For context: The 2/7 off suit is considered the worst hand you can be dealt in Texas hold 'em, they are cards you don't want to see. Some Army SF use that insignia as they are guys that you don't want to see.
Yeah, it is both fear and respect that comes from ‘Old-Timer’ in this scene and Hutch returns the respect, but not the fear, with his last words to ‘Old-Timer’ as he nopes right out of the room and turns what sounds like six locks 🤣 While there doesn’t seem to be any real US military or SOG units that use the 7-2 off-suit as a symbol for their unit apparently one does in the ‘Nobody’ universe and Old-Timer recognizes and understands that Hutch is a dangerous and deadly opponent if crossed. Absolutely love this scene, and all of the actors did a great job even though they had only a very few lines between them and the two guys in the back had none. Even with few lines they went from ‘Ready to battle’ to ‘Oh shit, this man is out of our league’ almost instantly and their nonverbal body language was great. The man who played the tattoo artist also put a great inflection of fear into his last line after Old-Timer, a man who the artist clearly respects, noped right out of there and made the room that he retreated into as secure as Fort Knox. Just a wonderful scene all around, and one early enough in the film to hint that this seemingly mild-mannered husband and father is far more than what he appears to be. I thought that his hat said “Vietnam Veteran” but it’s a DESERT STORM VETERAN hat which means that I am officially old. How did this happen? When did I become this age?! 😭
When the veteran notices his wrist tattoo and locks himself behind the steel door is when this becomes classic! The counter person has this look of "Oh Crap" when his Vet buddy leaves him without a word of warning. My cousin was career Army and told me of tattoo parlors for military are passed down from older combat Vets where to get special art for your teams and special opps. They keep our service people happy with tradition in Tattoo art that our service people want to show off and not be ashamed of! My Grandfather had ink which I was to young to know what it ment when he passed away BUT in 2023 I found out he was a prisoner of war who was part of the unit that was sent to drop the BOMB!!! It was a memorial to the team he was a part of and the friends he lost.
Whoa, you know him? For real? If you see this tell him that I loved his work in this film; he did a really great job going from the “I’ve seen anything and everything and nothing bothers me” to “Oh crap, I know what this man does for a living and I need to get the hell out of here” in a split second. Everyone in the scene, and even throughout the movie, did really good work. Personally I’d love for ‘Old-Timer’ to make a reappearance in the sequel that comes out next year, even if it’s just a fun cameo where he sees Hutch again and just ‘nopes’ right out of the room. It’s probably too late though as the sequel is probably wrapping up filming, but perhaps the team might find a cameo for the character in the potential third film!
Tbh I loved the fact the other dudes responded like normal humans beings backed off and gave him what he came for after the Desert Storm vet got scared for his life instead of still trying to fight him
Man, every one did a great job in this film. I never imagined that Bob could be an action star, but ‘Nobody’ proved to everyone that he definitely can and is. Can’t wait for the sequel in August 2025 - I want to learn more about Hutch and his wife Becca, and to see Hutch (and hopefully his father and half-brother as well!) kick more ass.
I love how, as they hear the locks starting to be latched, you can see the look of shock on the guy behind the counter, then the realization that if that old timer is afraid... they're dead meat if they try to take that cash from him.
It's more a thing for Vietnam veterans. Many veterans were virtual outcasts after the war, due to the war's extreme unpopularity and the number (and severity) of war crimes committed by US troops. A Vietnam veteran was most likely to be refused employment in the years after the war. More Vietnam veterans exited the service homeless than the veterans of any other war. It took about 10-20 years for the stigma of being a Vietnam veteran to fade.
@@torinira.9269 The wars unpopularity is actually a myth. Vietnam was a heavily supported war (most were actually volunteers not drafted like people think), but as Vietnam was the proxy for Russia (just like Afghanistan was for us against Russia), there was a massive propaganda campaign by the media and activists against it in order to assist Russia. The war crime claims were almost always unfounded just like what we did to Russia about Grozny. After the USSR collapsed it was revealed by ex-KGB that the DNC actually was funneling orders direct from Moscow on where and what to protest and the media was part of coordinating the promotion to Astroturf opinions. Apparently the groundwork went decades back during FDR who favored the USSR and did stuff like silence whistleblowers such as Whittaker Chambers around the Manhattan project which is suspected to be how Russia got our nuclear technology.
@@DaveSmith-cp5kj Are you a fool. People were spat on in public, ostracized for a very long time. When the public learned the war was wrong the absolute opposition to it became immense, and when those soldiers finally got home they were scrutinized and afforded no opportunity.
That would have been cool. He would have told them that Hutch could have single handedly killed them all with out breaking a sweat. He knew what kind of man that Hutch was because he saw some of them during his time in Vietnam. While no one knew their names or what part of the military they were from, all they knew was they had was a tattoo of the 7 of spades & 2 of diamonds on their wrists, and they were complete killers.
its amazing how a simple tattoo of two playing cards can invoke fear into someone who's in the know. I know it's only a movie, but it has a semblance of truth in it with how some tattoos today can signify certain things
That's exactly the same as the Russian Mafia (bratva) or other gang like the MS-13. You don't want to fck with someone of the bratva that wear somes stars on the chest. Or someone of the MS-13 that have teardrop tattoo lol
@@willie417 “there are three types of people with tear drops. Those that have them on their skin who earned them, and those with them still under the skin because they know better. You seem to be the third, that has them on the skin and didn’t earn them, let alone know what they mean. Get out of my sight”
@@willie417 too many people getting tattoos - too many people not realizing some have meanings and get them anyway because they think it looks cool or pretty - you not being able to connect the dots isn’t my problem
0:53 Best Scene....Masterpiece. If you have no chance and you know that you are in front of your master, then you better go and no one knows why, but everyone follows you. And the look and movement of the business....AWESOME
The fact that the Old Vet notices both the badge and the tatto at all is a hint about his skill. The fact he then gets afraid enough to leave and triple lock the door tells the others all they need to know.
IF vets has moral codes of service to the country, nobodies has no moral codes or even service for their country. They are killing machines meant to search and destroy.
7/2 the worst hand you can get in Texas hold ‘em poker. In terms like He did a job no one could pull off alone, all the odds were against him in every way imaginable, no briefing, no support, in a certain amount of time, no one was left alive except him. A simple task that was basically considered a suicide run.
Okay for some context for those that doesn't even know, the tattoo of 7 and 2 are a symbolization that a person has been sent to a suicide mission and lives to tell the tale, against all odds, he earned himself the nickname "The Bad Hand."
For anyone wondering, the 7 and 2 are the worst starting cards in Texas Holdem, it's the sign of ex CIA soldiers of fortune. It means he's the baddest of the bad
The 7 and 2 offset is an impossible hand in poker, that you should absolutely fold. The Spade signifies death while the Diamond signifies money. Which means he dealt death for money.
@@taefravis Says some random nobody who’s opinion means zero in this argument. Go back to watching more YT and pretending that you’re not a minimum wage worker with zero accomplishments in life.
In Desert Storm my tank company had "Fighting Aces" death cards we threw on dead Iraqis to let those who found them know that C Company, 2-34th Armor killed them.
The thing of it is: the old vet couldn't tell them who hutch was, because that would make them all a liability, and he might have killed them all. He couldn't say "wait, this guy is bad news" without telling them how he knew. Locking himself in the panic room and looking at them like it was the last time he'd see them was the best way to say "don't mess with this guy". I imagine the conversation after Hutch left went something like. "Alright. I'm only going to say this once, so listen up, and don't ask questions..."
Un film, uno dei migliori dal mio punto di vista..mi ha fatto molto ridere anche perché troppo il senso di giustizia, quella che manca e solo nei film si vede chiaro
The vet was respected there, clearly older than the MC. But that tattoo sent him off behind a locked door, no one else wanted to see why that guy was disturbed
My tattoo theory is as it's a 7 2 off suit, the worst hand possible, it is something you never want to see and is very dangerous to play with. Anyone got a different idea? I don't think it is a real life thing but please correct me!
i just saw deleted scene where the Barber had cuflflinks that looked like playing cards...i could make out a 3 of diamonds and an 8. This might suggest that Hutch's 7-2 tattoo may have been a unit tattoo and the numbers were rank designations?
For context: The 2/7 off suit is considered the worst hand you can be dealt in Texas hold 'em, they are cards you don't want to see. Some Army SF use that insignia as they are guys that you don't want to see.
They are also the guys who are given the worst situation and expected to win
Also in taro readings. One of them means death and misfortune and the other card wrath and gold. So he’s literally killing for money
Spades meaning Killing and Diamonds meaning money, He got the worst had served, killing for money
Oh i see.. thank you
or that you are a merc. expendable and does the it with money
I love the respect "old timer" shows, and how it's reciprocated. The quiet understanding between them is gold.
That was fear, not respect.
@@SynisterNation both
The term “old timer” is specifically used for vets like hutch and him
Yeah, it is both fear and respect that comes from ‘Old-Timer’ in this scene and Hutch returns the respect, but not the fear, with his last words to ‘Old-Timer’ as he nopes right out of the room and turns what sounds like six locks 🤣
While there doesn’t seem to be any real US military or SOG units that use the 7-2 off-suit as a symbol for their unit apparently one does in the ‘Nobody’ universe and Old-Timer recognizes and understands that Hutch is a dangerous and deadly opponent if crossed. Absolutely love this scene, and all of the actors did a great job even though they had only a very few lines between them and the two guys in the back had none. Even with few lines they went from ‘Ready to battle’ to ‘Oh shit, this man is out of our league’ almost instantly and their nonverbal body language was great. The man who played the tattoo artist also put a great inflection of fear into his last line after Old-Timer, a man who the artist clearly respects, noped right out of there and made the room that he retreated into as secure as Fort Knox. Just a wonderful scene all around, and one early enough in the film to hint that this seemingly mild-mannered husband and father is far more than what he appears to be.
I thought that his hat said “Vietnam Veteran” but it’s a DESERT STORM VETERAN hat which means that I am officially old. How did this happen? When did I become this age?! 😭
@@EatTheMarxistsI caught the "D" first watch, but I always thought it said Da Nang... I guess we're both old 😂
When the veteran notices his wrist tattoo and locks himself behind the steel door is when this becomes classic! The counter person has this look of "Oh Crap" when his Vet buddy leaves him without a word of warning. My cousin was career Army and told me of tattoo parlors for military are passed down from older combat Vets where to get special art for your teams and special opps. They keep our service people happy with tradition in Tattoo art that our service people want to show off and not be ashamed of! My Grandfather had ink which I was to young to know what it ment when he passed away BUT in 2023 I found out he was a prisoner of war who was part of the unit that was sent to drop the BOMB!!! It was a memorial to the team he was a part of and the friends he lost.
dude, stop with the exclamation marks. its cringe.
His little face in the window
@@elessal !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@elessal !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@williamdon3442 lol right? That part was comedy gold.
The look on the old man's face is priceless and I understood his feelings on what he felt.
Terror, sheer, gut-wrenching, terror.
@Just_Pele and that guy went to hell and back
Old timer, is an amazing actor and a close friend. I am so proud of you McIntyre, you Legend
He also played Kid and Devil in gangland undercover, amazing actor
Whoa, you know him? For real? If you see this tell him that I loved his work in this film; he did a really great job going from the “I’ve seen anything and everything and nothing bothers me” to “Oh crap, I know what this man does for a living and I need to get the hell out of here” in a split second. Everyone in the scene, and even throughout the movie, did really good work.
Personally I’d love for ‘Old-Timer’ to make a reappearance in the sequel that comes out next year, even if it’s just a fun cameo where he sees Hutch again and just ‘nopes’ right out of the room. It’s probably too late though as the sequel is probably wrapping up filming, but perhaps the team might find a cameo for the character in the potential third film!
Good excuse to brag a little, eh? 😄
Love how the dude's voice softened at the end when he says "how can i help you?" .. dude was stressed as hell
ended with a high pitch "you"... he was scread lol
Dude dropped a brick in his pants
I wad hollin
Tbh I loved the fact the other dudes responded like normal humans beings backed off and gave him what he came for after the Desert Storm vet got scared for his life instead of still trying to fight him
Wait, was he a Desert Storm vet? I thought his cover said Vietnam.
Holy Lord I have gotten old without really even realizing it.
@@EatTheMarxists Right??
Love how the tattoo artist voice inflection changed up. lmao
In a squeaky voice ''how can I help you?''
Man, every one did a great job in this film. I never imagined that Bob could be an action star, but ‘Nobody’ proved to everyone that he definitely can and is. Can’t wait for the sequel in August 2025 - I want to learn more about Hutch and his wife Becca, and to see Hutch (and hopefully his father and half-brother as well!) kick more ass.
Nobody. Thank you for your service.
John Wick. Oh.
Tells so much story with almost no words. Amazing writing!
Equalizer. Choose.
Polar. Let's bargain.
I love how the vet walks before him and not behind him to not provoke Hutch.
How to tell us he's a badass without saying anything; more movies could learn from that.
John Wick did that too.
"He stole John Wick's car and uh....Killed his dog"
"....oh"
and then
"That fucking nobody......is John Wick."
I love the parlours face when he’s watching the door lock😂
PRICE-LESS!
Greatest scene in a great movie.
I love how, as they hear the locks starting to be latched, you can see the look of shock on the guy behind the counter, then the realization that if that old timer is afraid... they're dead meat if they try to take that cash from him.
The tattoo artist then politely asked him if he needs help like a salesgirl from Ann Taylor.
If you listen carefully, there's a final clicking sound of the guy tested the door one last time to make sure it's locked. Really nice touch.
I like how the guy who retreated has a cap with "VETERAN" written on it
...you know, just in case it wasn't implied enough already
They really be like that tho lol
It's more a thing for Vietnam veterans. Many veterans were virtual outcasts after the war, due to the war's extreme unpopularity and the number (and severity) of war crimes committed by US troops. A Vietnam veteran was most likely to be refused employment in the years after the war. More Vietnam veterans exited the service homeless than the veterans of any other war. It took about 10-20 years for the stigma of being a Vietnam veteran to fade.
@@torinira.9269 The wars unpopularity is actually a myth. Vietnam was a heavily supported war (most were actually volunteers not drafted like people think), but as Vietnam was the proxy for Russia (just like Afghanistan was for us against Russia), there was a massive propaganda campaign by the media and activists against it in order to assist Russia. The war crime claims were almost always unfounded just like what we did to Russia about Grozny. After the USSR collapsed it was revealed by ex-KGB that the DNC actually was funneling orders direct from Moscow on where and what to protest and the media was part of coordinating the promotion to Astroturf opinions. Apparently the groundwork went decades back during FDR who favored the USSR and did stuff like silence whistleblowers such as Whittaker Chambers around the Manhattan project which is suspected to be how Russia got our nuclear technology.
@@DaveSmith-cp5kj Are you a fool. People were spat on in public, ostracized for a very long time. When the public learned the war was wrong the absolute opposition to it became immense, and when those soldiers finally got home they were scrutinized and afforded no opportunity.
@@PsicosisYT You don't read the comments that you reply to, do you?
I really wish there was a deleted scene where the guys ask him what the deal was with all the locks and why he just split.
That would have been cool. He would have told them that Hutch could have single handedly killed them all with out breaking a sweat. He knew what kind of man that Hutch was because he saw some of them during his time in Vietnam. While no one knew their names or what part of the military they were from, all they knew was they had was a tattoo of the 7 of spades & 2 of diamonds on their wrists, and they were complete killers.
7 of spades and 2 of diamonds being the worst hand in poker, meaning you never want to see that hand.
Not only 7 and 2, in deleted scene you can see black guy having something like 9 and 3 on his wrist badge.
@@RisticAleksa Whwre can I find the deleted scenes? here on the tube?
@@blomabrainsout yes. On tube
This never gets old!
A lot of veterans acted the same way when they saw my uncles tattoo. He often said I served in Vietnam but that's as much as he could say
Nice story
That’s all he needs to say! Thank you for your service sir!
Service for serving the Jewish elites who use soldiers like cattle to enrich themselves while stealing from other countries ,yes nice service
I just loved the door being locked and the look on the face of disbelief :)
its amazing how a simple tattoo of two playing cards can invoke fear into someone who's in the know. I know it's only a movie, but it has a semblance of truth in it with how some tattoos today can signify certain things
That's exactly the same as the Russian Mafia (bratva) or other gang like the MS-13.
You don't want to fck with someone of the bratva that wear somes stars on the chest.
Or someone of the MS-13 that have teardrop tattoo lol
too many people are getting tattoos today, any and everyone is getting them
@@willie417 “there are three types of people with tear drops. Those that have them on their skin who earned them, and those with them still under the skin because they know better. You seem to be the third, that has them on the skin and didn’t earn them, let alone know what they mean. Get out of my sight”
@@kyze8284 You funny, 🤔who said anything about tear drops😂🤣😂
@@willie417 too many people getting tattoos - too many people not realizing some have meanings and get them anyway because they think it looks cool or pretty - you not being able to connect the dots isn’t my problem
the movie was some of the better $15 that I spent. totally worth watching it.
Such a clever script! "Flash cheese"!! 🤣🤣
1:14 and onwards that head jump and face stare was so hilarious. It was like, WTF, why did you run and hide and secure yourself like that.
loved the panic in the eyes of the guy behind the counter when the old guy locked every lock on the door he could.... hahaha
0:53 Best Scene....Masterpiece. If you have no chance and you know that you are in front of your master, then you better go and no one knows why, but everyone follows you. And the look and movement of the business....AWESOME
great scene, what an awesome way to do character building without a lot of words
The worst hand in poker to be dealt..
If you gotta face him ..it's a bad hand to be dealt.
for a better term. you dont ever wanna see a hand like that when you play poker. meaning, you dont ever wanna see hutch
@@alwaysturnonaircon his was better
@@alwaysturnonairconya gotta good pun there.. 🔥
Yea basically red flags him as the worst case scenario, not just a bad hand, a damn near unwinnable one
lol! Hard-bro’s “how can I help you?” was for sure pitched up!
The polite way of saying “I wish a nigga would”
For an old man, he's sure got sharp eyes to notice the half-faded tats partially hidden under the cuffs, that too in the dim light.
he was a sniper leave him alone
He also noticed the FBI id expired... Old timer is still sharp.
When you ‘know what to look for’ you see things 99% of the population miss 🤔😳😎
Probably why he made it out of a war
The fact that the Old Vet notices both the badge and the tatto at all is a hint about his skill.
The fact he then gets afraid enough to leave and triple lock the door tells the others all they need to know.
IF vets has moral codes of service to the country, nobodies has no moral codes or even service for their country. They are killing machines meant to search and destroy.
Its a pretty good way to sibtly show he was involved in some shit back in his prime and he was STILL scared shitless when he saw that tattoo
I love how if you let the bananas get brown and spotty the banana bread tastes 100x better.
Not sure why this is relevant on this video 😁
But yea.. It's the sugars that are created when the banana goes brown.
Window close = I ain't see shit! Don't mind me.
😂😂😂😂😂😂 Awesome scene.
7/2 the worst hand you can get in Texas hold ‘em poker. In terms like He did a job no one could pull off alone, all the odds were against him in every way imaginable, no briefing, no support, in a certain amount of time, no one was left alive except him. A simple task that was basically considered a suicide run.
Never get tired of watching this scene. Masterpiece. Wish more movies said more with less.
Image what the vet has seen that he knows to fear that tat. Also hearing him spin the dial lock on the door😂. That some serious locking
Insignia represents that under the hardest odds you made it.
Finally someone speaking the truth!
Most others claim that it is not possible to win with that hand.
dude behind the counters voice lifts up a few octaves
after vet says thank you for your service
leaves and locks the door🤣
Lmao. Old timer looked like he saw a ghost😂
Aint nobody getting in that door.
Chills every time i watch it lol
At the seventh lock, even Hank raised his eyebrows. Meaning he prepared door like fort Knox.
Kinda curious what he was thinking to🤣
Saul really changed.
7-2 off suit Its meaning is simple: if life deals you Hutch, you're out of luck.
old timer probably a vet too based on his cap...so him seeing that tattoo got him thinking like, "no, not this guy!"
I love how even hutch's eyebrows went up like "God damn y'all got alotta locks."
Okay for some context for those that doesn't even know, the tattoo of 7 and 2 are a symbolization that a person has been sent to a suicide mission and lives to tell the tale, against all odds, he earned himself the nickname "The Bad Hand."
"Can I help you?"
The tone of his voice, his balls just pretty much dropped to the basement. 🤣
nah, his balls were pulled up into his throat
Still eleven months to go before the sequel. I can’t wait to see it! August 2025 can’t get here quickly enough.
I love this scene!!
One of the best if not the most badass scene ever.
I'm definitely getting that tattoo.
Upload proof of it, and your comment will be pinned 😁
7th SF group, 2nd Battalion '72 nam
"Thank you for the service".. lock lock lock lock lock lock... 😅😅
For anyone wondering, the 7 and 2 are the worst starting cards in Texas Holdem, it's the sign of ex CIA soldiers of fortune. It means he's the baddest of the bad
Absolutely love this scene!
I need to go and get that tattoo now😂
His dad has the same 2/7 tattoo :D and it can be seen in the scene where he is lowering the volume on the TV remote
Better call Saul
That music had the most uncanny buildup that droned any guessing of the outcome of this encounter.
I've seen this movie several times now and I've always wondered what this tattoo place does that they require a door with that many locks?
the foley artist really nailed this scene. the rhythm of the locks and bolts on the door is so perfect
The 7 and 2 offset is an impossible hand in poker, that you should absolutely fold. The Spade signifies death while the Diamond signifies money. Which means he dealt death for money.
@@Ravenlocke118 You need to learn better English! You also have zero clue about poker other than what you read from Wikipedia.
@@taefravis Says some random nobody who’s opinion means zero in this argument. Go back to watching more YT and pretending that you’re not a minimum wage worker with zero accomplishments in life.
No, it means the worst possible hand to be dealt with. So anyone who has to deal with hutch (in a fight or smt) has basically already lost.
I don't know, personally, I get a kick out of running big bluffs with a 7-2 offsuit and then showing my muck to put someone on tilt.
.... How can I help you . 🤣 No more explanation required :) .
God, I love it when an action movie has one dude smart enough to nope the fuck out.
Lol, the pitch of the knuckle dusters voice after the locks, 🤣😂😅
This is the John Wick equivalent of 'Oh'.
In Desert Storm my tank company had "Fighting Aces" death cards we threw on dead Iraqis to let those who found them know that C Company, 2-34th Armor killed them.
this was done so much better then they did in john wick
The thing of it is: the old vet couldn't tell them who hutch was, because that would make them all a liability, and he might have killed them all.
He couldn't say "wait, this guy is bad news" without telling them how he knew.
Locking himself in the panic room and looking at them like it was the last time he'd see them was the best way to say "don't mess with this guy".
I imagine the conversation after Hutch left went something like.
"Alright. I'm only going to say this once, so listen up, and don't ask questions..."
How can i help you? (quakingly)
one moment: "Fuck is this faker?"
next moment: (Shat Pants Noises)
Un film, uno dei migliori dal mio punto di vista..mi ha fatto molto ridere anche perché troppo il senso di giustizia, quella che manca e solo nei film si vede chiaro
The vet was respected there, clearly older than the MC. But that tattoo sent him off behind a locked door, no one else wanted to see why that guy was disturbed
I love this scene. Because finally it shows someone realizing they should not start shit with someone else.
whats the song playing in the background'
Nothing but respect
My tattoo theory is as it's a 7 2 off suit, the worst hand possible, it is something you never want to see and is very dangerous to play with. Anyone got a different idea? I don't think it is a real life thing but please correct me!
It's true. You don't want to see that hand. If you see it, you are in bad luck.
It means that you should fold instantly
@@basilisk74 Not necessarily. But you definitely should consider your options and odds before proceeding.
@@i_am_aladeen Old veteran folded instantly and locked himself in different room
@@basilisk74 He chose wisely.
But it is not the only possible choice.
Depends on which consequences one is prepared to deal with.
Toss up between Old Timer leaving or the assistant girl; "I'm out" in both cases.
Fun stuff
How many locks on that door
When a bear walks into a wolf den
in the military the tattoo means that he survived a suicide mission
can I help you 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣the way he says it 😂😂😂😂
How can I help u lol
20 locks and a 30min headstart.
The way that old timer peels an apple is something similar to what he saw in that tattoo
This will forever be the best scene next to “oh” from John wick
oh yeah. respect.
Rest In Peace Stephen McIntyre (the veteran) 🕊
T shirt vets < Desert Storm old timer.
72 is GB in the alphabet. Green Beret.
All those locks but the hinges are still exposed 😂
0:54 he new instantly this guys a problem 🔥
Gammel nar du fornermede ham da du sage hans fbi skilt ikke virked😂😂❤
guess the old guy is the father of jimmy in John wick, they all know who not to piss off
impressive
I want Hutch, Wick, and McCall to have an interaction, just once!
Tatto means special forces .profesional state Killer - very angry man
This J Cole Right Now
i just saw deleted scene where the Barber had cuflflinks that looked like playing cards...i could make out a 3 of diamonds and an 8. This might suggest that Hutch's 7-2 tattoo may have been a unit tattoo and the numbers were rank designations?
We'll, that would make moving up in ranks a b*tch.