The Reel Rejects - THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. (2015) MOVIE REVIEW! FIRST TIME WATCHING!
Episode Date: January 29, 2024UNDERRATED?! The Man from UNCLE Full Movie Reaction Watch Along: https://www.patreon.com/thereelrejects HELLO FRESH: Visit https://hellofresh.com/rejectsfree & use CODE rejectsfree for FREE Breakfas...t for life! ROCKET MONEY: Save Money & Cancel Unwanted Subscriptions By Going To https://rocketmoney.com/rejects With Argylle Review out now Greg Alba & Andrew Gordon give their Reaction, Commentary, Breakdown, Ending Explained, and Spoiler Review for the film adaptation of the classic TV Series directed by Guy Ritchie (Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, Snatch, Sherlock Holmes, Aladdin), and starring Henry Cavill (Man of Steel, Zack Snyder's Justice League, The Witcher), Alicia Vikander (Ex Machina, Tomb Raider), Hugh Grant (Notting HIll, Wonka, Paddington 2), Jared Harris (Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows, Morbius), Elizabeth Debicki (Tenet, The Great Gatsby), Armie Hammer (The Lone Ranger, Call Me By Your Name), and more! Based on the Classic Espionage Spy series starring the late, great David McCallum! Greg & Andrew react to all the best scenes & most exciting moments including Chance, The Glitch Scene, They Were Waiting for Me, It Doesn't Have to Match, & beyond!! #TheManFromUNCLE #ManFromUNCLE #HenryCavill #GuyRitchie #MovieReaction #FirstTimeWatching #firsttimewatchingmoviereaction Support The Channel By Getting Some REEL REJECTS Aparrel! https://www.rejectnationshop.com/ Music Used In Manscaped Ad: Hat the Jazz by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ POWERED BY @GFUEL Visit https://gfuel.ly/3wD5Ygo and use code REJECTNATION for 20% off select tubs!! Head Editor: https://www.instagram.com/praperhq/?hl=en Co-Editor: Greg Alba Music In Video: Airport Lounge - Disco Ultralounge by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Ask Us A QUESTION On CAMEO: https://www.cameo.com/thereelrejects Follow TheReelRejects On FACEBOOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM: FB: https://www.facebook.com/TheReelRejects/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/reelrejects/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thereelrejects Follow GREG On INSTAGRAM & TWITTER: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/thegregalba/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thegregalba Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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this week we are partnered with hello fresh and rocking money let's do it
we just watched the man from uncle if you're listening to us on apple and spotify please
go ahead right of this video uh and yo okay so that would be great with Andrew and myself
we saw wrath of methods to recap our guy richie movies lockstock snatch you saw rock and
roller yes um have you seen aladdin uh i saw the first 15 well i saw latin i enjoyed it uh i've
seen the sherlock homes movies have you i've seen the first one but i don't really remember
to be honest i just remember the soundtrack on zimmer okay so yeah i really don't remember it at
all and then we saw wrath of man so there's a big gap here of movies of guy richie films that we
haven't seen so we saw wrath the man really enjoyed it tonally exact same thing as man from uncle
Oh, exactly the movie.
Totally.
Wimcical nature, crazy production design.
I almost thought I was watching the same film.
I was like, this guy does not have variety.
This guy, Richie, whatsoever.
Not at all.
No, a very different experience.
I know this one came out first.
It was 2015, just a couple of years after Manus Steel.
And didn't really know anything about her.
I was a spy movie, but I remember seeing a trailer,
but I couldn't tell you anything from the trailer that I recalled.
And I want to,
to see just because people I'd always recommend in the movie as like a fun spy caper and I got
to agree. I had a, I don't, I think there's some, some flaws in it that I would like to, you know,
dive into, but I don't feel like I would spend too much time on it because what I think is the
intention of this film is that it wants to, you know, have a panache in a style of zest when it comes
to the flavor of the, you know, spy aesthetic, the spy genre films and the shows from back then
haven't seen man from uncle but it seemed to me at least the impression i got is like
it seems like it's based on a show is that uh sure the show i'm sure it's honoring in a lot of ways
but it seems to go further beyond that and just honor a whole genre in and of itself of a
specific type of time period and i think that you know guy richie one of things about his movies
is guy rich he's often one of the stars of his own movies you know what i mean and i feel like
that personality shines through and through, I'm preserving, I'm holding off on talking about
someone just so I can let you take the lead on that, Andrew. So yeah, I feel like that when it
comes to this film, like the editing, again, is very solid and his use of knowing how to work
with his sound designer, of when to go in and out of sound with soundtracks. I feel like he
creates such a good sensory experience, and I feel like this era was really brought to life
in a way that felt like appropriately modern
while still hearkening back
in a way that didn't feel like it was
I don't know
you know
biting off more than I could chew
in a way that seemed like cheesy
you know like I get what you're doing
it still felt like lived in
but still felt modern and period piece
simultaneously I thought to really solid job at that
with action scenes that I was
dazzled by
Like that final one in the chase.
The chase scene was brilliant when they're going through the island
and getting you to understand like the distance, the scope,
and make it like this craziness,
but also being able to appreciate when it was one take
or you could really feel the stuntman behind it and the performers.
Like it wouldn't get lost in the edit.
I feel like sometimes, you know,
you watch like the behind the scenes of certain action scenes
and you're like, well, it's hard to appreciate it when I see the final product
just because of how it's actually assembled and cut together.
But here, like, yeah, it's crazy, but I could keep up with it all.
And I'm able to still, it's like George Miller-esque.
And, yeah, I really thought that was great.
I have held off on talking about the man of the hour, Henry Cavill, just for you.
I was going to say, I thought the pest character by far was Uncle Rudy.
I love how they went into his backstory.
You got to see how white is such a torture.
No, no, I mean, yeah, Henry Cavill, I mean, just the suave, the charm.
I mean, the energy.
he's just he's just so much fun to watch you can tell too he's having a great time while he's doing this too
and i mean i just i know we said it a couple times but just watching this i'm like i really would love
to watch him we could put it closer we're not reacting put it closer that we could hear you clear yeah
i really would look at that volume difference you can hear it right yeah i really would love
to see henry cavil as james wand one day i mean i think you said it best too like he could
encompass, you know, both that Sean Connery and Daniel Craig thing. But also, too, I really loved
the chemistry he had. The three of them was really great, but especially him and Army Hammer
and the way they're able to build, I mean, because it kind of, yeah, it was a spy film, but also, like,
turned into a, turned into a buddy, I thought you were flexing it, turned into like a little bit
of a buddy cop type film, too. And, you know, they completely are, you know, totally different
sides of the same coin type of thing. But, you know, they come to an understanding and
they, uh, I just, I appreciated the, the contrast. They are completely opposites of each other. And,
you know, the way they, you know, build a rapport with each other. I just, I love their chemistry and their
interactions were so good. And, you know, by the end of the film, like, you could see that they
have a full understanding of each other. And I, I really, even though it was kind of telegraphed
and predictable a little bit in terms of the, the, the watch thing, it didn't bother me in any way. Uh,
I thought that was a beautiful moment in the film. And Army Hammer just, I know we had all the
jokes, the reaction with, you know, what's going on and what happened in his personal
life. But I actually did like his performance in it. And just, again, so polar opposite,
which I think was necessary with this because, you know, there was a certain level of charm that
Henry Cavill, I think it was appropriate to do the exact opposite with Army Hambur. And I think
that's what works well. I mean, it's kind of like the lethal weapon effect. Like, Riggs and Mertar are so
different. That's why they're so perfect with each other. And I felt the same way while watching
this. And yeah, and like you said, too, the sound design, so freaking good in this movie. I mean,
even at the beginning right away, just starting us off with the silencer sound. I mean, I mean,
just feeling that right away. And also, too, I love the camera work as well in this too. You had those
reveal shots where starting off in the mechanic shop, where they're down below. And then when he was
opening the safe this guy richie has such a specific style and i just you can always feel like he's
like he said he's his own character uh in his own films and i just so appreciate that but
let's the audience play be a character with with with this at least maybe he's always done that
since snatch and longstock maybe i just didn't notice back then even though i love those movies
um but especially with watching wrath the man and this like he he chooses his moment he knows how
play with perspective a lot yeah especially a movie such as this where you deal with perspective
in time and you go backwards a little bit
so that way you could see what really went down
or how certain reveals
are happening and
you've got many different perspectives here
and sometimes he just gives you the audience
perspective in a very literal
sense where you get moments such
as the windows shut
you can't hear what they're saying even though
you're following the characters with their subtitles happening
and the window goes down so then you can hear them
and then knowing when to have only
music playing and then when to snap
the audience back into it in the same
shot where they bring the music back. A lot of directors will rely on like do a punch in here,
do a zoom, do a cut. And he doesn't do that. He'll just rely on the sound whilst being in the
exact same shot or the exact same moving shot, which I think is very unique to Guy Ritchie.
And back to an earlier point that you were making about the two of them together, it is a very
interesting contrast because there's buddy cop or buddy spy, you know, it's usually, you
usually it's usually the way they usually do that is one's the straight man and one's like a little bit of a wild character a little goofier you know that's the generic way of doing it and like I said don't know the show so I don't know how you know how accurate they are to the characters in the show it's based on a show right I believe that's right but what I really liked about is they did such a good job at individually establishing Henry Cavill individually establishing Army Hammer and they're very unique to themselves and
they didn't sacrifice who they were in this for the sake of writing like comedy back and forth
between them or writing banter between them like it's a different kind of dynamic than I'm
used to when associating it with the genre like not one's not goofier necessarily stupider or something
like that you know they each have their own skill set and the respect level they earn for each
other felt like organic and genuine and none of it ever like you always knew who's going
to go that way just because it's a movie
so you knew it would go there
but how they got there
was actually done
in a way that was a little bit more
subtle and a
movie that is also quite
lively and large that
I really appreciated how they did it
because you know Army Hammer's
Russian spy character is
the more emotional one
and one with a lot of pain
and they have these
this this touch where
whenever he's getting enraged like this dramatic operatic music like overrides his system and and you could
feel like the the pathos within this guy whereas Henry Cavill's a little bit more of like your
traditional American spy guy but with a you know with there's still a heart underneath it it's still
a darkness underneath him but not so much of the extent of Army Hammers but they my point is
that when they have them interact with each other they stay true to the character
and they don't just go let's make it a funny movie now let's make it a thing like they still feel
like oh they're very very fleshed out for this world right that they're in and and i and yeah man
i can't praise henry cavill enough in this film he was he he really i heard he was good and
but i didn't know he was going to be like this entertaining yeah really because here's the thing
As good as Army Hammer, I thought was, like my personal point of view, I thought he was really,
I thought he was actually really good in the movie.
I think Alicia Vikander does a really good job, too.
The truth be told, when Henry Cavill is not there, you're thinking about it.
It's just not as entertaining.
Because you can cut to Henry Cavill not with Army, like the movies at its best when all of them are together.
Or at least Henry Cavill and Army Hammer.
however you can cut to Henry Cavill being on his own not with the other two leads and the movie is just as entertaining in those moments like it's it's a testament to the strength of him as a performer in this film and to me it's shit like this that makes you go man you really lost something there with Superman you lost something there with Witcher you really lost like a great performer on your hands because I'm used to Henry Cavill being more like the serious
brooding type like there's a sense of humor that comes through with him as geraldton the witcher
definitely not to this extent he's still like for most part like a serious brooding character
and here he's not serious brooding guy right um yeah but yeah he's like very believable still
like he really is to me I'm like this is a star performance yeah even in the the mechanic shop
and like when he was in the car and like just hearing him just out again the humor it's like
you even said it you're like this is like the traditional
Clark Kent that we would normally, you know, Kent. It's like a Superman and Bond.
Yeah. Either one, man. Exactly. You know, and speaking about Army Hammer's character, I actually
really liked the emotional arc we went through with the character. You know, again, feeling his pain
throughout, you know, what happened with his father and his mother. And then, again, seeing those
scenes of rage with him. I actually liked that. I thought that was really organically done.
And then by the end, again, very well earned. I also thought this film did a good job, too.
It's, again, a stylistic thing that Guy Ritchie does, and again, very well earned in terms of he'll say a couple of lines.
It's like a subversion type of thing where he'll say some lines.
You hear that lines of dialogue.
And then it's revealed later on of either a couple minutes later or 10, 15 minutes later where it's like, oh, this is the rest of the scene.
And it's like, I just love when he does that stuff.
It's just very intelligently done.
Yeah.
And then when it's, and it's edited properly.
And when he inserts it, it's like, oh, okay.
Now I see, because we didn't even know what the plan was when they were going at the end there, when they were trying with tracking the, when they were trying to get, what's her name? Elizabeth Del Becki. De Becki. We were a little confused. And then when the plan was being revealed, like, ah, okay. Because when they were fully, you know, shelling out like exactly what was happening. I just thought he did that a couple times throughout the film. But he did that, I believe, in Wrath of Man. And I'm sure, Snatch and some of the other films that I can't remember the scenes. But.
He has a way of doing that, and I love when he does that.
And it's such a stylistic choice of his.
And I just so appreciate those things.
I mean, it's not very well.
A lot of directors and editors just don't go that route because if you mess that up,
he can really screw up the scenes badly.
So, but he really does it well and he executes it in a way that's methodical and just
well, it's really well done.
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well, thank you. You know, in a lot of ways, I feel like Guy Richie and Christopher Nolan are kind
of cut from the same cloth. Like they're British. They're British and they love to play with time
and they have a unique voice unto their own.
Like, they're very, the emotions you're left with from their films are very different, I would say.
But there are things about them that I find to be, to be quite similar.
It's just what, you know, you associate Nolan Moore with the prestige of it all.
Right.
Not just his movie.
I was talking about, like, him as an art editor, director.
And you associate more Guy Ritchie is like, just entertainment.
You know, but I think they're really.
is a methodical attention and detail and care that is truly laced throughout.
And I don't know when it happened where Guy Ritchie just started getting like kind of
not the greatest, not Hale does like this truly great, because I think he is like a fantastic
director.
He's great.
Sometimes, I think in the first 45 minutes of this movie, I felt like, okay, the first 20, 20 minutes, 20 or so minutes was like really solid.
And then it does get to a point where it gets a little bogged down.
And I felt with some of the more, like, you kind of siphon off, you know,
our three leads from each other, or you just have Army Hammer and a Lucia Vicander,
and you're cutting around to like a lot of exposition about mission stuff that,
ultimately I was starting to think, like, okay, some of these scenes that aren't,
that aren't like action or just meant to be fun or is actually kind of messing with the pacing of the film
and it's not as intriguing or interesting.
it just wasn't and so I was like okay well like the reason because I started having the thought of like the it's not the mission that makes the movie entertaining it's it's the it's the actors together that make they're making the movie entertaining and it was around the time when the mission when everything started actually coalesce and come together in a way where the mission at hand itself was interesting where there's actual stakes involved was after Army hammer and Henry Cavill do that break in together and yes
then when the mission continues
okay now the mission is actually interesting
but it took a while to get there I felt
I felt like okay it's taking a while for
that stuff to I know you gotta do the
setup and everything and I just sort of feel like
the only parts of this movie that I thought
were a little bit
I don't want to say tedious
because tedious is too harsh of a word
just not as engaging and
it felt like it was losing some of its
flair and pacing was
was in that first like
first half of act two I would say
yeah but once
Once we reached that midpoint with them, it was like, okay, this movie's like firing on all cylinders for me.
Yeah, it doesn't take its foot off the pedal.
Yeah, there was like you said, that 15, 20 minutes stretch there.
But after that, yeah, it was just.
But it was also worth it because you needed all that information for later.
I just think maybe the immediate execution of it could have been a little sharper in the way it was done to make it all thoroughly entertained because you always had great actors in there.
Like, Jared Harris, I think is having a ball of a time.
He's really fun.
Yeah.
The voices everyone's doing.
Hugh Grant, another great addition.
Elizabeth DeBickey surprised me as, wow, when she's here in the last half of the film, she is really...
Intimidating.
She's intimidating.
She's scary presence.
A lot of times, a role like that might be given to, like, a guy that making a more of a male character.
And it just feels like a cliche portrayal.
And she brought something very different to it that I thought really elevated.
And she is an interesting character, too, because you can tell how piss she was after Henry Capville was going on about how he killed her husband.
And it's like, and also at the same time, she slept with Henry Cavill.
Which I get, he's a very
suave, good-looking man
and all about his, like, interesting relationship.
I guess when you're that powerful and that ruthless,
you just sleep around with whoever you want.
You know what I think it is when Nolan and Ritchie
is that Nolan usually tells like a unique story still.
And I feel like Guy Ritchie takes,
at least from just these two films,
he takes stories that are a little more predictable
and kind of go by tropes and genre tropes of it.
But then he executes them in a very unique.
way. That's where I think
his specialty is. Like when you're getting the
backstory with the husband torture
he's slipping through the book
and I'm like, that's a really unique way
to instead of like cutting to the footage.
Yeah, for sure. See photographs
telling the tale.
Yeah, with like Uncle Rudy, I thought that was such a
brilliant way of telling the back, his
backstory, even though that's a character like
that we don't really get a shit about. But still
an interesting way to tell the backstory.
And obviously to the ending there
was clearly set up for a sequel. So
As we're filming this, we don't know why there is no sequel.
I'm assuming box office because I feel like, I mean, it got a 7.2 and 9 dB, so I got to assume.
Let's look up some stuff then, my friend.
Okay, the TV series, man, for four years.
I got you for like, I got to get you out of here, Andrew.
I know.
Stop yelling at me.
I'll get you out of here.
Just wait.
I just want to find the facts.
The facts on Imdeba.
Where are the facts on Imdeba?
Do you see them?
I had a little lower.
You know where they're looking?
I do.
Right there.
Oh, my God.
Genius.
Genius.
Oh, no shit.
Henry Cavill.
You called that.
Actually.
You called that.
You said he performed that.
Because at first they didn't show it.
I was like, oh, I couldn't pull it off.
And then they showed the later on.
But then when they showed the white shot, you're like, yep, he performed that.
Holy shit.
That was wild.
They often performed their own stunts.
I mean, with Henry Cavill.
Yeah.
he's going to do that.
Hammer was more enthusiastic about his stunts to the point
the stunt double joke that he hardly had a chance
of do anything.
Yeah, I mean, that's what I mean by those action scenes.
You can actually tell,
oh, that is them doing that.
Yeah, I do remember you calling that out too.
Like, when we were on one of the chase sequences,
like, holy shit, that's Henry Cavill driving right there.
Cavill admit he was relieved to not have a shirtless scene
in this movie after a string of movies
where it had to be in top shape.
He was glad to focus on his performance for once
and not his physique.
It's crazy because he looks great.
I'm sure he was looking at the script.
The shirtless scene.
Okay, I'm signing up for this movie.
No shirt.
David Beckham?
What?
Harmie Hammer was the only one
who watched the Mind Farm Uncle show
for his role.
He was the only member to do so.
That's funny.
Oh, is partially developed by Ian Fleming.
oh okay the bond touch is very real you could feel
Napoleon solo has started as a character
and the novel of Goldfinger
oh interesting cool
okay
the tunnel saying that's cool
all right yeah yeah
briefly some of these are not those interesting
yes sure why not there was
the projectionist at the beginning of the movie that was David Beckham
I guess so how did I not recognize
damn it okay that tells us
Nothing about why there's no sequel.
Hold on a second.
Hold on.
Box office, maybe.
Okay.
Is reportedly in the works?
Oh.
Can you recap?
Oh, my God.
How funny.
January 5th, 2024, just this month.
Oh.
That's kind of funny how that was like, as we're doing.
As we're doing, it's just so recent.
There is movement on it.
Okay.
okay the disappointing box office turns they got mixed reviews that surprises me so it's gained
a following thanks to the streaming okay yeah that sucks about the box office this this deserve better
whatever but the problem has become in the form of like army hammer obviously yeah it's gonna be
public relations uh you're gonna have some problems there i mean here's a thing
i think army hammers are really great in the movie he's great he's great he's great
But I could, the only thing that would really be like, I'm not going to watch it if Henry Cavill is the best part.
Totally, yeah, yeah.
I mean, yeah, we depend on who they get.
I mean, I guess I could see that.
But yeah, totally what you said.
If they didn't have Henry Cavill, I'm not interested.
Well, I had a blast with this one, Andrew.
I hope you guys had fun with it, too.
Do you want the man from Uncle's sequel?
Will you still watch it even Army Hammer's on?
And leave your thoughts down below.
Be sure to subscribe, leave a like.
I don't know which guy richie
I'm probably the gentleman
I would love to see the gentleman
I've heard such good things about that movie
and I've never seen a trailer
I don't know anything about it
so I'm like all right
if people are hyping the shit of out of that movie
gotta keep that guy Ritchie experience going
all right talk of you guys soon
David Gandy
my man
I don't know what more there is to say to you David
except we haven't heard from you in a while
I know are you okay
Did you get kidnapped?
It's going on a very different bath.
I was more like,
you don't give a shit about us anymore, you asshole.
Yeah, have you become a jerk?
That's the worst fate of all.
Your subconscious instincts are very different than mine.
You go, are you okay?
Are you concerned?
I go, wow, the guy must be a dick.
What an ass.
What a real jerk.
This guy must be to neglect us who have done so much for your life.
Yeah, we've definitely done more for you.
Than you've ever.
Name one thing you've done for us.
thing you've done for us out of the
selflessness and kindness of your own heart
David. You didn't drive down forever
just to see us live one day. You haven't given us
countless gifts and money
on top of that. And, like, dined
with us, you know, broken bread
with us, literally and figuratively.
We have slightly entertained
you and help you pass some time.
What greater gift is that?
What greater gift than distraction?
My buddy, I don't know where you've been.
I don't know why we haven't heard from you.
I know we've been a lot busier since then.
I feel like since the Patreon's got it bigger and the channel's gone bigger,
some of our OGs like yourself just don't really like to chime in with us as much anymore,
which I'm very grateful for us because I don't got the time to talk to you anymore.
I love the time to engage with you to really focus on your needs.
Dude, you've been an absolute blessing in our lives, and I miss you, man.
And if you ever down here in our neck of the woods again,
because Lord knows, I'm never making it to Arizona.
What the hell's there to do?
Stare to cactus?
boring as shit
that's what everyone's out there doing
what david's out there doing right now
he's photographing just cactus after cactus
boring as shit standing that a disgusting
heat god your life must be
miserable now yeah david what are you
doing that all that happens in Arizona
are you
isn't someone here listening from Arizona
you just hate your life
I have at least a couple other
Arizonians it can't just be David
although David is our favorite on record
favorite Arizona right now David is just
standing next
so his AC looking at us on his phone.
Yeah.
How boring.
And responding to a video that won't respond back in real time.
Yeah, stop, man.
Stop it.
Anyway, keep you in our prayers to the same God we definitely believe in.
Yeah.
I hope that everything's all right in your neck of the woods.
Yeah.
Keep on playing tunes.
I think of you every time I hear a guitar.
Or when I see a cactus.
Or when I see a cactus.
Around here, it happens more than you think.
My flashback timeline plays in the near order of the times we've met and talked to, like a movie day.
Oh, yeah.
I see a cactus, and I go right back to the first memory of time.
It's a clip medley.
Stuck in time.
Anyway, miss you, buddy.
Hope you're doing well.