Brazzaville Teen-Ager, directed by Michael Cera

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • Michael Cera presents his short film, "Brazzaville Teen-Ager." Based on an original story by Bruce Jay Friedman.
    Subscribe to Michael: www.youtube.com...
    In a self-effacing attempt to save his father from a death by deterioration, a young man enlists his curmudgeonly boss and Kelis to perform a song, and a miracle.
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    Stock Footage Provided by Pond5: www.pond5.com
    PRODUCTION
    Director: Michael Cera
    Written By: Bruce Jay Friedman and Michael Cera
    Production Company: Jash
    Production Company: Ghost Robot
    Executive Producers: Daniel Kellison, Doug DeLuca, Mickey Meyer
    Executive Producers: Mark De Pace, Zach Mortensen
    Supervising Producer: Debbie Chesebro
    Staff Producer: Christine No
    Producers: Kyle Martin, Michaela Mckee, Brad Payne
    Co-Producer: Laura Heberton
    Associate Producer: Felipe Dieppa
    Cinematographer: Joe Anderson
    Editor: Jacob Craycroft
    Costume Design: David Tabbert
    Production Designer: Bridget Rafferty
    CAST
    Gunther: Michael Cera
    Mr. Hartman: Jack O'Connell
    Father: Charles Grodin
    Kelis: Kelis
    Dougie: Brandon Reily
    Conrad: Curtis l' Cook
    Mrs. Hartman: Charlotte Booker
    Dr. Schwartz: Andy Prosky
    Backup Singer #1: Christina Sajous
    Backup Singer #2: Deonna Bouyue
    Recording Engineer: Himansho Suri
    Adler: Andrew Levine
    Man in Recording Studio: Adam Levite
    Dr. Schwartz's Date: Caroline Powers
    MUSIC
    "BRAZZAVILLE TEENAGER" Written by: Adam Schleisinger
    Performed by Kelis
    Produced by Adam Schlesinger & Steven M. Gold
    "MOTHER LOVE" & "TENKON WHY FEEL SORRY" Written & Performed by Tsegue-Maryam Guebrou
    "DANCE FOR B" & "LATE MUSIC" Written & Performed by Alden Penner
    "CELLOVILLE" Written & Performed by Danny Bensi & Saunder Jurriaans
    About Jash:
    Founded and featuring original content by partners Sarah Silverman, Michael Cera, Tim and Eric, and Reggie Watts, JASH is the first fully realized network to offer all its comedic partners complete creative autonomy. At Jash we always strive to offer a variety of content with a unique voice: boundaries will be pushed, and disorientation is sure to ensue.
    Brazzaville Teen-Ager, directed by Michael Cera
    / jashnetwork
    Brazzaville Teen-Ager, directed by Michael Cera

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @PrettyYounqThang
    @PrettyYounqThang 8 лет назад +119

    Michael Cera's youtube channel is definitely a hidden gem on the internet. He hasn't mentioned it previously before that I know of so it takes some personal interest to find it.

  • @user-kj6wi4jq5j
    @user-kj6wi4jq5j 8 лет назад +91

    The most dramatic moment is when the boss is forced to listen to his singing. Brilliant acting

    • @ieattapes
      @ieattapes 8 лет назад +8

      it's chockablock with empathy: you feel simultaneously embarrassed for and amused by his boss' singing.

    • @user-kj6wi4jq5j
      @user-kj6wi4jq5j 8 лет назад +4

      Pure cringe

  • @juliepereira486
    @juliepereira486 9 лет назад +26

    I am the worst at giving directions, but I KNOW EXACTLY WHERE THAT HIGHWAY RAMP AT 6:20 IS. It's in Greenwich, CT across the street from the park. I don't even live near there, and I totally pulled that out of nowhere, and I am so proud of myself right now. This is a defining moment in my life. Backwoods-y people from Connecticut never get to see things we recognize in films.

  • @tomhanks6976
    @tomhanks6976 10 лет назад +44

    Cera risked his career to save his dads life, in hopes of him opening up to cera. When he brings his father home he is ungrateful and still what seems to be a bitter old man and just as reclusive as he was before. So in the elevator, cera is upset his efforts were in vain.

    • @roddydykes7053
      @roddydykes7053 4 года назад

      tom Hanks the part where he screams does a good job showing that too

    • @ericfieldman
      @ericfieldman 4 года назад +2

      I thought he died

    • @albertnortononymous9020
      @albertnortononymous9020 3 года назад +1

      It took me reading the original short story to figure it out tho

  • @MichaelCeraJash
    @MichaelCeraJash  11 лет назад +106

    • @russgoesmoo
      @russgoesmoo 11 лет назад +11

      Make tons more. I have replaced TV and movies with youtube and I don't see myself going back. Too good. Love this video.

    • @llortaton2834
      @llortaton2834 10 лет назад +1

      ***** YOU go home fuckass

    • @dylancoulter420
      @dylancoulter420 10 лет назад +3

      Michael Cera you coke head :P

    • @andreadiaz9537
      @andreadiaz9537 10 лет назад +1

      Michael You Are Ah Really Cool

    • @aaronabarca2150
      @aaronabarca2150 5 лет назад +2

      Michael Cera you're great🇨🇦

  • @Christian-qu5ye
    @Christian-qu5ye 10 лет назад +20

    Micheal Cera is a peculiar genius. Enough said. This was historically haunting in the greatest way possible. We've all dreamt it.

  • @HughWalenski
    @HughWalenski 9 лет назад +38

    This is so genius, that I have no idea what happened.

  • @seraazizacreates
    @seraazizacreates 11 лет назад +20

    This story is so unforgiving, and futile. I love the way he plays with sound, and how you start to hear the next scene. It is almost like a dream you are waking up from and you can hear what is happening around you. Well done.

  • @urRAWRsoundsfunnyLOL
    @urRAWRsoundsfunnyLOL 7 лет назад +21

    Going out of your comfort zone by taking someone out of their comfort zone. In order to help someone else that you're not certain you want to help. All to avoid the obsessive nagging of "what if". Oh the great complexities of life.

  • @psynema
    @psynema 10 лет назад +118

    My somewhat alternate analysis:
    The Boss and the Father are obvious parallels, but one thing I think most people missed is the Boss's WIFE CONVINCED THE BOSS to do the singing.
    Charles Grodin doesn't have that wife like the boss does. The mother is obviously dead and not in the picture. She's spoken of in past tense at the very start of the film.
    Brazzaville Teenager - the word teenager implies there's missing youth in Cera, as he had to grow up, probably caring for his father and taking the mother's role, but that drained him of youth.
    The need for Cera to embarrass himself is at first confusing and in a way nonsense. But it actually shows an underlying problem, the lack of a mother. The act of embarrassment implies vulnerability, and the need to be mothered, and something the father is incapable of providing, shown as Grodin's arms are casted in a hug with broken hands. The Boss's wife mothered both Cera and the Boss for a brief moment, which is WHY CERA HUGGED HER. She also brought the Boss to reality and to eventually realize that he missed his youth as well and had a moment of self realization in the studio and car. Grodin doesn't have this figure in his life so Cera was in a sense "fired" from being a son and a child.
    "Do you even know what I had to go through" at the very end is not just about asking the boss, but Cera's entire life without either parent.

    • @indigolove8360
      @indigolove8360 10 лет назад +3

      thanks, sincerely

    • @kitsosful
      @kitsosful 9 лет назад +1

      psynema Nice one.....

    • @projo8460
      @projo8460 6 лет назад

      DUDE, perfect explanation! I was wondering what the boss was feeling when he heard himself in the recording studio and on the ride home, but now i know.

    • @MJKarkoska
      @MJKarkoska 5 лет назад +2

      I think it was a good explanation, but you could be right. It is hard to imagine that there is not some underlying theme and symbolism, but do the people who make films like these always have the whole thing figured out? Or do they just hope that people will read meaning where there is none? Because obviously you can interpret characters and actions as veiled references to many different things, and the interaction of all these different elements begins to paint a certain picture.
      It would also be interesting to know just how much the beliefs and mindset of the viewer is projected onto the film, because that will have a big effect on their interpretation in my opinion.
      It's like Scrotie McBoogerballs. I cannot say either way because I have never made a film. At least not one that could be shown on RUclips. Or to my mother.

    • @WillsFilms
      @WillsFilms 4 года назад

      Also the song that plays at the end is called “Mother’s Love”

  • @distantandvague
    @distantandvague 11 лет назад +33

    I really like what Michael Cera is getting into at this stage in his career.

  • @rvbvftc
    @rvbvftc 9 лет назад +57

    Between this and "Gregory Go Boom." Michael Cera is shaping up as a good director. Would love to see a feature from him.

  • @greatfelixo
    @greatfelixo 8 лет назад +8

    "Can we just leave the logic part aside" haha That whole scene was so hilarious

  • @AmartinezxLink
    @AmartinezxLink 11 лет назад +3

    Why is Michael Cera so underrated? It makes me kind if sad. He deserves so much more recognition. I think he's an amazing actor.

  • @jaysunbrady
    @jaysunbrady 9 лет назад +10

    This is the first of your shorts I've seen and I can't begin to describe the emotions this has brought forth. Beautifully shot, fantastic cinematography and editing. Can't wait to watch more.

  • @MaeGrim
    @MaeGrim 10 лет назад +1

    Dysfunctional minds hold the most creativity. I truly love Cera's mind.

  • @iainenfc
    @iainenfc 11 лет назад +6

    He stops the elevator so he can vent his frustrations. The bang-click is the sound of the elevator coming to a stop. The elevator music is recurring throughout the video, and it's only until the end that we realise the story is retrospective. It's as if he recalls the days past events in the elevator after dropping his father home, and the elevator sound track bleeds through into the narrative retelling.

  • @TheHollomap
    @TheHollomap 10 лет назад +23

    Holly shit the shorts he is doing are fucking brilliant!

  • @JASH
    @JASH 11 лет назад +10

    Someone get that guy a record deal.

  • @egodrive
    @egodrive 9 лет назад +8

    I don't even know what to say. This is going to haunt me for a while. Thank you!

  • @jeromechapman4355
    @jeromechapman4355 6 лет назад +8

    This to me is a film about exploring the bargaining stage of grief. It's a bargaining fantasy. Gunther comes to some intuitive understanding that if he makes some self-sacrifice, that he will be rewarded with the continued existence of his aloof father, played in a nice, understated way by Charles Grodin. The idea of bargaining a self sacrifice as a stage of grief is all too common--the deal with God. "I'll be a better person and more like you want me to be if I get to keep my pop." But the bargain is usually a noble self sacrifice. Here Gunther imagines that his self sacrifice must be ignoble. It must be debasing and humiliating. It has to involve the breaking of unwritten rules of social living. It involves crossing a generational barrier--the one separating him from his father. It involves not only his own humiliation and discomfort, but also a humiliating request that a member of that older generation must cross that same generational barrier and enter into a scenario that is as much a fish-out-of-water scene as the one he must endure just to make the request. So the film opens with scenes of the hospital where Gunther's dad is dying, but the sound track is of a conversation Gunther is having with someone of his own generation. Gunther is open and honest about his feelings. He is scared of being alone. He wants answers from his dad before his dad moves on. And hidden in these questions is his own fear of inadequacy. He seeks to define himself and measure himself against his pop. He wants to know philosophy. He wants to know about his father's sexuality and finances--the stuff that is often off limits in cross-generational relationships. He wants to know about his father's fear. "Are you scared?" "Is Death a breeze?" As the film switches to Gunther and his dad in the room together, his questions are answered with less than overt comparisons between his son and the doctors that are treating him. He tells his son that they are good guys that don't think twice about treating a guy so much older. Gunther is told that they laugh, that they get the humor. Gunther does not. He also wants his dad to "drop his life-long cool." Gunther feels small and weak, and this is compounded by the threat of losing his dad. The bargaining fantasy comes to him. He must get over his crippling fear of crossing that generational barrier. He sees his boss humiliate a guy so badly that the co-worker seems physically ill. When Gunther is called into the office, he asks the boss to come with him to where a R&B recording session is going to be happening and sing back-up on some song. He is soundly rejected. The viewer is made to believe that this was not enough. He has to debase and humiliate himself even further. He has to go to the man's house. He has to interrupt his sophisticated, grownup party and insist. When the boss's wife comes to his aid and makes this happen, Gunther weeps. Gunther takes this man to a setting that is as uncomfortable for him as the party was for Gunther. And after it is over, the boss is humiliated and shown that in this world where he is the outsider and the underdog, he is inadequate. He is not good enough. The once dominant boss looks small and weak. On the ride back, they seem to have connected. Miraculously, Gunther's dad is healed. And when they are reunited, the audience expects that things will be different. They are not. With a lilting musical backing track, we see scenes of awkwardness between father and son. Their body language clearly suggests that they are as estranged as ever. Gunther screams his rage at his dad--his impotent rage at the top of his lungs by himself at the bottom of an elevator shaft, still unable to make a connection to his dad. It is as if it is not about the fact that he is unafraid to put himself out there. It is just that his dad is a dick. It is dreamlike and nonsensical and yet really resonant. I love this film. Although a couple of the bit parts--the friend at the bar and the guests at the grownup party seem to deliver their lines in ways that are not quite right, the rest of the film really works. The sound is especially effective as is the pacing. The lingering shots of catatonic thinking really work. The silent resolution is also very nice.

    • @RUVAOfficial
      @RUVAOfficial 5 лет назад +3

      nicely said dude, really helpful

  • @Clarence_13x
    @Clarence_13x 4 года назад +1

    The sarcastic goodbye wave at the end was some of the best thespianism I have laid eyes on

  • @CalixSteez
    @CalixSteez 10 лет назад +3

    This is actually one of the funniest things I've seen in a while.. I completely understand the idea lmao we need more this.

    • @totigerus
      @totigerus 7 лет назад

      can you explain what the deal was with why he wanted his boss singing on the song?

  • @meggznham
    @meggznham 11 лет назад +2

    omg....his face!!!
    i lost all of my ass laughing when that guy listened to his playback

  • @shaneurbini5350
    @shaneurbini5350 10 лет назад +13

    i predict michael cera will be in movies one day

    • @Bolazer
      @Bolazer 10 лет назад

      He's a professional actor and has been in several famous movies. Look him up on wikipedia or something.

    • @shaneurbini5350
      @shaneurbini5350 10 лет назад +9

      No. really?

    • @Bolazer
      @Bolazer 10 лет назад +1

      Shane Urbini I'm not sure whether or not you're being sarcastic, but yes. He's a leading role in Juno, Superbad, and Zombieland.

    • @koalabjoernify
      @koalabjoernify 10 лет назад +10

      Drixen Michael Cera is not in Zombieland... That's Jesse Eisenberg

    • @Bolazer
      @Bolazer 10 лет назад +1

      My bad

  • @idkagoodusernamesohi
    @idkagoodusernamesohi 11 лет назад +2

    Maybe it means that laughter is the best medicine. Since he got his boss to do the backup singing, then his father heard it and laughed at how silly the boss sounded. Which got him back on his feet.

  • @JashNetwork
    @JashNetwork 11 лет назад +6

    We proudly present to you Michael Cera's first Jash release. Enjoy!

  • @forganmeeman5897
    @forganmeeman5897 10 лет назад +1

    God that was so close to having good meaning. I definitely want more from cera in the future though

  • @TotallySketch
    @TotallySketch 11 лет назад +4

    This is fantastic. Seriously.

  • @piemakesmelol
    @piemakesmelol 11 лет назад +2

    I took it that the father died in the end. His reaction made sense because he went through so much to get him back and he ended up just dying when he got home. At least that's how I saw it.

  • @mistermanik
    @mistermanik 11 лет назад +3

    It just represents him being willing to do anything to save his dad... making his boss sing on a kelis song was probably the most humiliating thing he could think of

  • @darmac66
    @darmac66 11 лет назад

    LOVE Michael Cera and Kelis is my all-time favorite. What a great collabo

  • @georgiahall6810
    @georgiahall6810 9 лет назад +3

    I think because he was fatherless rather than having grown up with that kind of relationship, he thought vulnerability (embarrassment) sort of worked in the way that sons feel the need to prove themselves to their fathers- obviously in this case the opposite way round?

  • @KurtG85
    @KurtG85 11 лет назад

    An acid fueled trip to a sweaty foreign meat market... within a snow globe. The prick at the party and the back stabbed blood trail on the wall painting was hilarious.

  • @dill__pickles
    @dill__pickles 10 лет назад +3

    This is my favorite video on youtube

  • @bassseb
    @bassseb 11 лет назад

    Unlike anything you will ever see! True unsettling, absurd and thought provoking comedy!!! Man im so syched for the return of Arrested Development!

  • @danhurikan
    @danhurikan 10 лет назад +3

    i would like to hear him sing the whole song

  • @TheJohnbowers
    @TheJohnbowers 11 лет назад

    Terrific! A marvelous blend of Bruce Jay Friedman's humor and tristess. And Charles Grodin! Thanks!

  • @JASH
    @JASH 11 лет назад +4

    Awesome!

  • @LeviZilla
    @LeviZilla 11 лет назад

    I loved it. Not what I expected to see from Michael Cera, but the more I think about it, it's exactly what I should expect to see from Michael Cera.

  • @xcosme91
    @xcosme91 9 лет назад +6

    I think about this a lot....

  • @mikeandmike
    @mikeandmike 11 лет назад

    What brilliant comedy. The tension brings so much humor out that is apparently missed by some. I loved it. Make more.

  • @PlasmarBand
    @PlasmarBand 10 лет назад +14

    reminiscent of David Lynch at times

    • @patodiblasi
      @patodiblasi 9 лет назад +7

      +Plasmar Even his boss looks similar to Lynch!

    • @totigerus
      @totigerus 7 лет назад +5

      the first shot of the boss from far away, i thought it was David Lynch too

  • @klausweasley
    @klausweasley 11 лет назад +2

    Wow, I have to say Michael Cera has a future as a director. I like his visual eye.

  • @DaJokerSKEED
    @DaJokerSKEED 10 лет назад +4

    Is it just me or does the video freeze here and there?

    • @Antnj81
      @Antnj81 6 лет назад

      NebulaInHeat that happened with me too at a couple parts

  • @robotmurdergh
    @robotmurdergh 11 лет назад

    Another great film. I won't be surprised when I see a blockbuster come out with Michael Cera producing it.

  • @BoxOfComics
    @BoxOfComics 9 лет назад +3

    I think the whole getting his boss to sing was a metaphor for something else that he had to do or go through in order for he and his father to be in the position they were in the end. Not sure what exactly, but just a thought.

  • @peaceandlove544
    @peaceandlove544 6 лет назад

    What a jewel!! Everything is beautiful and suddle about this film. Magnificent job by Michael Cera and everyone else. I am a big fan of Charles Grodin. Since I first saw M Cera act in arrested development he became one of my favorite actors, one of the reasons is he remind him of the elegantly masterfull comedic dead pan acting of Charles Grodin. See them working together is fantastic. Hope to see more great work by M Cera and Charles Grodin.

  • @lexclemityclemclemmersons1567
    @lexclemityclemclemmersons1567 11 лет назад +6

    How old is Michael Ceramic

  • @emmagoodwin9679
    @emmagoodwin9679 7 лет назад

    What I like about these short movies is that they have so much meaning to them, they are so good to watch. I definitely think Michael should make a full movie like this, and I guarantee good reviews. Good job Michael! 😊

  • @TitusTHEIDIOTICFENOM
    @TitusTHEIDIOTICFENOM 10 лет назад +3

    I believe his father died at the end and Michael's character is inraged because of all he did to keep him alive for him to some what just kneel over and kick the bucket...,but this is just a(n) opinion ofcourse.PHALLUS APPROVES!!!!

    • @SuperiorRobyn
      @SuperiorRobyn 10 лет назад +10

      I think it was the fact that he went through all that to save his dad and in the end his dad was still a jerk to him.

  • @wallysaruman
    @wallysaruman 11 лет назад

    Dude! Awesome job! I see myself watching these shorts on the daily. Keep them coming!

  • @TiDWaPkills
    @TiDWaPkills 11 лет назад +3

    Reminds me a lot of Louie

  • @mothsinthecanyon
    @mothsinthecanyon 11 лет назад

    Michael Cera is my new favorite director. Period.

  • @jeremykun27
    @jeremykun27 10 лет назад +5

    Very Lynchian.

  • @gleix_
    @gleix_ 11 лет назад

    I got a bit teary when his boss heard himself singing. There was a lot that revolved around that moment.

  • @bobertjr3
    @bobertjr3 11 лет назад

    I liked it. Equal parts funny, absurd, dramatic, and touching. Boundaries were pushed, disorientation ensued.

  • @bainintheneck
    @bainintheneck 11 лет назад

    its great to see michael cera being a grown up like he is. this could maybe help break him out of the superbad and all his comedic roles.

  • @TheGusBus1989
    @TheGusBus1989 11 лет назад

    Hopefully (after watching this) people will stop looking at Cera as a one-dimensional actor and more like a complete, well-rounded artist. Good for him! Most impressed.

  • @SoWeirdBoy
    @SoWeirdBoy 11 лет назад +2

    I love Michael Cera... he makes me want to roll around in Cera sauce.

  • @TheMrEllusionist
    @TheMrEllusionist 11 лет назад

    This was well worth the wait. It was very deep, but was also very humorous. I loved this video and I loved the character Michael Cera played in it. Keep it up :)

  • @ShortCircuit11
    @ShortCircuit11 11 лет назад

    i loved this. i loved the cuts and transitions esspecially. i really loved that in the end, Gunther and his father were wearing very similar shirts, but his father wore a vest over it. i dunno, i just liked that. and moreover it was a strange kind of funny, this is a kind of comedy i love but can never find. the last scene killed me. and "its like i got a giant pebble in my shoe, like a small, like a large rock."

  • @Kunzthejokester
    @Kunzthejokester 11 лет назад +1

    My interpretation. His father is a prideful and independent man who is very reluctant to show affection because of fear of revealing weakness. The son longs for his father's love. He gets his boss, an intimidating man who commands a lot of respect (like his father), to sing a falsetto song to reveal all men have weaknesses, but hiding them doesn't make a man stronger. The trip home from the hospital reveals that his father has not changed. The elevator screaming if Cera's frustration coming out.

  • @JesseNicoleable
    @JesseNicoleable 11 лет назад

    I'm floored by how much my 7 year old son looks like Cera...

  • @josephfucci4491
    @josephfucci4491 10 лет назад

    Beautifully abstract. Micheal is working on a level way beyond mainstream comprehension.

  • @mattm9741
    @mattm9741 7 лет назад

    As an aspiring film maker watching a masterpiece like this is beyond just a pleasurable experience.

  • @RiannanRA94
    @RiannanRA94 11 лет назад +1

    This short film is extremely clever, and another great piece of work from Michael Cera! Love it and love him!

  • @zanderbeans
    @zanderbeans 11 лет назад

    Almost surrealist. So strange and funny but also poignant. I love it.

  • @CraigReed22
    @CraigReed22 11 лет назад

    First, that old guy singing was hilarious. Second, it's amazing that Michael got Josh Grobans dad Charles Groban to play his. Great movie!

  • @Carlosonebillion
    @Carlosonebillion 11 лет назад

    Best Jash yet. I loved the surrealism.

  • @snoutout
    @snoutout 11 лет назад +1

    makes total sense.. you have to be willing to go through crazy shit and sacrifice to help someone else out and save them.

  • @JyrzStreams
    @JyrzStreams 11 лет назад

    My mind is still processing what I watched.
    Probably be up all night with it....

  • @ihateyourusernames
    @ihateyourusernames 11 лет назад

    Brilliant. Also impressed to see that this is the first youtube video with this many views and zero dislikes! Well done Mr. Cera!

  • @RichMartini
    @RichMartini 11 лет назад +1

    Brilliant. David Lynch meets Fellini. Grodin is brilliant, script and direction equally so - five stars.

  • @addamp123
    @addamp123 11 лет назад

    This was really entertaining. A lot better than most stuff on RUclips or TV. Thanks for the vid man :)

  • @highwinder
    @highwinder 11 лет назад

    A quality short film only on RUclips? I never thought I'd see the day.

  • @fionarussell7872
    @fionarussell7872 11 лет назад

    It gets better on every viewing. Nice one, 'Mike C'. Look forward to more of these

  • @tune2u
    @tune2u 11 лет назад

    Definition of surreal...and brilliant! Well done! New! Fresh! Exciting! You give me hope....

  • @The_Osprey
    @The_Osprey 11 лет назад

    Cera's strange and wonderful mind at work again. The direction/cinematography was damn fine. I can't stop thinking of "it tastes like strawberry" when I see Cera.

  • @liquidjungle123
    @liquidjungle123 7 лет назад

    Great Work Michael Cera and Everybody who Work, Help on this Short Film.

  • @a5anda6
    @a5anda6 11 лет назад

    Now I gotta go read Bruce Jay Friedman 'cuz this was the best thing I've ever seen on youtube by a factor of 10,000. Cera's got skillz.

  • @ootygerlilyoo
    @ootygerlilyoo 11 лет назад +2

    i love these films. they remind me of those rare, strange short stories you come across and you have no idea what the fuck is going on but you can't stop reading. and gradually you become so immersed in the world that the author has created that the ending just feels like the natural conclusion and leaves you satisfied.

  • @mattmuldoon1585
    @mattmuldoon1585 11 лет назад

    I loved it when the producer goes over the background vocals with mr. Heartman, lmao

  • @Callepunk0
    @Callepunk0 11 лет назад

    Really great. The reaction the boss had to his voice was really cool

  • @lolzjessie
    @lolzjessie 11 лет назад

    wow. was not expecting this to be directed as well as it was. props to you, mr cera!

  • @willaminaviolet
    @willaminaviolet 11 лет назад

    I love the way he (the boss at his house) kisses his wife after she talks him into doing the song. She melts him. I love that....and I LOVE love love Charles Grodin.

  • @jamarcusyates2604
    @jamarcusyates2604 11 лет назад

    He continues to blow my mind with these amazing vids BRAVO MICHAEL BRAVO

  • @downwiththefoureleven8524
    @downwiththefoureleven8524 11 лет назад

    14:18 incredible acting. How many people can show you so much by doing so little? Awesome.

  • @JakeJarvi
    @JakeJarvi 11 лет назад

    That was awesome. Slowburn hilarious. Really compelling and weird. My favorite one.

  • @jeffdee6253
    @jeffdee6253 10 лет назад

    love the song choices, very beautiful

  • @jasonmalcolmgibbins
    @jasonmalcolmgibbins 10 лет назад

    Very good, very funny and moving. Quirky, good music, Love it!

  • @vhangel36
    @vhangel36 11 лет назад

    this is genius. i don't understand how anyone could not enjoy it

  • @bradmorrell310
    @bradmorrell310 11 лет назад

    i take care of my dad....i had perma-grin the whole time, and cracked-up at the end. great job.

  • @Wyattap125
    @Wyattap125 10 лет назад

    I started watching this channel today. It's so awesome.

  • @YourFlyIsUndone
    @YourFlyIsUndone 11 лет назад

    God damn! This looks sooooo good. Lighting and camera work is fantastic.

  • @TheAwkwardOh
    @TheAwkwardOh 11 лет назад

    Wish there were more movies by you that you have directed and such. So Fascinating!!

  • @TheMonkeyFeces
    @TheMonkeyFeces 11 лет назад

    Best short I've seen in a long time

  • @geekdoms
    @geekdoms 11 лет назад

    This, Mr. Cera, is a fantastic piece of work. Congratulations

  • @iAimToBeatYou
    @iAimToBeatYou 11 лет назад +1

    That might officially make him the coolest man to walk earth. Notorious for being an awkward, dorky actor. But behind the scenes, he crafts the creepiest, scariest shit ever. The best part is I bet he would be great at it.

  • @moe3zy14
    @moe3zy14 11 лет назад

    That was more then I could have wished for! Thank you