Episode Transcript
Lukey, you surely choose to be benied with.
Hello, and welcome to Films to be buried with.
My name is Brett Goldstein.
I'm a comedian and actor writer director at Compass Rose and I love films.
As Mark Twain once said, against the assault of laughter, nothing can stand, which is why both Finger has been charged with GBH Every week and a special guest over, I tell them they've died, then I get them to discuss their life through the films that men the most of them.
Previous guests include Barry Jenkins, Kevin Smith, Sharon Stone and even Read Rambles.
But this week we have actor, producer and director mister Justin Hartley.
My comedy special The Second Best Night of Your Life is extreaming now on Max and on Sky.
Give it a what you'll fucking love it.
Head over to the Patreon at patreon dot com forwards last Brett Goldstein, where you get next to twenty minutes with Justin.
We talk secrets, beginnings and endings.
You get the whole episode, Adfrey anders a check it out over at Patreon dot com forwards.
That's Brett Goldstein.
So Justin Hartley.
You might know Justin Hartley from his roles and this is us or as Green Arrow in Smallville.
He now stars in Tracker on CBS, and he can be seen in the film Brideheart.
I recorded this with Justin on Zoom and it was so lovely to hang out with him.
I really think you're gonna love this one.
So that is it for now.
I very much hope you enjoy episode three hundred and fifty eight of Films to be Buried With.
Hello, and welcome to Films to be Buried With.
This is me Brett Goldstein, and I'm joined today by an actor, a producer.
Hey, this is user, a Green arrower, a bad Mum's Christmas, a Tracker rough, a changing up productioner, a hero, a legend, one of the great TV stars of the last twenty years.
Speaker 2He's here.
Speaker 1He's amazing.
We can't believe he's here, but here he is.
I'm looking right at him.
Please, welcome to the show.
It's the brilliant it's Justin Harley.
Speaker 2All right, good to be here.
This is this is exciting.
This is very exciting.
Speaker 1Justin Hartley.
Speaker 2Yep.
Speaker 1I've been a fan of yours since Smallville.
Smallville may have been the last big many many, many, many episodes type show that I watched all of us every left.
Smoville loved it.
You know who else did because they were on my podcast recently, the Philippoo twins who made talk to Me and bring her back.
Oh really, both of them obsessed with Smoville every episodeide.
Speaker 2Okay, yeah, yeah, no, I get it, I get it.
Speaker 3I mean it was that was a long time and it was one of those things that happened to me where I was sort of a weird story.
I got cast in as pilot.
Leaders of Smallville were doing this pilot called Aquaman.
I think it was called Mercy Reef at the time, and they're calling it pocacle Man because it was about you guessed Aquaman and the pot ended up not going and for whatever reason there was a change of regime.
It was also probably didn't turn out exactly the way they wanted.
For whatever reason, it didn't go, and so that was sort of heartbreaking.
That was my first experience with that.
I just assumed the course of a go because it's Aquaman and I had experienced that before.
He worked so hard on it, and it's so naive to think about that now after everything that you know, I've gone to like, what was I thinking?
Of course, you know, I did, nothing happened, and I spending money on Amador when I don't smoke cigars because I think I'm going to be more than one of these shows.
Speaker 2And then it never saw the light of day.
Speaker 3But long story short, the creators of Small Will ended up wanting me to come on onto that show and play the Green Arrow.
Speaker 2And it was a I think it was a three episode game.
Speaker 3It was like a month come in for a month, month and a half, do this, and then leave, you know, And it ended up people really liked it, thankfully, and it stuck around for you know, one hundred years, so it was great.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1I remember being very impressed because you come into it quite late, right, It was like it wasn't season six.
Speaker 2Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1Because they'd had the guy who onto the Supernatural who was also he'd done a good run and then they turned him into a bad guy.
Speaker 3Jensen he uh yeah, he plays my brother on Tracker, right, yes, you yeah, yeah, he's incredible.
Speaker 2Yeah yeah.
Speaker 1And so I remember you joining and being really impressed because I think it's hard coming in season six and everyone loves the cast, and then you have to sort of make your mock and.
Speaker 3Yeah, and you're coming in and you know you're wearing wearing a super Suita's back.
Now it's like everyone's doing it.
But back in the day, it was like, this is back when you did camera tests and all that kind of stuff.
And you're doing these camera tests and there's a second where you feel you pretty cool, and then you know, you leave the dressing room and you're in green leather and you walk out and you're seeing everybody else is in jeans and looking like normal human beings, and then you feel like a complete ful, you know, and you're just like, what have I just signed on for?
I mean literally, you're in the hands of other people.
It's a lot of trust, right, so it can go either way.
Speaker 2And you know, we didn't.
We didn't really know.
We just kind of went for it and and it ended up working out.
It's great.
Speaker 1It's great.
Speaker 2So tell me.
Speaker 1I'm always interested in people that you who have done You've now done?
Am I right?
Forgive me if I don't know all of your stuff.
You've done three huge, three hit, big hit TV shows right long Running, you did Smallville, This is Us, and now you have Track.
But theyre more those are the three big ones, right, I mean I.
Speaker 3Would say those are the three, those are the three biggest ones.
Yeah, I mean those are the ones that I've been the biggest.
Speaker 2Part of as well.
Speaker 3I've done in small parts, I've had small parts in big shows, but those are the three that I spend a lot of time on.
Speaker 1Yeah, and in your head having done that, like, it's quite unusual to have that level of success really, as in the shows themselves are kind of in all cases like quite big culturally as well, like beloved things.
Yeah, do you think you're lucky or you're just very good at choosing these things?
Or like, how do you think that's happened?
Speaker 2I think it's both.
I think it's both.
I think I really do.
Speaker 3I mean, so, I'll tell you the small vill of it all was a huge hit before you know, I showed up and continued to be and really had nothing to do with me.
It had to do with the writers and the creators and Tom Welling and Michael Rosenbaum and all those guys, the originals, and I just kind of I stepped into that and I got really lucky and ended up, you know, making this character that was supposed to make a quick exit, interesting enough to where people wanted to see more more of him.
So that was that, and then This is Us.
A friend of mine read the script and sent it to me and was like, you got to read this.
This is one of the best things I've ever read.
And I was like, well, man, I'm an embrace.
Speaker 2I love reading.
I read the script and I agreed.
Speaker 3I was like, this is the This may be the greatest episode of television I've ever read in my entire life.
It was incredible.
I didn't see them, oh my gosh.
And I had a different take on the on the audition, I remember that I remember thinking that it.
Speaker 2Was tragically it was hilarious.
Speaker 3This guy Kevin, my character talking about that is going through this crisis of identity and he's talking he's liking it to the Challenger explosion.
Speaker 2He's just way over dramatic, and I was, but I thought was I had funny in a really sadistic kind of way.
Speaker 3And here's a guy who's at his birthday party surrounded by beautiful people and he doesn't know any of them.
We've got no friends, you know, and he's going through this early midlife crisis.
And I got them to laugh at a uh, So I thought, well, that's good.
I ended up getting that job, and then the show took off.
I mean, Dan Foegelman his genius.
Obviously, he's sensational, one of the greatest writers ever.
And then through that I I met Ken Olan, who was our directing producer on that show.
Speaker 2You I before This Is Us.
Speaker 3Ended, we knew we had one more year left.
He was always designed to sort of end a certain way, and we were kind of talking about how we had become pretty close over the years and we wanted to continue to work together what she'd do, and so we were looking for different projects and we found this book, Never Game, Jeffrey Deaver book, and we ended up adapting that, and the studio and the network got behind it, and with that, you never know, it was just like, Okay, we're.
Speaker 2Gonna we're gonna shoot this pilot.
I really like it.
Speaker 3I think it's exciting.
There's something different about this character.
I don't think we've ever seen this before, really, and I think it's the right time, you know, for people to see.
Speaker 2Something like this.
Speaker 3And it ended up ended up doing I mean, way better than we could have possibly imagined.
Speaker 2So so I think.
Speaker 3A lot of it is luck, a lot of it is timing, and then it's just you know, obviously you have to be ready for it when it comes.
Speaker 1Will you ever in any of these things, like they're very long, long running and long lots of websites like how is it sort of existing in that?
Do you get like I've had enough of this and then you come back round to I love it?
Like is it does it go in waves?
Or are you just in it?
Speaker 3And you know, I mean, I think I would be lying if I didn't say we get tired.
People get tired, obviously, but the idea of going to work, even if it's a fight scene, you know you're going to be fighting for five or six hours, That of course is exhausting thinking about and I know, I know you work out a lot.
Thinking about going to the gym sometimes is exhausting, right, yeah, But when you're done, you're never really I mean you're wiped, right because you beat your body up a bit, But in other words, you're never really thinking, Man, I wish.
Speaker 2I wouldn't have done that.
Speaker 3Oh yeah, was never never so and when you're in it, I don't like when I'm on set or if i'm rehearsing or preparing, time just flies by, you know.
Speaker 2Sometimes it is that the thought of like, okay, and I do this with auditions.
Speaker 3Even I remember when I would audition, I would sort of be upset that I wasn't getting auditions, you know, and when I would get one, I would immediately become exhausted at the thought for this thing.
Speaker 2It's it's the weirdest thing.
Speaker 3Then you feel so guilty because you're like, what is wrong with me?
I got I got the audition.
A lot of my friends aren't even getting these, and I'm complaining about impossible.
I'm complaining about not getting them.
I'm complaining when I get it, I'm impossible.
So but I think that's just human nature.
Speaker 1Yeah, So I tell you a secret that I'm not supposed to tell you, but I think it's I think I would like it.
So one of the Ted lassa rights, So we're writing season four of Ted Last Day, and she's obsessed with you, and she's obsessed with your show.
I had your news show.
And so when we have the boards on our wall of like you know, the seasons one, all the ads and anytime we're slightly confusing, we're making sure we're tracking the story.
We have a cut out of you.
We have tracker to remind us to track this story.
Speaker 2To track.
That's great.
We don't even do that.
Speaker 1So you're on our you're on our wool, on our board to remind us.
Yeah, we need to track this type.
Speaker 2Okay, we're gonna have to return the favor somehow.
Speaker 3I'll figure it out the favor.
Speaker 2That's I'm not hilarious.
Speaker 1Yeah, you're that's great, Justine Harley.
I've forgot to tell you something.
Fuck god, it's mad, you know.
It's fucking mad that I didn't tell you this up.
Oh no, you've got it.
Yeah, no, I'll tell you you got it.
Okay, what is it?
You've died?
You're dead?
What you're dead?
Speaker 2D e d you're dead?
Speaker 1Oh man, how did you die?
Speaker 3Well, you're not messing around.
It's sort of coming back to me a little bit.
Speaker 2Now.
Speaker 3I don't remember all of it.
It's not how I imagined it.
Oh right, yea, yeah, it's coming back to me.
Okay, So I should tell you something.
I've always had this sort of I'm sort of a homebody in general.
I would say major homebody in general.
And I always had sort of this fear of skydiving.
It's not a fear of skydiving.
Actually, it's not a fear of heights.
It's not a fear of skydiving.
It's it's been a lifelong fear of dying skydiving.
Not because I'm afraid of heights, not because you know anything like that.
I'm afraid of how people will talk about me if I die skydiving.
And like I think, when I die, I want people to be sad, if not for a day.
And I feel like if I if I go skydiving and I die skydiving, people are just going.
Speaker 2To say, well, shouldn't jump out of planes?
You know what I mean?
And I think that's not That's not I want people to say, you think that?
So I do.
I think people I think that because that's that's I've been.
I would do that.
Speaker 3I've done that before where I've been like, well, person shouldn't have been jumping out of a plane, which is so insensitive of course, but right, sky dive, I don't.
Speaker 1Want skydive death is one of my top three deaths.
Speaker 2It's it's it's I see because you're living out but see.
Speaker 3You you're not afraid of what people.
Speaker 2You're You're irrational about it.
Speaker 3You're not afraid of what people are going to say when you're dead, because what do you care you're dead?
I'm irrational about it, and I think about things I shouldn't think about, like what what the hell people are saying about me after I'm dead?
Speaker 2Who cares?
You're dead?
Speaker 1But there's much like I'm thinking, skydiver.
Speaker 2You could burn.
There's much worse, of course, but you.
Speaker 1Could die, you know, wanking in a cupboard with about Ranji.
That would be.
They would talk about you much more.
They would probably make more, but with.
Speaker 3A slight but with a sly brind right, but you really trying to have a good time, no matter what, no matter what he was, Hey, you know he was he was bored and he, uh, what do you want?
The guy?
Speaker 1Hey?
Speaker 3The guy was always a great time, you know what.
They would talk about you like that, not about like, well.
Speaker 2What you jumped out of a plane?
What the hell was he thinking?
That's why you do that?
Speaker 1You would rather die whang king in a cupboard than jumping out of a play.
You would rather.
Speaker 2One hundred million percent.
Speaker 3And it's too late now though, because I've already I'm not going to die twice.
Speaker 2But yeah, I wish, I wish I would have gone that way, but it didn't.
It didn't turn out that way for me.
Speaker 3What ended up happening was I I because, like I said, I'm this massive homebody and I thought, you know what, this is crazy.
I I got to get out there and I got to like be more adventurous, you know, really, like, I mean, what, what's what are the odds really skydiving death is?
Speaker 2I looked it up.
Speaker 3It's actually very very rare, and people have a lot of fun doing it, So I won't.
And I get on the plane and I'm nervous, right, and I'm like, am I tempting fate?
Speaker 2This is weird?
Speaker 3I hope it's not my time, you know, when it's your timey, it's a time.
I get up there and I'm up in the plane.
Where are you which which I'm over California.
Just just just buy my house, Yeah, buy my house and near Los Angeles.
And we go up and the co pilot looks back at me like they're doing something wrong.
Speaker 2And he looks to the pilot.
Speaker 3There's two of them, and he taps the pilot and he says something I don't hear what he says.
And the pilot turns around, looks at me, and I see him lipping Tracker.
He's a Tracker fan, right, which is.
Speaker 2Good and bad.
Speaker 3I'm like, Okay, great, they're going to take care of me.
But bad because he just sends to forty thousand feet because it's like this guy can do anything.
Yeah, yeah, probably doesn't even need to shoot.
Yeah, So I'm now forty thousand feet.
I know, like I've done in my homework.
I know you can't jump like this is crazy.
You jump like ten fifteen thousand something like that, right, you don't jump at forty And I've never done this before.
Speaker 2They put the thing on me.
Speaker 3I got no tandem, nothing, and my mouth starts to gets so dry.
Speaker 2I'm getting caught mouth.
Now.
Speaker 3I remember I have this lozenge in my pocket.
I'm like, I better take this because I don't want to all the wind in my face.
You know, I'm probably gonna choke on my tongue, so I pop this thing in my mouth.
It's a life saver, ironically, and I just start choking, start choking.
Speaker 2I haven't even jumped out of the plane yet.
Speaker 3I'm on my knees and I'm choking on this life saver and everyone thinks I'm joking because I don't know.
Speaker 2They think it's funny because I'm not.
You know, They're like, obviously, he's fine.
I die.
Speaker 3I roll out of the plane, out of the hat to hatch the door.
I drop like a stone through the atmosphere forty thousand feet as luck would have it, this homebody that went out once on an adventure of a lifetime.
I plummet into the earth, into my roof, into my bedroom, and I die right there in my bed.
Speaker 2Bullseye.
Speaker 1That is a fucking great death.
Speaker 2From a lifesaver.
It's not bad.
Speaker 3I mean I would rather have lived, honest, I would rather have just ship goes open.
Speaker 2But the tracker is very popular, and so I blame the show.
Speaker 1What's good is you could?
Because I always you know, when people talk about dying in bed with their loved ones around you, maybe that was alone ones, but maybe they were in your bedroom looking for you, and then when you crashed through dead you did.
Speaker 3I am no maybe I yeah, I will never know.
Speaker 2Or I could have My wife could have been sleeping in and I crushed her too.
I have no idea because wow, yeah, yeah, it's not the way I planned it.
Speaker 1Wow, that's a pretty great death.
But you're people will I've got to be honest, people will talk about that.
Speaker 2It's a bullseye.
Speaker 1Yeah, I think about that for a long time.
I think that might you can never go home overshadow some of your work because I think people would talk about that death forever.
Speaker 2I hope.
So it's all I have left.
Speaker 1Do you worry about that?
Speaker 2You know?
I worry?
Speaker 3Oh gosh, I try not to, and and you know, I think I do more and more as I as I get older, which is a constant reminder that I'm getting older because I never thought about it when I was younger.
Speaker 2Ever, right, I think that's normal.
It's just not something you think about when you're when you're young.
Speaker 3And then as I've gotten older, yeah, you start to think about things like making sure your kids are all set up, making sure your finances are in order, making sure you've said you know, the way you handle yourself now, the way people are going to remember you, Making sure you don't have any weird ship laying around your house.
Like when you die, people go through your stuff and they're like, this guy was a kinky you.
Speaker 2Know whatever, all that weird stuff that people playing.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, just the weird stuff, Like I just want to make sure everything is is buttoned up before before tickets punch.
Speaker 1What about after after life?
Do you think there is one?
What do you think happens?
Speaker 2You know what?
I think jury is still up?
I hope.
So.
Speaker 3I think it's such a bleak thought of just the lights go out, and I mean all this for nothing kind of thing, you know, not to say that this is purgatory, and I don't I don't know, but I think I just really think life is such a gift to the idea of going out and just having it be gone gone because people say, well, I've heard people say, well, you know, it's religious hard to grasp when you're in heaven and this I'm like, okay, well, isn't it also hard to grasp that the like switch just goes off and then it's nothing.
Speaker 2It's also hard to grasp, right, Yeah, So I hope, So, I sure hope.
Speaker 3So.
Speaker 1Well, I've got good news for you.
Justin Hartley, there's a heaven and you're going, hey, I made it.
Heaven is filled with your favorite thing?
What is your favorite thing?
Speaker 3Well, my favorite thing is movies, and uh movies and baseball movies in baseball, well.
Speaker 1Let's tell you what heaven.
You know what heaven's a bit like field dreams.
There's this beautiful baseball diamond and you can play whenever you want, you can watch whenever you want.
That's the baseball players there, Babe, Roofs there, great the other ones.
Speaker 2And they all know you know, your baseball.
Speaker 1Sea is there.
Speaker 2Look at you.
Speaker 1Look he was in the movie, yeah, and the Gazer.
But but he's there there there and.
Speaker 2All the greats, all the greats.
Speaker 1Brendan, he's there there.
Speaker 2Okay, all right, great.
Speaker 1And everyone very excited to see you.
And they want to talk to you about your life, but they want to talk to you about your life through films.
And the first thing they ask you, what is the first film you remember seeing?
Speaker 3Justin Haley, I thought about that, and I was sort of vacillating between a few and if I don't remember if it was first or not.
But I'll just tell you the first thing that came to mind.
I don't know how accurate it is, but Back to the Future is the first movie I remember seeing that.
I mean, it made a huge impact on me.
I couldn't believe they were doing things in that movie story wise, and I mean just this the concept, the idea of it.
Speaker 2And also I haven't seen it in a.
Speaker 3While, although I did watch it maybe maybe six or seven years ago with my daughter.
But the technology they were doing at the time, and the time travel and the Fox capacitor and the DeLorean, and I mean it was just so cool and the crazy, you know scientist with his hair and you know, Mike Jay Fox was on fire.
Speaker 2It was just his charisma and everything that he was doing.
And I mean I've probably seen that movie thirty times, thirty or forty.
Speaker 1Wow, it's a great fucking film.
It's believable, and it's also a really weird film.
That's what what I watched it recently four years ago, and it's brilliant.
But you're like, yeah, I don't think this film would get made certainly in this way.
It would have much more nights.
Speaker 2Which is kind of sad.
Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's very strange, and there's weird stuff with his mom and oh yeah, there's so much attractions.
Speaker 2Oh yeah, that's right.
The attraction thing.
She kind of fell for him, which I kind of understood.
Speaker 3Because it's her.
She made him right yet, but she had made the guy came from her, and that was a kind of a weird Yeah, that was a weird moment.
It was when you think about that, like what would happen?
It's really odd if your if your if your mother didn't know that you or her son.
Speaker 2But she's obviously in love with you.
Speaker 3She's your mother, and yeah, they might have had a great time.
Speaker 2They might have had a great time.
Speaker 1We don't know.
Well when you saw that, were you like, oh, I want to do this?
What did you just enjoy it?
Speaker 2I wanted to learn.
Speaker 3I wanted to acting.
You mean no, no, I never thought that I could do it.
Never even dawned on it never occurred to me that that's you know.
I would watch these actors and they seem so larger than life, and I almost looked at it like like.
Speaker 2Michael J.
Speaker 3Fox is a different species, Tom Cruise a different species.
These guys are.
I can't even imagine them breathing the same error that I breathe.
But I wanted a skateboard, and I wanted a Dolorean, and I wanted and I started to think maybe time travels possible, Like it really did change, you know, the way I.
Speaker 2Looked at life as a kid.
Speaker 1Really, I did one to guys to school via the back of a truck on a skateboard.
Speaker 3Heck yeah, oh free ride awesome with Huey Lewis Blarin.
Speaker 2Yeah, it'd be great.
Yeah.
Speaker 1What's the film that scared you the most?
Do you like being scared?
Speaker 3I don't mind being scared.
I don't I don't mind being scared.
I don't like being Uh.
I don't like walking into a room and having somebody to go like that.
Speaker 2I don't like that.
Speaker 3And the reason I don't like that is because I'm a It's I don't have any control over it.
I just I I'll punch, I'll punch or I'll kick, like because I'm scared.
So a lot of people scared and they go like that, like when I scare, I got I It's it's not even something I'm doing.
Speaker 2I can't control it.
But I don't mind.
Speaker 3Being scared at the movies, and it takes a lot, so I respect it.
Yeah, because you think you see something coming, and when it's done right, it's incredible.
Speaker 2The shining.
Speaker 3Uh, I mean that was that was you know, minute after minute that that was you.
Speaker 2Were when you watch that movie.
Speaker 3At least for me, I was stressed out in a good way without even knowing it.
Your your heightened level of awareness when you're watching that movie, even when he's just sitting there listening.
Speaker 2Or usually talking, you're you're horrified.
Yeah, I mean that was, uh what are iconic performance?
But I mean what a movie too?
Speaker 3Yeah?
That was that you could that still holds up really and it's incredible.
Speaker 1Yeah.
The women in the bath, yeah, I don't know that.
Speaker 3Someone told me they went through Someone told me.
I don't know if it's true or not, but they went through sixty doors.
I guess to get that shot right accidently.
Yeah, sixty, which means I guess there were sixty takes at least, which is quite a few.
Speaker 2I've never done sixty takes, No, I don't think.
Speaker 1I often think that, what's the best amount of takes you've done at any take?
Speaker 3Oh man, I've been in the twenties before, I've been in the twenties.
Yeah, but it was a lot of technical stuff.
I've never been in the twenties like because of performance.
Thank god, I would if the performance was bad, I would I would, you know.
Speaker 1Sure, I guess there's eluxtuit.
When I read about Fincher and Kubrick doing one hundred takes whatever, there's a sort of budget luxury, as in, I think I've ever worked an we had that kind of time.
Speaker 2You don't have that kind of time.
Speaker 1Yeah, But I'm also like, that's a fucking nightmare for the edit.
That's a nightma.
You've got a hundred fucking takes.
Speaker 2Oh, I mean you're killing these people.
I can't you imagine, Like, how any different ways could you do this?
You know, I guess a hundred.
Speaker 1I guess one hundred unless they're very sure.
I've never understood if it's if it is a hundred on the day, if they're like, that's the one, or they're going I just write one hundred options for the edit.
Speaker 3I think if it's if it's a hundred, I would hope that the hundredth was the one they took.
Speaker 2Yeah, I forget.
Speaker 3I did a movie with a who became this man became a really really dear friend of mine, passed away recently.
Speaker 2Charles Shire.
He's a he directed Father of the Bride.
Yes, I knew him.
Speaker 3We did a movie together and I got to know him pretty well, and I just adored him.
And when he died, I didn't realize how what an effect that would have on me until I thought of not having him around.
Speaker 2I couldn't call him, couldn't not that we talked every day.
I'm not saying that, but just you know, these certain.
Speaker 3People come into your life, your life, and you you just go poof, They're gone, you know, and you just well, how could that be?
He was so full of life and everybody loved him, and I mean that.
Speaker 2Was I would.
Speaker 3I had to pull over the car a few times and by myself and just be like, man, I gotta get my head that this is really affecting me in such a way.
I didn't really see that coming, but you know, I went off on that tangent, but somehow I was just reminded of I guess we're talking about Dave of Charles Yam.
Speaker 1Yeah, well was it about the takes a number of takes?
And well, yeah, that's right, that's.
Speaker 2Right, the good thank you you're following.
Speaker 3He directed Father of the Bride, and I forget how many takes he said, but he said he made Steve Martin do that speech at the in Father of the Bride where he's in the chair.
I think he said something like thirty or forty something or fifty something or whatever.
It was wow, And I remember asking him he was like, oh, he never said anything about just what we've you know, we got it and it was really great and it was performance of a lifetime that was really brilliant.
And I finally asked him, I was Steve Martin, did he get upset at you?
Speaker 2And he was.
Speaker 3He didn't say he got upset.
He was just like, I mean you could tell it was like, what's this man doing?
Like is he punishing me?
Speaker 2On perfect?
Like what's going on here?
Speaker 3You know, because you got to feel and you and as an actor, right, you start to get self conscious, like at any level, even if someone's made wrong more than like three times, even I'm like, is there is there something you for me?
Speaker 2Like I'm not doing like communicate this?
Is it a folk Hopefully it's.
Speaker 3A focus pull or something, but yeah, yeah, it's that that that luxury of time and all that.
Speaker 2We just don't have it on TV on my show.
Speaker 1But then there's also like I hear like Ridley Scott just has like ten cameras covering so many different wedding and then he'll do like three takes, two takes, and yeah, got its interesting.
What is the film that made you cry?
The mist?
And now you a cry?
Speaker 2I guess?
Speaker 3I mean I cry when it's necessary.
I think human beings need to cry every once in a while.
Speaker 2I don't.
Speaker 3I wouldn't consider myself a crier at all, though, but I certainly do.
You sometimes you can't help it.
I mean unless you have a dead heart, right.
Speaker 1I tried.
Speaker 3I think I've everybody I've ever met my life that I that I know you try, you try as hard as I can.
I think everybody that I've known for longer than six months, I've seen them at least well up.
Speaker 2I mean, if we weren't run by our.
Speaker 3Emotions, this world would be a life would be a lot easier women, I mean, it would be boring.
Speaker 2It would be like that's what we're run by.
Speaker 3So the film that maybe I have two if I may, you may, they're very different.
So one is an older film with Michael Keaton called My Life.
Speaker 2Have you seen this?
Speaker 1With Nicole Kidman?
I fucking love.
Speaker 3And when when she finds out what he's been doing recording this stuff and he teaches him, teaching how to shave and everything, because he finds out he's got this cancer and he won't be there for his kid to teach him how to grow up and be a man.
Or It's just like he's leaving him all these tapes and I'm thinking, how perfect is that?
And then the heartbreak is when you realize that he wasn't telling he didn't tell her about it.
Speaker 2She's going to that room, she's watching.
Speaker 3These tapes, and it was like, oh, what a perfect way to show case the fact that this woman is holding on to stuff, she's holding on by a very thin thread, and she's finally like she's being faced with like falling into this moment of what it's going to be like when this is all you have of him or the memories and these tapes heartbreaking, heartbreaking And I don't know if this is a more recent film.
Speaker 2Nicholas Cage Pig, did you see Pig?
Speaker 1Pig is fucking brilliant.
Speaker 2Brilliant and that performance is incredible.
Speaker 3Yes, And when he starts talking about the pig about because it's you think it's this really gifted truffle pig, like really gifted Trump, he sort of talks about the fact that she couldn't smell a truffle.
Speaker 2Of landed on our nose.
It's just amazing, right, what a movie?
What a movie?
Speaker 1That is a film about grief, isn't it.
I love that absolutely.
It's a film about grief that was sowed as a revenge.
It was sold like it was taken with a pig.
Speaker 2So well done.
Speaker 1Yeah, and then you watch it, you're like, fuck, this is beautiful.
Speaker 3I walked out of we have a little viewing room here and my wife and I were walking Big Nickel's cage fans.
We walked out and we were standing in the kitchen and it was one of those moments where talk about are you a crier?
Not necessarily and categorize myself as a crier, but there was a good, solid I don't know if you've ever had this with three or four minutes where I knew if I try to speak, nothing would come out.
Speaker 2It's a really powerful feeling.
You know.
Speaker 3It reminds you that you're alive, and and it also makes you proud to be an actor when you see a performance like that and go wow, the way that that movie affected me and other people, and you think maybe there was a performance that that I gave or a show that I was a part of, or something that had an effect.
Speaker 2On someone like that.
That is really It's profound and humbling, isn't it?
Well?
Speaker 1This is this is us?
Was made you cry every single week without fair Yeah, every week that was hopefully hopefully last.
Oh yeah it was funny shows but.
Speaker 2You oh, you were in for it.
Speaker 3And I see I hear people all time to like, oh I binge like the first like yesterday, my husband I bene like the first five episodes that I'm like, what are you a massachist?
Speaker 2You spent five hours?
How do you do that?
You bring your gatorade?
Like, what are you doing in that five hours?
Really?
Wow?
Speaker 1My sister al said, love, love love that she would just cool me crying.
Speaker 2I just the last that will sneak up on you when you don't see it.
Speaker 3Coming and you're like, oh, come on, but you want but you want it, you know what I mean, you definitely want it, And then it delivers and you're like, yes, this is how you do TV.
Speaker 1Well, that's because we've been using tracks.
Speaker 3A track here, that's right, you got Yeah, it was, yeah, it was using.
Speaker 1What is the film that you love.
People don't like it.
It is not critically acclaimed, but you love it unconditionally.
Just In Hartley, what is it?
Speaker 2All right?
Speaker 3I'm gonna I'm going to spin on this a little bit if I may.
This is not it's I don't think it's not critically acclaimed.
I think it's not well known.
Although I do love Halle Berry's Catwoman, I do.
Okay, that's a great yep.
Yeah, but this movie is I feel I feel like it probably is critically acclaimed.
I don't really know, but it's not well known and it's staying on the Nicolas Cage train.
Speaker 2Have you seen The Weatherman?
I fucking love The weather Man?
Isn't that something else?
This movie?
Speaker 3Right?
Speaker 2What do you like?
Everything about it?
Speaker 1That makes me cry as well?
Speaker 2Try you laugh?
Speaker 3When he hits the snowball, he's sorry, the whole secret note thing that you're supposed.
Speaker 2To do, and the first thing he does is open it up.
It's just like, this is why your marriage isn't working.
Speaker 1Man.
Speaker 2He's this is a whole trust exercise and you blew it.
Speaker 3You blew it, and right away you know, yes, yeah, it was a great, great movie.
Speaker 2Michael Caine wonderful.
Speaker 1That's a fucking great set.
Speaker 2Yeah yeah, yeah, that's.
Speaker 1Like a mainstream Nicholas Kate nearly no move.
It's a great one.
Speaker 3Oh yeah, No, he was.
He was, Yeah, he was the weather.
He was he was playing the straight guy.
Just kind of couldn't anything.
He even says it in the movie.
They're like they're trying toigure out what's wrong with him, and he just says, I can't.
It was heartbreaking and he just goes, I can't knuckle down.
And I thought, Wow, a grown man with kids went through a divorce is saying I can't knuckle down.
Speaker 2He's on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
And what does a man do?
Speaker 3You know when he's on the verge of it, you know you don't want to tell anyone, I guess.
And there's all these He just crushed that role in the story, the script of everything.
Speaker 2But the way they lit it tonally, it was that the Grays took place in Chicago.
I think it was great.
Speaker 1Yeah, nice film, good chot.
What is the film that you used to love but you've watched it recently and you do not like it anymore because you've changed.
Speaker 3Well, I hate to say this because I still like the film because Tombstone.
Speaker 2You know, Tombstone.
Speaker 1Yeah, I love Toomstone, but I haven't watched it in many years.
Speaker 2Yeah, don't time.
Okay, it was.
Speaker 3I have probably in my life quoted that movie over a hundred times.
I probably could write this, I know it.
It's incredible from anywhere from Billy Bob Thornton coming in there to you know, one of the greatest perform I mean that dark Holiday performers.
Paul Kilmer was incredible.
Why are really hard character to play?
Russell nailed it, of course, like he always does.
But I just thought it was the coolest film, like something I'd never seen before.
And maybe it's because they're making so they made so much of that geen afterwards, and they did it so well even in televisionhows like dead Wood and things like that.
Yeah right, I just think the bars So maybe they should I don't know.
I was gonna say maybe they should read do Tombstone, but I don't think they should.
This, this is this is making me want to watch it again and change my mind about it, because I do have a love for Tombstone.
Speaker 1You make me want what's Deadwood again?
Is dead with the greatest TV show ever.
Speaker 3Not that I mean I think I don't think anybody would laugh you out of the room if you said that.
Speaker 1Help three top Free for sure.
What is the film that means the most to you?
Not necessarily the film is good, but the experience you had seeing the film makes it special to you forever.
Speaker 3Justin Harley, Yeah, I've got I've got one for you that not only is it special to me forever, but it.
Speaker 2Is great, a great film.
Speaker 3And the little story behind this is so I have I have a twenty one year old daughter.
There was a big part of my life between what was it like two thousand and three or four two thousand and three, probably to like twenty thirteen, fourteen.
Word, I didn't watch a lot of movies.
I have time, so a lot of movie I'm sort of catching up on them now, right.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3And it's my wife's favorite movie of all time.
And I was sure that i'd seen it, of course, I'm like, of course I've seen it.
Everyone's seen The Gladiator, everyone's seen it.
And then I realized it's almost like I've seen so many clips from it, and I've heard so much about it, and it dawned on me.
I don't think I've ever sat down and watched the actual film, right, even though I know it because it's it's the site guy so much for decades, right, And I sat down and watched that film, and I remember thinking, like, it's so strange that that's her favorite film of all time, of all time, really, And then I watched it and I was like, well, it's perfect.
Speaker 2Perfect movie.
Speaker 3It's there's not one little moment in that movie that you're like this bullshit.
I mean, it's it's so good when he looked even at the very beginning when he looks at the before he goes into war, and he looks at them before he goes into battle, and.
Speaker 2He looks at the bird and kind of takes that little smile and then.
Speaker 3The bird and then he's like, boom, here we are.
And he's just prepared for death the whole time.
And he gets kidnapped.
I mean, the whole thing.
It's just it's riveting from cover to cover, you know, credit to credit, unbelieve.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And also the first time they used Overly died filming it, And was it the first time they used like CGI to fill him in or something.
Speaker 3I don't know.
If it was the first time.
But they definitely did.
They definitely did.
Speaker 2Yeah, I mean it might have been the very first time.
You can tell when you watch it, if you're looking for it, you can, you can see it.
Speaker 1But yeah, okay, it's the gas.
That's a great movie, lovely.
What about the film you most relate to?
What's the film you most relate to.
Speaker 2There's a movie called Beautiful Girls.
Speaker 1I love Beautiful Girls.
Speaker 2Nowy Portman, Timothy Hutton, and Dyan Yeah, Uma Thurman's in it.
Everyone's in it.
Speaker 1Yeah, Scott Rosenberg, right, is that right?
Speaker 2Yeah, it's great.
It's just a great movie.
And I was this is way back in the day.
Speaker 3I was renting I don't even remember it's VHS or DVD, but I was renting a movie.
I forget what the movie was, some action movie probably, and I get home and they had put the wrong employer or whatever.
I put the wrong disc or movie in the in the right So I ended up with this movie, Beautiful Girl.
Speaker 2So I was like, what the hell is this?
I was ready to watch I don't know, probably Top Gun or something.
Speaker 3I have no idea, And I was like, guy, I god, I might as well put it in the Timothy Hutton character when he's this musician and he goes back for his high school reunion and he's sort of at that place where he's got to figure out what he's going to do.
I mean, it's like he's at that age right where he can can no longer continue doing what he's doing in the manner in which he's doing it and grow up.
He's got to figure something out, right, make concessions or go for it, or whatever whatever it is.
And I think at that point in my life I was kind of at the same point, except for the fact that I didn't know what I wanted to do.
Speaker 2I knew I had a lot.
Speaker 3Of different interests, in a lot of different passions for a lot of different things, but it never occurred to me that you could be an actor.
Speaker 2I still at that time, I was like, I don't know how to do it.
I don't know how people do it.
How would I?
And then it turns out you just have to be an idiot and get in your car and drive the Los.
Speaker 3Angeles and just try, try, try, try, try, and you have to be a total you have to be a total moron.
Speaker 2And thank God, I think I was, Yeah, you have to be someone.
Speaker 1I was talking with someone about this the other day.
They worked in Broadway.
They were a Broadway musical person, and they said, if someone had told me when I was like queuing up for like background auditions, and they were like, I can't remember the number, it was something like one in one hundred thousand, we'll get this.
She said, I wouldn't.
I wouldn't have done it, and I was like, yeah, you would, because you did, you know what I mean, Like, I don't think that would.
I think the reality is, yeah, it's a fucking it is mad.
Speaker 3It's hard to remember too.
It's hard to remember when you didn't have I think it's a lot easier.
I've often thought of that too.
I've thought about what I did.
I'm like, Wow, that's brave, and then there's part of me that's like, well that that's really reckless.
Well, you know, it's taken out of context, like right now, it would be reckless because I have a lot of responsibilities.
Right it would be totally reckless.
It's just abandon people and be like I'm gonna do what I want to do.
But when you're young, you don't really have anything.
You might have a little bit of debt.
Speaker 2You might not have any debt, you might have some bills, you don't really have any responsibilities.
Yeah, that's the time to do it.
Speaker 1Really, but it is a mad thing today, completely mad.
Speaker 2And it's completely made very very very very very very very lucky.
We're very lucky.
Speaker 1What is the sexiest film you've ever saying?
Justin how they think it's probably Dirty Dancing?
Okay, now you see you disagree with me.
No, I didn't listen.
Day Dancing is a wonderful film and a sexy film.
But that sounds like an answer you're giving two impressed women.
Speaker 2No, no, I no, not at all.
Speaker 1In my mind.
Speaker 3I'm not trying to impress in my in my uh in my version of Dirty Dancing, there was a lot that went on behind the scenes if they didn't show on the camera, right, I mean.
Speaker 2I don't know.
Speaker 3I thought it was very you know, you have you have the quote unquote help that these people are coming these country cute people are coming in and they really don't talk to these people.
Speaker 2They don't fragnize with these people.
Speaker 3They're there to serve them and to help them learn how to dance or you know, give them coffee or champagne or whatever, and this woman kind of falls in love.
Speaker 2With the bad boy, right, Yeah, And uh, I don't know.
Speaker 3I thought there was something really there's something really suxy about you have like a lane that someone tells you you're supposed to be in.
This is where we play over here, and the power of love and lust and the wanting it transcends all of that, and then you're really out of control.
Speaker 2There's really nothing that anyone can do about it.
You're you're sort of you know, you're running wild in the streets.
Speaker 1I'm convinced that's a very good answer.
I fucking loved it dancing.
I have a sister, so I have seen it two hundred times and I watched it again recently to see if it holds up, and it absolutely holds up.
The only thing that does funny is that when you think about it, at the end, when he goes on stags and he says hey, and he does his big speech, most of the people in that room must be thinking, who the fuck is this guy wasn't talking about?
Speaker 4Yeah, it was kind of it was lost on them.
I think he's talking about what happened?
Speaker 2Is he talking about what's happened?
Speaker 1But it's a brilliant film and I love the its like they're not going to be together after this see each other.
Speaker 3Do you remember watching I'm sure you saw a fight club?
Yes, okay, do you remember when Brad Pitt had a cigarette out of his mouth and he was like standing there and he was ready to fight in the thing and he's just like just ripped beyond belief.
It looked like like just chose a lot of clay and that sort of change.
I think that changed the way that dudes, that men were like, I want my body to look like that, because before that people watched WWF wrestling used to be ww ON and you were wanted to be big and hulking and all that.
Speaker 2And then when you saw.
Speaker 3Brad Pitt what he did with his body, he carved it, Everyone's like, that's what I want.
Especially I think women were like, that's what I want, right, Yeah.
But Patrick Swayze and dirty Dancing was the og of that.
Speaker 2Yes, yeah, yes, I mean he he dialed that ship in.
That looked like a lot of hard work, a lot of discipline.
Speaker 1Right, you know, the other guy is completely underrated in the area.
Brendan Frasier.
When I watched like this guy's and.
Speaker 3He was too, he was big, he worked a lot.
Yeah, that must have been at least two three hours in the gym, just in the morning, you know.
Speaker 1Jesus Well, there's a sub category to this question.
Traveling behind is worrying.
Why don't film you found arousing?
You went, sure, you ship Bridesmaids.
I think it's going You don't get it so much better?
What's better than I mean, a woman that can.
Speaker 2Make you laugh?
Right?
Yeah, agreed, there's nothing better.
There's not because of that point of view, a sense of humor from that point of view.
Speaker 3It is just the point of view that I don't have, right, and to hear that point of view, I mean, I don't think there's anything better than that or sexier than that.
Speaker 1I mean, I do agree.
So you'll say, you're watching Bridesmaids with it by the hotel.
Speaker 4Okay, not the whole time, not the whole time, not the entire time.
Speaker 2Maybe that part, maybe that part, Maybe that's that was the only part.
Actually that was the only part.
Speaker 1I guess alone is the son What is objectively the greatest film of all time might not be your favorite, but it is objectively the greatest, objectively greatest film of all.
Speaker 3Time, as good as it getst wow, as good as it gets.
And I think I can make that argument in an objective way.
Not that not that the oscars are objective, but I can make this argument.
It won a lot of awards.
I think it either it got nominated and I think it won, might have won Screenplay Actor.
Maybe she went supporting actress or actually I forget.
I think Kneer got nominated for supporting.
I could be wrong on that one, but the movie is, in my estimation perfect.
It's road movie and what's not the love?
You got a guy with an ailment, he's got an impediment.
It was a little ahead of its time because I think people like, what's wrong with this guy?
And now you look at it and you're like, no, it's it's everywhere.
I mean it's everywhere.
Speaker 2Yeah, I mean was heightened of.
Speaker 3Course, right, and then the love story conversation he has with her about how he hates pills.
Speaker 2But she asked for a compliment.
Remember, yeah, she goes.
Speaker 3You got to give me a compliment because he said, you're wearing a house dress.
Speaker 2I got to wear a shirt and tie.
Speaker 3And he's like okay, okay.
He starts giving it his compliment.
He goes, I hate pills, this ailment.
They gave me these pills to take.
Speaker 2I hate pills.
I hate them.
And she's like, what's the where's the compliment.
He goes, okay, after you told me you wouldn't sleep with me, I started taking the pills.
And she's like, I don't get what this has to do with me.
He goes, you know the line, right, He goes, you make me want to be a better man.
Yeah, yeah, good, wow, great, right good?
Speaker 1And you know I heard maybe you know this, someone tell me that the ending was like kind of improvised.
They didn't have the ending, and I think they were just filming and filming and then and then James L.
Brooks was like kiss here, just kiss here off camera, and the kiss and then oh and.
Speaker 2Then he goes, I can do better than that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, great.
I didn't know that.
Speaker 1Yeah, so it was kind of real.
It was like I can do better next time.
And he's like, that's it.
Speaker 2That's cool.
Yeah, that's cool.
Speaker 3I mean it's sweet and it's clever, and it's like I said, it's got everything, got everything.
Fantastic concept so'll make you cry.
When she's talking about to her mother, she goes, what do you want?
She goes, I want to go out?
Remember that whole scene.
Yeah, you're just like, it's just great.
Speaker 1What's the film you could or have?
What's the most open over again?
Speaker 3Well, it's that one probably, but oh gosh, there's so many of them.
I've probably seen It's a Wonderful Life three four, five hundred times, probably with Stuart.
Speaker 2I love that movie.
Speaker 1Timeless, No bad way to spend your time?
What is the worst film you ever saw?
Speaker 2The worst film I ever saw?
Speaker 3Was like I struggled to even say this because I don't I don't think anybody should.
Speaker 2Try to watch it.
And you know, maybe maybe I was wrong, Justin was wrong.
We'll try to watch this.
Speaker 3Maybe we have a different opinion about it, because it really is a different opinion you can have.
It's called And at the time, I was this huge Hulk Hogan fan.
When I was a kid, I was a huge Hulk Hogan fan.
Yeah, I would watch wrestling every time he was on.
Speaker 2I just loved it.
I would.
I still thought it was real.
He made a movie No holds barred.
Speaker 1Okay, not the alien one.
Speaker 3I loved I loved Hulk Hogan so much when I was a kid that I watched that movie and I convinced myself that I loved the movie.
Speaker 2It's really what's it?
Speaker 1What is it about?
Is he a wrestler in it?
Speaker 2That's right?
Right?
Speaker 1What was the one?
What was the alien one?
Speaker 2He did?
Speaker 1Remember when he's an alien?
Speaker 3No, I don't remember, but I don't know.
If I saw that one, it might be the same movie.
Man they were holding on.
I think they were holding onto the fact that Hulkogan was such a big star that he could just do no wrong, probably, and that it probably made a lot of money.
Speaker 2I knows, but not not in.
Speaker 1Particular Suburban Command.
Oh you got it, that's the way.
I didn't see that one.
Speaker 2Did you see that?
Speaker 1That's good?
That's like?
Speaker 2Is it good?
Speaker 1Yeah, he's like a fish out of wall.
He's an alien.
Speaker 2Well that's cool.
Speaker 1Yeah, maybe that will make up for no hoodes.
But what's the film that might you laugh?
Device?
And will it based?
Aburb and Command die?
Speaker 2The film that made me laugh the most?
I got?
Speaker 3I have two, I have three, but I narrowed it down to two.
I Meet the Parents for me is just it's and I think part of it is I think it's a brilliant script, and I think that the performances are great still is amazing, But what seeing Robert de Niro in that role is just he is He's so funny, yeah, you know, and he's just given this guy a hard time without really even trying to give him a hard time.
And then I really love wedding Crashers.
I think is yes, incredible, incredibly funny.
Now here they're doing a sequel.
Speaker 1What was the third one?
Speaker 2Tropic Thunder?
Tropic Thunder?
Speaker 1So many you got you got a pick one guns a head.
Speaker 2If I had to pick one, all right, but I could changed my mind in ten minutes.
Speaker 3If I had to pick one right now, just because of the mood I'm in, I guess I would say Tropic Thunder.
Speaker 1Justin Hartley, Yo, you have been a delight.
Speaker 2Thanks.
Speaker 1However, yeah, when you decided, you're like, I'm home, buddy, it's crazy.
I need to fucking do something.
How going the guy skydiving and you get on the plane and the pilotoks backing you and he goeska and you go, that's me and he go, all right, you can do anything, and he goes.
He guyes, we ain't doing ten thousand and we're doing forty thousands.
And you're like, oh shit, and you're nervous.
You don't want to look you don't want to look weak in front of this guy.
He thinks you'll track her, and you're like, I'm gonna have a lifesaver and that'll calm me down.
You take the lifesaving and it lodges in your throat and you start going red and the guy's looking back at you and tears coming at you right, but you're trying to just hold it together, don't and look on cool like m really excited, really excited, and then you you die and you roll and the guy's like, this guy, don't give a fuck wow, And you just roll out the plane and you fall.
You fall it three thousand miles an hour, and you reach the terminal with dusty and your wife is lying in her bed, and your loved ones have come up, says hey my mom, auntie, whoever all you love ones are there just to wake ups?
Is her birthday actually, And you crash through the roof of your else land on your wife, both dead, all your loved ones around you.
They were go ah, they're covered in blood.
And I'm like, Jesus, I'm walking past time with a coffin.
You know, I'm like and I'm like, hey, missus, Harley, happy birthday.
And all your loved ones go come up here.
They're all dead and like what And I come up the stairs with coming out Jesus Christ a fucking like blood.
Everyone scream I go, guys, you got to help me.
I got a very justin.
First we have to peel you off your wife, I mean you too, like a fucking cheese and ham sandwich now, and like, oh god, So we peel you off.
And then there's you've picked up stuff you.
There's birds attached to you because you felt so fuss.
She took a load of birds with you.
I'm like, shit, to chop you up.
I'm chopping you up in front of your family.
They were screaming like I just shut up.
We got to get him in the coffin.
Get you in the coffin.
There's more of you than I was expecting.
You've been working out a lot.
Just put stuff you in there.
There's no room in this coffin.
There's only enough room for me to slide one DVD into the side for you to take across to the other side, and when you get there, it's movie night.
Every night.
One night, it's your movie night.
What film are you taking to show the baseball players in heaven when it is your movie night?
Justin Hartley, please, I'm.
Speaker 3Gonna show them the greatest Christmas movie of all time that might not even be a Christmas movie.
Speaker 2It's called die Hard.
Fucking great, We're going die Hard.
Speaker 1I thought you were gonna say bad Mom's Christmas.
But okay, okay, fucking great.
Speaker 2What a night.
Speaker 1I don't think I don't think anyone's picked Diehard.
Speaker 3They're gonna have a great well, it's it's it's Bruce Willis at his absolute best, right coming off to the moon Lighting?
Speaker 2Where that good?
Speaker 3That dude just rattle off dialogue like nobody's business, and he goes and does one of the greatest action films of all time.
Everyone started to gauge action films based on They would call like, oh, this is like the die Hard of or Dying you know.
It became yeah, exactly, It became the standard by which they were all judged.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, yep, Justin Hartley, what a delight.
You're a delight is there anything you would like to tell people to watch or listen to or anything with you in it coming up?
Speaker 3I'm on this so hopefully they listening to this, that'd be great.
I think we had a good time.
Yeah, you're amazing, dude.
Yeah, you're super fun and hilarious.
Appreciate you you are.
Speaker 1Thank you very much for doing this.
Have a wonderful death.
Speaker 2Thank you.
Speaker 1Good day to you.
So that was episode three hundred and fifty eight.
Head over to the Patreon at patreon dot com forwards.
Last Brett Goldstein for the extra twenty minutes of chat sequence and video with Justin Hartley.
Go to Apple Podcasts.
Give us a five star rating.
But right about the film that means the most to you and why it's a very lovely thing to read.
It helps numbers, etcetera.
And it's really appreciated by my name and Maureen.
I hope you're all well.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you so much for Justin for giving me his time.
Thanks to Scruby's Peeping the Distraction Pieces Network, Thanks the Buddy Peace for producing it.
Thanks to iHeartMedia and Wilferreo's Big Money Players Network for host to get Thanks to added Risdom for the graphics and needs to lad them for the photography.
Come and join me next week for another amazing guest.
You won't believe it.
Thank you very much for listening.
I hope you're all well in the meantime.
That's it for now, have a lovely week, and please, now more than ever, be excellent to each other.
Speaker 5Fast back back bat backs, A back back backs us back us back back back backs back by back back, last back back