How Did This Get Made? - The Number 23
Episode Date: February 24, 2023Today, February 23rd 2023, Paul, June, and Jason break down the 2007 Jim Carrey thriller The Number 23. Coincidence? Let the HDTGM team decide. They discuss all the bonkers names—from Topsy Kretts t...o Fingerling to Sirius Leary—the protagonist who hates dogs, Walter Sparrow's sanity, Bud Court's crazy room, the son's childish mug gift, Danny Huston's villainous vibe, and Chekhov's Saxophone. Plus, they ask "At the beginning is Jim Carrey basically playing Ace Ventura?" And Paul reveals his theory that maybe Walter Sparrow's dog bite gave him rabies. Is Paul right? Crack the code.Go to www.hdtgm.com for tour dates, merch, and more.Follow Paul on Letterboxd https://letterboxd.com/paulscheer/HDTGM Discord: discord.gg/hdtgmPaul’s Discord: https://discord.gg/paulscheerCheck out Paul and Rob Huebel live on Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/friendzone) every Thursday 8-10pm ESTSubscribe to The Deep Dive with Jessica St. Clair and June Diane Raphael here: listen.earwolf.com/deepdiveSubscribe to Unspooled with Paul and Amy Nicholson here: listen.earwolf.com/unspooledCheck out The Jane Club over at www.janeclub.comCheck out new HDTGM merch over at https://www.teepublic.com/stores/hdtgmWhere to Find Jason, June & Paul:@PaulScheer on Instagram & Twitter@Junediane on IG and @MsJuneDiane on TwitterJason is not on Twitter
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This podcast is dropping on February 23rd, 2023. That's 2, 23, 23, 2, 23s.
June Diane Raefiel Shear is 23 digits if you include the hyphen and her husband's last name.
Her birthday is 01041980, which adds up to 23. Geoffrey character readings adds up to 24,
but if you misspell it as Geoffrey with one F character readings, it is 23.
This podcast is hosted by Tall John Shear. And if you assign the corresponding number in the alphabet to his name,
you get 21, 12, 12, 10, 15, 8, 14, 19, 3, 8, 5, 5, 18. If you add this all up, you get 69,
which, if you divide by the number of names, Tall John Shear, 3, you get 23.
But did you see the 69? We saw the number 23, so you know what that means.
Hello, people of Earth, conspiracy theorists. Unite. Today, we are talking about a classic Jim Carrey thriller.
The number 23 came out in 2007. And if you've not seen this film, the plot is going to be a little bit tricky to break down,
but I'm going to try two weeks in a row. But basically, we are following Walter Sparrow,
played by Jim Carrey, who works as a dog catcher, who comes to find a book titled The Number 2.
Oh, yeah. Did you forget this movie starts with him being Ace Ventura and talking to animals?
I forgot that.
So this dog catcher comes to find a book called The Number 23, which sends him down the rabbit hole of the 23 Enigma,
which is a real conspiracy theory. I'm going to just play a quick clip to show you exactly how that comes into play.
The Titanic sank on the morning of April 15, 1912. That's 4151912. 23.
The Hiroshima bomb was dropped at 815. 8 plus 15 is 23. The Mayans at the end of the world would come in 2012.
20 plus 1 plus 2 equals 23. Go ahead. Tell yourself it's just a number.
And then a larger mystery unravels. Did Jim Carrey's character actually write the book?
How much does his wife know? Is there a larger conspiracy? The answer is yes,
as long as you don't think about any of the answers.
To break this all down, I am bringing in my two and three co-hosts, my 23 co-hosts.
What?
Jason Manzuchus and June Diane Raphael. Wow.
This is like the X-Files. We're solving cases. This is a mystery.
The crazy thing is, listening to you say that though, Paul,
listening to your intro, your math that you did was way more complicated than the math that is done over and over throughout the course of this movie.
It's literally that most of the dialogue is simple math of just like 1 plus 2 equals 3.
And 3 plus 2 is 5. And 5 minus 2 is 3. And 32 is 23.
And also like, and your last name is sheer. And that name is 14.
And 14 plus 9, they're assigning numerical value to colors, names, words.
Pink is 23. Red is a little less than because it's white.
And so then now red is pink and pink is 23. And 32 is also 23.
Like 14. But if you add the 1 and the 4, you get 5.
But then if you take the 5 and you look at 5, 5 is 2 and 3 together. 23.
It truly felt insane after this was over.
I felt mad.
You said something in the intro, Paul, that blew my mind.
This is based on real conspiracy theories around the number 23.
Yes, this is a real thing. And by the way, this is such a real thing that Jim Carrey named his production company JC23 because he is obsessed with the number 23.
Why did you decide to do this project?
I was kind of obsessed with the number 23 for years, you know.
Yeah, I had a friend who passed it on to me like a virus and it just entered my life big time. It's everywhere.
And even though I was born at 2.30 in the morning, my daughter was born at 12.11.
And we just kept going on and on and on in my life until I changed the name of my company, the JC23, because somebody came up with a book that was about the 23rd song.
And he said, does this have anything to do with the 23 thing, man?
Okay, now we're... This is all starting to click into place.
Yeah, now I'm starting to understand.
I mean, so this is it. Like, this is Jim Carrey's big thing.
JC23 Entertainment is his production company and they're...
Holy shit.
Now, JC is... Okay, because as I was watching this, I was like, yeah, is that Jesus Christ?
I was just gonna say that's also Jesus Christ.
Which two times three is six.
23 plus 10 disciples is 33, which is the age Jesus Christ was when he died.
I mean, and this is where... I mean, this is, by the way, this thing, it can go on so long.
William S. Burroughs was the first person to really believe in 23 as the enigma.
A totally normal man.
Yes, so he...
Totally normal. The author of Naked Lunch.
And then all of a sudden, you start to see it in all these different things.
I'll just read you a couple more because I know we've given you a million examples.
But Norman, human sex cells have 23 chromosomes.
Other human cells have 46, arranged in 23 pairs.
The Earth's axis is tilted at 23 degrees.
Musical acts with connections to number 23.
Tool, Blink 182.
They're all these... 23 is an album.
Same for any... I mean, this is like... what I don't understand is you can make so many numbers work
if you do enough kind of... if you're backing into 23.
I mean, couldn't we do that with any number?
Well, yeah. I mean, honestly, I feel like...
Here's what I'll say.
I feel crazy.
As absurd as it is, and I agree with you, June, as crazy-making as it sounds.
What year, Paul, did you say this came out 2007?
2007.
So, in 2007, this must have felt like this is preposterous.
I roll city, right?
We live in a culture and a society now where the conspiracy theories that a huge amount of the population
like participate in and believe in are so much more ridiculous than this.
This makes... this movie makes more sense than like QAnon non-sense.
I actually thought, like, was this the beginning of Q?
Oh, my God. Is Jim Carrey Q?
Well, I'm going to tell you, there's a lot of people who love this movie, and I got to tell you that...
There are?
Oh, yes, because they are conspiracy theory nuts.
And by the way, if you listen to this show, we're right behind you. We support you 100%.
But...
Are you willing to commit... are we just doing numer... is this numerology February?
I mean, we have to be.
Next week, are we doing the lucky number 11?
I just have to say that this is a perfect example of these types of movies where somebody just has enough power
to get their own weird idea out and is like, if I can just get this to the masses,
like, because this really does feel like...
Well, that's the thing, Paul. Here's my genuine question.
Yeah.
Because at the end of the movie, I felt insane.
I was like, put me in an institution, please.
But I am genuinely asking, at the end of the movie, is the story that Jim Carrey is insane,
or that the number 23 is actually coming for him?
It's been... it chased his father?
Both.
And then it...
Both.
So it's coming for him, and so it made him crazy.
Yes, that's what I'm saying, is that the movie sort of affirms that 23 is a killer number and the devil's number.
No, much like Jim Carrey, Walter Swallow, was infected by...
Swallow, Sparrow.
Sparrow, Sparrow, sorry, sorry, they're both birds.
Sorry, sorry.
Sparrow.
And that's not to be confused with his detective name.
Oh, Jesus.
Or his wife.
Fingerling.
Fingerling.
Fingerling.
Fingerling.
Like the potato.
Fingerling.
I could not get past the potato.
Or his pseudonym.
Oh, his pseudonym is... this is the best one.
The pseudonym is my favorite part, because when you say it out loud, it gets really good.
Topsecrets.
A.K.A. Topsecrets.
Topsecrets.
I laughed so hard at the reveal of Topsecrets.
Topsecrets.
Topsecrets.
Out.
Topsecrets.
Topsecrets.
Topsecrets is the author.
Oh, my God.
Topsecrets is the author of the book, The Jim Carrey, The Dog Catcher.
Topsecrets.
Now, here's what I'll say.
When this movie first started, this is in this era of sad Jim Carrey, like depressed
Jim Carrey, like a little bit after Eternal Sunshine, he's got the long hair, and he looks
to me like he's a FedEx guy, right?
Yes, he's got this long hair, and he's got it styled in a way that is from guys in 2007,
which is flat down on his head, kind of matted down, even though he looks like...
Okay, anyway, it doesn't matter.
When they give him flashbacks in the movie, the young actor playing young Jim Carrey,
some 20-some odd years in the past, has the exact same haircut.
I was like, why did they give the kid that's in the late 60s a 2007 haircut?
I have a feeling that that was a miscommunication from the director, Joel Schumacher, to the
hair and makeup team.
Oh, my God, that made me laugh.
I mean, it was...
I'm worried they're not going to know this is a flashback, and it's young Jim Carrey.
Make them look exactly the same.
Well, at that point, we're not even supposed to think he's young Jim Carrey.
We're supposed to think this is a young Topsecrets.
Oh, that's right.
It's young Topsecrets.
That's right, because there's flashbacks inside of the fantasy sequences.
Yes.
This movie is like layers on layers on layers of nothing, frankly.
The movie makes...
The movie is a zero, like it adds up to...
In numerology senses or numerical senses, the whole movie is times zero, so it ends up
zero.
Well, I will say this.
When you meet him, Jim Carrey, I was like, what is this movie going to be about?
Like a sad man who finds something in this number 23, but then this reveal of him like
in a truck looking miserable, depressed, and then it's like a comical decal on the side
that's like, you know, he's an animal dog.
He's a dog catcher, essentially dog catcher.
He's like, he hates animals.
I don't know how they ever expected us to get on board with a character that hates dogs.
Like hates dogs and calls them evil, dead dogs, and wants to catch them.
And...
The first...
The first moment...
In the first minute, I was like, how I want...
I was so angry at this character, and I was so appalled at the treatment of these animals.
It was so strange.
I'm like, and looking back on the movie, to be quite honest, Ned, the dog, I don't know
why... why was Ned there?
Why did he have to hate dogs?
That cute little dog, he almost ran him over.
Well, the dog essentially brought him into his first experience of death, right?
I mean, the movie is like...
The movie, I feel like, can't decide if it's supernatural or not.
Right.
If there's actual...
Like there's this element of like, oh, is the dog kind of provoking him into this journey
of self-discovery and remembering and uncovering his memories and stuff.
Because the dog bites him, he chases the dog, and the dog goes right to the gravestone of
the woman that he killed.
Right.
And then also later on, we see the dog with this man, this very intimidating man.
Who's that?
Is that revealing?
Who is that?
Revealed in the very last seconds.
I think that that might have been the devil.
If it's...
Okay, here's my theory, the larger theory.
Oh, is it death?
I think it's like, the number 23 is the killer in this movie, and it will always find you.
It will make you appear to be insane, but you're basically just carrying out the will
of the number 23, and the number 23 is the devil's number.
So the devil has a dog who then helps people get back to that.
I don't know, that's part of what I would put together in here, like, based on the things
I know.
If the devil had an animal, there's no way it would be a dog.
Well, I mean, the therapists, there's therapists, the three-headed dog that guards the gates
of hell.
So there's that dog, but that's not what we're talking about here.
There is, the other thing I couldn't figure out is that scene at the end of the movie
where we see the dog, Ned, we see this dark, shadowy figure, and they're at the gravestone
at the funeral.
The funeral for Laura, the woman that Jim Carrey killed, but they're having a funeral
15 years later?
Well, because they never found her remains.
Oh, that's right, that's what it is.
Now, I would really love to get into why Robin took her skeleton and put it somewhere.
I think to protect Jim Carrey.
Oh, wait, Scott is saying her name is Agatha.
Yeah, Agatha is her name.
Robin is the son.
But Agatha wouldn't have known Jim Carrey to move the body.
Well, no, because she found, wait, no, Agatha found everything at that place.
And she's read the book.
The Institute, Nathaniel Institute.
Oh, right, because she figures out that he's the author of the book.
Right, okay.
Yes, when Bud Court is, when she finds Bud Court's crazy room.
Okay, wait, let me just go back.
Let me just go back for a little bit.
Just because if you're listening to this, it sounds like pure.
I would like the t-shirt to be Bud Court's crazy room.
I mean, it's just a red-hued, scroll-filled nightmare scape.
Okay, but here's my question, Paul.
And I'm sorry, I'm really sorry to interrupt.
But my question about like 23 and the devil.
So Agatha already wanted to paint her room.
Can we just, let me just set up.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Hold on.
Sorry, sorry.
Let me just set up one little bit of here because I think this will help us.
And Jun immediately turns off her camera.
I'll say this.
We meet Jim Carrey.
He seems like a, oh, Jason just turned up.
No, guys, I just have to explain one part of the plot.
We meet Jim Carrey.
He seems like he is a depressed loner, doesn't fit in.
And then you reveal he is happily married to a beautiful woman and has a son and
seemingly a pretty functional family life.
Not just functional, I would say happy.
Yes.
So we have Virginia Madsen, who's Agatha.
And we have Logan Lerman, who is Robin, that's a son.
Robin.
I just want to set that up.
So this weird character that we meet who hates dogs, who's xenophobic is actually
a very well-adjusted, like normal guy living a normal life.
And all right, so now I just want to label who these characters are because it's going
to get hard to know.
Also, because many of them, like there are a couple of characters, like Jim Carrey plays
both Walter, right?
And he plays Fingerling in the fantasy sequences.
Yes.
Like as does Virginia Madsen plays Agatha, but she also plays Fabrizia.
Fabrizia.
So the reason why this number, this book, this number 23 book comes into Jim Carrey's
hands is because he is late to his own birthday dinner with his wife because this monster
of a dispatcher from the dog impound makes him work a little bit later one night because
he turned down her advances.
In the best dialogue of all time.
Oh my God.
She's basically like, why don't you take it out and wag your tail at me?
And he goes, I wouldn't wag my tail in the bitch's room with you if you were the last
bitch on earth because it's a celebration party.
It's his birthday party and it's, but it's a dog themed birthday party.
So his cake is a dog.
So it's all the dog.
So it looks like the ladies room has been covered over with the word bitch.
Right.
So it does say the bathroom does say bitches room.
It's also so convoluted.
It's like, why would it?
It's like having a birthday party for a lawyer and everything being law themed.
Like this is the Jerry.
I had so many questions about first of all, where does this movie take place?
I don't know.
Philadelphia.
Okay.
And whatever.
Okay.
So now I know, I know for a fact that in some places.
Animal controller is an elected position in some like small towns and stuff.
Okay.
You actually have to run for office.
I do not think Jim Carrey had to run for this.
Okay.
But my question is how many people could possibly be working in this department?
It's enormous.
It's enormous.
Not only that, but there seems to be in whatever small town city this is, there seems to be
a behavioral psychologist just for the animal controllers.
Yes.
So that if they run into any traumatic experiences on the job, they can go talk to.
They've basically taken all of the elements of a traditional police story.
The bar that services the detectives, the mental health professional who helps out
the police who've had traumatic experiences and clears them for duty so that they can
return to the force after a shooting or an event or whatever.
All of those tropes from a police procedural story have been ported onto an animal control
officer who let a dog get away on his birthday.
And was bitten by a dog.
Yes.
I want to underline it one more time too.
It is a crazy way to meet a lead character.
It's Jim Carrey.
He first barks at another dog.
He's an animal controller.
What is that a bark, Paul?
That first sound he made, I was like, I don't know what that is.
He was taunting a dog.
Do you think that all of this, he hates dogs.
He's taunting the dog.
He's talking to the dogs.
Is this just a bit or a trying to reframe or change the narrative from Ace Ventura, I
talk to dogs.
That this is like, is this a wink or is this trying to?
I thought about that.
Because it's the movie starts and I was like, this feels like obviously referencing Ace
Ventura.
I'm not always nice to animals.
Right.
I hate animals.
In fact, I can also hate animals.
I have range.
I mean, at this point, Ace Ventura came out in 1994.
This is 2007.
I think it's pretty far away from, you know.
Close to the Schumacher Batman that Jim Carrey was in.
Is this another Schumacher Jim Carrey?
Were they on set for Batman?
And Jim Carrey was like, listen, I got the.
Batman and Rob is 1997, guys.
This is a later.
Yeah, guys, I think that all this is Jim Carrey's fascination with the number 23.
I mean, just to put it in context, this is of the era.
And that's timeless.
Where he, he's kind of already had his ups and downs.
And this is like just a weird sidestep because this is coming out in 2007.
And he's already been Lemony Snicket.
He already did Eternal Sunshine.
He did Bruce Almighty.
Right.
So he did Fun with Dick and Jane and then the number 23.
And the next movie he made was Yes Man.
So it's like, this is an odd.
Like it's not, you know, it's post-majestic.
It's, you know, it's a weird moment of his time.
It's not in his heyday.
But it's in this period where he's trying to do a bunch of different stuff.
Yeah.
Interesting.
And trying to reinvent himself.
There's a, it's so interesting because I feel like one of the things we haven't mentioned
is in the fantasy sequence of this.
Because part of me feels like this is what an element that Jim Carrey may have been drawn to
is that he gets to play the affable everyman who's kind of spiraling out of control.
But in the fantasy sequences, he, the fantasy is all a noir detective story.
Like an incredibly washed out, stylized, femme fatale filled noir story.
And I feel like-
He plays a saxophone.
Replays?
I was going to say, and has bad tattoos.
I mean, he plays a saxophone shirtless.
It's like that character from The Lost Boys.
But here's-
He is!
And I'm sorry-
So how can you be an everyman if you hate dogs?
Well, I want to bring it back to you.
He doesn't only hate dogs.
He's also kind of a racist.
Because when he does confront that dog, he presents this, like, he is doing a monologue
to this dog about how this dog is going to be eaten if this dog was in China.
He's like, and I guess also working for like-
Yeah.
It's like a-
I just point that out for a couple reasons.
Because it's our lead character.
And he is going to go into a descent of madness.
But you start off going, this guy's fucking sucks.
Like he is-
And absolutely, Paul.
And I would add that this is not a vicious dog.
No.
Not at all.
And I would also add-
It's a beautiful pitbull mix of some kind who seemed like pretty docile.
Yeah.
And I would also add, what does he have to be such a dick about?
Like, what's he so upset about?
A wonderful home with a supporting, loving family.
I mean, maybe he's haunted by the traumas of his past and just doesn't know it and is
waiting for a handmade book to be found and trigger his memories.
Can I ask something though?
Why not have him find the book?
Well, this is okay.
This is my question.
Why-
Okay, Agatha said that she has read the book, but she's in the bookstore holding the book.
So did she already read it before she went to the bookstore?
Did she try to open him again?
Because here's the thing.
And we have to spoil this at one point because I think we have to unpack it.
We find out much, much later in the movie that Jim Carrey has been in a mental institution,
has one of the best exits of that.
Like after they-
Basically, he's in a mental institution, he has amnesia, which makes him forget that
he killed somebody.
And as he's leaving the mental institution, the doc's like, well, I hope I don't see you
anymore.
And he's like, oh, I'm not going to come back.
They have a joking dispatch from the mental institution.
And then immediately as he walks out the door, he has a meat cute with Virginia Madsen where
he bumps into her and she drops a cake.
And then they get together.
But so this entire movie, she knows, he knows nothing about his life before 23 years old.
Well, but why doesn't he know that?
Right.
Why isn't he able-
He doesn't seem to, you know, he doesn't remember whether it's amnesia or they say,
because he tries to commit suicide and jumps out a window.
And so they're not sure if it's trauma from the fall or if it's some sort of amnesia or
if it's just whatever, but he doesn't seem to remember any of his past life.
So, but the mustn't his family understand it.
The movie wants to have it every way, right?
He wants, they want him to be totally normal.
And then through the process of refinding and reading this book.
And because that's what we haven't really said definitively.
The book about the book, the book that he had, the whole movie is about him becoming
obsessed with this book and thinking that this book and this author is writing about
him only to find at the end of the movie, obviously, that Jim Carrey, his character,
wrote the book prior to going insane, prior to amnesia rather.
The best part is that we find that out because Virginia Madsen rips off a piece of paper
that had been glued to the title page of the manuscript where it said by and then it said
Top Secrets.
What's the name again, Paul?
Top Secrets?
Top Secrets.
Yeah.
I can't deal with that.
But who did that?
Did Bud Court do that?
That's what I don't know.
Who put that on?
Who made the red book, you know, because here's the thing.
By the end of the movie, there's two copies of the book.
One we've spent the whole movie with, which is the red-covered book, the red cover, which
matches the red walls, which matches the red light bulb in Bud Court's chaos room.
And then there's the copy that is the manuscript, which is the loose pages that Jim Carrey
types up and hand writes and glues stuff to.
The last chapters on a wall in a hotel.
And the last chapters on the wall in the hotel.
But who made the red book, Bud Court?
I don't know.
No, yes.
I do not.
So basically, this man went insane and wrote this book.
Top Secrets?
No, no, Top Secrets' fingerling.
Or no, basically, no.
But he wrote the book.
Jim Carrey wrote the book.
So Jim Carrey wrote this book like as an insane person.
And then he's like, ooh, wouldn't this be great if I just self-published this book under
some...
It's a wild ride.
I don't know why he wanted to get that book in there.
Wait, you think he published it?
You think...
I don't think he published it.
He sent it to the thing, he sent it to the public.
I thought that...
I thought that Bud Court published the book.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
Yeah.
I think that's a skill.
I think that's a skill.
As the doctor...
I thought you were saying Jim Carrey.
Oh, no, no.
I misunderstood.
Okay, got it.
So basically, they take advantage of this guy.
God.
And by the way, my stepfather used to bring home beautiful watercolors painted by schizophrenic
patients of his.
They're really gorgeous.
Wow.
I mean, I couldn't put them in the house because they're too scary.
One was very frightening.
I had nothing to do with this, you know, having schizophrenia or not.
It was just...
Of course.
No, no.
Yeah.
But so they basically like...
He's like, ooh, this isn't...
I guess like Bud Court's like, ooh, this is interesting.
Let me just like make money on this person who is not well, publishes the book, but then
pops on Topsy Secrets.
And then that, but then he gets obsessed about the number 23 in the publishing or reading
of it.
The book.
So the book is like a virus.
But this is what I don't understand.
But then Agatha read it.
She didn't go insane.
Yes, she's fine.
Robin is reading it.
He doesn't go insane.
But when did Agatha read it?
Because she keeps on going, oh, no, you're being crazy.
You're being crazy.
First of all, the family's so okay with him writing on the walls.
They're way relaxed with him going crazy.
But like, when did she read it like, and because it seems like she's holding the book to set
him up to open it, but did seem that way.
But then she's like, I felt like he, I will say this, for a slim, it's a novella.
Let's be clear.
Yes.
It's 22 chapters.
It's a shorty.
I mean, by the way, it also, I will also say it's a graphic novel of points and there's
pictures in there, there's there's writing, collage.
It's a mixed media piece.
But he really, there inexplicably, for reasons I'll never understand, the movie continuously
gives us the dates like it'll be like February 5th.
So what you, I mean, and I don't know why the time, there is no ticking clock, there
is no timeline, there is no reason to be jumping back and forth in time and trying to help
us by understanding what day it is.
But what it does let us know is it's taking Jim Carrey weeks to read a very small book.
So my assumption is his wife read it just in an appropriate amount of time, which is
for a book that size, probably three hours.
Yeah.
I think that's a good point.
I thought for sure we were going to land, everything was going to culminate to a date
that added up to 23.
Oh yeah, sure.
Okay.
Well, his birthday is on February 3rd.
We know that.
No, no, let me also, let me also just say this, but it didn't know this movie also feels
like while it's really leaning into all this conspiracy, it also feels like is it a parody
of it because I thought that too at points when he starts reading this book, it's as
if Jim Carrey is reading it like this, like he's doing a bit like listen to Jim Carrey's
voiceover of him reading the book chapter one.
You can call me fingerling.
It's not my real name.
It came from a book I read as a child, fingerling at the zoo, paper flap long gone, it had a
green hardback cover and model texture.
It was possibly my very first book.
Funny, I can't recall what it was about.
The only thing I remember is the name, fingerling.
It was so weird, like when he says call me fingerling, I'm like, it's a bad, it's a
bad book.
It's also bad.
Yes.
I'm like, this is not a book.
This book is also like, I'm like, this is not compelling.
I'm not, I'm not sitting up.
Yeah.
Well, then when you realize it was written in a post-murder frenzy, you're like, okay.
But that's my question about Agatha because I believe that Agatha had maybe, Agatha's
clearly already been like seduced by the devil.
That's why she wants to paint those walls red.
Okay.
So she's already been turned.
Yes.
So I think she had probably either already read the book before she saw it in the gift
shop.
Oh, so maybe it's Danny Houston, the devil, that other doctor.
You know, I would believe that only because Danny Houston is always the bad guy.
So when Danny Houston was even in the, when I saw Danny Houston's name in the credits,
I was like, well, that's, that's who did it.
And then he turns out to be seemingly benevolent.
He seems to be an ally to Agatha and Robin in trying to help corral the more and more
erratic Jim Carrey, correct?
Or no.
Or is he just trying to manipulate him?
I don't know.
To what end?
I thought it was going to be revealed at the end that Danny Houston had done the crimes,
what was making Jim Carrey crazy to the point that Jim Carrey was going to be convicted
of the murder that, that it would seem as though Jim Carrey would incriminate or like
when Jim Carrey dug up the body, I thought, oh, this is it.
They're going to make it so that he gets arrested for this only to find out he did in fact do
it.
You know.
Interesting.
I, I don't know.
Because at the end of the day, Danny Houston, not a bad guy, not a bad guy.
And I will say the bad guy is Jim Carrey and I did what I didn't understand is the variant
and I'm jumping ahead listeners, but at the very end, Jim Carrey says that because he
turned himself in, obviously the guy who was framed for the murder of Laura, which we haven't
even got into the original murder, but whoever that college girlfriend of his was that he
murdered.
Because she touched Danny Houston's or no, she touched that other guy's finger.
Well, no, she did have sex with him in the woods.
Oh, yeah.
That looks so uncomfortable.
Very uncomfortable.
She was touching his, she was touching his fingerlings in the classroom.
That's why they call him Detector Fingerlings.
He's always looking now for fingers touching other fingers.
The fact that he named the character Detective Fingerling in his hard boiled, you know, Philip
Marlowe-esque character is Detective Fingerling.
But here's my question.
At the very end, he says when he's talking to his son, Robin, that he's going to be
in jail for a while.
Justice has been served and, you know, he's going to be serving his time until he gets
parole.
Why would this man ever get paroled?
Yeah, because I feel like he was like, he said the judge took kindness on him because
he came for, basically the judge was like, you didn't have to do this, so I'll go easy
on you.
No.
Like, hey, hey, hey.
You know what?
You did me one, I'll do you one.
Yeah.
Like, you killed someone.
Yeah.
And not only that, but another man sat in jail for like, for 23 years.
Oh, 23?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I said, I don't know.
I know 15 plus 15 is 30.
And then if you take 30 and you-
Minus seven.
Seven, you're going to get to 23.
So-
Yes.
I do think though, it's like, it's so weird because even in that final moment when they're
at the gravesite, the devil man and dog are close, but everyone's always spying on people
in very close proximity.
Like when Jim Carrey is watching his wife and Danny Houston in that restaurant, he's
literally standing in the middle of an empty street staring into a big bay window.
It's like, if any, like you would catch it in the corner of your eye.
Like it's not, he's not even trying.
Like everyone is just there.
Like the other person standing at the cemetery, like I'm like two feet away.
I'm two feet away.
It felt like, yeah.
It felt like there was, it was, it's so unsatisfying.
This is a murder thriller mystery.
Who done it?
I love these types of movies too.
It wants to be an erotic thriller because there's all these kind of like transgressive
sexually things that are happening in the flashback especially.
Fabrizia.
Oh yes.
We have with Fabrizia.
And then there's also like an element where I felt like Jim Carrey was like, I want to
make seven.
Yes.
I want to make my seven, my gritty, stylized crime thriller, blah, blah, blah, except that
at the end, the ending is so unsatisfying.
It's that he's been the killer the whole time and that he just didn't know it.
There's no outing of the bad guy.
There's no satisfying unraveling of the mystery and the revelation of the real murderer, blah,
blah, blah.
What it feels like to me is when you've been in a writer's room or you're trying to come
up with a solution for something and it's like late, it's like 11 o'clock at night and
it's like, all right, here's the deal.
You know what it is?
He wrote the book.
She knew about the book, but she's also by the devil and he, so he hit the body.
It sounds good, fast, fastly pitched, right?
And then everyone's like, oh yeah, that is good.
And then you go home and then the next morning you come back and you're like, what did we
come up with?
Oh, that doesn't make any sense.
But then they're like, wait a minute, wait a minute, fuck, fuck, fuck.
We already cast Danny Houston, so he's got to be the murderer, right?
He's Danny Houston.
When you look at my notes in a one section, these are the notes right after each other.
Who is this?
She wrote the book?
He wrote the book?
He was the detective?
Wait, it wasn't her?
And it's so crazy because Danny Houston, my notes, Paul, my notes are so similar.
They're just almost, there's a huge chunk of my notes that all just, is this a homemade
book?
Movie we're in is in the book.
Like all these, everything equals 23, but not really.
It's all just questions.
All of mine are, why is he speaking to dogs like this?
How dare he hate dogs?
Why must he hate dogs?
By the way, I'm going to tell you this.
I know that we talked a lot about the number 23.
I thought this movie was off the rails when the son gave him his birthday gift and it
looked like a five-year-old made a mug for him.
That was crazy.
The sun seems like a straight up heist, like the sun is making up with his girlfriend on
the couch.
He's like, you're dead.
The sun is like a 16-year-old.
They all have a lovely relationship and dynamic to each other, and the sun, it looks like
he made him something in like one of those pottery places that you go to for a seven-year-old
birthday party.
What a child.
What a small child would mean.
It's like, it's so off.
It's not pretty in any way.
The world's best dad.
It's like, all right, all right, this 18-year-old made this.
I just want to go back to Jim Carrey's weirdness.
I'm watching the movie for clues.
I'm like, what's going on here?
Did you see that weird moment where Jim Carrey's trying on his vest before he goes to the birthday
party?
He's like, I look like a rock star.
I'm like, oh, I missed that.
What is the fuck here?
Were you?
What?
What?
I'm sorry, but Paul, I want to be clear.
He says, I look like a rock star to his son, like he's trying to get fucked, and then
you reveal that he's got a wife, and then it doesn't matter.
By the way, it doesn't matter because he goes to that party.
But they do want to fuck him anyway.
That woman, the supervisor, that's where the scene happens, where she says, wag your tail
at me.
So he is like, he's in his movie being like, I need to be an object of sexual desire, but
also a family man, but also I have to say this, I have a theory.
I don't know if I've talked about this theory here, but I'm going to talk about it now,
which is I believe that in every movie, Jim Carrey must show himself fucking because
it's like, I am still a wanted man.
In Ace Ventura, arguably one of the goofiest fucking movies, he fucks, and he's good at
it.
It's not like it's a funny scene, but the scene isn't funny like that about him fucking.
It's like, oh no, no, he's really good at fucking.
All the animals are watching him fuck, and it's a weird choice.
I feel like Jim Carrey is like, I just need to let you everybody know, I may be weird
or whatever.
I'm goofy, I do funny voices.
But I still fuck.
But I get it done.
Yeah.
Just because I'm wearing the mask, don't worry, I fuck.
There is something, and I have to do a deeper research on this, but every time I see him
in a movie, I'm like, it comes out of nowhere that people are like, I want to fuck you.
That's never, and we've been watching a lot of Adam Sandler movies because our kids have
been really enjoying them and it's been great to watch.
Sandler doesn't carry himself like that, Bill Murray doesn't carry himself like that, but
Steve Martin doesn't.
He's like, I fuck.
You're right.
You're right.
It's hard in a way because with Ace Ventura, it's such a funny movie and our kids love
it, but we do have to constantly run in and fast forward, Jim Carrey fucking.
I mean, there's a lot of things in there around sex that is a little messy.
I mean, it takes, it's all new meaning for take you to the pound.
By the way, the opening scene of fucking Ace Ventura, he has this like, he steals a dog,
right?
The reward for stealing a dog is a blow job, but the woman's like, I got to blow you.
That's the opening.
That's like the cold open.
I'm going to be honest.
I don't think I've watched Ace Ventura for...
It's quite funny.
You know, he's so great in it.
I mean, he's very good in it.
Yeah.
Probably 20 years.
I'll tell you this much.
The rumor I heard about Ace Ventura was that Jim Carrey couldn't get a movie, was trying
to get a movie together, couldn't get one and gets Ace Ventura and is like, this script
is terrible, but I'm going to make sure it's going to be great and every day would stay
up until like two or three in the morning writing the pages for the next day to make
sure it was great and really imbue this character and make it awesome.
And I feel like he needs a little bit more of this energy in movie 23 to make it make
sense.
I feel like no one was looking at the next day's pages or they were and they weren't
looking at what they already shot.
I don't know.
Jim Carrey did fire his agent at the test screening of this movie, at the screening.
Whoa.
Which is also like, fuck you because you clearly wanted to do this.
You can't fire in it.
It's not like you, it's not like, all right, paint my house, I'll come home and see what
it is.
Like you are, you're an accomplice.
Like you were on set, you saw it with, you got that bad back tattoo, you picked up the
saxophone, you knew what you were doing.
I mean, now that I understand he was obsessed with the number 23 and all this, this has
got to be a passion project.
This is his toy.
This is friend, yes.
His friend, Fernley Phillips, who is the writer of this, his friend, yes, Fernley.
Did anyone else notice that when he wrote a note to Agatha, when he was leaving to go
dig out the skeleton at the park, which also had a name that, you know, rhymed together?
Did anyone else know, notice that the note he left for Agatha, that he put on the refrigerator
and put a magnet on it for her to see, his handwriting was so flowery and flourished.
I don't know if we have a screen grab of it, but it was the most kind of feminine swirly.
Don't you, I always assume that is a props department person, wasn't it?
That wasn't percent.
But it was just so hilarious.
It's hilariously not him.
Yes.
Because it should look like the chaotic scrolls that he's been doing on his arms, on the
walls, on the, on everyone's hands.
This was cursive, like pure cursive.
I will say the interesting thing about Fernley Phillips, the writer of this, is he's only,
he's only credited with the number 23.
It's gotta be a pseudonym.
That's gotta be a pseudonym.
Jim Carrey wrote this, right?
But like he never, but he never wrote any, like, it's not even like, oh, like I've never
seen an IMDB page.
It's one, it's one credit.
That's god.
There's something.
I would argue that Jim Carrey wrote this movie.
That's what I just said.
Yeah.
I feel like Jim Carrey wrote this and under a pseudonym and Fernley Phillips is like his
Tony Clifton.
Yeah.
Fernley Phillips, IMDB.
I'm, I'm like, I'm just, I, I, I, what are we doing?
We can't be going down the rabbit hole.
We're doing it.
We're doing the number 23.
I know.
We're, we're stuck in a conspiracy.
That's what I was saying.
Like they did this to us.
Yeah.
The number 23 is out for us.
I'm dead serious.
Guys.
Fernley, Fernley Phillips is not.
You guys are both clickety clackety.
Yeah.
I am.
Going through like a conspiracy theory.
Oh guys.
Okay.
So I just, I just found, okay.
I just found the New York Times, Molly and I are finding at the same time.
Okay.
So, okay.
In February, this is their wedding announcement.
In February, 2002, Fernley Phillips was an undiscovered Hollywood screenwriter with
a month to go before his money would run out and he'd have to go home to England.
He was so low on cash that he would wait until McDonald's offered hamburgers for 29 cents
and buy five to save money for the coming week.
Alyssa Ferguson was an associate producer working for Bo Flynn, reading 30 to 50 scripts
a week when Phillips screenplay the number 23 landed on our desk.
It was love at first sight.
I thought this was probably the best script I'd seen in my entire life.
And that's how they met.
She read this script.
And, and, and that's how they, like this movie united them over the movie 23.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it looks like he's written other things too.
Okay.
It does look like he's written other things.
I don't know.
Jason, I haven't seen that.
No, Jason, I haven't seen that.
Sorry.
I mean, I'm saying he's, I'm, I'm saying he is credited as having written features
for Paramount Warner Brothers, Universal Fox, and now these may not have been produced,
but there are plenty of people who have successful, successful careers in which, in which they
get paid to a lot of money to write scripts that then eventually do not get made.
I love that the, like he found the love of his life from writing the movie, the number
23.
Like this is like, it would be, it would be very different story.
Uh, oh, he teaches a screenwriting class or we're going deep.
He teaches a, uh, he teaches a screenwriting class.
So he, all right.
So he's a real person.
We apologize for suggesting that this was, that he was a pseudonym.
Yes.
And now we're going to sign up for his class.
It's very interesting to see all of the other celebrities that were at the premiere of the
number 23.
Oh, wow.
Should this be a segment?
Yes.
Who came out?
We've never done.
Well, I have a question about this.
I'll tell you, um, I'll tell you who is there, Stacy Kiebler, Rosario Dawson, came out to
support, which was always nice to see.
Uh, I want to ask this question.
Can I quickly say, what is your, what is your take on this?
Do you do either of you show up to a movie that you have no involvement in and let's
bar a very close friends, something, but like, this is like, Oh, hey, uh, you know, this
is a movie premiere and take away COVID and everything like that.
Like, do you show up if you're not involved in it at all?
Now, just to clarify, you mean like walk the carpet and be photographed, right?
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
You're not saying, do you go to the movie?
Oh, no, no, no, yeah.
You go to the premiere and do you get photographed for the, for a movie you were not in?
Because there are certain friends I know that like will say, Oh, I got, I got a, I'm going
to go to this premiere tonight.
Oh, did you have anything to do with it?
No, no, no, I'm just going to go walk the carpet.
Yeah.
I don't.
Okay.
And I don't, I mean, like you said, though, unless I'm supporting a friend, right?
Like if, if you had a movie that was going and you invited me to come, even if I wasn't
in it, I certainly would come and support your film or whatever.
But no, I wouldn't go to, now let me be clear.
If they said come to the premiere of fast 10, fast and furious 10, I would go and, and
if they said, do you want to walk the red carpet?
I would be like, absolutely.
I'm a hundred percent.
I mean, that's different because we are involved in that one.
That's what I've done.
No, but, but no, no, I wouldn't randomly go to some random premiere.
Yeah.
I would definitely go for a friend, obviously, but I wouldn't go either unless it was a fast
movie or it was a movie that I felt like super attached to.
Right.
So this, I'm just saying, so these people who are showing up, they're coming because
either they're part of, you know, maybe they're part of this, maybe they're, they're 23 conspiracy
theories.
Maybe, I don't know.
I don't want to lie.
So part of me wonders though, if some of these actresses might have been in a cut of the
movie and because I know I have a number of friends who did not find out they were cut
out of the movie until the premiere.
Whoa.
Oh yeah.
So it's also possible they thought they were in it.
Not the movie.
Not the movie.
My, my favorite.
My favorite thing was.
Gene Applegate was there too.
I, I showed up.
I was in that Larry David movie.
Clear history.
The one, the clear history.
And I, I went, I was excited.
I knew I was in it.
I shot with Larry for like a day.
I went with you.
I'll never forget.
He was pretty much the first person to arrive.
He was the first person to arrive.
From here for his own movie.
And then they, they, they displayed the red carpet on the, on the screen.
So like as you were sitting in your seat, you could see people walking around.
You couldn't hear it, but you could see it.
And Larry got up to take people off the red carpet so the movie would start on time, which
was one of the best movies I've ever seen for the lead.
Amazing.
And when I walked in to that movie, I bumped into him in the lobby and said, Oh no.
Oh no.
We, we cut that, we cut that seat.
We cut it way, way, way down.
Oh no.
It was, it was such a funny moment of him realizing it.
And then it does, it does sting a little bit when you, you know, yeah, but it's, you know,
but it was nice.
I would think especially to find out at the premiere.
Yes.
You've gotten dressed up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
So anyway, down that rabbit hole, I will say this, what is Jim Carrey as a private investigator
if he's meeting with suicidal people because he's not a cop.
He's a PI.
Right?
Did he start as a cop and get like disgraced?
Was he, wasn't there a thing where they were like, you're not a detective anymore or something
like that?
Or was that one of the way he goes, dude, they take away your gun.
And he's like, yeah, but hold on, but hold on.
But when he first meets with that woman, she's kind of hanging like she hung herself.
This movie's representation of suicide and, and mental illness, frankly, is deeply troubling
and problematic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, like across the board, everything from the, from the hospital to the whatever
is going on with him, with everybody, everybody, the treatment of mental illness in this movie
is absolute, you know, it was frankly nuts.
Well, maybe, maybe because they're all, you know, they're all obsessed with number 23.
So they're not, you know, they can't be doing their job.
But that, but that idea that he's like meeting with her, like he's meeting with a woman before
she commits suicide to talk to her about why she, I mean, this is where the movie really
like, I don't understand what the fuck is going on.
I couldn't follow that.
I couldn't follow that.
And I guess it makes sense that it's written by somebody who is having a mental breakdown
as well because it is, it is confused.
I mean, it's confusing.
It's confusing.
Oh yeah.
And the other thing is none of the, because we spent so much time inside the story, inside
the book.
Yes.
Where Jim Carrey is portraying Detective Fingerling, again, I can't state it enough.
His name is Fingerling.
And we spent so much time in that story that, and it features Jim Carrey narrating voiceover
for the movie hard boiled kind of again, like, like Raymond Chandler style noir, hard boiled
detective stuff.
And it's nonsense, none of the story of the book, the Detective Fingerling story doesn't
make any sense.
No, he's not, he's not on the case.
He's just jumping around fucking people, holding his sacks.
This is Chekhov's sacks.
He's holding it, but he never plays it.
By the way, I will say this.
I wrote it.
Well, I jumped up in the middle of watching this movie last night, like I had figured
it out.
It's every now and then, every now and then, there'll be a moment.
Like I figured out the sixth sense before the reveal, and I was like, so proud.
I was like, ah, I did it.
I saw that.
And I was able to enjoy the movie, like for like the next 10 minutes, like seeing what
I knew.
I jumped up the same way last night, and I was like, he's got rabies.
That's what I thought the entire movie was like, I love that.
I love that from the initial dog bite.
Yes.
He got rabies.
And he's gone crazy.
He didn't treat it.
He didn't take it seriously.
And then they never even discussed that.
That was it.
But I really was like...
That would have been incredible, because you know, rabies, once it takes over, it will,
it just, you're done.
It's over.
And that's what I thought would have been interesting.
I was like, oh, this is like, but this whole idea of this larger murder plot, and then it's
also like, you're doing something really weird, which is like, you're telling three stories.
You're telling the story of the dog catcher who has amnesia, who killed this girl that
he loved.
But then that's also being personified in another book, because he's also the suicide
blonde.
She jumps out the window, but he actually jumped out the window, because he was feeling that.
So like the movie opens with the end.
And then when you try to connect the pieces, it doesn't even make sense, nor do they even
do like that fight club thing of like, oh, you see what you were missing.
Yeah, that's what they never filled in the blanks for you.
They just, you know, they just give you a couple of reveals that are just not satisfied.
You know, like the other thing that's really unsatisfying is just the end, the end of the
movie.
Like when he, it should feel incredible when he gets to that room and is ripping the wallpaper
off to discover that chapter 23 of the book is on the walls of the hotel.
That should be a fucking awesome reveal where you're like, whoa, the missing chapter.
And you're like, wait, what?
What is go?
What?
What?
What?
What is this also?
They're so little.
They're so little.
The movie is full of truly insane moments that get no reaction from people.
And Bud Court slices his own neck open with a box cutter in the mailbox store.
Nobody yells.
Nobody screams.
Do you mean the mailbox facility as Virginia Madsen refers to it?
I'm sorry.
DMF, the mailbox.
I love Virginia Madsen.
By the way, I also like love Virginia Madsen.
I'm obsessed.
I love her too.
It made me think of like, where is she?
And why don't I see more of her?
Like she was terrific in this.
Virginia Madsen and Logan Lerman, both great actors, and I will say even Jim Carrey in this,
they're all like selling it.
Like, except for Jim Carrey's voiceover, but Virginia Madsen, I'm like, oh, you're, you're,
but you're like, you're, you have to do the hardest thing, which is like, you come home,
your husband's written all over the walls and you're like, hey, all right, what's on
your mind, honey?
Like, I agree.
I agree.
I feel like Virginia Madsen and Logan Lerman, and to a lesser degree, Danny Houston, but
really Virginia Madsen and Logan Lerman are doing an incredible, are doing Yeoman's work
trying to ground this movie into like reality by being like, okay, Virginia Madsen was married
to, uh, to Danny Houston.
What?
Oh, I didn't know that.
From 1989 to 1992.
I like that you almost just said that she was married to Logan Lerman.
Wow.
So they were.
Oh, that's interesting.
Okay.
Not married when they were in this movie together.
No.
But I just, yeah.
When were they married?
From 1989 to then 1992, a short lived one.
Oh, interesting.
So this was a reunion of sorts.
Yeah.
I don't think I knew she was married to Antonio Sabato, Jr.
Oh, wow.
I didn't know that.
Or had a child with him.
Wow.
Do you know what I mean?
We're getting into it, guys.
We're deep in Madsen.
She was great.
She was great in this.
Oh, it's great.
And because there was also a period where, and I don't know what you guys felt like, there
was also a period where I was like, oh, she did.
Yes.
Absolutely.
And I'm on board for that version of it where she is, her past is coming back to, and because
of this book or someone is taunting her because she is the first person who finds the book.
So I was like, oh, is this somehow her perpetuating or putting this thing in motion?
Can I just quickly pitch out what I think this story is and tell me if I'm right or
wrong?
Jim Carrey's dad has been haunted by the number 23.
Jim Carrey, his father, kills himself.
Jim Carrey then feels like, oh my gosh, my dad had this little curse, but I'm doing okay.
I'm in love with a girl.
Everything is going great.
Catches his girlfriend cheating on him.
And then the number 23, that's the number 23 is kind of infecting him at that point.
He kills his girlfriend, blames it on someone else, but that forces him to go crazy.
He tries to commit suicide, gets amnesia, goes to this hospital, gets better.
The number 23 is gone, immediately meets Virginia Madsen, they get married, they have
a very happy life besides the fact that he hates dogs and he's slightly racist.
And everything is okay until he finds this book, but we don't know anything, and then
we know what happens there, but we don't know anything about how Virginia Madsen gets corrupted
or why she is the way she is.
Why she wants the walls.
What do you mean?
Why she wants the walls, blood red.
Is she working for the devil when she read the book?
We don't know anything about this character.
I think the movie, I don't think, well, I don't know, Juna, I'd like to hear what you
think, but I don't think the movie thinks Virginia Madsen has been corrupted or is any
sort of.
I think Virginia Madsen, Danny Houston, Robin the son, I think they all exist in the, in
a, they are benign.
I don't think any of them are have malice or malicious intent, and maybe that's why
they cast Danny Houston was to throw you off the scent and be like, you think he's going
to be the bad guy, but he's actually helping, you know, I don't, I genuinely don't know
because I did find it suspect that she was painting the walls red.
I mean, what a color, you know, but also blue, one of the other rooms she was painting blue
during the movie, okay, but she also found the book, well, that's her finding the book
and then, and then her trying to throw him off the scent.
I don't know, there's something there like, but you said that she also, so who hid the
body?
She hid the body.
She did.
She hid the skeleton.
She, she, I think she, and once she, okay, so once bud court slices his neck open in the
mailbox facility and he says to her, go to the Institute, you know, it's, it's you'll
find it, go find it, go to the Institute.
So and she pulls out of his pocket, his ID card for Nathaniel, the Nathaniel Institute,
is that right?
That's correct.
And his name, his name is serious leery, his name, I believe, is Dr. Seriously.
Yes.
I think his name is basically Dr. Seriously.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
So, so, so, but he, and he, he has in his pocket his hospital ID for when, so, and she takes
it and she goes to the Nathaniel Institute, which is covered in like razor wire and has
clearly been shuttered for a decade at least, right?
Yes.
At least.
Why is he still carrying his ID in his pocket?
She walks right in, the light bulb is red, there are lit candles in this abandoned facility.
I couldn't make heads or tails out of any of this.
Why, why are there so many candles around that are lit?
I'm assuming she lit them.
Why is there a red light bulb?
It's fucking crazy, but anyway, she goes, she finds the locker, the foot locker that
has all of her husband's stuff.
She finds the manuscript, she rips the paper off of it, the top secret and finds his name
underneath, right?
Right.
So, this is where she learns everything, then she goes and she realizes he killed whoever
and she goes and takes the skeleton because she doesn't want him to be caught.
Is that what's happening?
I do not know.
I do not know because I'm not sure why she's protecting him, like I don't think he called
the cops, so protecting him from what exactly?
From the cops.
Okay, so at that point she knows, but at that point does she know he killed Laura?
Someone, yes.
She does.
Because she realizes he wrote this story.
Wow, what a wife then, honestly.
Yes, yes, you know.
Relationship goals?
Truly, like I, much respect.
I'm reading through some interviews with the cast and I want to read you this.
I feel like they all drank the Kool-Aid pretty early on because this is kind of interesting.
It's like, Virginia Madsen's like, I love this, the number 23, you know, there's so
many things in case you're a doubter and then Carrie's like, yeah, there was a phenomenon
on set.
You know, if you know that my name and Schumacher's name, you put them together, that's 23 letters.
And then Virginia Madsen goes, yeah, well, Danny Houston and I were married 23 years
ago.
And you know, and so like, they're all like up, they, I think that they've lost the plot
on set a little bit too.
It's like, and I think what they're all saying.
Well, yeah, because that makes no sense because what they can't do is be like, well, yeah,
because Virginia Madsen and Logan Lerman's names together, oh wait, no, those aren't
okay.
No, no, so not those ones.
How about, you know, this is what Joel Schumacher says, he's like, you know, I, he's like,
I want it.
He's like, this is my 20th movie.
I wish it was 23.
I couldn't, and then, and then they, they do this thing where they say that he, he finds,
he sees the dog again, the dog takes him to the cemetery again, and then the priest comes
out and says that the dog is the guardian of the dead.
Well that said, the devil dog.
Or is it an angel dog?
Is the dog helping solve and bring closure to this restless soul?
It's a good question because why would Laura, why would this dog be a devil dog?
Why would Laura be in hell?
She didn't do anything wrong.
Yeah, Laura needs to be put to rest and is the dog trying to bring closure to her restless
soul?
First of all, all dogs are angel dogs.
All dogs go to heaven.
Okay.
Okay, yes.
All dogs go to heaven.
Sure, sure.
Must love dogs.
Well, can we, can we just say that I will talk about this, and this is a very serious
thing actually.
The dog did not show up to the premiere.
I think that they did have a falling out.
The dog is not like the way he was at an idiot.
Wow.
Wow.
And that is, of course, and we're talking about Ned, who played Butch, and this was
Butch's acting debut.
He was very comfortable with the cast, you know, and even when he was being chased by
Jim Carrey, you know, like, so Ned is, great little work there by Ned.
I don't know, you guys, this doesn't, you know, it just doesn't, no pun intended, add
up.
Oh, yeah.
Remember when he tried to hit the dog too?
Yes.
Yes.
I was so upset.
He literally, and what was that about exactly?
What was that moment about?
Why was he trying to kill the dog?
Because I think the dog represents his, his, if he didn't get bit by the dog, he would
have been on time to his birthday dinner, and he was on time to his birthday dinner.
He would never have looked at the book.
Okay, so all these things might be true, but like, now we have to go kill that dog.
And not only that, but why do we have to bring the family along for it?
Like, he brings his family along for killing dogs, digging up bodies.
Heading into the mailbox facility to watch a man slid his throat.
It feels like they're all with the, with the same level of intent as like, let's go play
Pokemon Go together.
Yeah, let's do some geo catching or whatever.
Yes, some geo cashing by digging up the bones of a woman that I killed 20 years ago.
Like, what is it?
Yeah, like it's, it's team building.
He's a bad dad.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
Well, obviously we have opinions about this movie, and I want to bring you into the world
of the people who love this movie, because now it is time for second opinions.
All right, these are five star reviews called from Amazon.
I might even start taking them from Letterbox as well, because these are pretty great.
This one just starts out, title is solid movie.
Jim Carrey made a good movie, but there is one flaw only.
No reference to Michael Jordan, who is number 23.
So there you go.
But five stars, none the less.
You know what five stars is, two stars and three stars put together.
Oh, you're right.
Wow.
Look at that.
Holy shit.
It's, I know from me, the movies seem to drag a little, but when things, aka the truth,
starts to unfold, then it starts to make sense, and you will come to realize you may not have
been paying attention.
This is a movie you're going to want to watch again, because you need to watch it like the
sixth sense.
I first saw this movie when it came out, and this was only the second time I watched it,
and I couldn't remember how it ended, but I'm the type of person who likes knowing what's
going on.
So like, I like spoilers and it helps me enjoy movies because, you know, if something doesn't
make sense right away, I'll get bored.
But that's just me.
This is a good movie.
And if you're like me, I would say be patient and watch, and it will all make sense.
Five stars, suspense, dot, dot, dot, pay attention.
Guys, I just realized something that's really fucking me up.
I watched this movie on Amazon Prime, and 23 is a prime number.
All right, I have two quick ones here.
This is from Dominic Calandre.
My name is Dominic Joseph Calandre.
If you count the spaces as characters, there are 23 characters in my name.
I was born on 12, 1793.
It adds up to 23.
Or if you prefer 12 plus 17 plus minus nine plus three is equal to 23.
I checked the time right after the character turns to look at the clock.
He said 11, 12.
Mine said 9, 23.
I checked again later in the movie at a random time.
What time is it?
9.59.
Add it up.
I had a friend who was born on March 23rd.
We have 23 mutual Facebook friends.
She said you couldn't remember a large amount of her childhood.
I never found out why exactly coincidences.
But Jesus, that's weird.
Stay safe.
Five stars.
Am I top secret?
Stay safe.
Am I top secret?
Top secret and serious leery.
Dr. Serious leery and top secret.
This is some next level nonsense.
This is absurd.
I feel like this movie is a prank.
That's what I'm saying.
It plays at parts like it is a prank.
I feel utterly ill.
Oh, my God.
I really don't feel well.
I really don't.
Top secret.
Top secret is some next level stuff.
Because you also feel like, but this is also, we have to just briefly just mention like
Joel Schumacher.
I feel like he's like, yeah, top secret.
I like it.
Like, like I feel like it's like, oh yeah, like, you know, he's so crazy because it's
like, that's not a name.
Topsy is topsy.
Like top secret.
What are you talking about?
I just have it.
I just have it.
Of course it is.
It's top secret.
You know my, you know my very serious girlfriend, top secret, right?
Are they written by anonymous?
Um, oh my gosh.
The tagline for this movie, the truth will find you.
First it takes hold of your mind.
Another one first takes hold of your mind, then it takes hold of your life.
Or finally the other tagline, a number is just a number or is it?
What's amazing is that Budcourt, Dr. Sirius Leary, also still crazy.
He having the manuscript that says by Jim Carrey's character name.
I can't remember what it is.
He puts topsecrets over it.
So he invents the name topsecrets.
So he must, I mean, like, he's like, well, the name should be top secret, but I can't
just say top secret.
Top secret.
Oh god.
Yeah, it's okay.
That, I want to know what that journey is.
I mean, it feels like a dumb person trying to be clever, and I say that in the nicest
way, it's like top secret, because it's also like, it's not a top secret that he's like,
topsecrets is not that, like what it should be is like an integrate.
Did any of us think of it?
We saw the name and heard the name over and over again, and it wasn't until that prison
scene where, where the guy goes, yeah, the author top secret, that I was like, oh no.
I know.
I mean, because my thought would be the better take on it would be that it's his name, right?
Like Walter Sparrow and you, you anagram that are like, you know, or sparrows nest or sparrows
brain, you know, some version of his name, like I am Walter Sparrow, you know, but, but
you know, it's like, I don't even know how you would be, but it's like, it's not top
secret.
It's not top secret.
Oh, anyway, folks, this is, this is a, this is a fun one.
I mean, wow.
And it represents to me, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because it's unfinished because you, you didn't get closure.
No.
Oh my God.
All right.
Well, at that point, thanks a lot, Paul.
Sorry guys.
Thank you, April.
Anyone want to, want to plug anything that they got?
I will plug and it's, this is not a plug, but it is just a full throated, full hearted
recommendation.
The movie of the year, Paul, you told me about it.
I've watched it.
It's called Plain.
And it is incredible.
June and I saw that in the theater.
It was so fun.
Incredible stuff.
There's part of me that's like, should we do that on this show?
Only because I would love to just talk about it.
And maybe we should.
Let's revel.
Let's revel.
Let's love it.
It's back.
It's on VOD.
And oh my gosh.
And I, and again, it's just a giant shout out to Gerard Butler for giving us that amazing
geostorm.
You can see it on all of our socials.
I love that he did that during the Plain premiere.
But yeah, if you are interested in Plain, let us know on the discord or on social and
maybe we should just tackle it.
I know that.
It's fantastic.
I loved it.
I was having a blast.
It was so fun.
It's like a solid movie.
Yeah.
Oh, it's what it's terrific.
I loved every goddamn minute of it.
Please put me in Plain too.
Oh my gosh.
We just want to be in Plains.
Well, by the way, I want to go.
I want to go this way.
Well, we can get into a bigger, but I think there needs to be a prequel or sequel with
Skarsgard.
I want to see Mike Coulter do his incredible.
That's another movie, his foreign legion service, or I would be into what happens next for him
as well.
Wherever he goes next.
Amen.
Got it.
I thought he was fantastic as well.
Absolutely.
What else you up to, Jason?
I want to.
Oh, you know what?
I want to plug.
I did two recent appearances on some other terrific podcasts that I want to get out there.
I was a guest on the Fantastic Earwolf podcast TV, I say, with Ashley Ray, which is a fantastic
show.
I did a great year.
If you like the recommendation episodes that Paul and I do on The Last Looks, this was
a year-end recommendation list with me and Ashley Ray.
It's a fantastic show.
And then I just did an episode of our friend, Kulap Ilisak, has a wonderful, and Tsuchin
Park have a wonderful podcast called Add to Cart.
And I just did a whole episode that is, no joke, everybody, a secret pilot for Zooks
Cubes.
By the way, first of all, I'm upset that you did Zooks Cubes off of the How Did This Get
made mainframe.
I'm so sorry.
We got it.
I mean, let's be honest.
It's not really Zooks Cubes.
It's Add to Cart.
But it just was fun.
You gave me a cube for my birthday.
I'm so excited about it, but it opened my mind to what a cube is.
Maybe in The Last Looks, we should talk about it a little bit, because I need to understand...
Did you notice that it stands flat when you open it?
Yes.
And I'm like, this is not how I...
Because what my cubes have been are simply just...
By the way, if you're not hearing June's voice, she's not just sitting here quietly.
She had to go.
They're just like little formless bags.
That's the cubes I've been working on.
What I gave you is more of something to carry like, you know, it's got a little bit of padding
and it's got a little bit of organization.
So that is more for like, I have one of those that I try when I travel with like an Apple
TV and some cords and a camera.
And it's like, because it has a little bit of padding, I put like electronics in that
cube.
There is a...
I have a little...
We will get into it.
I want to hear...
I'm going to listen into Add to Cart.
Add to Cart is a great show.
It's super fun.
Add to Cart is a blast.
And I just... they ask people to bring products or things that they like or enjoy and want
to talk about.
And so I just took the opportunity to talk about backpacks and packing cubes and my favorite
card game, Monopoly Deal, which I also gave you, which is fantastic.
Yeah, which was amazing.
And I got to play that with my kids.
I will tell you that the thing that you've gotten our family hooked on is Flushing Frenzy,
which is basically a toilet roulette.
You roll a dice, you crank a toilet, and then you plunge it.
And then if you lose by when the poop shoots out, and then literally a poop with the eyes,
it's the best game.
It is a game that the game item is a toilet that you plunge and a poop shoots out the
top and whoever catches the poop gets the...
Yeah.
Come on.
That's a fucking great game.
It's a great game.
Now, I will also just talk about a podcast.
I was on, and I wanted to ask you a question about it.
So I did Dax Shepard's podcast.
Sure.
Armchair, expert.
They love you.
Love you.
Oh, yeah?
He and Monica?
Yes.
They talk so highly of you.
I've never been reached out to more in my life about being on a podcast than I was after
that show.
Did you find that too?
Yes, absolutely.
My cousins reached out to me, people who I don't think have ever listened to any other
podcast listen to that podcast.
I think that we do the show for such a long time that no one tells us, like, hey, I heard
your show or whatever.
So it's nice when you hear feedback that it doesn't just go into the ether.
All right.
So that is it.
Jason, I think I'm going to take your challenge, and we're going to make Bud Court's crazy
room, or maybe should it be Dr. Sirius?
Dr. Sirius Leary?
Dr. Sirius Leary's crazy room, which maybe make it like a bar shirt.
It almost looks like an advertising for a bar or something like that.
Oh, like it's a logo?
Like it's a logo?
Yeah.
Maybe that's the way to go.
So check out T-Public there.
And people, make sure you listen to Last Looks, because we've got some big surprises coming
up.
We always have good special guests.
Jason and I are breaking down a lot of stuff.
We're getting into cubes.
We're going to get into podcasts, everything there, and a big thank you to our entire team.
I'm talking about the amazing, producerial work of Scott Sonny, Molly Reynolds, and our
movie-picking producer, Avel Halley, our engineer, Alex Gonzalez, and our publisher, July Diaz.
People, they make the trains run, and we love them.
So we will see you next week for Last Looks, and until then, bye for now.