring problem-solving using maths & science. Fleming & Turing did save many thousands of lives in WW2. Fleming, in peace, too. But not films with Streisand's hammy acting.
For God’s sake proof your bloody AI. The man’s name is ALAN Turing. Gifted….. ??? Brilliancy ??? “The man who knew infinity” “… more then just a bi-opic drama” NO, It is a bio-pic. And “Stand and Deliver” is a BIOGRAPHIC drama film. A biopic. “Jaime Alfonso Escalante Gutiérrez was a Bolivian-American educator known for teaching students calculus from 1974 to 1991 at Garfield High School in East Los Angeles. Escalante was the subject of the 1988 film Stand and Deliver, in which he is portrayed by Edward James Olmos.” ~ Wikipedia
Oh C'mon.... include "UFO" (2018) How the hell no one is talking about this in their comments?! If you are a mathematics lover, watch this under-rated movie.
Fermat's Room is a great maths movie as well. I'm surprised it's not on the list (although it's a Spanish film, so maybe that's the reason). You should check it out.
To me, that film is insulting to the mathematicians work. Its like put a doctor in medicine, saying to you the 5 senses. The director (Luis Piedrahita) just basically do a copy of Saw movies, but the puzzles are elementary math problems. Even a non-olympiad kids can solve the problems in the film.
@@bowtangey6830 To be fair, while both were theoretical physicists, both also worked a good deal with mathematics. But I wouldn't include either in a list of "movies about mathematicians."
😂😂😂 The man who know infinity at 4 !!!! You should have known that is based on trust not any Drama movie, Who fill your comments box with 90 % of comments!
Popularity is not quality. The real life Srinivasa Ramanujan is for sure one of the best mathematicians and "The Man Who Knew Infinity" is also a decent movie but if you just compare the quality of movies when it comes to the performance of the actors, storytelling, cinematography, soundtrack etc. you can see that the 3 higher ranked movies (The Imitation Game, A Beautiful Mind and Good Will Hunting) have by far better ratings on every major rating platform like IMDb or Rotten Tomatoes..
@@TheMoLAProduction If it's about acting, music, NOT ABOUT THE MATH, Title should be changed! From it's titles our expectations are making some sense of mathematics not about Acting, Music and all that!
@@sonymehra970 yes if the video would be about characters what for example is most accurate or important mathematician in movies the title should be changed in „Top 10 Most Important/Accurate Mathematician in Movies“. But for this one like every other video in this channel it‘s about the best movies of different categories/genres like here mathematician movies. Therefore the title fits and the ranking too
There was a better movie called "Proof" out of Australia with Hugo Weaving. And you forgot the movie that introduced the concept of "going to 11" - Spinal Tap
Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few; Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth labourers into his harvest. Matthew 9:37-38 KJV
S.Ramanujan was from South India (Madras, now Chennai) and not East India. It's a very big distinction in a country of India's diversity & population of 1 billion. Clearly you prefer to remain in complete ignorance about the man while paying lip service by including, "the man who knew infinity' in your revised list to the negative comments your initial list had provoked. Sad
X+Y movie.... sucks... it's misleading title and trailers, it's more like a romantic comedy, and at the end, the kid ditches the math competition anyways!.... but thanks for the rest of the suggestions, they are good, I've seen them all!
I am a professor of math and of film. And my favorite film about math is the documentary "A Mathematical Mystery Tour", 1986. It features interviews with real creators: Diedonne, Erdos, Toom, Moore, Atiyah, and others. This is the best film "If you want to see geniuses dealing with mathematical concepts."
1 21
2 a beautiful mind
3 the imitation game
4 the man who knew infinity
5 Hidden figuers
6 Gifted
7 pi
8 stand and deliver
9 x+y
10 proof
Yeah man! I thought of "21" too...
Good will hunting also
Mathematics is incomplete without "Shrinivas Ramanujan".🙏🙏
well said brother! Proud to be an Indian!!
@@AVeera3087 all india produces now is robots from kota factory
@@shiken69420 that's partially true. And that's mainly 'coz of "business" of coaching
Baby,,, he was contribute only in number theory... 😜😜
@@siddharthjain2127 but he died at age 30 and no degree man
If he lived for 100 then .......
Finally a man who knew infinity
Dosent make sense lmao. You have two different time tenses here 🤣
a----->the
🤣🤣🤣🤣
All of these movies are fantastic, but it was a damn shame that the women who contributed to the space program of the United States went unacknowledged and unknown until someone wrote a book about their work and their personal stories, with that book eventually being made into a movie.
Before the making of this movie, you could've uttered the names of Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson and Dorothy Vaughn, and ninety-five percent of the country's population would not know who you were talking about or what contributions they made to the N.A.S.A. space program.
similarly Hidden Figures should be higher on this list as the 3 stories are compelling and acted beautifully
I loved "Hidden Figures", but those women were not mathematicians. Like Einstein, Hawking, and any accountant, they were users of mathematics. It's akin to naming Sherwin Williams as one of the great painters. There were and are many true female mathematicians (Sonia Kovalevsky, Emmy Noether, Julia Robinson, Mariam Mirzakhani, Ingrid Daubechies).
@@lila2986 wow a solid arguement.
@@lila2986 'some people' who really make sense and oppose your world view, but you don't have any solid arguement to disprove them*
Here ya go corrected it👍
@@lila2986 I didn't but, the guy you were replying to did.
Good Will Hunting shouldn't even make the list. Its representation of mathematics is naive and incorrect. The script itself is written by young men who have no knowledge of the subject and just some vague, fantasy like model of a universal genius character - unrealistic and not a movie about math or mathematicians. The Man Who Knew Infinity is a favorite in the actual mathematical world. If you want to see an excellent, authentic movie about mathematics and one of the great geniuses - this is number one.
Exactly correct on both counts.
Although I completely enjoyed both movies, Will and Ramanujan, I also agree with your conclusion. No proofs required.
9:10 when I was a kid this I thought this was some really complicated stuff, I rewatched the movie a few years later and it's extremely simple maths🤣
Ok looking at other comments I take back extremely simple, but it's relativily simple maths
Same as Good Will Hunting. Just basic graph theory.
Personally I loved "Little Man Tate". I think this movie should be in this list, perhaps even in the top 5. This beautiful movie shows the emotional difficulties of an advanced student in a normal school setting. I remember watching this movie with my 8 year old son, who at 3 1/2 years old was tested at 6 grade math level. He loved math but was afraid to show his talents when he started school, since it made him feel different. At the end of the movie, my son said "That's me" and walked out of the room. I knew at that time I had to pay more attention to the emotional impact of his being gifted. An accurate and great movie!! Underrated.
I came to the comments to say exactly that.
I really loved today's list and I appreciate your work
Thank you!
Thank you for Introducing these movies.
This channel have my gratitude for this video. I was able to torrent most of the movies I like from here.
Thanks for updating the original Top 5 to a Top 10 - there are too many good movies of this genre.
I have seen all the 5 movies from #5 through #1 - each has a fantastic story to tell.
Especially I liked John Littlewood's statement when Ramanujan looks aound in awe at the campus of Trinity: "Great knowledge often comes from the humblest of origins."
Thanks again.
The movie "Colossus: The Forbin Project" (1970) is my favorite. It deals with computer learning and how a computer quickly overtakes man's knowledge of mathematics. And everything else.
🙄🙄🙄🥴🥴
Thanks for the recommendation
Everything else???? Show me a computer that can compute the moves, thoughts and feelings of a woman. HA. Just the laugh of one man.
How did you get the ratings of Good Will Hunting as No1. ???
Ramanujan’s work is *still* providing fruitful new insights today.
Turing imagined and kick started the computing world our civilisation relies on.
Nash was an extraordinary mind.
And then there’s the 50 greatest mathematician films never made…. About Hypatia and Pythagoras of Greece, Newton, Gauss, and so many others.
As a mathematician I appreciated Antonia’s Line, a Dutch movie.
You should add "in our prime" it's a beautiful movie, with strong lessons about what is needed to be a mathematician
The mathematician character in the pleasant comedy "I.Q." was played by Meg Ryan. Einstein was played by Walter Matthau.
Good choices. Can I suggest that they all are in the Top 10, no matter where their position on the list?
Much more than ever appreciated my friend s
thanks for including movies and timestamps excellent list
I was thinking "Little Man Tate". Although mostly a human drama story, I remember the boy being very mathematically inclined.
Gifted seems nice. A bit unrealistic with her abilities, rapid multiplication is more savant, early reasoning is genius. But the gist of this film, that life is much more than being gifted, is spot on. While many of the other films glamorize or tragedize genius, the reality is much more human. I've been to math camp with the smartest kids in the world, I've competed with them on equal footing though perhaps with less preparation. Their and my success or failure is mostly determined by the support we got as kids in picking up essential human skills like patience, responsibility, discipline... and it doesn't take a genius to teach us those.
4:23 i solved it my head! basically what you do is calculate the integral from -infinity to +infinity of -e^x^2 in which is going to give you that answer as square root of pi over [A] other wise known as the gaussian integral, then you notice that 2 rho squared is a constant so you can cancel the squares and then substitute to get {square root of 2 pi rho}!
When you get the integral as stated on the board without a negative exponent you get imaginary error function, so nope.
Gaussian integral is integral from -infinity to +infinity of e^(-x^2)
Exactly my thoughts. OH Look a cookie. 😂
I would suggest the movie "N is a number" which is a tribute to Paul Erdos, a great number theorist of the 20th century.
I wish gifted was rated higher. I think it gave an emotional connection beyond some of the other movies. And isn't having an emotional connection to the characters what movies are all about ?
it may have been inferior in acting, which matters more than the math premise
Great list. Little man Tate should be here
I only need to see 7 and 8 to complete the set.
'Einstein and Eddington' (2008 Andy Serkis) explains Einstein's theory of general relativity, Planck's help and its proof, very entertainingly and accurately, with an all star cast. (Made on the centenary of it's publishing). It shows the politicisation of science (and maths) during WW1. And there are two good Hawking biopics: 'Hawking' (2004 Benedict Cumberbatch) and 'The theory of everything' (2014 Eddie Redmayne).
Srinivasa Ramanujan is from South India.
Tamilnadu to be precise.
I WAITED SO LONG FOR THIS
It's really interesting to note that the most awesome mathematicians will never be known in this generation and maybe the next two. They are usually employed in national deep end strategic research agencies of the US, Russia, Israel, the UK. They also have them in the crypto departments of their national intelligence signals institutes
What complete and utter nonsense. Outstanding mathematicians are exceptionally rare, possibly the rarest kind of people there is, and the very best of them usually stand out already at a very young age, but certainly very early on in their academic careers. They don't suddenly disappear when the finished their PhD just because some spy agency would like them to work for them. If Terence Tao or Peter Scholze were asked to give up their scientific interests in favor of cracking codes (which is a mere movie trope and impossible in reality anyway, unless we're talking Turing and WWII times) they would most definitely tell whoever asked to fuck off.
I haven't seen any but these are really magnificient movies.
Al-Kharazmy was the reason of math in this world along with Pifagor
"Proof" should be #1 in the fiction sub-category.
Pi is still one of my favorite films
Stand and Deliver (an Australian Bushranger's demand) is not only unlikely but based on the true story of a high school mathematics teacher, Jaime Escalante.
Did you mean "likely" here?
Well, I saw a few of them, and none of them are as good as Little man Tate, the development of the story of being a genious at such at youg age is really good.
I enjoyed The man who knew Infinity most
Sometimes in the grand scheme of things, it's all rather sad ! Geniuses and the like seem to only appear Geniuses only in a narrow band in a given field the rest of their life seems adversely affected. Some cope, Some adapt, Some Die, Some live in the dream, Some are tormented their whole life.
Yaa thoery of everything and man who knew infinity r greatest not only on screen but in real life ramanujan and stephen hawking r grstest scintist born in human race
Not even an honorable mentions for Moneyball?
Excelent list!
How about Little Man Tate???
Those movies are really cool
Very good list.
Good Will Hunting.. Others are not close. Gifted is good.
Good Will Hunting was mostly fictionalized but was loosely based on a true story. The school was U.C.L.A., and the professor was Doctor Dye. He wrote the problem on his blackboard at the start of class and then passed out the final exam. The problem was solved by someone that had worked as a janitor (just not at that school). The "janitor" got a Ph.D. in math, married the woman of his dreams and left academia behind to work in the defense industry.
Still missing agora.
The clip may show why "21" didn't make the list. ("Extra 33.3 percent" seems off to me as an estimate of the increase of (66 2/3) % over 50%)
The Man who knew infinity life story was great but the movie was poorly done it didn't gave justice.
Whatt?? I disagree. I think it is the best mainstream movie concerning mathematicians.
Check on Marguerite’s theorem
How about "The Mirror Has Two Faces", in which Jeff Bridges played a Columbia University mathematics professor? (Just kidding, I didn't think it was very good.) And what about "Jurassic Park" with Jeff Goldblum as a mathematician?
One of the very few films that made me walk out of the cinema, TMHTF. An appalling waste of time.
@@nevillewran4083 I agree that it was MEH, but at least it had a mathematician in it.
@@bowtangey6830 Good point. STEM subjects are a path towards better lives. I wish kids could access more maths-related movies and realise there are wonderful careers in maths & science.
I'd like to see more shows featuring problem-solving using maths & science. Fleming & Turing did save many thousands of lives in WW2. Fleming, in peace, too.
But not films with Streisand's hammy acting.
How about "Straw dogs (1971)", in which Dustin Hoffman plays a mathematician on vacation.
@@goboy6882 Oh, yeah! I forgot that one.
For God’s sake proof your bloody AI. The man’s name is ALAN Turing.
Gifted….. ??? Brilliancy ???
“The man who knew infinity”
“… more then just a bi-opic drama” NO, It is a bio-pic.
And “Stand and Deliver” is a BIOGRAPHIC drama film. A biopic.
“Jaime Alfonso Escalante Gutiérrez was a Bolivian-American educator known for teaching students calculus from 1974 to 1991 at Garfield High School in East Los Angeles. Escalante was the subject of the 1988 film Stand and Deliver, in which he is portrayed by Edward James Olmos.”
~ Wikipedia
Pi The Movie should have been #3.14
Isn't Good Will Hunting Fiction?
And we even make movies! 😮
Every one is smart
yes relatively
Thank you!
Oh C'mon.... include "UFO" (2018)
How the hell no one is talking about this in their comments?!
If you are a mathematics lover, watch this under-rated movie.
Wow that was an awesome suggestion thanks a lot for that and I realy liked the ending. Although the credits reveal gave me hefty goosebumbs :D
@@anthonysmith6413 yeah man! I hope they make a sequel of it soon...
Fermat's Room is a great maths movie as well. I'm surprised it's not on the list (although it's a Spanish film, so maybe that's the reason). You should check it out.
To me, that film is insulting to the mathematicians work. Its like put a doctor in medicine, saying to you the 5 senses. The director (Luis Piedrahita) just basically do a copy of Saw movies, but the puzzles are elementary math problems. Even a non-olympiad kids can solve the problems in the film.
Im a fan of Piedrahíta's magic. It has talent. But I think he just choose wrong the way to make a movie explaining the mathematicians work.
Possibly the most brilliant mind ever. Stephan Hawking. And not a word about him. Sad.
Like Einstein, he was not a mathematician.
@@bowtangey6830 To be fair, while both were theoretical physicists, both also worked a good deal with mathematics. But I wouldn't include either in a list of "movies about mathematicians."
My favorite one is x+y
The man who knew infinity must need to be at 1 😭😭😭 it was really bad
Whatt?? I disagree. I think it is the best mainstream movie concerning mathematicians.
maybe u can add shakuntala devi also
😂😂😂 The man who know infinity at 4 !!!! You should have known that is based on trust not any Drama movie, Who fill your comments box with 90 % of comments!
Popularity is not quality. The real life Srinivasa Ramanujan is for sure one of the best mathematicians and "The Man Who Knew Infinity" is also a decent movie but if you just compare the quality of movies when it comes to the performance of the actors, storytelling, cinematography, soundtrack etc. you can see that the 3 higher ranked movies (The Imitation Game, A Beautiful Mind and Good Will Hunting) have by far better ratings on every major rating platform like IMDb or Rotten Tomatoes..
@@TheMoLAProduction If it's about acting, music, NOT ABOUT THE MATH, Title should be changed! From it's titles our expectations are making some sense of mathematics not about Acting, Music and all that!
@@sonymehra970 yes if the video would be about characters what for example is most accurate or important mathematician in movies the title should be changed in „Top 10 Most Important/Accurate Mathematician in Movies“. But for this one like every other video in this channel it‘s about the best movies of different categories/genres like here mathematician movies. Therefore the title fits and the ranking too
My
it's south indian mathematician not east indian .....any way it's INDIA
There was a better movie called "Proof" out of Australia with Hugo Weaving. And you forgot the movie that introduced the concept of "going to 11" - Spinal Tap
OK, you have Stand and Deliver in this list, but at number 8? Good Will Hunting is a great movie, but it is hardly a good mathematician movie.
Travelling Salesman (2012)
Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few; Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth labourers into his harvest.
Matthew 9:37-38 KJV
Robbins cant even recognize an imposter...lol
My best is the gift
Who know this movie name please???!
I am so bad at mathematics that these movies are like fantasy movies for me
You are sweet 😄
GIFTED
S.Ramanujan was from South India (Madras, now Chennai) and not East India. It's a very big distinction in a country of India's diversity & population of 1 billion. Clearly you prefer to remain in complete ignorance about the man while paying lip service by including, "the man who knew infinity' in your revised list to the negative comments your initial list had provoked. Sad
Wtf theory of everything I feel sad for Dr Stephen hawking
Cube(1997)
The Oxford murders
Maths is incomplete without sirnivasa
Little Man Tate should have been in there somewhere.
I liked the story of the donkey that Sadguru told. Maybe they aren’t asses after all. 🤔😆
Pi is a huge mess. It is basically devoid of mathematics and it's more of a psychological thriller.
Unproportionately ???????? The irony!
The man who knew ♾️? 😢⬇️
X+Y movie.... sucks... it's misleading title and trailers, it's more like a romantic comedy, and at the end, the kid ditches the math competition anyways!.... but thanks for the rest of the suggestions, they are good, I've seen them all!
No Mean Girls? Kevin G is awesome!
Narration is a mistake. Just show the trailers. Your other list was much more fun to watch.
1
❤️
Oddly there is a world outside English speaking world… 😳
terrible ad.
So you clowns are stuck on Good Will Hunting. Some girl must have done the list and had the hots for Matt Damon. 😄😄
🙏🙏🙏🙏👍👍👍👍👍
X+Y !