As a British person, this is fantastic seeing an American try and go through a film so smothered in our kind of humour he actually researches some jokes! not an insult or snide remark in any sense I just love how committed he is to understanding the film and doesn't just skip over them
It's subtle, but Danny also has an incredible memory. Angel is always checking his notes, Danny doesn't need to. And he remembers (even if he doesn't always understand) everything Angel tells him.
Yup. Danny has a case of geek: he's really good at vacuuming random stuff into his head and spitting it back out on command, but he never figured out how to actually put it to use until Nicholas comes along.
@@OhNoTheFace I think that's a good point, and I think that's a lot of what their relationship is about. Nicholas helps Danny to grow, Danny helps Nicholas to take a step back and take a moment to breathe, I think they both give each other what they need
@@jackriley106 yeah I get the feeling that nobody ever challenged Danny growing up especially his father so he never HAD to use any information he might have inside his head. You see throughout the film Danny showing his intellect and policeman instincts the more he observes and listens to angel
Fun fact: Edgar Wright cut told Nick Frost to turn around after he smashed through the fence to make sure the audience knew it was actually him that did that stunt
I read the fence was actually meant to fall with down with him but it got stuck and broke and Nick frost looked back to see Edgar waving him to continue that's why he only looks quicker
Another fun fact: Timothy Dalton when he says “of course, cheers”, he looks directly into the camera supposedly to mess with Edgar Wright. Edgar Wright decided to add in a cash register sound when Dalton looked into the camera in post just to mess with him back
"We had a love interest in the first draft for Nicholas. A woman named Victoria. She didn't have a lot to do in the story, so we decided to write her out. But we gave most of her lines to Danny." -Edgar Wright
You missed some details that I thought were intresting: The model village sign has a double meaning. Its obviously pointing to the actual small-scale model of the village but also its indicating that Sandford is a model village, as in it's perfect. Speaking of, Sandford comes from the example town name that actual police theory exams use. Its insane how much detail there is in this movie
Also, a model village isn't a real community - it's hollow, fake, primarily designed for people to come and look at and go ooh and ahh over. Much like Sandford, which puts up the front of being a charming perfect rustic community to hide the fact that the NWA are a conspiracy of murderers controlling the town.
With Sandford being placed in Gloucestershire, can't fail to notice that the model within the model recursion can actually be found in Bourton-on-the-Water where the model village is a replica of the village and includes a model of the model village itself.
Funnily enough, back when Shakespeare was actually running his own productions, the epilogue of plays like Hamlet and Macbeth would have an upbeat song and dance number featuring the cast, so that the audience wouldn't leave his shows feeling dejected. So, while this performance of Romeo and Juliet was atrocious, the curtain call was very much accurate.
It's also because the "actors" weren't actually performing Romeo and Juliet the play, but instead Baz Luhrmann's 1996 Romeo and Juliet "modernized adaptation." That's why the cast was singing that song specifically and the angel wings and armor were their costume.
I've watched Hot Fuzz around 6 times and I never noticed The NWA are always lurking on the background. Every re-watch is always a delight for these Cornetto Trilogy
You also had one of the highest grossing directors of all time in Peter Jackson dressed as Santa and stabbing Angel early on in the film. I often wonder if he met Martin Freeman on this film.
@@leonbrooks2107 Not sure if its confirmed but I remember either Pegg or Frost saying they introduced Freeman and Jackson, but even then im certain they at least met on the set of Hot Fuzz, Jackson of course knew who he was because you know, Hollywood
My only note - I love this movie, I love that you're covering the trilogy, my only thing - he didn't "forget" the notepad in the car; he left it there intentionally. If I remember correctly (and I might not), Angel goes to see Leslie (god rest her) after he and Danny have the "YOU DON'T KNOW HOW TO SWITCH OFF" argument. When Angel goes to Leslie (god rest her) to buy Danny flowers, he doesn't think of it as a work thing, but as a partner thing. He's taken that step to leave the notepad behind so he can just focus on Danny. Rotten timing, though.
06:15 - I've seen these movies dozens of times and I can still laugh my ass off about most jokes, but I ALWAYS lose it when Nick Frost gets the wastebasket chucked at him. So random. So glorius. So perfect.
Hot Fuzz is one of those movies that I can just imagine the entire cast and crew having a huge amount of fun making. Not to say they didn't work hard, there are so many well-known faces, even in minor roles, and everyone absolutely kills it, Timothy Dalton especially just comes across as enjoying every second of being Skinner.
Me too, until I binge watched his videos one day and discovered he has a wife, kid, a dog named Khaleesi and a drone that got attacked by a hawk one time
He looks like a very calm, collective Bill Hader. It's so weird... Also I'm pretty sure he told his kid to go wild while he looks at his computer to make it work so well hahahahaha
I live in Wells - the City this was filmed. (smallest City in the UK) The pub has a load of pictures of all the cast during filing. Watching this film even now is a surreal experience.
This film is everything Great about Britain encapsulated. All the regional stuff is right, the tone is perfect, the dialogue is fantastic, the acting is out the park, and the plot just nuanced enough to stake a claim of its own.
Yeah she has some....weird early work. Even more so than I'm sure if you go back to the early days of any big star (Meryl Steep, Maggie Smith, Ian McKellan) that you'll find strange roles "Dustman No3" or "Villager on the left" and go "hey that's Maggie Smith playing 'Girl with balloon' isn't that crazy" or whatever. But some of the early stuff Olivia Colman took... Like we could always tell she was a great actress, and I firmly believe that with the right script and director like 80% of people can act to "Oscar standard" (leaving aside how rigged that contest is) it still surprises me now to see her in the super serious stuff because I've seen more of her in the early things.
@ I only ever saw her in comedic roles before I think Broadchurch? I thinkI saw her first in Mitchell and Webb, one of the earliest series, and Hot Fuzz before anything else.
Biggest title of his career 🏆 The Russian won it all since the start of November (Paris title, London title, 10-match winning streak, 7-0 vs top 10 players) 💪🏻👏🏻 Congrats Daniil, so well deserved and what a way to end the season 🎉🎉
One of my favorite little gags is when the little drunk pays Danny for dropping him off at his mansion only for Angel to hand it back to the guy saying “And there’s your change.”
Absolutely right. And you definitely find something new each time. Just from watching this video, I realised that the waning phone service kinda foreshadows the poor state of the police service. It's a bit of stretch but I'm hoping someone can make something of the basic concept I failed at wording
@@Tom-oz7wk the waning phone service is a clever representation of the waning phone service as you leave the city... There comes a point where you just really over think things
@@WozWozEre I definitely over think things. All the time. But it's understandable with any of Edgar's films. Also I really don't care if I'm overthinking nor do I much care for anything else you have to say
Fun fact: at 11:17 when sergeant angel says that traffic “accident” applies there is no one to blame, was an actual debate in Britain back in the early 2000’s as they called this an RTA which stood for “Road Traffic Accident” but they had to change it to RTC - “Road Traffic Collision” as RTA was used in court and let drunk drivers off the hook as accident implies no one is at fault.
Ouch; HHGttG The Movie (not the 80s BBC tv show) would be hard.. it probably does have its moments, but its also a pretty poor rendition of the books (ie: maybe due to bad editing; theres a couple times they say the first half of a gag, and then never actually say the rest of it; it hurts!) .. so yeah, good challenge for him. I've not seen that since the theatre :) ... and heres to Mr Adams .. well missed!
"The church always being in the background" is not so much a cinematic device as a characteristic of most European settlements. In America, where every other building is taller than the church, over here it's the other way around...
Some of Danny’s lines where supposed to be for a love interest and it’s cute when you notice which lines were supposed to be for the love interest like when Danny ask him to come inside for another beer.
I love the joke that when angel and danny start drinking at the pub, the beers they buy progressively get less and less expensive as they move from good beer to awful stuff, as they get more drunk, because who cares how much you pay for beer when you're already drunk.
@@lendonat I mean if they were left any longer they would pull a world's end and get them for free by drinking half finished beers of some blokes table who left.
As a former Gloucestershire native, you cannot begin to understand how spot-on perfect this film depicts it. It hits the rural-england atmosphere perfectly. One of the best comedies of all time.
Why does boone mention that when Nicholas says "that windows broken from the inside" he points directly at Janine, symbolising how she is heartbroken over Nicholas's lack of commitment to their relationship
My favorite in the Cornetto trilogy. Didn't know what it was the first time (thought it was something like Midsomer murders), so imagine my surprise with the final act. Absolutely blew me away, so many great lines and deliveries.
Hot Fuzz was what got me into Edgar Wright's stuff, I love this, Shaun of the Dead, Scott Pilgrim, and he was a writer for Ant-Man as well; I still need to see The World's End, keep putting it off for some reason.
Omg thats Marsha from Spaced @3:25 !!!! She was one of my favorite characters! I love Simon for casting actors he's acted with before 😊😊😊 I haven't seen HotFuzz since it basically came out (though I loved it immensely even though it gave me a headache. Literally) and watched Spaced years later so it's my first time catching this lovely cameo 😊
This is, without a doubt, my favourite movie of all time. As a Brit I could watch it again and again and it still makes me cry with laughter! Edgar Wright is ALWAYS a win...
Quick side note: Leslie Tiller says she's just about to "pop off" before she's 'f*cking murdered', which is not only slang for going somewhere, but also to die. In case you didn't know 🙂
What's funny is it's taking the piss out of obnoxious over the top action scenes, which is why the action is mostly a bunch of rapid camera movements and quick cuts a lot of the time
@@volcanic2578 Depends on the action scene you're comparing it to really and other factors that contribute to entertainment. Things like music as well as characters and setup in the story.
You may know him as bond, he'll always be Rassilon to me. Yeh that's right, last time it was Harriet Jones former priminister, this week is president of the Timelords, I'm just saving David Bradley for next time, I'll let you decide which reference I end up going for
Thank you so much! I thought he looked familiar but couldn't figure out why, thats another one for Doctor Who Bingo lol. I believe the woman at 14:16 is the blood assimilator from "Smith and Jones", obviously Bradley played William Hartnell and Solomon from "Dinosaurs on a space ship", bill nighy played Mr Black in "Vincent and the Doctor" Jim Broadbent played the 11th doctor in "The Curse of Fatal Death" Bill Bailey played Droxil in "The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe." as DanteCorwyn pointed out Also a friend recently pointed out that Simon Pegg played the Editor in 'the Long game' and Nick Frost played Santa Claus in 'Last Christmas.'
Yup my mate and I nearly shat ourselves laughing in cinema at that and then spent next couple of minutes looking worriedly around checking we weren’t being stared daggers at!
I absolutely love Hot Fuzz, and I've always wanted to go through and see all the little details that make it so great. Thanks for putting in the work and showing it off in such an entertaining way!
Please never stop what youre doing. Im bombarded daily about how much everything I enjoy sucks to other people and then I come here and Im reminded why I love what I love. Top it off with pure genuine character and all around wholesomeness and yep, thats a win.
11:53 I never noticed it before, but even though it's only one person in the mirror, two reflections visible is a reference to there being multiple "killers, eh?"
I just wanted to say. I discovered this channel about a year and a half ago. When I found out your wife was pregnant (clearly way after the fact) was when I discovered I had a child of my own and soon after gained full custody of her. Not only do I actually appreciate the ad space and relate to it, it warms my heart to see your boy develop such an energetic personality (as much as I know you dislike it sometimes) and he's genuinely older than I thought. You've been a source of positivity through the craziness that has been the last year and a half and thank you and good job to the two of you for raising such a happy human. Much love
OMG @3:16 I've watched this movie multiple times. I've never noticed the connection between this joke and how the town leadership are actually subscribed to that ideology.
This movie is the gold standard for cinema wins! Almost every scene, every line of dialogue, every transition, has some sort of hidden detail or foreshadowing. I've probably seen it ten times in my life and am always finding new lines that foreshadow something later in the movie. Truly a work of genius that I recommend to everyone (who can handle the gore).
Every time I watch this movie I pick up a new detail, and this time it was the black cape in the background! Never noticed that before. Since this is part 1, I don't want to get ahead of myself, but I hope to god you don't miss one of the most important details of the movie. The "swan chase" itself is the parody of the whole movie plot. It's a whole wild goose chase. They are chasing the swan throughout the village, just like Nicholas is chasing the killers all around him, and yes, most of the time they are in front of him, and he can never catch them!
Honestly, this is one of my all time fav movies. And, it's so intense... brutal, funny, intelligent... (mind blowing, if you want to say so (double meaning, pun intended!)) and I love all the actors, and their acting! Thank you very much for this review!
Peel Centre/house (Metropolitan Police Training centre) which is featured here at the beginning of the film is also featured in Avengers multiple times as background and main buildings. The more you know.
I can’t believe you didn’t win the “when’s your birthday?” “Every year!” Scene with the red headed guy
I like the kid with the glasses who just goes uHhHHHhhhhHhhHhhhh
Omg that’s literally a CLASSIC
I honestly bring that line up everytime someone mentions Hot Fuzz, its literally one of my favorite exchanges lol
If he were to give a win to every great joke in this movie, the video would be hours.
I adore that scene, but every time someone mentions it I can't help but remember, that this guy has been murdered. Creeps me out
As a British person, this is fantastic seeing an American try and go through a film so smothered in our kind of humour he actually researches some jokes! not an insult or snide remark in any sense I just love how committed he is to understanding the film and doesn't just skip over them
im canadian and ive seen this movie probably 10 times by now lol, i catch new jokes every time
I’m American and this movie is so great i’ve watched it multiple times and the jokes are great
@BAT THINK good, 5g is very beneficial
@BAT THINK seek help
@BAT THINK how tf did you get that idea
It's subtle, but Danny also has an incredible memory. Angel is always checking his notes, Danny doesn't need to. And he remembers (even if he doesn't always understand) everything Angel tells him.
Yup. Danny has a case of geek: he's really good at vacuuming random stuff into his head and spitting it back out on command, but he never figured out how to actually put it to use until Nicholas comes along.
@@Duiker36 Not to be wierd, but he seemed like he always needed someone to help him grow, since his dad obviously failed at it
@@OhNoTheFace I think that's a good point, and I think that's a lot of what their relationship is about. Nicholas helps Danny to grow, Danny helps Nicholas to take a step back and take a moment to breathe, I think they both give each other what they need
@@jackriley106 yeah I get the feeling that nobody ever challenged Danny growing up especially his father so he never HAD to use any information he might have inside his head. You see throughout the film Danny showing his intellect and policeman instincts the more he observes and listens to angel
@@emanuelmartinez7267 police officer instincts
To this day I repeat, “the greater good” whenever I hear it.
"The Greater Good . . . "
@Beckett Wright Cheese grater ?
I do municipal road maintenance.
The grader good?
@@duncandmcgrath6290 "The Grader Good."
You're not the only one bud!. The Greater Good...
Fun fact: Edgar Wright cut told Nick Frost to turn around after he smashed through the fence to make sure the audience knew it was actually him that did that stunt
yes and i love the way he looks around to see if anybody saw him do it with a goofy grin on his face
I read the fence was actually meant to fall with down with him but it got stuck and broke and Nick frost looked back to see Edgar waving him to continue that's why he only looks quicker
It's a testament to how many times I've seen Hot Fuzz that I understand every word of the "incomprehensible British English" now
I knew it on the first viewing as I have family who talked like that
Truly impressive!
@@brandonwelsh5090 Even more impressive!!
@@brandonwelsh5090 what did he say?
“Also, because talking to them is like an uphill struggle, i’n’t dad?”
Jesus, Raycon did not pay you enough for that ad - it was beyond adorable.
Ur adorable
i know! his should literally be an actual ad, promo read and all
For real. I usually skip through ads when I'm not interested in the product but damn, I just kept smiling at the whole ad.
Raycons are terrible though
@@TheXlen ok, we were having fun with his creative choice of promo content.
Everything Great About Hot Fuzz:
The entire movie.
Right?
Agreed; the whole movie is amazing
I absolutely love this comment section, because it is not filled with people saying that it is a mediocre movie
Another fun fact: Timothy Dalton when he says “of course, cheers”, he looks directly into the camera supposedly to mess with Edgar Wright. Edgar Wright decided to add in a cash register sound when Dalton looked into the camera in post just to mess with him back
That Andes joke from Danny is actually pretty intelligent coming from him. Also i LOVE the delivery, the confidence in his face and then the bin.
“F**k oooffffff!!!!!”
im replaying that scene over and over again as I read this
@@tinamarie7757 'Thank you Danny'
6:13 for those curious
I have no idea what he just said
edit: "Because talking to them's an uphill struggle innit"
"We had a love interest in the first draft for Nicholas. A woman named Victoria. She didn't have a lot to do in the story, so we decided to write her out. But we gave most of her lines to Danny." -Edgar Wright
Danntoria
@@TomEyeTheSFMguy Vinny
That is the funniest thing ever. Kind of explains a few of Danny's lines.
Smart
You missed some details that I thought were intresting: The model village sign has a double meaning. Its obviously pointing to the actual small-scale model of the village but also its indicating that Sandford is a model village, as in it's perfect. Speaking of, Sandford comes from the example town name that actual police theory exams use. Its insane how much detail there is in this movie
Also, a model village isn't a real community - it's hollow, fake, primarily designed for people to come and look at and go ooh and ahh over. Much like Sandford, which puts up the front of being a charming perfect rustic community to hide the fact that the NWA are a conspiracy of murderers controlling the town.
With Sandford being placed in Gloucestershire, can't fail to notice that the model within the model recursion can actually be found in Bourton-on-the-Water where the model village is a replica of the village and includes a model of the model village itself.
And the big cop small town metaphor, as Angle - sorry I mean Angel - enters Sandford as the big London cop in the small town.
Genius writing
WOW!!!
@@BobChillison god I love how u said angle first
Funnily enough, back when Shakespeare was actually running his own productions, the epilogue of plays like Hamlet and Macbeth would have an upbeat song and dance number featuring the cast, so that the audience wouldn't leave his shows feeling dejected.
So, while this performance of Romeo and Juliet was atrocious, the curtain call was very much accurate.
And in an Edgar Wright film, that sort of detail is 100% on purpose. The layers upon layers of detail in this film is just mind boggling.
It's also because the "actors" weren't actually performing Romeo and Juliet the play, but instead Baz Luhrmann's 1996 Romeo and Juliet "modernized adaptation." That's why the cast was singing that song specifically and the angel wings and armor were their costume.
I didn't understand a single world in all that
@@loucifer9618 Dance number at end of tragic play make audience happy and not sad.
@@loucifer9618 Are you dense?
"With respect sir, you can't simply make people disappear"
"Yes I can, I'm the chief inspector"
Foreshadows Frank's true colours
Holy shit I love this movie. Years later and I’m still learning things about it. Thanks for the info!
I've watched Hot Fuzz around 6 times and I never noticed The NWA are always lurking on the background. Every re-watch is always a delight for these Cornetto Trilogy
I love how they got one of the most beautiful women in the industry to play a character where she’s entirely covered up and can only see her eyes 😂
Who?
It's Cate Blanchett
To be fair her eyes are gorgeous
You also had one of the highest grossing directors of all time in Peter Jackson dressed as Santa and stabbing Angel early on in the film. I often wonder if he met Martin Freeman on this film.
@@leonbrooks2107 Not sure if its confirmed but I remember either Pegg or Frost saying they introduced Freeman and Jackson, but even then im certain they at least met on the set of Hot Fuzz, Jackson of course knew who he was because you know, Hollywood
My only note - I love this movie, I love that you're covering the trilogy, my only thing - he didn't "forget" the notepad in the car; he left it there intentionally. If I remember correctly (and I might not), Angel goes to see Leslie (god rest her) after he and Danny have the "YOU DON'T KNOW HOW TO SWITCH OFF" argument. When Angel goes to Leslie (god rest her) to buy Danny flowers, he doesn't think of it as a work thing, but as a partner thing. He's taken that step to leave the notepad behind so he can just focus on Danny.
Rotten timing, though.
Holy shit, thanks for pointing that out. Goes even further into the romcom subtext
There are genuinely few movies in existence that are legitimately a work of genius. This is one of them.
what about "Movie 43" or "Meet the Spartans"?
Tenet is also amazing
I hadn’t thought about Danny knowing his mother’s death wasn’t an accident!
Same
@@markyu4841 me either wow
06:15 - I've seen these movies dozens of times and I can still laugh my ass off about most jokes, but I ALWAYS lose it when Nick Frost gets the wastebasket chucked at him. So random. So glorius.
So perfect.
Hot Fuzz is one of those movies that I can just imagine the entire cast and crew having a huge amount of fun making. Not to say they didn't work hard, there are so many well-known faces, even in minor roles, and everyone absolutely kills it, Timothy Dalton especially just comes across as enjoying every second of being Skinner.
Idky but the vision of CinemaWins in my mind has always been; a clean shaven, built, college freshman that’s making videos in his dorm closet.
That's exactly how I pictured him too and I refuse to accept that the guy in the ad is him.
Me too, until I binge watched his videos one day and discovered he has a wife, kid, a dog named Khaleesi and a drone that got attacked by a hawk one time
even though he's constantly making references to his wife and child?
That’s so weird I thought that as well haha, although he does match his voice looking at him.
He looks like a very calm, collective Bill Hader. It's so weird...
Also I'm pretty sure he told his kid to go wild while he looks at his computer to make it work so well hahahahaha
missed the best joke. "which year?", "every year"
GET OUT
I still reference that joke, even if few people get it.
@@lajoyalobos2009 Edgar also references that joke literally every year on February 22 on his social media. Never gets old!
I live in Wells - the City this was filmed. (smallest City in the UK) The pub has a load of pictures of all the cast during filing. Watching this film even now is a surreal experience.
smallest City in England**
St Davids in Wales got you beat I’m afraid 😬
This film is everything Great about Britain encapsulated. All the regional stuff is right, the tone is perfect, the dialogue is fantastic, the acting is out the park, and the plot just nuanced enough to stake a claim of its own.
12:06 "I dunno I quite like a little midnight gobble."
Academy Award winner Olivia Colman, ladies and gentlemen.
Do you mean the Kev Bev advert actress ? 😉
Yeah she has some....weird early work. Even more so than I'm sure if you go back to the early days of any big star (Meryl Steep, Maggie Smith, Ian McKellan) that you'll find strange roles "Dustman No3" or "Villager on the left" and go "hey that's Maggie Smith playing 'Girl with balloon' isn't that crazy" or whatever. But some of the early stuff Olivia Colman took...
Like we could always tell she was a great actress, and I firmly believe that with the right script and director like 80% of people can act to "Oscar standard" (leaving aside how rigged that contest is) it still surprises me now to see her in the super serious stuff because I've seen more of her in the early things.
@ I only ever saw her in comedic roles before I think Broadchurch? I thinkI saw her first in Mitchell and Webb, one of the earliest series, and Hot Fuzz before anything else.
Biggest title of his career 🏆
The Russian won it all since the start of November (Paris title, London title, 10-match winning streak, 7-0 vs top 10 players) 💪🏻👏🏻
Congrats Daniil, so well deserved and what a way to end the season 🎉🎉
She is waaaay too much!! I love amazing actors that can be crazy or ridiculous! Shes so good!
One of my favorite little gags is when the little drunk pays Danny for dropping him off at his mansion only for Angel to hand it back to the guy saying “And there’s your change.”
You mean the guy who made his fortune in home appliances? The “refrigerator magnate”?
Yeah :D like of COURSE Angel isn't gonna take money (a) from a drunk person (b) for something he considers his duty.
As an American who loves action movies, Hot Fuzz unlocked the Edgar Wright puzzle for me, and I love all of his films now.
Simon Pegg and Nick frost are the single best acting duo of all time
Easily the 🐐
Nick Frosts alternate lines for the ‘drunk kid pisses on him’ scenes are hilarious....”collar matches the cuffs” is my personal fave 😂😂😂
in my opinion, this is the greatest comedy ever made. It's honestly the vertigo of comedies. every time you watch it you find something new
Absolutely right. And you definitely find something new each time. Just from watching this video, I realised that the waning phone service kinda foreshadows the poor state of the police service. It's a bit of stretch but I'm hoping someone can make something of the basic concept I failed at wording
Right!!! And it’s so much more than just a string of jokes, it’s creative, heartwarming and interesting!
Yep still hands down my favourite comedy film and in my top 10 of all time. Every scene is just hilarious and full if memorable lines.
@@Tom-oz7wk the waning phone service is a clever representation of the waning phone service as you leave the city...
There comes a point where you just really over think things
@@WozWozEre I definitely over think things. All the time. But it's understandable with any of Edgar's films. Also I really don't care if I'm overthinking nor do I much care for anything else you have to say
Missed win is where he does hand and grip strength exercises with the hand he was stabbed in
"Hello, Nicholas. How's the hand?"
"Still a bit stiff"
Me, Seeing that Cinemawins did an EGA of Hot Fuzz: "Sweet"
When the title says part one: *Excitement intensifies*
When part 2 isn’t up yet *sadness*
I always giggle at the incomprehensible British English guy going “Heh, cocks”
In one of the outtakes, nick frost loses it at the cocks part and it makes me laugh every time lol
Fun fact: at 11:17 when sergeant angel says that traffic “accident” applies there is no one to blame, was an actual debate in Britain back in the early 2000’s as they called this an RTA which stood for “Road Traffic Accident” but they had to change it to RTC - “Road Traffic Collision” as RTA was used in court and let drunk drivers off the hook as accident implies no one is at fault.
Really? Talk about another realism win!
Man, I always thought accident meant you didn't mean to do something, do British people just. Not get yelled at about the difference there?
“Incomprehencible british english”
Really made me laugh
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and Love Actually, two movies you really need to do
You also like this channel that’s awesome oh and I love your animations their my favs
and grand budapest hotel !
I’d do anything to see some Douglas Adams on this channel!
Love actually? Cinema Sins "Skip!"
Ouch; HHGttG The Movie (not the 80s BBC tv show) would be hard.. it probably does have its moments, but its also a pretty poor rendition of the books (ie: maybe due to bad editing; theres a couple times they say the first half of a gag, and then never actually say the rest of it; it hurts!) .. so yeah, good challenge for him. I've not seen that since the theatre :) ... and heres to Mr Adams .. well missed!
National treasure Olivia Coleman, making crude sexual references has to be a win surely.
Oh absolutley
I’ve seen enough Peep Show to not be shocked.
@@katashworth41 same
“Nothing like a bit of girl on girl!”
@@alih2611 exactly
"The church always being in the background" is not so much a cinematic device as a characteristic of most European settlements.
In America, where every other building is taller than the church, over here it's the other way around...
Pfft.
Some of Danny’s lines where supposed to be for a love interest and it’s cute when you notice which lines were supposed to be for the love interest like when Danny ask him to come inside for another beer.
The scene with the fence gets me every time. Best one of the trilogy
Frost looks back so the audience will know its actually him instead of a stuntman.
I love the joke that when angel and danny start drinking at the pub, the beers they buy progressively get less and less expensive as they move from good beer to awful stuff, as they get more drunk, because who cares how much you pay for beer when you're already drunk.
Let's be fair we've all done it
Well that's one way of looking at it I was just thinking "2 beers in England cost 5 pounds? Here they are 2"
@@lendonat I mean if they were left any longer they would pull a world's end and get them for free by drinking half finished beers of some blokes table who left.
@@ShiningHalo it's called mine sweeping
@@unholywolf1945 Roofie Rumble
"Does Bob look like the kinda guy I'd go out with? It's Dave..."
*"Hello there"*
Dave Kenobi?
Ah, kenobi
@@skyden24195 i came to the comments for this and was not disappointed
General Kenobi?
7:37 the fact that you took the time to line up saying the word swan to when it was said in film. Perfect
As a former Gloucestershire native, you cannot begin to understand how spot-on perfect this film depicts it. It hits the rural-england atmosphere perfectly. One of the best comedies of all time.
@sannio komi virgin cinema nitpick ‘criticism’ vs chad cinema appreciation
Jude is heckin' adorable. That is all.
Actually, let's say it like this: "Jude is and always will be a win."
Agreed
Agreed
Preach
I was waiting for this one LETS GO. The World’s End next lets keep the train rolling
Man I can’t wait for the worlds end
@Dizi Editleri no
Ok. Go where?
@Dizi Editleri
If you had good videos you wouldn't need to spam like tnis
LEST GO FAM
"How can this be for the greater good?"
"The Greater Good."
*SHUT IT!!*
Wright time, Right Place ! 😂
The greater good
@@tonystark-bl1vu SHUT IT!!
@@MiyaTakamura the greater good
@@tonystark-bl1vu SHUT IT!
Why does boone mention that when Nicholas says "that windows broken from the inside" he points directly at Janine, symbolising how she is heartbroken over Nicholas's lack of commitment to their relationship
I am really glad that there's someone that's actually talking about why the movies are good and not bad. Thanks for that man.
My favorite in the Cornetto trilogy. Didn't know what it was the first time (thought it was something like Midsomer murders), so imagine my surprise with the final act. Absolutely blew me away, so many great lines and deliveries.
Hot Fuzz was what got me into Edgar Wright's stuff, I love this, Shaun of the Dead, Scott Pilgrim, and he was a writer for Ant-Man as well; I still need to see The World's End, keep putting it off for some reason.
My grandmother lives in the village where this was filmed, and to this day I wonder if she’s part of the cult.
FOR THE GREATER GOOD
@@sidsmith6522 SHUT IT!
@@erikbjelke4411 THE GREATER GOOD
If she ever says "for the greater good" then she is
Isn't Wells tecnically a city since it has a cathedral?
Timothy Dalton was such a joy in this movie. He was so good.
He looked as though he was having the time of his life in this role
@@WozWozEre Exactly. You know how they say an actor is chewing up the scenery? Timothy Dalton was chewing up the scenery.
Definitely scared The Living Daylights out of the audience
“Catch me later!”
Straight line : __________________
Dotted line : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Iconic line : “I dunno, pub?”
1:39 I actually met Bill Nighy while he was reading a book down on the sea shores of Brighton, was a very nice man
Did you miss out even a single frame?
“Uhh... Yeah.”
Get out.
Dizi Editleri no.
@Dizi Editleri If you actually made good videos you wouldn't need to beg for views.
Dude, this time, for real, EVERYTHING IS GREAT about the movie HOT FUZZ.
He can’t show the whole movie, copyright.
The trilogy... and everything these guys put out is top shelf.
7:52 thanks man. You finally resolved the mistery of why I wasn't able to see that cameo.
Omg thats Marsha from Spaced @3:25 !!!! She was one of my favorite characters! I love Simon for casting actors he's acted with before 😊😊😊 I haven't seen HotFuzz since it basically came out (though I loved it immensely even though it gave me a headache. Literally) and watched Spaced years later so it's my first time catching this lovely cameo 😊
This is, without a doubt, my favourite movie of all time. As a Brit I could watch it again and again and it still makes me cry with laughter!
Edgar Wright is ALWAYS a win...
What do u mean as a brit😂 adds nothing to what u meant
"A GREAT, BIG, BUSHY BEARD!" is a phrase I try to work in to my day-to-day life as much as is appropriate. That line delivery is great
Also prisoner Zero has escaped and is impersonating a cop
Nah, she's just a transfer from Broadchurch.
@@inkmaster5480 nah it’s just Lizzie trying to get a break from the press and scrutiny by leading a secret life as an officer
@@jhjhbihih8494 no it's Queen Anne.
I am proud to have understood that reference.
You probably don't care and didn't ask, but there you go.
I understood that reference.
Quick side note: Leslie Tiller says she's just about to "pop off" before she's 'f*cking murdered', which is not only slang for going somewhere, but also to die.
In case you didn't know 🙂
It took until now to realise that maybe the reason Angel is so good at jumping is from the time he briefly wanted to be a frog
when a mostly comedy movie has better action then most modern action movies
What's funny is it's taking the piss out of obnoxious over the top action scenes, which is why the action is mostly a bunch of rapid camera movements and quick cuts a lot of the time
@@TOONYBOY still looks great though
@@volcanic2578 Sometimes. It's bad action but it's funny-bad on purpose
@@TOONYBOY Well Wright's signature editing style makes it far more entertaining then other action scenes
@@volcanic2578 Depends on the action scene you're comparing it to really and other factors that contribute to entertainment. Things like music as well as characters and setup in the story.
You may know him as bond, he'll always be Rassilon to me. Yeh that's right, last time it was Harriet Jones former priminister, this week is president of the Timelords, I'm just saving David Bradley for next time, I'll let you decide which reference I end up going for
Thank you so much! I thought he looked familiar but couldn't figure out why, thats another one for Doctor Who Bingo lol.
I believe the woman at 14:16 is the blood assimilator from "Smith and Jones", obviously Bradley played William Hartnell and Solomon from "Dinosaurs on a space ship", bill nighy played Mr Black in "Vincent and the Doctor"
Jim Broadbent played the 11th doctor in "The Curse of Fatal Death"
Bill Bailey played Droxil in "The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe." as
DanteCorwyn pointed out
Also a friend recently pointed out that Simon Pegg played the Editor in 'the Long game' and Nick Frost played Santa Claus in 'Last Christmas.'
"If I hear any more blatant references like that, you'll be in for a jolly good smacked bottom"
That's which David Bradley reference you should make.
The original you might say
@@mickys8065 Bill Bailey is one of the Christmas specials, and in Spaced.
@@DanteCorwyn yes he did
Weird, I always imagined you as a disembodied smiley face rather than an actual human
Now it's just a Jeep Smiley face. 😉🤣
14:35 hes so excited and cute!! I love how much you love movies
The flying high kick mortal kombat style to the 90 years grandma face who tried to kill officer Angel with a shotgun was also great 😂
Yup my mate and I nearly shat ourselves laughing in cinema at that and then spent next couple of minutes looking worriedly around checking we weren’t being stared daggers at!
Yo, not only was that ray con matchcut smooth as hell, the fact that you have a face for the voice is gunna take a while for me to get used to.
THAT is a creative sponsor bit, honestly. That's impressive.
Multiple pints later: "It's hardly in keeping with the village's rustic aesthetic."
And a win for saying 'aesthetic' correctly, and not saying 'aestetic', which seems to be becoming much more common these days.
Angel's entire character in a nutshell.
I absolutely love Hot Fuzz, and I've always wanted to go through and see all the little details that make it so great. Thanks for putting in the work and showing it off in such an entertaining way!
Please never stop what youre doing. Im bombarded daily about how much everything I enjoy sucks to other people and then I come here and Im reminded why I love what I love. Top it off with pure genuine character and all around wholesomeness and yep, thats a win.
11:53 I never noticed it before, but even though it's only one person in the mirror, two reflections visible is a reference to there being multiple "killers, eh?"
So glad this one turned out to be part one of two! Edgar Wright is a genius when it comes to filmmaking
The fact that I've now been verified that CinemaWins is a fan of Every Frame a Painting fills me with more joy than you can imagine.
I just wanted to say. I discovered this channel about a year and a half ago. When I found out your wife was pregnant (clearly way after the fact) was when I discovered I had a child of my own and soon after gained full custody of her. Not only do I actually appreciate the ad space and relate to it, it warms my heart to see your boy develop such an energetic personality (as much as I know you dislike it sometimes) and he's genuinely older than I thought. You've been a source of positivity through the craziness that has been the last year and a half and thank you and good job to the two of you for raising such a happy human. Much love
Requesting "The Princess Bride"
Attempt number 39
As you wish!
I loved the princess bride as a kid and I love it even more as a teen
I’m looking forward to “The Worlds End” review
Now that I’ve seen it, same.
OMG @3:16 I've watched this movie multiple times. I've never noticed the connection between this joke and how the town leadership are actually subscribed to that ideology.
Your kid's too adorable, add an extra win everytime on screen.
This movie is the gold standard for cinema wins! Almost every scene, every line of dialogue, every transition, has some sort of hidden detail or foreshadowing. I've probably seen it ten times in my life and am always finding new lines that foreshadow something later in the movie.
Truly a work of genius that I recommend to everyone (who can handle the gore).
Every time I watch this movie I pick up a new detail, and this time it was the black cape in the background! Never noticed that before. Since this is part 1, I don't want to get ahead of myself, but I hope to god you don't miss one of the most important details of the movie. The "swan chase" itself is the parody of the whole movie plot. It's a whole wild goose chase. They are chasing the swan throughout the village, just like Nicholas is chasing the killers all around him, and yes, most of the time they are in front of him, and he can never catch them!
Everything great about Hott Fuzz: I live where it was filmed and love it
damn I suppose that really shows you the greater good
@@dominicjeffrey9477 _The greater good…_
I would say “What a Shame...” but... this is a Good Saturday.
HE WAS A GOOD MAN. WHAT A ROTTEN WAY TO DIE.
10:02
I still love how it sounds like "arseholes", refering to the ones who were complaining, but it eventually just turns into "yes, I suppose"
Honestly, this is one of my all time fav movies. And, it's so intense... brutal, funny, intelligent... (mind blowing, if you want to say so (double meaning, pun intended!)) and I love all the actors, and their acting! Thank you very much for this review!
Jude is so big now. Wow, I remember when he had just been born and you talking about him on the channel :) congrats!
Not to bring politics into this, but Danny and Nick's dynamic is exactly what people mean when they say nontoxic masculinity
Simon and Nick are like that in real life too, it’s sweet as hell
Exactly! They care about each other and are not afraid to show it.
I really like that some of the jokes nick made actually get a geniune chuckle out of simon
This is literally my single favorite film - I couldn't agree more that it can't be covered in just one part
8:20 will never NOT make me laugh. It's honestly one of my favorite scenes in movie history.
Timothy Dalton was amazing in hot fuzz, his best performance since his time as Bond
Peel Centre/house (Metropolitan Police Training centre) which is featured here at the beginning of the film is also featured in Avengers multiple times as background and main buildings.
The more you know.
Missed a win for “what’s the situation” even thought he has come to say he’s leaving he still puts the job first.
10:25 that's also Bill Bailey, one of the most funny and witty men alive today. His real live haircut is even more adventurous than depicted here ^^
He's also a brilliant dancer: ruclips.net/video/NtAJtaC76H0/видео.html
The ‘incomprehensible British English’ might be the best part of the entire video especially since I understand it.
Do you mean that Slytherin is the best, or that you are merely following their rules?
@@BEdwardStover lol neither I’m just saying that Slytherin is awesome and should get less hate
You forgot when he said to Danny” u haven’t taken a shortcut before” and beforehand said to David in Shaun of the dead the exact same thing
15:15 beautiful beard win.