But unlike first blood i can appreciate the depature of the mad max movies. Road warrior had this undertone of desperate scarcity that i really enjoyed ( think of Max's shotgun shells, scarce and failing) that also built upon the Original like Terminator 2 did. First blood 2 was correcting the crime of critizing the US Military by taking the conspiracy of missing Vietnam POW and turning it into Death Wish movie.
A few weeks ago I watched a reaction video of an Australian watching Mad Max for the first time. She went in blind and never realized that it was set in the near future at the start of civilizational collapse until it was over and she started reading the DVD box.
This channel is the Gremlins 2 of RUclips. The director has full control and the audience is in for a ride. You get Brainy Gremlin, Goofball Gremlin, Batman symbols, Count Dooku waiting for his rabies, Slayer soundtrack, Phoebe Cates recounting the worst Lincoln's Birthday ever.
Also, as a quick aside, I always enjoyed your political content, but I have sincerely loved your return to film and media analysis with your newfound zeal and zaniness. The slight political tilt works well, too. It all works. You’re great, this video is great, and this whole channel is great. Keep doing whatever you want to do. I always know it’s going to be worthwhile.
Ditto, he used to teach me so much then the world broke and now he makes me smile while dropping bits of knowledge. Hell of a mind and I'm thankful he shares it with us.
This channel feels like when the quiet but secure friend in the group, the one who rarely says anything and usually just watches amused from the sidelines, finally is comfortable enough with you to be the last one to leave the monthly Friday night get-together at your house. Then they stick around on your couch with a drink in their hand, dryly sharing this incredibly insightful funny set of observations until 3 am, and you wish they’d stay longer.
I think the idea behind the “biker gangs in a fuel-scarcity apocalypse” thing is that fuel shortages led to fuel hoarding which led to having vast fuel reserves to power your extravagant cars being a cultural signifier and we can see by Fury Road cars have basically become a religion to some people. Plus Max likes cars and the movies follow him primarily, we can see from the holedwellers and wordburgers from Furiosa that there are plenty of wastelanders leading non car related lifestyles, so for all we know the road warriors could be a very small percentage of the population that Max disproportionally deals with.
Fun fact: when Demolition Man came out, we didn’t have a Taco Bell anywhere within reasonable driving distance. So it really did feel like the food of the future
Unironically, Babe may be Miller's best film. If you can watch that movie and not cheer for Babe while letting the tears of complete and unadulterated joy flow, then you're a monster. James Cromwell saying, "that'll do pig" is iconic. I still use that phrase today to express admiration.
The Babe films, Babeverse if you will, are so underrated. I think it's because most movies with talking animals are kinda simple, but the Babeverse is full of heart.
I can't speak to the Aussie variety, but Cockney rhyming slang was a reaction to "poverty tourism" (I believe in the 17th century, but I haven't researched to that degree). The idle rich used to enjoy slumming it in the poor areas of the East End of London, looking down their noses at the uneducated working class and treating them as simpletons for not understanding the fancy erudite words they would use to ask for directions. In response, the Cockneys (working-class denizens of the East End - traditionally, anyone born within earshot of the bells of Bow Church) decided to make up their own lexicon of words and phrases which they understood but the rich tourists couldn't in order to make _them_ look stupid. The idea was to use common elements of working-class life which the toffs couldn't relate to, with the key to the cipher being that it rhymed with a more sensible statement in context, so that anyone with the relevant life experience would understand the joke and run with it. So when a gentleman found himself turned around in the rabbit warren of tenements and warehouses and asked a passerby for directions back to "civilization" they might be told, *_"Yeah, just 'ead down the frog an' toad, round the jolly 'orner, past the rub-a-dub-dub an' up the apples an' pears, and Bob's yer uncle!"_* And when they tried to cover their ignorance and find someone else to give them directions, they would receive the _same directions as before_ because all the locals knew the cipher, and would look like fools for not being able to understand. It was a way of getting back at the landed gentry for treating their disadvantaged lives as some sort of sideshow, and proving that they were just as smart as the upper class even if they hadn't had the education to learn the expensive words. But this isn't a political video, so I'll shut up... lol
If anyone's interested in a translation of the above... Frog and Toad = Road Round the Jolly Horner = Around the Corner Rub-a-Dub-Dub = Public House (pub) Apples and Pears = Stairs Bob's yer Uncle... well, that's not rhyming slang...
It's funny how the Mad Max movies have so little dialogue but when they do speak, their lines are very memorable/quotable. "I am the Nightrider. I am fuel injected suicide machine." "The Ayatollah of Rocknrolla!" "Just walk away and there will be an end to the horror." "Who run Bartertown?" "Two men enter, one man leaves!" "Bust a deal! Face the wheel!" "Witness me!" "Do not, my friends, become addicted to water!" "Mediocre!"
Controversial Headcannon: With each Mad Max movie getting further and further away from the end of the world with no visible aging from Max, I convinced myself that Max isn't a man but a Ghost Rider esque Spirit of Vengeance and High Octane that possesses people and forces them to walk with a limp and be a reluctant hero. Edit: I came to this conclusion while playing the 2015 Mad Max game.
I like the RLM theory that Max isn't a guy anymore, it's series of wasteland fables people tell and they're just all attributed to him because he was such a legendary figure at one point in time so everything legendary is attributed to him whether true or not.
I've always been partial to the interpretation that the films are depictions of an oral mythology, making Max a culture hero that bounces from adventure to adventure like Maui or Hercules. This smoothes over things like the economics of nomadic hot-rod leather daddies: it doesn't have to make sense, its a legend of the before times illustrating our values and imparting wisdom to our children.
That's not really an interpretation, that's from George Miller himself. He "sees Mad Max as a series of legends about the titular character." That's why so many of the films have narrators. I really appreciated the details of the historians in Furiosa.
Somehow it reminds me of the best Seinfeld episodes, where all the random things all end up relating and contributing in non-random ways. He brought it all together. I agree, this is peak.
Might be my favorite line from any media anywhere: "What do you do when you can't do nothing, but there's nothing you can do?" "You do what you can." Top tier, video. Ne well.
Road warrior and thunderdome are some of my childhood favourites. Then i saw fury road and my mind never recovered from being completely blown. Truly one of my favourite movies
The lesson I took from this video is that there's a Babe sequel I missed as a child and a Fury Road sequel I missed as an adult, both of which I need to go watch. Like, now.
OMG, I literally just watched Mad Max: Fury Road because I love the cinematography and the color grading and the practical action effects. Never saw the first three films so I'm interested to see what you have to say about them.
Even more troubling in the post-apocalyptic world of The Road Warrior and beyond is the apparently limitless supply of welding consumables. MIG and TIG wire, welding rods, shield gas, electricity, acetylene and oxygen... there is no way those hot rods were stitched together with a battery and some coat hanger wire. Otherwise they'd explode into a shower of parts the first bump they hit. Then there's the fact that sunlight is murder for tire and belt rubber, and the dubious availability of coolant, transmission fluid and brake fluid, brake pads, lubricating oil... yeah.
2:15 I 100% agree with you there! I also love telling my brother I’m “skittling” when I eat skittles during our watchStuff Ritual. It’s just so much fun to say.
Sounds like you had fun. I also watched Furiosa, The Road Warrior, and Beyond Thunderdome this week. I also jumped back into my save file for the 2015 Mad Max videogame for a few minutes. It’s a great adaptation.
Having grown up with a moderately healthy appreciation of the original trilogy, along with endlessly being teased about "sequels in development" for well over a decade, this was a nice refreshing overview of why I love the series. It's never been about Max, or the wasteland, or any of the superficial elements; to me it's just a wonderful excuse to indulge in mindless mayhem. When I watch a Mad Max film all I care about is explosions, fights involving cars, and a villain being delightfully over the top.
I just want to say thank you for your political videos. They helped me, an American, broaden my political knowledge during the pandemic. I completely respect the direction you decide to go and will be here to support! 🐻✨
14:53 yeah it's interesting to think about for myself, I would've been in the womb when 9/11 happened, the 2008 market crash happened when I was just starting kindergarten, just a year prior to that the iPhone and iPod were released Edit: also my graduating class was 2020, I was still working at my first job when lockdown happened, I went to multiple George Floyd protests and almost got squished by a riot van at one of them, was also the first year I could vote so yeah it was pretty rough
I went to Canada to meet some friends a few years ago and they took me to a double feature of Babe and Mad Max. I had no idea about the movies' shared lineage and thought it was just a weird double feature for weird people.
In a lot of the world, people join together in a crisis - even in dirt poor countries, you can see everyone forming chains to move rubble and rescue victims after an earthquake. In the USA, after Hurricane Katrina, people from towns surrounding New Orleans stood on bridges waving guns around, telling refugees to fuck off somewhere else. That made a huge impression on me at the time - it seemed inconceivable that such a country could hold together for long.
My experience of Fury Road was so pure I'm reluctant to watch it again, like ever. Some part of me wants it to percolate forever in my imagination as the one perfect example of the form. You might tell me I'm idealizing it, but that's the point. It's probably not perfect. It probably could be better. I was probably just caught up in the moment and missed some of its glaring faults--plot holes, awkward CGI, etc. But I don't want to know that.
Digging Leon's "Not giving a fuck" arc.
the original mad max is much like first blood in the way thats its nothing like what people think mad max or rambo films are like
It was so low budget that a lot of extras were paid in beer!
It's crazy to think the main reason these films are post-apocalyptic is they could only afford to shoot on lonely roads and abandoned towns/buildings.
But unlike first blood i can appreciate the depature of the mad max movies. Road warrior had this undertone of desperate scarcity that i really enjoyed ( think of Max's shotgun shells, scarce and failing) that also built upon the Original like Terminator 2 did. First blood 2 was correcting the crime of critizing the US Military by taking the conspiracy of missing Vietnam POW and turning it into Death Wish movie.
It is also weird in the sense this is post apocalypse? They go out and buy ice cream
It naturally evokes a distopian atmosphere from a deep australian sense of lawlessness and cultural obsession with cars
That is the least words any video essayist has ever dedicated to Fury Road
A few weeks ago I watched a reaction video of an Australian watching Mad Max for the first time. She went in blind and never realized that it was set in the near future at the start of civilizational collapse until it was over and she started reading the DVD box.
This channel is the Gremlins 2 of RUclips. The director has full control and the audience is in for a ride. You get Brainy Gremlin, Goofball Gremlin, Batman symbols, Count Dooku waiting for his rabies, Slayer soundtrack, Phoebe Cates recounting the worst Lincoln's Birthday ever.
Tacos AND George Miller?
Oh what a day. What a lovely day.
Mad Max Taco Warrior Who Stuffed The :
"Except astronauts..." I lost it there
Got me too, so good
It was "He died; his eyes bulging ... I ate a taco in his honour" for me.
Astronauts in low earth orbit travel about 17500 mph and experience time slower than ppl on earth by fractions of a second.
Time moves slightly slower for astronauts. There are videos about it
The little jokes like that, that's what keeps me hooked
Also, as a quick aside, I always enjoyed your political content, but I have sincerely loved your return to film and media analysis with your newfound zeal and zaniness. The slight political tilt works well, too. It all works. You’re great, this video is great, and this whole channel is great. Keep doing whatever you want to do. I always know it’s going to be worthwhile.
Thanks mate, that is exactly what I wanted to say as well!
Ditto, he used to teach me so much then the world broke and now he makes me smile while dropping bits of knowledge.
Hell of a mind and I'm thankful he shares it with us.
Seconded. Couldn't have said it better.
This channel feels like when the quiet but secure friend in the group, the one who rarely says anything and usually just watches amused from the sidelines, finally is comfortable enough with you to be the last one to leave the monthly Friday night get-together at your house. Then they stick around on your couch with a drink in their hand, dryly sharing this incredibly insightful funny set of observations until 3 am, and you wish they’d stay longer.
seconded
I think the idea behind the “biker gangs in a fuel-scarcity apocalypse” thing is that fuel shortages led to fuel hoarding which led to having vast fuel reserves to power your extravagant cars being a cultural signifier and we can see by Fury Road cars have basically become a religion to some people. Plus Max likes cars and the movies follow him primarily, we can see from the holedwellers and wordburgers from Furiosa that there are plenty of wastelanders leading non car related lifestyles, so for all we know the road warriors could be a very small percentage of the population that Max disproportionally deals with.
Fun fact: when Demolition Man came out, we didn’t have a Taco Bell anywhere within reasonable driving distance. So it really did feel like the food of the future
Taco Bell was so far away from us that they dubbed the film over with new dialogue and superimposed a Pizza Hut logo onto everything. 😂
My personal head canon is that, in the mad max world, most everyone is doing ok but Australia just decided to go all in
Unironically, Babe may be Miller's best film. If you can watch that movie and not cheer for Babe while letting the tears of complete and unadulterated joy flow, then you're a monster. James Cromwell saying, "that'll do pig" is iconic. I still use that phrase today to express admiration.
I love Babe: Pig in the City and I frequently say "Thank the Pig."
The Babe films, Babeverse if you will, are so underrated. I think it's because most movies with talking animals are kinda simple, but the Babeverse is full of heart.
You watched all the Mad Max movies and only crushed one taco twelve pack? Absolutely Haram.
Harem
I can't speak to the Aussie variety, but Cockney rhyming slang was a reaction to "poverty tourism" (I believe in the 17th century, but I haven't researched to that degree). The idle rich used to enjoy slumming it in the poor areas of the East End of London, looking down their noses at the uneducated working class and treating them as simpletons for not understanding the fancy erudite words they would use to ask for directions. In response, the Cockneys (working-class denizens of the East End - traditionally, anyone born within earshot of the bells of Bow Church) decided to make up their own lexicon of words and phrases which they understood but the rich tourists couldn't in order to make _them_ look stupid. The idea was to use common elements of working-class life which the toffs couldn't relate to, with the key to the cipher being that it rhymed with a more sensible statement in context, so that anyone with the relevant life experience would understand the joke and run with it.
So when a gentleman found himself turned around in the rabbit warren of tenements and warehouses and asked a passerby for directions back to "civilization" they might be told, *_"Yeah, just 'ead down the frog an' toad, round the jolly 'orner, past the rub-a-dub-dub an' up the apples an' pears, and Bob's yer uncle!"_* And when they tried to cover their ignorance and find someone else to give them directions, they would receive the _same directions as before_ because all the locals knew the cipher, and would look like fools for not being able to understand. It was a way of getting back at the landed gentry for treating their disadvantaged lives as some sort of sideshow, and proving that they were just as smart as the upper class even if they hadn't had the education to learn the expensive words.
But this isn't a political video, so I'll shut up... lol
If anyone's interested in a translation of the above...
Frog and Toad = Road
Round the Jolly Horner = Around the Corner
Rub-a-Dub-Dub = Public House (pub)
Apples and Pears = Stairs
Bob's yer Uncle... well, that's not rhyming slang...
5 cool movies and 12 tacos.
Sounds like a day well-spent.
I know for sure that I definitely saw Babe 2: Pig in The City when I was a kid but from the plot summary I guess I remembered absolutely nothing.
I think I watched half of it in Spanish in my middle school Spanish class. Also don't recall the plot lol
"Who killed the world?" more like "Who killed their digestive tract?", the answer? Renegade eating 12 tacos.
It's funny how the Mad Max movies have so little dialogue but when they do speak, their lines are very memorable/quotable.
"I am the Nightrider. I am fuel injected suicide machine."
"The Ayatollah of Rocknrolla!"
"Just walk away and there will be an end to the horror."
"Who run Bartertown?"
"Two men enter, one man leaves!"
"Bust a deal! Face the wheel!"
"Witness me!"
"Do not, my friends, become addicted to water!"
"Mediocre!"
Controversial Headcannon: With each Mad Max movie getting further and further away from the end of the world with no visible aging from Max, I convinced myself that Max isn't a man but a Ghost Rider esque Spirit of Vengeance and High Octane that possesses people and forces them to walk with a limp and be a reluctant hero.
Edit: I came to this conclusion while playing the 2015 Mad Max game.
I like the idea that any sufficiently angry man who isn’t a complete bastard could be dubbed the new ‘Max’
You're head cannon is now my head cannon.
I like the RLM theory that Max isn't a guy anymore, it's series of wasteland fables people tell and they're just all attributed to him because he was such a legendary figure at one point in time so everything legendary is attributed to him whether true or not.
fury road is obviously a reboot with a different timeline
@@kamikazilucas You're missing the point.
I've always been partial to the interpretation that the films are depictions of an oral mythology, making Max a culture hero that bounces from adventure to adventure like Maui or Hercules.
This smoothes over things like the economics of nomadic hot-rod leather daddies: it doesn't have to make sense, its a legend of the before times illustrating our values and imparting wisdom to our children.
That's not really an interpretation, that's from George Miller himself. He "sees Mad Max as a series of legends about the titular character." That's why so many of the films have narrators. I really appreciated the details of the historians in Furiosa.
This is one of your best videos. I’m not even being sarcastic or ironic. This is peak.
AGREED! It's just great seeing him have fun again finally
Somehow it reminds me of the best Seinfeld episodes, where all the random things all end up relating and contributing in non-random ways. He brought it all together. I agree, this is peak.
Should of added the crunch of the tacos but i digress
1:31 "i am here to eat tacos"
i can't tell you how much i wanted to be followed up by something like "and I'm all out of babe" XD
Might be my favorite line from any media anywhere:
"What do you do when you can't do nothing, but there's nothing you can do?"
"You do what you can."
Top tier, video. Ne well.
"That'll do pig" I said at the cops funeral.
I'm not even 5 minutes in and I've bellylaughed like 6 times
Leon, I haven’t laughed so much in a very long time. Please know the joy is as important to me as everything else you've provided over the years.
Road warrior and thunderdome are some of my childhood favourites. Then i saw fury road and my mind never recovered from being completely blown. Truly one of my favourite movies
You gotta go see furiosa if you haven’t it’s incredible
You gotta respect anyone who commits to leather fetish esthetic in Australia. Especially post-apocapypse.
Leon is under Big Taco's thumb. It's the only explanation for my irresistible urge to consume them tonight.
They should give you a raise.
Big taco 👀
Where Cockney people were going with most things was usually jail. Or rather gaol.
The lesson I took from this video is that there's a Babe sequel I missed as a child and a Fury Road sequel I missed as an adult, both of which I need to go watch. Like, now.
OMG, I literally just watched Mad Max: Fury Road because I love the cinematography and the color grading and the practical action effects. Never saw the first three films so I'm interested to see what you have to say about them.
I grew up on Mad Max. Always loved it, it felt my sorrow.
I'm peeing in a wine bottle as i watch the intro to this work of art, let's go 🎉
you know the song “piss bottle man” ?
You and John Frusciante.
That'll do Renegade Cut dude, that'll do.
Turbo Kid is a great indie movie that is very much in the spirit of the Mad Max movies. It is also a chef’s kiss to elder millennial nostalgia
“I ate a taco in his honor” should become a catchphrase of the channel
The fact that you tied the MST3K Beyond Thunderdome riff into the video reinforces why you're my favoritest bestest.
Calling it Babe 1 Pig in the Country is hilarious and accurate
I love these movies and I love this video. Made me want to watch them all again. I just hope George miller is able to make more mad max films
I always thought Mad Max being nomadic was a metaphor for him running from the memories of his past.
Thank you for the joy this brought me, I remember watching Thunder dome with my mom while growing up.
Best wishes to kind people❤
Miller made me the person I am today. I joined Greenpeace and drive a supercharged V8 because of him.
God bless you George. ♥️
I mean, 3D printed cheese would be a pretty great innovation by a nameless taco company
I too enjoy Mad Max, tacos, and words of praise from James Cromwell
Even more troubling in the post-apocalyptic world of The Road Warrior and beyond is the apparently limitless supply of welding consumables. MIG and TIG wire, welding rods, shield gas, electricity, acetylene and oxygen... there is no way those hot rods were stitched together with a battery and some coat hanger wire. Otherwise they'd explode into a shower of parts the first bump they hit. Then there's the fact that sunlight is murder for tire and belt rubber, and the dubious availability of coolant, transmission fluid and brake fluid, brake pads, lubricating oil... yeah.
Glorious taco eating.... witnessed.
Before I watch I'm predicting the tacos were not consumed during the watching of the movies, but at the end, all at once. Possibly over the sink.
Ok so no, but he didn't explicitly state that he didn't eat them over the sink.
😂So relatable 😭
2:15 I 100% agree with you there! I also love telling my brother I’m “skittling” when I eat skittles during our watchStuff Ritual. It’s just so much fun to say.
PS there was a novelisation of the 1st mad Max movie, not sure if it's still in circulation. As an 18 year old Aussie it was a great read.
As an Aussie I have to say that was a great run of Cheese & Cuties (movies)
Now when people ask if I've seen Fury Road yet, I can say no but I have watched Babe
This is the art i'm here for!
Sounds like you had fun. I also watched Furiosa, The Road Warrior, and Beyond Thunderdome this week. I also jumped back into my save file for the 2015 Mad Max videogame for a few minutes. It’s a great adaptation.
It seems you are happier than usual, it also makes me happy.
Makes me want to do a 12 taco movie binge challenge as well. I'm so glad you are making content that makes you happy Renegade Cut! 🙂
Fantastic video! ❤
Achievement unlocked: Max Tacotanski! 🏆🥇🎖️
Full chaos configuration RC is here and I am LOVING it
I really love your stuff like this!
Also your other stuff...
Honestly i just think you make really great videos!
Finally someone puts some respect on Babe's name
Man knows how to have a good time
Having grown up with a moderately healthy appreciation of the original trilogy, along with endlessly being teased about "sequels in development" for well over a decade, this was a nice refreshing overview of why I love the series. It's never been about Max, or the wasteland, or any of the superficial elements; to me it's just a wonderful excuse to indulge in mindless mayhem. When I watch a Mad Max film all I care about is explosions, fights involving cars, and a villain being delightfully over the top.
I'm really enjoying these new videos.
I really enjoy your inflections and cadence in your narration. That might be the weirdest thing I ever typed on RUclips.
this chanell has gotten even better.
I just want to say thank you for your political videos. They helped me, an American, broaden my political knowledge during the pandemic. I completely respect the direction you decide to go and will be here to support! 🐻✨
Good use of that old MST3K gag
14:53 yeah it's interesting to think about for myself, I would've been in the womb when 9/11 happened, the 2008 market crash happened when I was just starting kindergarten, just a year prior to that the iPhone and iPod were released
Edit: also my graduating class was 2020, I was still working at my first job when lockdown happened, I went to multiple George Floyd protests and almost got squished by a riot van at one of them, was also the first year I could vote so yeah it was pretty rough
You made my day a lot better with this. Thank you.😊
Someone else already said this is one of your best. Agree to the max.
Leon, this is genius. Hilarious and way more fact packed than I thought it'd be.
RIP the unattended grilled cheese sandwich and Leon's gastrointestinal tract.
Love the title of this video, great work as always and I'm glad you're making videos!
This era of RC is strange, and I like it.
Great video! I have enjoyed your more serious content in the past but this was a very nice change up.
I give this video 12 out of 12 tacos.
I liked Leon's old work very much.
I'm deeply digging this era of Leon. I love this so much.
Babe was my favorite kids movie. I got into the Mad Max series years later and loved it. I had no idea the 2 were connected until again, years later
I went to Canada to meet some friends a few years ago and they took me to a double feature of Babe and Mad Max. I had no idea about the movies' shared lineage and thought it was just a weird double feature for weird people.
Fam, that sounds like an excellent weekend.
"All the Mad Max Movies?" the audience asked in awe,
"That´s right" said Leon "12 Tacos!"
This is sincerely one of your best videos
In a lot of the world, people join together in a crisis - even in dirt poor countries, you can see everyone forming chains to move rubble and rescue victims after an earthquake.
In the USA, after Hurricane Katrina, people from towns surrounding New Orleans stood on bridges waving guns around, telling refugees to fuck off somewhere else. That made a huge impression on me at the time - it seemed inconceivable that such a country could hold together for long.
Watch ALL the Mad Max movies in reverse order! The sporadic nature of Max becomes more explicit as you see the narrative moving toward his beginnings.
05:30 one false move, get swiss cheesed up -who shot ya by the notorious B.I.G, is an example of swiss cheese being used in a similar context
Every video more delightful than the last.
“I reckon you got a bargain.”
16:25 i SCREAMED at kirin j callinan, my favorite australian together with george miller
That is the perfect amount of words that any essayist ever dedicated to Fury Road
Art. Full stop. Thank you
18:15 - Max is just going out for a pack of cigarettes. He'll be back.
I can’t think of a better way to spend a day
The taco countdown added a very fun deranged structure to this.
this Babe review slaps
Loved this!! Humor on point
My experience of Fury Road was so pure I'm reluctant to watch it again, like ever. Some part of me wants it to percolate forever in my imagination as the one perfect example of the form.
You might tell me I'm idealizing it, but that's the point. It's probably not perfect. It probably could be better. I was probably just caught up in the moment and missed some of its glaring faults--plot holes, awkward CGI, etc. But I don't want to know that.
Fanstastic... I guess I should maybe watch Babe 1&2 for the first time.
Is there a sadder statement in this world than '0 Tacos Remain'?
-1 Tacos Remaining. Can you imagine that...
I had no idea tacos worked as a narrative device on this scale. Wild.