First Wives Club
No More Late FeesMay 14, 2024x
6
01:44:2895.65 MB

First Wives Club

This week on the No More Late Fees podcast, we're serving up a side of sass with a special dose of Mom Power! Joining us for a hilarious deep dive into the iconic divorce comedy, The First Wives Club, are our amazing moms, Terri and Christine! Get ready for some multi-generational girl talk as we discuss the film's themes of female empowerment, second chances, and the enduring power of friendship. Tune in for laughs, life lessons, and maybe even a few dance moves inspired by that unforgettable Leslie Gore song! ·Season 4 Episode 6· — No More Late Fees www.nomorelatefeespodcast.com 909-601-NMLF (6653) — CONQUERing ⁠myconquering.com⁠ Coupon: JACKIE10 — Follow us on Social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/NoMoreLateFees TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nomorelatefees Twitter: https://twitter.com/NoMoreLateFees Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nomorelatefees — Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWabO-p-_ndzepHNBjLwGJA Listen to the No More Late Fees Podcast: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/no-more-late-fees/id1562176878 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/24as8W3RXuntZEEmp1HJ9q --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nomorelatefees/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nomorelatefees/support

[00:00:00] This week, we're dishing all the dirt on the ultimate breakup movie, The First Wives Club,

[00:00:06] and asking if there's anything more satisfying than watching these women get their revenge.

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[00:00:51] Welcome to the No More Late Fees podcast.

[00:00:53] I'm Danielle.

[00:00:54] And I'm Jackie.

[00:00:55] And we're just two best friends and ex-Blockbuster employees rewatching some of the best and

[00:00:59] worst movies from the late 90s and early 2000s.

[00:01:03] This week, we are talking about the 1996 comedy, The First Wives Club.

[00:01:08] But before we dive in, let's get into some housekeeping.

[00:01:15] If you love the podcast and you want to support us, here are a few ways that you can.

[00:01:21] Did you know writing a review and or rating us helps us get more listeners?

[00:01:25] If you want to be featured and help us grow, head to Apple Spotify, PodChasers,

[00:01:30] or your favorite podcast platform and leave us a review.

[00:01:33] And if you like what you hear and want to buy us a virtual cup of coffee, aka a one-time

[00:01:38] donation, head on over to ko-fi.com slash no more late fees.

[00:01:43] If you want to purchase our merch, head to our no more late fees dot redbubble.com.

[00:01:49] But we are not alone this week.

[00:01:52] We're switching it up and having our moms, aka Terry and Christine, give their

[00:01:57] commentary as we go throughout the movie.

[00:02:00] Kind of like pop up video, if you know what that is, but way more unhinged.

[00:02:05] Yeah.

[00:02:06] And if I'm scared and excited, yeah.

[00:02:11] And if you want to get to know our moms a little bit better, come back later this week as

[00:02:18] we test their knowledge on our friendship, the podcast, and so much more on our bonus

[00:02:22] episode.

[00:02:23] Let's dive into this movie, Jackie.

[00:02:27] Despondent over the marriage of her ex-husband to a younger woman, a middle

[00:02:32] age divorcee plunges to her death from her penthouse.

[00:02:36] At the woman's funeral, her former college friends reunite for the first time in nearly

[00:02:40] 30 years.

[00:02:42] When the three discover the reason for their friend's suicide, they realize that all

[00:02:47] of their ex-husbands have taken them for granted.

[00:02:51] And deciding it's time for revenge, they make a pact to get back at their exes.

[00:02:56] starring Bed Midler, Goldie Haan, Diane Keaton, Maggie Smith, Dan Hedaya, Bronson

[00:03:01] Pinchot and Marcia Gay Hardin.

[00:03:05] Among others, this movie is jam-packed with famous faces.

[00:03:10] Victor Garber, my boo.

[00:03:13] Victor Garber, the dad from 7th Heaven, which we do not refer to him by name.

[00:03:19] Sarah Jessica Parker, Jesse Spano from Save by the Bell.

[00:03:24] Elizabeth.

[00:03:25] Elizabeth Berkley.

[00:03:27] Berkley, thank you.

[00:03:30] Directed by Hugh Wilson, screenplay was by Robert Harling and it was based on the

[00:03:36] first wise club by Olivia Goldsmith.

[00:03:39] You can currently watch it on Paramount Plus.

[00:03:42] But before we start, let's go ahead and get into our ratings rewind.

[00:03:46] So you know the drill.

[00:03:48] Before we get into the movie, we'll reveal the rating our Y2K versions of

[00:03:51] ourselves would give.

[00:03:52] Then at the end, we'll see if our current sales agree with our initial rating.

[00:03:56] Our scale consists of would buy it, would buy it again.

[00:04:00] The best would plan repeat.

[00:04:02] Five day rental.

[00:04:04] Would watch again.

[00:04:06] Two day rental.

[00:04:07] It's okay, but nothing to write home about.

[00:04:10] And same day rental.

[00:04:12] Like most of the men in this movie, trash.

[00:04:15] Straight up.

[00:04:17] Trash.

[00:04:18] Ex-husband, Gabbage.

[00:04:21] All right.

[00:04:23] Well, I'll start with mine, I guess.

[00:04:26] It's not even a question.

[00:04:28] Would buy would buy it again.

[00:04:32] How about you, Jackie?

[00:04:33] Same.

[00:04:33] We own this.

[00:04:35] It was a mystery favorite she would throw on.

[00:04:39] Probably when she was mad at my dad.

[00:04:44] Well, I'm glad you brought it up.

[00:04:46] Let's hear what the moms had to say about their ratings.

[00:04:49] Mom, Terry, what was your Y2K rating of First Wise Club?

[00:04:53] Would buy it.

[00:04:54] Did buy it.

[00:04:55] Okay.

[00:04:56] Okay.

[00:04:58] Mom, what was your rating?

[00:05:00] Same day rental.

[00:05:03] What?

[00:05:08] Danielle, you know, I watched the movie and the meaning that I have now is a little

[00:05:16] bit different back then.

[00:05:18] Gotcha.

[00:05:19] I did want to tell the story of why I was like, Jackie, if we do First Wise Club, I would

[00:05:25] really like our moms to be on because I have a sentimental reason for this movie.

[00:05:29] So my mom and I, when we were first moving to Florida and it was just me and her, she

[00:05:36] would try to take me to different movies and stuff like that.

[00:05:41] And we would go to Albertsons because they had 99 cent movies and she would get like

[00:05:46] a pizza pie crust and we would make pizza together.

[00:05:50] And it would just be like a whole routine, fun girls night in together.

[00:05:56] And I remember specifically one of the movies that we watched in that time period

[00:06:01] was First Wise Club.

[00:06:02] So I think it imprinted on me in that way at the time.

[00:06:08] So that's why I picked the movie mom.

[00:06:10] I didn't know that you didn't love it that much until last night when we

[00:06:14] watched it and you're like, I don't remember any of this.

[00:06:19] I like the Joy Luck Club.

[00:06:21] Yes, we did.

[00:06:22] That was my, you know, that was meant more to me than, you know.

[00:06:28] Yeah, it's not in our time period, but I.

[00:06:33] I remember us very much loving that movie.

[00:06:36] A lot of a lot of commentary on that one.

[00:06:39] Yeah.

[00:06:41] So the movie had a budget of twenty six million dollars

[00:06:45] and it made over one hundred and eighty one million dollars worldwide.

[00:06:51] That's amazing.

[00:06:53] But also, like they thought it was not going to do much.

[00:06:58] It was going to be kind of a flop.

[00:06:59] It was up against a bunch of like men movies.

[00:07:03] I'm looking at the box office right now.

[00:07:05] And all three women want to do a sequel.

[00:07:10] And the studios don't think it'll make any.

[00:07:13] I'm sorry.

[00:07:15] I think as we continue to do this show,

[00:07:18] it just shows next.

[00:07:20] Don't even believe what they're selling or what they're saying.

[00:07:24] Yeah, because there's been proof points at this at this venture.

[00:07:28] Like you can't tell me that a female lead movie is not going to do well.

[00:07:34] You can't tell me that a black movie is not going to perform well,

[00:07:40] especially when you're we're seeing such small budgets that they were originally

[00:07:44] given and then they way exceed.

[00:07:47] And then it's like the goalpost moves again and again and again and again.

[00:07:51] We have had so many female directors, writers.

[00:07:55] And one of the trends is that you get these female directors.

[00:07:59] You give them these like big movies that nobody really wants their YA.

[00:08:03] Their women led movies and then they do extremely well.

[00:08:08] And then the second or third movie or sequel that they get, a man takes over.

[00:08:13] Yep. Every time.

[00:08:15] You know, and like if I was, for example, J.K.

[00:08:18] Rowling, she could have pushed Warner Brothers to say, you know what?

[00:08:22] I want at least one of the directors of the Harry Potter movies to be a woman.

[00:08:27] Yep. But we know she's trash.

[00:08:29] But yes, I think one of the movies that this movie was up against

[00:08:33] in the box office was a Bruce Willis movie and it beat it.

[00:08:37] It's not a diehard movie.

[00:08:39] It's like stand tall.

[00:08:40] Last man standing.

[00:08:42] There you go.

[00:08:43] Has some do it standing up.

[00:08:46] And there is nothing like as much as they're like, oh,

[00:08:49] it begins with a bunch of real movies.

[00:08:50] No, it was not.

[00:08:52] It was last man standing came in second.

[00:08:56] That was the first week for that.

[00:08:58] Then it was fly away home.

[00:09:01] Maximum risk, which I don't even know about.

[00:09:04] Never heard of it.

[00:09:05] Then is bulletproof with Adam Sandler and Damon Wainz.

[00:09:09] West Club grossed 105.4 million in the United States and Canada

[00:09:13] and 76 million in other territories for the total of 181.4 million dollars

[00:09:20] worldwide and it became the 11th highest grossing film of 1996.

[00:09:25] Oh, low Raj, low Raj.

[00:09:29] You know, sometimes we're on the same wavelength and sometimes you just be talking crazy.

[00:09:34] Your Ebert, writing for the Chicago Sometimes gave the first wise club

[00:09:41] two out of four stars.

[00:09:44] He declared the film heavy on incident but light on plot

[00:09:48] filled with heartfelt talks with slapstick and sitcom situations.

[00:09:55] Roger Marie Ebert.

[00:09:58] What were you thinking before we get into cast and crew?

[00:10:02] Let's hear a word from our podcast.

[00:10:09] There's too many homiloses, too many tremors, but I like to watch them for rotten treasure.

[00:10:20] Hello, I'm Kai Bobby, co-host of the Rotten Treasure podcast

[00:10:23] where I talk with my friend, Jim O'Donnell and a special guest about movie franchises

[00:10:27] that arguably went on a little longer than they should have.

[00:10:30] Hey, Jim, what movies do we review?

[00:10:33] Home Alone, Home Alone 2, Lost in New York, Home Alone 3, Home Alone 4,

[00:10:38] Taking Back the House, Home Alone, Holiday Heist.

[00:10:41] We review more than just Home Alone movies.

[00:10:45] Tremors, Tremors 2, Aftershock.

[00:10:48] Do we have any guests?

[00:10:49] Do we have guests, Jim?

[00:10:51] Scott Campbell, Robert and Donnell from Watching It, Sarah Carter.

[00:10:55] OK, how do people find us on the internet, Jim?

[00:10:59] Follow us at Rotten Underscore Treasure on Instagram,

[00:11:01] at Rotten Treasure on Twitter, Rotten Treasure on Facebook.

[00:11:04] You know what? That's enough of your list.

[00:11:06] So folks, if you still want to find us, you can listen to us

[00:11:09] on your preferred podcast app such as Spotify or Apple Podcast or podbean.com.

[00:11:16] Google Podcasts, listen notes, not SoundCloud.

[00:11:23] So casting, Danielle.

[00:11:25] Ben Midler and Goldie Hahn were the first actresses reported to have landed

[00:11:30] one of the three starring roles, but Ben Midler had wanted to play

[00:11:33] the more glamorous role of Leece at first.

[00:11:38] OK, I'm not surprised by that.

[00:11:39] No, and I will say this movie top to bottom, aside from Mr.

[00:11:44] Camden, perfectly cast.

[00:11:47] Yes, like agreed.

[00:11:49] I don't think this movie would have had as much heart and levity

[00:11:54] if these three women had not been cast in these roles.

[00:11:58] It could have fallen really flat or felt very like whiny,

[00:12:03] you know, or that were pandering to the divorcee audience.

[00:12:09] But these women breathe such life into all of these characters.

[00:12:15] Yeah. That it was just fantastic.

[00:12:18] And they didn't take themselves too seriously.

[00:12:20] I think they're all comedic actresses because Scott Rudin,

[00:12:25] who is a legendary producer, he produced his film.

[00:12:29] And so he had intended to cast Jessica Ling for the role of

[00:12:34] Elise, I believe.

[00:12:35] And they decided to actually rewrite the character from the book.

[00:12:39] So if you know anything about the book, the movie is not that

[00:12:44] close to the book at all.

[00:12:46] They changed a lot.

[00:12:47] They almost call this movie script kind of like a Frankenstein situation.

[00:12:51] It was a lot of different pieces.

[00:12:54] They had different writers come in.

[00:12:56] They had some ghost writers come in to try to put it together.

[00:13:00] But I love down some Jessica Ling, OK?

[00:13:04] I do.

[00:13:05] But and I think she can be comedic.

[00:13:07] I see it watching American Horror Story.

[00:13:10] She has those zingers and there's nothing I don't think she could do.

[00:13:13] But Goldie Hawn just fit this role so much better.

[00:13:19] And she Goldie Hawn wanted to bring on Sally Fields.

[00:13:22] And I think Sally Field would have done great, too, in the role of Annie.

[00:13:26] But honestly, I don't.

[00:13:29] Either one could have gone for me because we've learned that she could

[00:13:33] play comedic comedic roles pretty well.

[00:13:36] But I think Diane Keaton was perfectly matched as well.

[00:13:39] Sally pulled out because she said she lacked musicality,

[00:13:43] which I think is kind of weird because they only have that one scene at the end.

[00:13:49] And they didn't have that scripted.

[00:13:52] It wasn't planned until the last minute because they were like, we don't have an ending.

[00:13:57] Oh, I did not know that.

[00:13:59] But also like Diane Keaton.

[00:14:03] Not a great singer, but that added to.

[00:14:08] The scenes is that like, I mean, she can carry a tune,

[00:14:13] but it's not she's standing next to fucking Bed Middler.

[00:14:16] Like you're not going to be bad.

[00:14:18] I to this day, even when I was younger, I remember thinking

[00:14:23] because you could tell that they were lip singing, which is totally normal for a movie.

[00:14:28] But as a kid, I was like.

[00:14:31] Putting two and two together.

[00:14:32] I just always thought, yeah, Bed Middler saying I never thought Goldie Hawn

[00:14:37] or Diane Keaton sang their parts.

[00:14:40] But apparently they didn't.

[00:14:44] So it wasn't it wasn't it fit the characters.

[00:14:48] Like that's what you expect in a group of three friends,

[00:14:51] not everyone is going to be a singer.

[00:14:54] I wish.

[00:14:57] I wish that Mandy Patinkin was cast as Aaron as originally intended.

[00:15:03] Unfortunately, he had to drop out and then was replaced by Mr. Camden.

[00:15:09] Yeah, I think I would have had a hard time hating Mandy Patinkin.

[00:15:13] That's true.

[00:15:15] He's a great actor.

[00:15:16] He probably would have brought me there.

[00:15:17] But rewatching this and seeing that pedo.

[00:15:21] It was very easy to hate him.

[00:15:23] Oh, yeah.

[00:15:24] Like immediately, I'm like, no, go away.

[00:15:26] Trash, that's why your hair is running away from your face.

[00:15:33] On site.

[00:15:36] On site.

[00:15:39] If you have no clue what we're referring to, go and watch our Attack of the Clones

[00:15:44] episode.

[00:15:45] And if you're a Patreon member, you have a fun little gif that you can use

[00:15:49] of Danielle on site.

[00:15:53] The role of Dwardo originally went to writer David Rakoff through.

[00:15:58] But he was fired after only one day on set and was replaced by Brunson.

[00:16:03] And show pinch hot.

[00:16:04] I think he's so underrated.

[00:16:06] I love him so much.

[00:16:08] He's so good.

[00:16:10] Yeah.

[00:16:12] We were huge, perfect strangers.

[00:16:15] Yeah.

[00:16:16] Fans.

[00:16:17] So like anytime we see her like it's bulky.

[00:16:20] Okay.

[00:16:21] I'm really disappointed that we didn't get John Stewart to play

[00:16:27] Elise's lover.

[00:16:28] Apparently he shot most of his scenes, but they needed to trim the fat.

[00:16:34] And so unfortunately he was cut out of the movie.

[00:16:38] I just love John Stewart so much.

[00:16:40] Yeah, it would have been cool to see Elise have a little love interest.

[00:16:44] But I also think it's kind of great.

[00:16:46] One of the my favorite things about this movie is that when people talk

[00:16:51] about it, sometimes I think people say romcom and it goes back to like

[00:16:56] when it's female centered, they don't know what else to call it

[00:16:58] besides a chick flick and a romcom.

[00:17:01] I love that it doesn't center around any of them dating per se.

[00:17:07] I know at the end we get Bette Midler's character.

[00:17:11] They say that her and Morty are getting back together, but it's really

[00:17:15] about their the core of their friendship and getting their vengeance.

[00:17:18] And I really like that.

[00:17:19] And I feel like the John Stewart like relationship, it would have been nice.

[00:17:24] Maybe he was doing the opposite of her ex-husband, but it would have,

[00:17:29] I don't know, I don't think it's that bad.

[00:17:31] But the director said John Stewart did a really good job.

[00:17:34] I want the John Stewart cut.

[00:17:37] Yeah, like the Snyder cut.

[00:17:39] I want the Stewart cut immediately.

[00:17:42] Give us the Stewart cut.

[00:17:44] Yes.

[00:17:46] Dan Hadea, he won who plays Morty.

[00:17:49] He won the role over Hector Elizondo.

[00:17:53] I love Hector Elizondo, but I think Dan Hadea

[00:17:58] was perfectly cast.

[00:17:59] He has that just tiny bit of like could be

[00:18:04] Schmarmy slime.

[00:18:05] Yeah.

[00:18:06] Yeah, where Hector is just is so endearing and I just love him.

[00:18:10] He's wonderful.

[00:18:12] Our boy, our boy Timothy.

[00:18:15] Here he is.

[00:18:15] He came off.

[00:18:17] I. All right.

[00:18:18] So Timothy Elephant, this is his movie debut.

[00:18:23] They were able to get him to come on because he impressed them

[00:18:26] with his local stage work.

[00:18:28] So he played Brett Artonin.

[00:18:32] I don't even know how to say this.

[00:18:33] I didn't even know the guy had a last name, but he plays the director

[00:18:38] for the movie that Elise is trying to get into.

[00:18:40] And he looks so fresh faced and baby, baby faced.

[00:18:44] You want to talk about that cameos?

[00:18:47] I was very proud of myself that I was able to spot some of these people

[00:18:50] because we were younger when this movie came out.

[00:18:54] And a lot of these people are like old heads, you know.

[00:18:59] It's kind of like for us, we're watching certain movies.

[00:19:01] We know who these people are, but like my sister's like,

[00:19:03] I don't know who these people are when I was trying to get her

[00:19:06] to watch Spice World.

[00:19:07] She's like, I don't get it.

[00:19:08] So yeah, so a ton of cameos.

[00:19:12] We get Ivana Trump, who in the movie famously stated,

[00:19:17] don't get mad, get everything.

[00:19:20] We have Gloria Steinem,

[00:19:23] Kathy Lee Gifford, author Olivia Goldsmith,

[00:19:26] director Hugh Wilson as the commercial director

[00:19:29] and Heather Locklear as the younger lover of James Notton's character.

[00:19:33] Gil. So yep.

[00:19:36] Clocked all of those.

[00:19:38] Well, maybe I didn't talk to the director or the author,

[00:19:41] but everyone else that like celebrity.

[00:19:44] I was like, oh, yep.

[00:19:45] There she is. There she is.

[00:19:48] So the line, don't get mad, get everything was the marketing department

[00:19:52] had decided that was going to be the tagline for the poster and for the movie.

[00:19:55] And so the director is like, let's make sure we add it to

[00:20:00] the script and head of on a say it, which it's the most one

[00:20:03] of the most iconic lines, even though there's so many lines that.

[00:20:07] So I. Brenda.

[00:20:14] It's like it just lives in my head all the time.

[00:20:18] Just like, well, there's a line that Brenda says where she's like,

[00:20:22] they're talking about Goldie Hans character, Elise, her plastic surgery.

[00:20:27] And she's like, did you get the whole enchilada,

[00:20:29] which originally was going to be, did you get the whole Ivana?

[00:20:33] But once Ivana came out, they changed it to the whole enchilada.

[00:20:38] Oh my God. Here's my question to you.

[00:20:41] OK. Who do you think

[00:20:44] out of the stars on the set was considered difficult to work with?

[00:20:50] I know the answer to this.

[00:20:52] It was. So should we jump right into the movie?

[00:20:57] Yes, let's do it.

[00:20:59] Oh, jump in is probably not.

[00:21:02] Oh, damn it.

[00:21:04] Sorry, Cynthia.

[00:21:07] So yes, the amazing, lovely stalker chanting.

[00:21:12] Please, Cynthia.

[00:21:13] It starts out as a flashback.

[00:21:15] The four of them, Cynthia, Annie, Elise and Brenda all graduated together

[00:21:21] in 1969. They graduated from college.

[00:21:24] Cynthia seemed like she was very affluent even back then.

[00:21:29] So she gave all of the girls a strand of pearls for their graduate

[00:21:32] as a graduation gift.

[00:21:34] I feel like they're all pretty affluent.

[00:21:37] Yeah.

[00:21:39] It's crazy how much money is really going on in this movie.

[00:21:42] Started like just put in there.

[00:21:44] But you know how when we talk about diversity and stuff like that

[00:21:48] in some of the other movies, there are some movies where I'm just like,

[00:21:51] that's fine. I don't I don't need it

[00:21:55] because this is a movie that let the white ladies do what the white ladies do best.

[00:22:01] That's the kind of feel I have for this movie.

[00:22:03] I'm not complaining about diversity.

[00:22:06] It's a very specific subset of like

[00:22:10] Upper East Side ladies,

[00:22:13] like we know of the ladies that they are depicting in this movie.

[00:22:20] I'll give you this.

[00:22:22] They are the grown up college versions

[00:22:25] of the girls from All I Want to Do.

[00:22:27] Yes.

[00:22:29] That's definitely

[00:22:32] very they always have those like feminist word roots,

[00:22:37] but then they let men dull their shine.

[00:22:41] Pretty much.

[00:22:43] Here we get that kind of flashback.

[00:22:46] Then it goes to present day.

[00:22:48] We see Stockard Channing as the grown up Cynthia,

[00:22:53] and she's just very distraught, very miserable.

[00:22:56] She has newspapers all around reporting on her ex-husband,

[00:23:01] who is like a tycoon baron remarrying this young hot girl

[00:23:06] played by Heather Locklear.

[00:23:08] She has her pearls that she gives to the maid

[00:23:12] and then asks the maid to also mail some letters made from coolest.

[00:23:18] Not the Mexican. Right.

[00:23:21] So Cynthia does commit suicide by jumping out of her penthouse.

[00:23:27] The next scene we are the next scenes we get

[00:23:30] are kind of introducing the other women.

[00:23:33] So that happens.

[00:23:34] We don't know much about Cynthia other than that.

[00:23:37] And then we're introduced to grown up Annie.

[00:23:39] She has a daughter named Chris, who she's very close with,

[00:23:42] who comes out as a lesbian.

[00:23:44] We find out she is separated from her husband, Erin,

[00:23:48] but they're still like hanging out and Chris is pissed.

[00:23:53] Yeah, she she loves her dad,

[00:23:55] but she hates the way her dad treats her mom.

[00:23:58] And also there she lives with her

[00:24:01] their grandmother is there, her mother

[00:24:04] grandmother is there, very opinionated.

[00:24:07] And it's really interesting, especially watching it now

[00:24:11] from the perspective of we understand so much more about

[00:24:15] generational trauma, women, women's expectations in the home

[00:24:20] and how are those those are imposed on Annie by her mom?

[00:24:27] Like, I know like her mom is very well intentioned, loves her daughter.

[00:24:30] But she's also like it'll work out because like she's just from that era

[00:24:35] where you don't get divorced, like you just work shit out, even if you're miserable,

[00:24:40] like you just stick with it.

[00:24:42] I love the dynamic of the three of them

[00:24:46] because it reminds me so much of in different aspects, like obviously

[00:24:52] my mom is not a what's the word?

[00:24:58] A wallflower like Annie is.

[00:25:01] But I really thought the dynamic between

[00:25:04] the three generations was very interesting and how loving they were

[00:25:08] and how the grandma came around at the end.

[00:25:10] It was super sweet.

[00:25:12] So I definitely asked my mom about how she felt about these characters.

[00:25:16] Let's hear what she said.

[00:25:18] I thought.

[00:25:21] It showed you so many the generational divide

[00:25:27] between the three, the three women, you know,

[00:25:30] the daughter who was a little bit more, I guess, a little bit more like now.

[00:25:35] And then the grandma who's still living in the fifties

[00:25:39] where how men she wanted her daughter to make it work in terms of a marriage.

[00:25:46] And then there was her daughter who would be in pulled from.

[00:25:52] She's just, you know, so conflicted about what should I do?

[00:25:56] And, you know, should I try to make this work?

[00:25:59] And well, there wasn't even a question of should I make this work?

[00:26:03] It was just I have to make this work.

[00:26:05] And her mom was just, you know, kind of prodding her along to,

[00:26:09] yeah, yeah, come on, let's go, let's go.

[00:26:11] And then her daughter who saw very, very clearly that no, that is a.

[00:26:20] He's a douchebag.

[00:26:21] Yeah, user.

[00:26:23] I didn't want to say all of that.

[00:26:26] The user and she saw right through him.

[00:26:30] So in that way, yes, I saw how whatever time frame

[00:26:35] that they grew up in really impacted how they dealt with a partner or a marriage

[00:26:42] or their thoughts on it or what to do about it.

[00:26:47] I just thought their dynamic reminded me of you, me and Anna a lot.

[00:26:54] Like, Nana being very critical and me being like, no, this is the new way

[00:27:00] to do it and you being like, OK, I guess find a happy medium.

[00:27:05] What about you, Mama Terry?

[00:27:06] What did you think to?

[00:27:10] To think about my family dynamics with my mom and my kid.

[00:27:16] We didn't come from the previous generation, my mom's generation never said anything.

[00:27:22] Yeah, they were just quiet.

[00:27:24] They were just quiet.

[00:27:25] So you never got feedback.

[00:27:26] You never got.

[00:27:28] You know, what do you do?

[00:27:29] So I never talked to my mom about anything, you know, about

[00:27:36] when my marriage was hurting, I didn't go to her because she did not talk about things.

[00:27:43] So for our generationally, I made sure that my kids felt that they could talk

[00:27:49] to me about anything because we just I missed that.

[00:27:52] I missed having, you know, someone to confide confide in and who would have my back.

[00:27:57] Yeah.

[00:27:58] And I think both did a really good job with like the fact

[00:28:02] that Jackie and I feel like we can tell you anything.

[00:28:05] I think at this point, it's probably TMI to the highest.

[00:28:09] I don't mind them.

[00:28:15] But, you know, Danielle, you are kind of prudish about certain things, though.

[00:28:19] I mean, when it comes down to it, I, you know, I would still want you to,

[00:28:25] you know, say whatever it is that's on your mind, but you are not.

[00:28:31] She still doesn't do that, Jackie.

[00:28:34] Is like, Mom, no, we're not going to talk about that.

[00:28:38] Oh, yeah.

[00:28:38] I don't want to talk about like communication is hard.

[00:28:47] It really is.

[00:28:48] And you have to work at it to be.

[00:28:51] Yeah. Yeah.

[00:28:53] I will keep that in my mother.

[00:28:55] I will try my hardest, but be careful what you ask for.

[00:29:00] I'm not a prude.

[00:29:01] No, I'm a prude.

[00:29:03] Okay.

[00:29:06] Christine, have you found as you get older that some things that you would have

[00:29:10] tolerated as you were younger?

[00:29:12] You're like, oh, what is happening with me?

[00:29:17] And I was like fine with that when I was younger, but you do you get you just

[00:29:22] change, you change as you age and your wisdom helps you out on.

[00:29:27] You're kind of what is happening over there?

[00:29:29] You you also care less about what other people think.

[00:29:33] Yeah.

[00:29:35] When you're younger, you worry about that or at least I did all.

[00:29:38] Yeah.

[00:29:40] I don't know if I ever really did.

[00:29:43] But, you know, in terms of with Danielle, I I I expected her to kind of

[00:29:50] come to me and say, I don't know if I would have freaked out or anything.

[00:29:55] I mean, there were other things that I freaked out about.

[00:29:57] But things I don't think I would have if she trusted me enough to to tell me,

[00:30:04] you know, I would probably do a long lecture, but which they don't like.

[00:30:10] No, I I I think I don't know for whatever reasons.

[00:30:13] I I I was that kind of her.

[00:30:18] She didn't think that I was.

[00:30:19] She was always afraid to come to me and say, but I was past that already.

[00:30:24] I was like, come on already.

[00:30:26] You know, she's like, yeah.

[00:30:27] My little friend and I thought it would be OK.

[00:30:32] I wanted her to do that.

[00:30:35] Well, I'm working on it.

[00:30:45] I think I I think I you know, I I ask some of my other friends and they're

[00:30:50] like, you tell your mom and your grandma way too much stuff.

[00:30:54] I mean, I tell you my bowel movements at this point and it's just like,

[00:31:00] is it necessary?

[00:31:01] I don't know. But if you don't have someone to tell that to,

[00:31:07] who are you going to tell it to but your mom? That's true.

[00:31:10] Somebody needs to care.

[00:31:12] Yeah. I just don't know if I'm ever going to get to the point

[00:31:18] where I'm going to be telling her about sex.

[00:31:24] OK, I'm comfortable with you don't have.

[00:31:29] I mean, Jackie and I don't even talk about sex.

[00:31:32] No, no, we don't talk about.

[00:31:33] But I do know, mom, if like something really weird happened or like I'm scared

[00:31:38] about something, yes, I would definitely tell you like 100 percent.

[00:31:42] And she'd be on the duress.

[00:31:44] Yes.

[00:31:49] This took a turn.

[00:31:54] The next scene is we're introduced to Elise and she's an aging actress.

[00:31:59] She's incredibly famous, but she wants to be youthful.

[00:32:03] She's starting to get the mom roles and things like that, which I'm

[00:32:07] surprised she hasn't already because in Hollywood, you start getting

[00:32:11] the mom roles at like 30.

[00:32:13] Yes.

[00:32:15] Swan's collagen filler in her lips.

[00:32:17] Her doctor is like, I don't think so.

[00:32:19] The doctor is played by Rob Reiner, who is love it.

[00:32:22] Fantastic director in his own right.

[00:32:25] So I'm sure it was just like one of these ladies called and was like, hey,

[00:32:29] Rob, do you want like this little bit part in this movie?

[00:32:33] Well, it's probably Scott Rudin because he knows everybody apparently.

[00:32:38] But in this scene, there's created Goldie Han simulated college

[00:32:42] and treatment by injecting her lips with a harmless saline solution.

[00:32:46] Though temporary, Han later remarked in interviews that the experience

[00:32:51] was quite painful and that it had discouraged her from ever getting collagen for real.

[00:32:57] I wonder if she's kept that sentiment.

[00:33:00] So you're telling me.

[00:33:03] We have seen movies in this time frame with fantastic makeup.

[00:33:11] Teens and practical effects.

[00:33:13] You injected saline into an actress's lips to simulate collagen injections.

[00:33:22] Like that could have been done with makeup.

[00:33:26] Agreed.

[00:33:27] That just thinking about it, I start visualizing it and it feels I feel

[00:33:32] pain about it. Yeah.

[00:33:33] It just yeah, it was unnecessary.

[00:33:35] I'm sure they could have put a prosthetic and it would have been fine

[00:33:39] if they could do what they did from misdoubt fire.

[00:33:41] What could we get?

[00:33:46] I guess this is ironic.

[00:33:48] The author Olivia Goldsmith.

[00:33:50] She wrote this book and the whole idea of this movie essentially was that

[00:33:57] all the societal pressure that are put on middle age women to stay looking

[00:34:01] young and beautiful and the result that some of them undergo like

[00:34:05] really bad cosmetic surgeries like we're seeing with Elise here

[00:34:09] and what ended up happening to Olivia is that she died in 2004 at the age of 54

[00:34:15] due to complications from anesthesia during an elective cosmetic surgery procedure,

[00:34:21] which that's looking horrible.

[00:34:24] Really scary.

[00:34:25] Don't mess with your face.

[00:34:26] Although like I feel like because in this movie they mentioned that

[00:34:30] they're like 46 ish.

[00:34:32] The ladies are playing younger than they actually were because they were all

[00:34:37] born within 45 days of one another and they all celebrated their 50th birthday

[00:34:41] is while they were shooting this movie.

[00:34:43] I love that.

[00:34:44] I do too.

[00:34:46] And I love that, you know, like, yes, they said that Miller was difficult,

[00:34:50] but I love that they didn't have it seemed to have any onset issues

[00:34:56] with each other.

[00:34:57] So could have just been she was opinionated and we already know

[00:35:01] in Hollywood what that means from an interview snippet.

[00:35:06] I read one of I don't know if it was the cast member, a cast member or crew.

[00:35:11] It was bulky.

[00:35:13] Was it?

[00:35:14] Yeah, he went on AVM.

[00:35:16] He defended the director and said that.

[00:35:18] But Miller was very kind.

[00:35:21] Yes.

[00:35:22] Also, I saw one where Joan Rivers lived in the neighborhood that they were

[00:35:27] shooting and she went up to the director and was like, what are you doing

[00:35:30] in here? Why are you in my neighborhood?

[00:35:32] Kind of like joking.

[00:35:33] And she was like, OK, well, if you're the director of this movie,

[00:35:35] why are you sitting in the car hiding in the car with the teamsters?

[00:35:39] Whatever he's like, I'm afraid of Beth Medler.

[00:35:44] I mean, I could see it.

[00:35:49] I can see where I feel like I don't want to be on any side of that right now.

[00:35:55] I'm going to go just sit somewhere.

[00:35:58] Yeah.

[00:36:00] So next we meet Brenda, played by Beth Medler.

[00:36:03] She is prepping for her son, Jason's Bar Mitzvah.

[00:36:08] She is divorced from Morty, who owns like an appliance store

[00:36:14] that started as like a homegrown mom and pop shop and has grown into this

[00:36:21] multimillion dollar company.

[00:36:23] And she was there at the ground level like she helped build that company

[00:36:27] with him and essentially he traded her in for a newer model

[00:36:32] played by Sarah Jessica Parker.

[00:36:33] Every woman handles divorce differently, especially when it comes to kids.

[00:36:38] And she is still hurting over the loss of Morty

[00:36:44] and also Morty cheated on her with one of the like store clerks

[00:36:48] or somebody that worked at the store.

[00:36:50] And so I think that even hurts 10 times more

[00:36:53] and they have like a contentious relationship.

[00:36:56] And it's all driven because she still loves him.

[00:36:58] She never wanted this divorce.

[00:37:01] Exactly.

[00:37:01] And so she's she's just coping with the fact that like

[00:37:06] she's not young and hot anymore.

[00:37:08] And so that's where his his attention turned.

[00:37:12] And she's always kind of putting her son in the middle,

[00:37:15] asking him kind of questions about their dad.

[00:37:17] And he you could tell like he just doesn't want drama.

[00:37:20] He he's going to grow up with a ton of anxiety.

[00:37:23] 100 100 percent.

[00:37:24] Yeah, I I always commend my mom for not not doing that to me.

[00:37:31] Never never asking questions like she was curious

[00:37:35] as to what was happening with like my dad and my stepmom.

[00:37:40] She just kept it kept it a buck.

[00:37:42] She would complain about my dad cheating.

[00:37:45] I'm not going to lie.

[00:37:48] But she never made it like awkward for me to see my dad,

[00:37:53] which I always appreciated.

[00:37:55] And my mom did the same.

[00:37:57] She I mean, even after they had separated

[00:38:01] or and even after they had finally divorced,

[00:38:05] he came over every night for dinner.

[00:38:07] Like he had an apartment across town,

[00:38:09] but he came over every night for dinner.

[00:38:12] I do commend that the both of them did prioritize their child.

[00:38:16] And I could say that for both of you guys,

[00:38:18] that you both really made sure that as much as you could

[00:38:22] that we had relationships with their dad, no matter how mad

[00:38:27] or messed up they were, you guys really made sure

[00:38:31] that they were in our lives.

[00:38:33] And, you know, in tandem, I got to have a like a bonus dad

[00:38:38] because Ron was around all the time

[00:38:41] because Terry was making sure that her kids saw their kid,

[00:38:46] their son, their dad. Yeah.

[00:38:50] Son, father, brother, cousin.

[00:38:55] Now we are at Cynthia's funeral.

[00:38:59] We're introduced to Maggie Smith's character.

[00:39:03] Gwynnola. Oh, yeah.

[00:39:06] The wig, the wig on Miss Maggie,

[00:39:10] Miss Dame, Dame Maggie Smith

[00:39:14] is a side to.

[00:39:18] Behold, honey says.

[00:39:21] He goes, hey, it's McGonagall.

[00:39:24] And he's like, he she's looked the same since the 90s.

[00:39:28] And then he turns to me because Maggie Smith is a vampire.

[00:39:35] Like probably not.

[00:39:38] Yeah, we love her.

[00:39:39] Super weird kids.

[00:39:40] Like when you look at the ages of these people,

[00:39:44] like I don't even think she was that old when this movie came out.

[00:39:47] No, she's just always looked the same.

[00:39:50] Yeah, it's weird.

[00:39:52] But OK, love that she's in it.

[00:39:54] Love how deadpan.

[00:39:56] Unserious she is this movie.

[00:39:58] She is like the queen of divorces because what has she been divorced

[00:40:03] like five times three times?

[00:40:04] And so she's richer than God at the same time.

[00:40:08] So they needed they see we see her at the funeral first

[00:40:11] and she comes into play later.

[00:40:13] Yep, and then we're also introduced to the bell.

[00:40:19] It does.

[00:40:20] Duarte played by Bronson Pinchot, Pinchot.

[00:40:25] Who who Brenda works for essentially.

[00:40:29] Yes, he's an interior designer.

[00:40:31] Yeah, exactly.

[00:40:32] Yep. That's how the three ladies kind of reconnect is

[00:40:37] they see each other at the funeral and they're like,

[00:40:39] we had no idea that she was like this destroy and why would she do this

[00:40:44] and kind of just reeling from the fact that their friend just killed herself.

[00:40:48] So they all decide to go to lunch together.

[00:40:51] And so at first they're very standoffish.

[00:40:55] Yeah, but they start drinking, drink, start flowing

[00:40:59] and convo starts happening.

[00:41:01] I love when they ask Elise what she's had done.

[00:41:05] And Elise tries to say nothing with her like pillow lips,

[00:41:09] freshly collagenated lips and Bridget just looks like she's a quilt.

[00:41:17] There's a there's a few elements that show each other's personalities, right?

[00:41:21] When they first reconnect after the funeral is over.

[00:41:25] First you have Annie who.

[00:41:28] Is like all over the place, spastic, very spastic, normal

[00:41:32] Diane Keaton energy.

[00:41:33] So it's not random.

[00:41:36] Yeah, also when she she she wants to ask if they can go to lunch

[00:41:40] and it takes her forever to get there because she's so passive aggressive.

[00:41:44] Essentially, Brenda, of course, being just no filter queen that she is

[00:41:51] screams that we got to eat.

[00:41:53] So, you know, spit it out already.

[00:41:55] But Brenda and Elise are like just spit it out.

[00:41:58] And I do love that.

[00:42:00] Elise is such a she was very Mariah Carey about it where she's like

[00:42:06] pretending she doesn't know Brenda's fucking name.

[00:42:08] Yeah, she's like because Brenda's like hello.

[00:42:12] And Annie's like, do you remember us?

[00:42:14] And she's like, I don't know her.

[00:42:19] I was like, come on, Elise, stop with your bullshit.

[00:42:22] Yeah. And then when they get to lunch, like you were saying,

[00:42:24] they're not talking to each other, but I think they're all trying to front.

[00:42:29] And this scene makes me think like, wow, we don't have Facebook in this time period.

[00:42:36] So people really don't know what's going on in each other's lives.

[00:42:40] Maybe more Elise than everyone else because she's famous.

[00:42:44] So they're all trying to pretend and you don't you don't have text

[00:42:49] messaging like you would have to pick up a phone and call someone.

[00:42:53] There's no email really.

[00:42:55] Like we hadn't entered into the age of accessibility.

[00:43:01] Yeah. So yeah.

[00:43:02] Oh, let's jump back to the funeral.

[00:43:04] I forgot a couple of things.

[00:43:06] This is where we're introduced to Heather Lockley or as the second wife.

[00:43:10] And like he's trying to give the benefit of the doubt because they're

[00:43:13] like, how dare he bring her to Cynthia's funeral?

[00:43:17] Blah, blah, blah.

[00:43:18] And he's like, oh, you don't know.

[00:43:20] Like he made like she may be here to comfort him.

[00:43:23] He may be really upset, blah, blah, blah.

[00:43:25] No, he's straight up rubbing this lady's nipple at his ex wife's funeral.

[00:43:31] So nasty.

[00:43:33] These men.

[00:43:34] So gross.

[00:43:35] So gross.

[00:43:38] OK, now back to lunch.

[00:43:40] Brendan and Annie are wearing their pearls.

[00:43:42] I know Elise was not.

[00:43:44] Elise wasn't wearing any.

[00:43:46] No, she wasn't wearing the pearls.

[00:43:48] Yeah. She does say.

[00:43:49] Oh, you guys are wearing those pearls.

[00:43:51] Like she like she don't know where they are.

[00:43:54] We find out both Brenda is divorced and Morty has a new girlfriend, Shelley.

[00:44:01] Annie is separated and Elise is currently going through a divorce.

[00:44:07] So they're all essentially.

[00:44:08] A husband. Yeah.

[00:44:09] Played by Victor Garber.

[00:44:11] Yeah. I love Victor Garber.

[00:44:13] Not in this role.

[00:44:14] I still love him in this role.

[00:44:16] He does play douche very well, like in Legally Blonde.

[00:44:19] Yes. So then they start talking about Shelley,

[00:44:22] played by Sarah Jessica Parker as Morty's new girlfriend.

[00:44:26] Annie and Aaron have been together 25 years.

[00:44:29] They're now separated.

[00:44:32] And they're going to counseling.

[00:44:34] Yes.

[00:44:36] And their therapist is played by Marcia Gay Hardin.

[00:44:39] And she's like written books and all of this stuff.

[00:44:44] So she's like a renowned therapist that they're going to.

[00:44:49] During the course of the conversation,

[00:44:52] at one point, Elise is like, I wish I could just let it all go like you, Annie.

[00:44:58] Like,

[00:45:00] for Annie.

[00:45:02] She doesn't dress doubt.

[00:45:04] I would say Brenda dresses the most dowdy out of all of them.

[00:45:09] Annie just dresses

[00:45:12] like Hampton's casual is how I would describe her outfit.

[00:45:19] I don't know. She wears a lot.

[00:45:22] A lot of blazers and stuff like Annie looks like she's going to work,

[00:45:26] but she ain't got no job. Yeah.

[00:45:29] Any you ain't got no job.

[00:45:31] She gets one later.

[00:45:33] She does. But and then she puts on a power suit, which I really love.

[00:45:37] Yeah. Yeah.

[00:45:39] You know what?

[00:45:40] Annie's style in this movie is just I am keen.

[00:45:43] Yes. 100 percent.

[00:45:46] Yeah. And I love that for her.

[00:45:48] So find out that Elise's husband wants half of all of the assets and alimony.

[00:45:53] So this is a scene where they're sitting in a conference room with their lawyers.

[00:45:58] And she's like, what the fuck?

[00:45:59] Like I.

[00:46:01] You were no one.

[00:46:03] Now you're this super famous producer, probably making his own money

[00:46:07] and getting residuals off of her shit.

[00:46:09] And now you still want half of my shit.

[00:46:12] Like he has no like

[00:46:17] he doesn't care. Yeah.

[00:46:18] And the thing is, is like his lawyer, make sure to say anything they acquired

[00:46:24] together is either you you pay me for or we sell off and we keep the we split the proceeds.

[00:46:34] I wanted to ask our moms what they thought about

[00:46:39] the behavior of all the men once we're introduced to them.

[00:46:44] So let's hear what the moms have to say.

[00:46:46] What did you guys think about the husbands in this movie?

[00:46:49] We'll start with you, Mamatari.

[00:46:52] They all.

[00:46:55] Took advantage of their wives.

[00:46:56] They all took advantage.

[00:46:59] Of the fact that.

[00:47:03] They were involved in making the money, you know,

[00:47:07] that Miller's character worked the stores and Goldie Han did the movies

[00:47:11] and Diane Keaton kept the house.

[00:47:13] And then when they were ready to go to something else, it was like too bad for you.

[00:47:17] Yeah, they were all horrible.

[00:47:19] They were all horrible men.

[00:47:20] They weren't.

[00:47:22] They really were.

[00:47:23] Yeah, they were horrible.

[00:47:25] They obviously were not in the marriage for the marriage

[00:47:29] because they didn't care.

[00:47:30] They didn't care.

[00:47:31] And I think that's also a generational thing, too.

[00:47:33] At that time, when you looked at when you got married,

[00:47:36] it was like my only job as a husband is to make the money.

[00:47:40] And I think we're seeing that shift.

[00:47:42] A lot of the conversations that are happening right now is that women,

[00:47:46] because they can make their own money, they can be independent.

[00:47:49] They're asking a lot more of men.

[00:47:51] And so there's definitely a shift.

[00:47:53] So going back and watching some of those movies

[00:47:55] and seeing how these men were just like, it's totally fine about what we're doing

[00:48:00] is is insane.

[00:48:01] Like, what's the problem?

[00:48:03] Right. This is fine.

[00:48:04] Well, and it's even like when we were growing up,

[00:48:08] dad only had to get himself ready.

[00:48:10] You were packing the car, getting the kids ready.

[00:48:13] He just waited till everyone was in the car

[00:48:15] and then was in the bathroom for 45 minutes while we're sitting in the car.

[00:48:21] Oh, man, forget the vacation he booked

[00:48:24] where he booked a different hotel every night.

[00:48:27] What I was packing up

[00:48:31] four people, three of them children every day to go to a new hotel

[00:48:35] because he wanted to and he was not patient.

[00:48:37] So he'd be like, come on, we're ready to go.

[00:48:39] You ready? You ready? You ready?

[00:48:41] No, I have three kids and myself to take care of.

[00:48:43] Yeah. You have one you.

[00:48:45] Yeah. The one thing that he always said is

[00:48:48] I've never changed since the day we got married.

[00:48:51] And I would say that's the problem

[00:48:54] because you're a father now.

[00:48:56] You're a husband now.

[00:48:57] There's so many things that happen to you in 25 years.

[00:49:00] You should have changed.

[00:49:01] Yeah. And I don't think a lot of men change.

[00:49:04] They just don't.

[00:49:06] They don't think they need to change to adapt to.

[00:49:08] They don't understand.

[00:49:10] Yeah, they don't understand.

[00:49:11] They don't understand that it takes two people.

[00:49:14] You know, I mean, I find women to be like superheroes

[00:49:19] because of all the things that they had to do, you know,

[00:49:22] the children picking up and dropping off

[00:49:25] and and dropping off to all of the activities.

[00:49:28] And and, you know, if he's late working,

[00:49:32] it's not a priority to say, well, listen, I can't stay late today.

[00:49:35] I have to, you know, I have to meet with my kids teacher.

[00:49:38] And women are awesome because of all of the things

[00:49:42] the multitasking that a woman is capable of doing, not.

[00:49:46] That's it. It was just the capabilities.

[00:49:48] There's like so wide and varied and we can't do it.

[00:49:52] Yes, yeah, I do it because there is no choice.

[00:49:55] Yeah, there is no.

[00:49:57] And those men at movie there, they were just

[00:50:01] I didn't really like how they flunted the woman

[00:50:04] the the sidebar, the women who came along and and they were

[00:50:09] side and they were and they were skinny and glamorous

[00:50:12] and they can bail out.

[00:50:14] I want this. I want that.

[00:50:15] There was never anything about, well, you know,

[00:50:18] we have to kind of stick with our budget.

[00:50:20] It was OK to put the budget with a wife, but not with

[00:50:24] the side chick, as Danielle said.

[00:50:27] The disrespect was was just in your face.

[00:50:29] And I didn't like that.

[00:50:30] It was full on disrespect.

[00:50:32] That was the perfect word, Christine.

[00:50:33] Do we meet Morty next?

[00:50:36] Who do we meet next?

[00:50:38] Yes, so they're out shopping because

[00:50:41] Brenda needs a dress for the bar mitzvah.

[00:50:44] And so they go to this store and there's like this little

[00:50:49] like short, very form fitting dress in the window.

[00:50:54] And Brenda makes an offhanded comment about it.

[00:50:57] And then they walk inside Morty's there with Shelly.

[00:51:01] Shelly comes out wearing that dress

[00:51:03] and I I hate.

[00:51:06] I hate the weight shaming on both ends.

[00:51:09] I hate that.

[00:51:10] Brenda says, what?

[00:51:12] You can't buy her whole dress.

[00:51:14] You can't buy her a whole dress.

[00:51:16] But then Shelly immediately responds back with like some fat

[00:51:20] shaming comment and Brenda's not like Brenda is just a lady.

[00:51:24] Like she's not even heavy.

[00:51:27] And regardless, you just don't comment about people's weight

[00:51:30] like ever.

[00:51:32] Well, I think it's a projection because

[00:51:36] it is something that Brenda is insecure about within herself.

[00:51:40] And Shelly knows it.

[00:51:42] And so it's like a back and forth with these two very insecure people

[00:51:47] because essentially it's alluded that Shelly had a full on makeover herself.

[00:51:52] And maybe she was a little bit young, naïve and dowdy.

[00:51:55] And she uses Morty's money to, you know, upgrade herself.

[00:52:00] It's that whole thought you're not ugly.

[00:52:01] You're just poor.

[00:52:03] Yes, because in a future scene where she's having lunch with Maggie Smith,

[00:52:08] you can tell she's not refined at all.

[00:52:12] Like you fix the outside girl, but you got to work on the inside.

[00:52:16] Yeah.

[00:52:17] I in this scene, so they're at the store, like you said,

[00:52:21] and Duarte is with Brenda.

[00:52:24] Hope I said that name right.

[00:52:26] Duarte. Duarte.

[00:52:27] Sorry.

[00:52:28] He when he sees Brenda spot Morty,

[00:52:34] he's begging her not to go over there.

[00:52:37] But then when she does, he's hiding.

[00:52:40] And I've always questioned the fact that when he comes to decorate

[00:52:47] the house, why Morty never said, well, that's who my ex-wife works for.

[00:52:53] I don't think I think this is sus.

[00:52:55] Like why isn't he never meet Duarte ever?

[00:53:00] I didn't.

[00:53:01] I've never even pondered that.

[00:53:05] So I was like, OK, maybe that's why he didn't notice because he's hiding in this scene.

[00:53:09] I can understand if they got a divorce so he doesn't really know

[00:53:12] who his wife works for or whatever.

[00:53:14] And she does say that like they don't really interact with each other.

[00:53:18] They kind of talk through Jason essentially.

[00:53:20] But yeah, that was always one of my questions.

[00:53:23] Like how are you hiring the person your ex-wife works for?

[00:53:26] You didn't you didn't know that?

[00:53:29] OK, yeah.

[00:53:30] Now we're sitting with the director played by Timothy Oliphant

[00:53:35] and he he approaches her with this project.

[00:53:38] She's super excited because I think work has slowed down for her.

[00:53:42] And then she finds out it's for the role of the mother.

[00:53:46] Right, because she when she was at the lunch with the girls,

[00:53:49] she was boasting about this new play or movie.

[00:53:54] Sorry, this new movie that was coming out and that there's this really cool role

[00:53:59] of Monique, right? Yes.

[00:54:01] And so she thinks she's talking to the director about the role of Monique.

[00:54:06] And then he starts going, I'm thinking for the makeup, it's just like grotesque.

[00:54:10] And she's like confused because she's like, Monique is the lead.

[00:54:14] Why would you know?

[00:54:15] And she doesn't say it out loud, but he's like for the mother role.

[00:54:18] And you could tell she is just holding on by a thread to keep it together.

[00:54:23] So after that meeting, we see her just get absolutely trashed at a bar

[00:54:29] and going on and on about how she's going to he wants her to play the mother.

[00:54:34] And it's just the poor bartender.

[00:54:36] Yeah, he's very supportive.

[00:54:38] He is. And then eventually he's just like, I'm going to get you some coffee.

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[00:55:13] Annie is at home.

[00:55:15] She's cooking with her mom.

[00:55:17] They're figuring out dinner and she gets a phone call from Aaron and he's like,

[00:55:22] I want to take you out to dinner.

[00:55:23] Can you meet me at the hotel that I've been staying?

[00:55:26] So she's all excited.

[00:55:28] She gets all dressed up.

[00:55:29] They go out have a lovely dinner, go back up to his room.

[00:55:33] They bone.

[00:55:35] And then he tells her he loves her.

[00:55:38] She says I love you back.

[00:55:40] And then he's like, by the way, I want a divorce.

[00:55:43] Be a mount of just gaslighting from this man.

[00:55:52] And like love bombing.

[00:55:54] And I'm like, what is your end goal, sir?

[00:55:57] The way he does this is so cool.

[00:56:00] He's like, well, I was thinking it was a goodbye.

[00:56:02] A goodbye is when both people know that we're leaving.

[00:56:06] Like, let me have you've taken my choice away from me.

[00:56:11] It's so disgusting.

[00:56:13] And so he's telling Annie he wants a divorce and in the middle of it,

[00:56:17] could you imagine?

[00:56:18] Because we do have a scene where Annie does go to her therapist again

[00:56:22] played by Marsha Gay Hardin.

[00:56:24] And when she hits her with that foam bath,

[00:56:29] she should have won an Oscar.

[00:56:31] So the therapist's goal is to try to get Annie to stop

[00:56:36] being a people pleaser and to start tapping into her emotions.

[00:56:41] What her husband or ex-husband, soon to be ex-husband, Aaron likes to do.

[00:56:47] He likes to.

[00:56:50] Pretend that he's the victim in this situation.

[00:56:53] He likes to project that that Annie is a manipulator.

[00:56:57] And it's like the crazy one.

[00:56:59] Right. When Annie is having actual normal reactions to this

[00:57:03] and not even a normal enough.

[00:57:06] But in the span of this whole situation,

[00:57:09] Annie is just after they have sex, she's like, Oh, Dr.

[00:57:13] So-and-so would be so happy and proud of us because we.

[00:57:16] So she's thinking they're getting back together.

[00:57:17] She's telling him to bring his stuff back to the house

[00:57:19] and he's ready to like I'm out.

[00:57:22] And in the midst of all of this,

[00:57:25] their therapist walks at the door because the bitch has a key.

[00:57:30] And then they've been born.

[00:57:32] Right. So unethical.

[00:57:34] Let me tell you.

[00:57:36] When I would have rolled out my revenge plot,

[00:57:39] I would have definitely sent something to

[00:57:43] the whoever runs the board of the therapy board of New York.

[00:57:48] Yes, bitch needs her license revoked.

[00:57:51] You're not supposed you're sleeping with clients, bitch.

[00:57:55] And you've written books and stuff.

[00:57:57] I can bring down your entire fucking career.

[00:58:00] Yes, it's insane, insane.

[00:58:03] And on top of it, she's trying to tell Aaron.

[00:58:06] Oh, did you tell her yet?

[00:58:08] No. And then based on her reaction,

[00:58:12] do you think I've told her about you?

[00:58:15] And then Aaron's like, you're manipulating me.

[00:58:18] And then she's like, oh, the therapist is like, Aaron,

[00:58:22] her feelings are valid.

[00:58:24] Bitch, don't even, don't even.

[00:58:28] I will end you.

[00:58:33] I would pay to see you in that.

[00:58:38] Not that I want you to ever go through that situation.

[00:58:41] Jackie, I would never.

[00:58:42] I would never.

[00:58:43] I would never.

[00:58:44] I would never.

[00:58:46] I wouldn't. I wouldn't.

[00:58:47] First of all, I've never let it escalate.

[00:58:49] No. Far. There's no way.

[00:58:51] Well, and we know we know what gaslighting looks like.

[00:58:55] We know what victim

[00:58:57] like playing the victim looks like now.

[00:58:59] We can call that shit out, but like.

[00:59:05] I did it. I hated it.

[00:59:07] I know one thing that the reaction

[00:59:10] that you would think I would do is like yell and scream.

[00:59:15] I am a cancer through and through.

[00:59:17] OK. And I am for the long haul

[00:59:21] in the sense that you fuck me over like that.

[00:59:25] If you're not, you would be like

[00:59:28] if I was to just yell at you.

[00:59:31] And lose my shit.

[00:59:32] Oh, no. Oh, no.

[00:59:34] I am going to have a well executed plan

[00:59:38] to make sure that you will never forget.

[00:59:42] What you did to me.

[00:59:44] Yeah, as long as you live.

[00:59:46] Never forget for better or for worse.

[00:59:49] Bitch, it's for worse for the rest of your fucking life.

[00:59:52] The bar is in hell.

[00:59:56] That's one thing I could say if you and I

[00:59:59] have ever had beef in life, people in the world.

[01:00:04] And you were able to just like the worst thing that happened was

[01:00:07] that we're just not friends anymore.

[01:00:09] We're just not talking anymore.

[01:00:10] You got off lucky.

[01:00:12] I'll tell you that.

[01:00:14] Because you don't want me thinking you don't want me plotting.

[01:00:18] You don't want sometimes it's just not even worth it.

[01:00:20] But if it's worth it, I feel so sorry for you.

[01:00:25] And that's all I'm going to say.

[01:00:28] I am not one to be tugged with.

[01:00:33] And you know what?

[01:00:34] I'm sure if we asked my mom the question,

[01:00:36] you would say something maniacal.

[01:00:41] That's that's also the worst part.

[01:00:43] I can plot something by myself.

[01:00:46] Don't let Christine jump on this bandwagon.

[01:00:51] Shit me.

[01:00:52] She's rowing this boat too.

[01:00:54] At this point, they all received their letters

[01:00:56] that Cynthia had mailed out.

[01:00:59] The letters just reflect how sad Cynthia is that they didn't keep

[01:01:03] in touch and how she misses her friends and that she wishes

[01:01:08] that she had attributes of each one of them.

[01:01:11] So just a really touching letter, but also very sad

[01:01:15] that she was in this very lonely place

[01:01:18] and didn't feel like she could reach out to them.

[01:01:22] I mean, I know this movie is a comedy

[01:01:24] and it's all about revenge.

[01:01:27] But I think the biggest thing that you could pull from it

[01:01:30] is how important female friendships are.

[01:01:34] I think that now there are studies that come out about it.

[01:01:38] Say if you have really strong friendships, you live longer,

[01:01:40] you live happier lives.

[01:01:43] And I think that so many people get lost in marriages and kids

[01:01:48] and they don't prioritize their friendships.

[01:01:51] It's important even for men.

[01:01:53] Men having their friendships and their things.

[01:01:57] I think it's a Western thought process that

[01:02:01] significant others are the only relationships to have, essentially.

[01:02:07] While if you look at other societies, it's about community in general.

[01:02:11] And I could not exist without my female friendships.

[01:02:18] I just couldn't.

[01:02:19] I think about all the different groups of girlfriends that I have

[01:02:22] and how they just rally, like no matter what happens.

[01:02:26] I have really amazing guy friends.

[01:02:29] I'm not saying that I don't.

[01:02:31] But my female friendships feel my cup.

[01:02:34] They make me feel whole again.

[01:02:39] They lift me up when I'm having dark times and vice versa.

[01:02:44] And so I love that this is a theme in this movie

[01:02:48] that even after years of not talking to each other,

[01:02:50] they were able to come together and help each other.

[01:02:52] And that switch happens after they have that big blow up fight.

[01:02:58] Like in the beginning, them trying to come together was about revenge

[01:03:02] and it was very surface.

[01:03:04] And I think it comes back full circle that's why they change their

[01:03:08] motives of what they're doing this for.

[01:03:10] Right.

[01:03:11] I completely agree.

[01:03:13] And it's just having that sounding board someone.

[01:03:16] And there are toxic friendships as well.

[01:03:19] And just really working on identifying those friends that are your

[01:03:24] writer dies, they're going to be your mirror.

[01:03:26] They're going to support you.

[01:03:28] They're going to uplift you, but they're also going to be honest with you

[01:03:32] in hard times and really help you out, make really thoughtful

[01:03:39] suggestions about it and always checking in like, do you need to vent

[01:03:44] or do you need solutions, things like that and just really weeding

[01:03:49] out the people that don't serve you.

[01:03:52] I may tell a joke, but I won't tell a lie.

[01:03:57] And that's not always an easy thing with me.

[01:04:01] Like I'll sugarcoat it sometimes.

[01:04:04] You know, I don't think my approach is always like hurtful.

[01:04:09] Yeah.

[01:04:10] And it could be blunt, but sometimes it's like, if you have

[01:04:14] a bunch of people around you that are just going to be like telling

[01:04:16] you the good fluffy things, sometimes you've got to have real shit being said.

[01:04:22] You know, like this is not working.

[01:04:24] I see that things aren't working out here.

[01:04:29] I mean, we've had in some of my groups like checking in like,

[01:04:35] Hey, have you found a therapist yet?

[01:04:37] Have you asked them about like just checking in like, we see that you're struggling.

[01:04:41] Yeah.

[01:04:42] You know that you're struggling.

[01:04:43] Like we're going to keep you, hold you accountable for this because we know in

[01:04:47] the long run it's going to be better for you.

[01:04:50] You know, like those are the type of friends you need is like, we're always

[01:04:54] going to be here for you, but we also know that we can always do things

[01:04:59] to better ourselves.

[01:05:02] Yeah, it's just a blessing.

[01:05:03] It's a blessing to have female friendships.

[01:05:06] It's a blessing to have sisters.

[01:05:07] You know, some people their first and last friend is their sister.

[01:05:11] And so if you have it, your cousins, your friends, make sure that your

[01:05:15] fostering those relationships.

[01:05:16] Don't take them for granted.

[01:05:18] Make sure you're checking in because it is, it's literally for your help.

[01:05:24] If anything.

[01:05:25] So I don't back out this movie.

[01:05:27] You'll just buy a compound and you all just live in your houses with your

[01:05:31] pets and you all just live together happily ever after.

[01:05:35] Sheila and I are planning our golden girl years as we see it.

[01:05:42] We always joke that we're just going to all put put all the husbands in a

[01:05:48] house together and then we'll all have a house together.

[01:05:51] And so we can just visit them as needed.

[01:05:56] We don't want to get rid of them, but it does seem like a really better,

[01:06:01] a much better plan if you just live with all your girlfriends long term.

[01:06:05] Yeah, 100 percent.

[01:06:07] At first they call it revenge.

[01:06:09] And then they're like, no, it's justice.

[01:06:11] It's not just about revenge.

[01:06:14] Justice for all of the things that these men have put us through and all

[01:06:18] the sacrifices we've made for these relationships all to be to go to

[01:06:24] shit on the whims of these men.

[01:06:27] Yeah, they they come back together and they're like, you know what?

[01:06:32] Let's let's get these suckers and they're figuring out different ways.

[01:06:36] So they're trying to find dirt on Morty.

[01:06:39] And his business because to find out from her uncle Carmine, what do you feel

[01:06:44] like Uncle Carmine is probably like a mob boss?

[01:06:48] And so he just has a hand in everything.

[01:06:50] Okay.

[01:06:51] Well, he's Brenda's dad's brother.

[01:06:56] So he finds she finds out that Morty when he first started his business,

[01:07:03] like there was some issues and so a good amount of product for

[01:07:07] his store came from, you know, falling off the truck.

[01:07:11] And so Brenda never knew this.

[01:07:13] And this was because of when they first got married, I think they were

[01:07:15] just in a place of the dad and uncle decided to like help him out,

[01:07:20] which means that his business started off with some illegal shit.

[01:07:24] So they're trying to find.

[01:07:25] So her goal is to try to find proof of what happened.

[01:07:30] Then with the divorce with Elise, she decides because they're supposed

[01:07:35] to split their split everything 5050.

[01:07:39] She comes into his office unannounced and just has all these movers

[01:07:44] start taking all his shit from his office and he's losing it.

[01:07:47] They also get his Lamborghini later.

[01:07:49] And I love one of Elise's on the she's on the treadmill and she's walking

[01:07:55] and she's like, the Lamborghini.

[01:08:00] And they're just checking things off of the whiteboard that's in there.

[01:08:05] That whiteboard was epic.

[01:08:07] Like who the fuck made that?

[01:08:10] It was like a whole calendar year on a giant like wall.

[01:08:15] It just went across.

[01:08:17] Yeah. And there was different colors for the different men.

[01:08:20] So they were they were it was it was very interesting.

[01:08:25] So I love when like

[01:08:28] they take Bill's desk and he's like back off, Jacko.

[01:08:34] Johnny was like, I'm going to be saying that to you from now.

[01:08:39] At first he's like, this is my office.

[01:08:41] Like why are you taking my stuff?

[01:08:42] She's like, you said everything we acquired together

[01:08:46] and all of this because he wants all of her the gifts he's ever given her back.

[01:08:52] So she's like most of this stuff was gifts I've given you.

[01:08:55] So that goes into the pot as well.

[01:08:57] Like Elise knows her shit.

[01:09:01] She is and she's given him a hard time.

[01:09:03] I do love that we are introduced to Jesse Spann.

[01:09:08] Yes, Elizabeth Berkeley.

[01:09:10] So we meet her and we find out that she has the role of Monique.

[01:09:15] And because when she meets her and runs up to her,

[01:09:18] she's like, you're going to be playing my mother and she's like, what the fuck?

[01:09:22] So we find out Bill is with her.

[01:09:28] And she's very young.

[01:09:29] Well, we find out later how young she is.

[01:09:31] But she looks very young.

[01:09:34] And then we move on over to Morty.

[01:09:36] They kidnap him like full on kidnap him.

[01:09:41] And I love how Uncle Carmine is so fucking right or die.

[01:09:46] You know, he's like Morty is trash.

[01:09:48] You want me to take him out?

[01:09:50] And Brenda's like, no, no, no, we're just going to scare him.

[01:09:53] So they pull him into a meat butcher shop.

[01:09:58] Like the there's meat.

[01:10:00] Yeah.

[01:10:02] Is this this happens later?

[01:10:04] Because what?

[01:10:05] And they set up the meeting with Camilla.

[01:10:09] Is that her name or Cornelia?

[01:10:10] I don't know. Maggie, Dave Maggie Smith.

[01:10:13] They have onella.

[01:10:15] They have her play in to this whole thing because they need her

[01:10:19] to recommend Dwardo as an interior designer.

[01:10:23] So they get access into their apartment, Marty and Shelley's apartment.

[01:10:28] And so that's like what you were saying.

[01:10:31] We see that she's so uncultured, she doesn't know anything.

[01:10:34] And it's very easy to like throw the wool over her eyes.

[01:10:38] And so her Gwinnala.

[01:10:41] I love when Gwinnala is like take her fork because the way

[01:10:46] she is eating that salad is fucking ridiculous.

[01:10:51] So Dwardo comes and but he says like he needs space in the house.

[01:10:55] And so they go out.

[01:10:57] He kicks them out essentially and he gets the girls in.

[01:11:00] But of course, when Brenda sees this place, she is pissed because

[01:11:05] she's constantly having to beg Morty for money and all sorts of stuff

[01:11:10] just to like pay the rent for where her son and her live.

[01:11:13] Like it's awful.

[01:11:15] And so now she sees this apartment

[01:11:17] because he's always saying he doesn't have money,

[01:11:18] but he's buying Shelley all of these things.

[01:11:21] And she literally has carte blanche to his bank account.

[01:11:25] Yeah, it's he's he's trash all the way.

[01:11:28] And they find some documents, but they don't really find everything.

[01:11:32] And this is when you get the infamous window washing scene because

[01:11:37] like they're going to die.

[01:11:38] And I love that Maggie Smith is in the car watching all this shit.

[01:11:41] She's like, oh, God, there it is.

[01:11:45] So good.

[01:11:46] The physical comedy in this scene

[01:11:50] and the way first when Morty and Shelley arrive back home before

[01:11:57] they're done searching his office, the way Annie panics.

[01:12:03] And she's she throws the documents in like her clothes.

[01:12:08] She is so out of control.

[01:12:13] And then they like they're trying to get out

[01:12:17] and they finally get on the washer elevator thing.

[01:12:21] Yeah. And then like it seems like there's no

[01:12:27] governor on how fast it can be let down, which seems dangerous.

[01:12:32] Yes.

[01:12:33] It's that they like lie down and Annie like doesn't even want to get on it.

[01:12:38] They're like forcing her on it.

[01:12:41] And I love how Elise is like, look, I can do it.

[01:12:45] I do all my own stunts.

[01:12:47] And she's like, does one of them say you want to do it again or something?

[01:12:53] Yeah. At the end when Brenda, Brenda reaches the ground, she's like,

[01:12:57] do you want to do it again?

[01:12:59] And he's like, give me the fuck off for this thing.

[01:13:03] I do also love that the staircase in that apartment doesn't have any railings.

[01:13:08] Let me tell you the way my anxiety I could never I could barely make it

[01:13:14] on the little steps I have here.

[01:13:16] There I would fall.

[01:13:18] I'd be good. Oh, and in the window washing scene, they like go down

[01:13:23] and they stop at this other apartment and it's to a couple in bed.

[01:13:28] And the lady is like, is that Elise Elliott?

[01:13:32] And then they're like yelling, you look great.

[01:13:34] And she just goes, oh, there he is.

[01:13:36] And then they serve.

[01:13:38] I'm so good.

[01:13:40] And did you recognize who that lady was in bed?

[01:13:43] I don't remember. Who was it?

[01:13:46] It was Ellis Gray from Grey's Anatomy.

[01:13:49] That's right. I saw her.

[01:13:52] I saw her picture in the castles.

[01:13:55] I was confused because I had before I saw that like I started

[01:13:59] doing the notes, I saw John Stewart and I saw her and I was like,

[01:14:02] where the hell was where is she?

[01:14:05] Oh my God, yes.

[01:14:07] Yeah, spotted.

[01:14:09] They also figure out because they're like, we want to start this

[01:14:13] first wives club for one, Elise needs a place to store all her shit.

[01:14:17] And number two, we need a place where we can kind of like meet together.

[01:14:21] And at least it's just like, oh, yeah, by the way, I own this building.

[01:14:26] Right. You didn't think about that before.

[01:14:28] And first of all, how much are you that you own a building

[01:14:31] and you haven't you don't have to do anything with it?

[01:14:33] Like you don't have ten in New York.

[01:14:35] Right. Yeah.

[01:14:38] So yeah, she has that building.

[01:14:40] And so there the whole goal is to take all the assets

[01:14:46] that she's taken from Bill and sell it at Christie's

[01:14:51] and then give the money to Annie.

[01:14:55] No, Annie buys all of the assets for a dollar from her.

[01:15:00] Yeah. And then Annie's the one who does the auction at Christie's.

[01:15:05] Right. So that she can have enough money to buy Aaron's

[01:15:10] partners out of his ad agency.

[01:15:14] What's she essentially, I think she like helped start.

[01:15:17] Yeah. And she finds out that his partners went out

[01:15:21] because her daughter, Chris agrees to go and intern

[01:15:26] at the advertising agency to get recon for Annie and the ladies.

[01:15:32] And all I think the biggest thing that all these men did

[01:15:37] was underestimate their their wives.

[01:15:39] Yep. The scene in which Annie,

[01:15:42] I know probably bouncing from where we are, but when she goes in

[01:15:46] and Aaron comes into the office and sees that Annie's there sitting with his

[01:15:51] partners and their faces, the partners faces as they're it's like,

[01:15:58] this is some good tea, but.

[01:16:01] I'm a I'm a head out.

[01:16:04] Things are getting real real scary around here.

[01:16:08] And so Aaron starts pleading, he starts getting angry like he you could see him

[01:16:12] literally go from each stage of manipulation and.

[01:16:17] Yep. Because at first he's like, I'll take my all of my all of my accounts

[01:16:22] with me, you'll be left with nothing.

[01:16:24] I'll just go start another firm, blah, blah, blah.

[01:16:26] And she's like, oh, by the way, I just secured a $45 million

[01:16:31] ad contract.

[01:16:33] This is how rich people do business.

[01:16:37] I know that they're just like we're doing revenge, essentially.

[01:16:41] But this is how it works.

[01:16:43] I know a friend we're going to partner in this.

[01:16:45] We're going to make money here.

[01:16:46] So like the money just comes in a circle, essentially,

[01:16:50] because the big client that Annie has now is going to be Morty's business.

[01:16:55] Yeah.

[01:16:57] It's it's epic.

[01:16:59] And if Elise doesn't need more movies, I'm sure she could work with the studios

[01:17:02] to say, I think this ad agency could do the advertising marketing.

[01:17:06] Yeah.

[01:17:07] It's it's.

[01:17:09] It's just.

[01:17:10] Jeff's kiss.

[01:17:11] So while they're kind of redo reliving the window washing event,

[01:17:18] scaffolding stunt, they're at Elise's building.

[01:17:22] It is it does need a lot of work, but they're having like a little picnic

[01:17:27] and they're drinking wine and eating and just reminiscing.

[01:17:31] And so they did talk about how they they did like this girl group

[01:17:35] for Cynthia's 21st birthday.

[01:17:38] And this is when we kind of get like a very shortened rendition of you don't

[01:17:42] own me and Annie is very stage shy.

[01:17:45] She's like, I don't want to sing by myself.

[01:17:47] You guys have to sing with me mean girls.

[01:17:50] They're like, yeah, sure.

[01:17:51] And so they start out that way and then they stop singing when Annie gets

[01:17:55] like really into it.

[01:17:57] Not really nice.

[01:17:59] Actually, I would be out of this friend group.

[01:18:04] If I were any, I wouldn't be in this friend group.

[01:18:07] These women are not nice to themselves.

[01:18:12] Women who aren't nice to themselves are most likely not going to be nice to you.

[01:18:16] Yeah.

[01:18:18] So I'm glad that they like turn things around towards the end.

[01:18:21] I'm glad that Annie gets more of a backbone, but you could tell

[01:18:25] that these two start getting up on her.

[01:18:28] So in this moment, they do that joke.

[01:18:30] It's a joke, whatever.

[01:18:31] But when they do have their falling out at this is a house.

[01:18:35] This is when they're like going through her house and they're

[01:18:38] seeing like her golden globes or after whatever that they have.

[01:18:42] I love that the Golden Globe that that they pick up the talkie

[01:18:47] that Brenda picks up is actually Goldie Hans real Golden

[01:18:52] or was it an Oscar?

[01:18:55] It was an Oscar first and then they get the Golden Globe.

[01:18:59] The Golden Globe is what they throw.

[01:19:01] Right.

[01:19:02] So the funny thing is in this scene.

[01:19:06] I never put two and two together.

[01:19:08] And Jennifer Lawrence was like dragged for this.

[01:19:11] But in her acceptance speech after winning the Golden Globe

[01:19:14] for Best Actress in a Musical or Comedy for Civil

[01:19:16] Lightning's Playbook in 2012, she says, Oh, what does it say?

[01:19:20] It says I beat Meryl in reference to the line of this movie.

[01:19:23] But everybody like trashed her and said that pearls.

[01:19:29] Yeah.

[01:19:29] And said it was an insensitive comment because it just so happened

[01:19:33] she was up against Meryl Streep.

[01:19:36] And I'm like, oh man, I'm really mad as a 90s girl

[01:19:39] that I missed that reference.

[01:19:41] And we should apologize to Jennifer Lawrence for giving her

[01:19:44] shit for that.

[01:19:44] I didn't think anything of it.

[01:19:46] I thought it was funny, but a lot of people thought it was mean.

[01:19:49] So in this scene, they start arguing because Elise is frustrated

[01:19:54] that she's not finding anything on Bill.

[01:19:57] And she's like, you're going to have Morty, Morty nailed to the wall.

[01:20:01] Erin is going to, you know, be in big trouble.

[01:20:04] And so she just starts feeling sorry for herself

[01:20:07] and she's just having a hard time.

[01:20:09] She also mentions that she got an offer for this like Broadway.

[01:20:15] Not a Broadway, but like a theater role.

[01:20:18] And Annie's like, you should do it.

[01:20:20] And she's like, no, this is for a step down.

[01:20:24] Yeah.

[01:20:26] This is the time that they do really fall out

[01:20:28] and everyone is calling each other out on their shit.

[01:20:32] So Annie's trying to be the pacifist, tried to be the peacemaker

[01:20:36] and the both Elise and Brenda are like going at each other's throats.

[01:20:40] Brenda is calling out the fact that Elise is a full on alcoholic.

[01:20:45] She even pulls up a garbage bag with and you hear all of the bottles.

[01:20:48] It's pretty bad.

[01:20:49] Like that's a lot of bottles.

[01:20:52] And then Elise calls out Brenda for, you know, her behavior,

[01:20:58] like kind of holding a torch for Morty and all that stuff

[01:21:03] and not really having her own life situation.

[01:21:06] They they pit Annie against one another and tell her she has to choose

[01:21:09] which one she wants to be friends with at some point.

[01:21:13] And that's when Annie kind of loses it, like she, her anger finally comes through.

[01:21:20] It comes through because they make her choose, try to make her choose

[01:21:23] when she doesn't shoot, then they both start going after her back and forth.

[01:21:27] Yeah.

[01:21:28] And I'm just like, y'all are some bitches for real.

[01:21:32] Yeah.

[01:21:33] I love how Annie says you both have severe psychological problems.

[01:21:39] And then they all started slapping one another too.

[01:21:42] There ain't no way.

[01:21:44] Ain't no way.

[01:21:46] No, but before this scene, we get the scene at Christie's.

[01:21:52] And so Duarte and Grinnella are with Shelly.

[01:21:56] They're supposed to be buying things to decorate her house house with Morty.

[01:22:02] And they just keep like running up her tab that buys like this chase

[01:22:07] that she doesn't really want.

[01:22:08] And then there's this Japanese plate, a singular plate, and it's going for like

[01:22:15] $160,000 and she's like, Morty is going to be upset, blah, blah, blah.

[01:22:21] Brenda's in the back in disguise running up the tab.

[01:22:26] You have a lease that's sitting there and bidding on stuff to influence Shelly

[01:22:30] to buy it because Shelly looks up to Elise Elliott.

[01:22:33] And then you have Annie in the backkeeping track of how much money

[01:22:38] they're they're like essentially siphoning from Morty.

[01:22:41] She also purchases Bill Lambo and gives it to Morty as a gift.

[01:22:46] And Morty's like, you're spending all this fucking money.

[01:22:50] And she's like, I bought the Lambo as a gift for you.

[01:22:53] And he's like with my money like that.

[01:22:55] I bought me a gift.

[01:22:57] And then all she has to do is start taking off her clothes and seducing him.

[01:23:01] And he shuts up.

[01:23:02] I it's just so fucking easy.

[01:23:05] It's ridiculous.

[01:23:06] Elise goes over to Brenda's and.

[01:23:10] Says like, she she doesn't want to be like Cynthia.

[01:23:13] She doesn't want to live this lonely existence without friends.

[01:23:17] I like how she walks into Brenda's house and says something like,

[01:23:23] oh, this is real.

[01:23:25] Like it's like an actual like normal house.

[01:23:30] Like and then this is when they kind of come back together and.

[01:23:36] Forming that deeper bond and saying, like this is bigger than us.

[01:23:40] We can't let this happen to other women.

[01:23:43] We need to do something about it.

[01:23:45] We need to think globally.

[01:23:47] So Elise which drinking she's like, hey, you know what?

[01:23:51] We don't have to actually have dirt on Bill.

[01:23:54] We could just imply that we have dirt on Bill.

[01:23:57] So this is where it gets muddy, like did she.

[01:24:01] She takes the yearbook.

[01:24:04] So Elise takes Phoebe to lunch and they start talking.

[01:24:08] And that's when it's she finds out from that lunch

[01:24:13] all about Phoebe's situation and how old she really is.

[01:24:16] And then she digs up like the yearbook and stuff.

[01:24:21] Yeah. So. OK.

[01:24:23] Because like she did say we just need Bill to think

[01:24:26] like he's done something wrong. Right.

[01:24:28] But then she does actually find. Yes.

[01:24:31] That's where I was confused.

[01:24:32] OK. And this is also when she finds out that Phoebe was cast as Monique.

[01:24:37] Yeah. And that she be playing her mom.

[01:24:40] Well, I also like at the end of this this scene where they're at lunch

[01:24:43] where Phoebe's like, oh, you're not Satan.

[01:24:49] Damn, Bill.

[01:24:51] Well, could you imagine Jenny McCarthy,

[01:24:54] Walberg turn that she would have been Phoebe?

[01:24:56] Could you see her as Phoebe instead?

[01:24:59] I could.

[01:25:00] I she turned on the role and I'm wondering, bitch, why?

[01:25:03] What were you doing singled out like?

[01:25:07] Baseball like.

[01:25:10] This is top tier. Yeah.

[01:25:13] Jenny McCarthy.

[01:25:14] Why the hell did you say no to First Wise Club?

[01:25:18] She didn't know.

[01:25:18] Maybe she got the original script.

[01:25:21] Maybe because that was a mess.

[01:25:23] Yeah. And the feds show up at Morty's store or the the feds.

[01:25:29] Yeah, this is going to get kidnapped.

[01:25:33] Like we were saying.

[01:25:34] Yeah, Uncle Carmine and his team throw him

[01:25:38] throw a bag over his head and throw him in the trunk

[01:25:41] and they show up at the butchers shop and Brenda's like,

[01:25:45] I got all the shit on you.

[01:25:47] We've got letters.

[01:25:48] We've got your books like.

[01:25:51] Yeah, you're cooked.

[01:25:52] You're done.

[01:25:54] And she's like, you have two choices.

[01:25:56] You could either go to prison and lose everything

[01:26:01] or start giving me fucking money.

[01:26:04] Give me some money and I'm in control of everything.

[01:26:06] The marketing, the business like I'm in charge.

[01:26:10] Pretty much he's like, OK, I have no fucking choice.

[01:26:12] So after all of them invoke their revenge

[01:26:16] against their husbands and give them all cards,

[01:26:18] they have these cute little first wives club business cards made.

[01:26:22] And they're told to meet them the next day at a certain time.

[01:26:26] They get there. They're all I love how they're like sitting next to each other

[01:26:30] like they're in a waiting room. Yeah.

[01:26:32] And the daughter now works there.

[01:26:35] Love how she's just always like, hey, Daddy, even though she's like,

[01:26:39] I fucking hate you.

[01:26:42] And right before they go in, she's like, and by the way,

[01:26:45] I am a lesbian, a big one.

[01:26:47] And this really does tell for the time that

[01:26:52] how different times are like how that would have been like one of the worst

[01:26:56] things possible for.

[01:26:58] I mean, I know there's some people who are still ignorant

[01:27:01] that that would be the worst thing ever for their child.

[01:27:04] But at this time, it's crazy.

[01:27:06] Oh, and we also miss one of my favorite scenes,

[01:27:10] which is when they go to the lesbian bar

[01:27:14] and boo from Orange is the new black.

[01:27:16] Is that because Elise is a gay icon, of course.

[01:27:21] And they're like dancing and having a great time.

[01:27:25] And all of her fans are like dancing up on her.

[01:27:29] And she's just having a great time.

[01:27:30] And Brenda has to step in and say, like, let's go.

[01:27:33] And then one of the girls are like, she's with me.

[01:27:36] And she's like, no, she's with me.

[01:27:40] I love that scene so much.

[01:27:43] So so much fun.

[01:27:45] And Elise is just eating it up.

[01:27:50] Yeah.

[01:27:53] The husband's essentially you're going to start paying us.

[01:27:57] Right.

[01:27:57] And we're going to take your money and we're going to put it

[01:28:00] towards a more worthy cause that's bigger than us.

[01:28:04] Like revenge, if we just sought after revenge,

[01:28:07] we wouldn't be any better than y'all are.

[01:28:10] We're trying to make a difference.

[01:28:11] Right.

[01:28:12] There's a montage of like building renovations.

[01:28:16] Doing it for themselves.

[01:28:20] That was lovely.

[01:28:22] They meet with other like first wives, start consulting with them.

[01:28:26] Elise is in the play.

[01:28:27] They show up for her.

[01:28:29] It's like it's a huge success.

[01:28:31] So then we find out it's opening night for their efforts.

[01:28:36] And we find out it's the Cynthia Swan griffin crisis center for women.

[01:28:41] I feel like they should have taken the griffin off and just like

[01:28:45] given her, her made a name back since her ex husband was the one who kind of

[01:28:53] made her spiral anyway.

[01:28:55] Or the fact that his last name is on there.

[01:28:57] It's like always attached to him as a reminder that you're shit.

[01:29:01] That's true.

[01:29:02] But Kathy Gifford comes.

[01:29:06] It's like, gosh, this is so old.

[01:29:09] She comes and interviews them.

[01:29:10] And there's a scene in that scene when they're asked, she's like, is it true

[01:29:14] that the reason you started this, which calls it all your ex husbands were,

[01:29:18] you know, got younger, wise or whatever.

[01:29:20] And they're like, yeah, there's a scene that they cut because they were

[01:29:25] like, where's your husband, Kathy Griffords, husband, you know, very.

[01:29:32] Popular. Yeah.

[01:29:33] They're like, where's Frank?

[01:29:34] She's like, oh, he's at home watching Cody.

[01:29:37] And the last whip that Brenda says is that's what you think they took it out

[01:29:42] because literally, I think the next year, that's when his cheating scandal came out.

[01:29:50] Yeah.

[01:29:50] Whoops.

[01:29:52] As a child, I remember that shit rolling out on Regis and Kelly.

[01:29:56] And like, she was like, I'm gonna stand by my man.

[01:29:58] Oh yeah.

[01:29:59] Regis and Kathy.

[01:30:01] And like, that's my man.

[01:30:03] I'm gonna stick beside him.

[01:30:05] Just like Julie Chen Moonves.

[01:30:07] Ugh.

[01:30:08] Sad.

[01:30:09] All the husbands show up for the opening, but Morty drives up in Bill's Lamborghini.

[01:30:16] And Shelly is like, I'm not feeling special.

[01:30:18] Why are you going to your ex-wives thing?

[01:30:21] Blah, blah, blah.

[01:30:23] I'm not Brenda.

[01:30:24] And he like looks at her and he's like, no, you're not.

[01:30:28] Because all he asks is like, can you just come in for a little bit

[01:30:31] and then we can leave.

[01:30:32] And she can't even do that.

[01:30:34] And he realizes just like how self-centered she is.

[01:30:37] He goes in there and he sees Brenda and Brenda's day.

[01:30:41] Brenda is dancing with their son, Jason.

[01:30:43] Also when Jason had his bar mitzvah, he had brought Shelly and that was like a whole thing.

[01:30:49] And so now Jason's like, oh God, I don't want you guys to fight.

[01:30:53] But they're actually really nice to each other and Morty cuts in and starts dancing.

[01:30:58] And so we see reconciliation.

[01:31:00] Let me tell you, I rather sit on a hot hole of fucking fire than to take this man back.

[01:31:11] Especially because we forgot this part when Shelly is like trying to get in good

[01:31:17] after she spends all that money at Christie's.

[01:31:20] She's like, she says something about not being engaged and like the next scene

[01:31:27] we see with Jason and Brenda, Jason's telling him like, oh, dad got engaged to Shelly.

[01:31:34] So like you're now engaged to this woman that you left me for.

[01:31:39] And it's just going to take a dance in a little like the tiniest apology ever.

[01:31:46] And I'm going to swoon.

[01:31:48] I don't think so.

[01:31:49] There's no there's no way because despite like, OK, I get it.

[01:31:53] You guys both still love each other.

[01:31:55] Yeah, maybe he's having a midlife crisis.

[01:31:58] But he was he already showed you who he is.

[01:32:02] You as his wife, who helped him build his career that your family helped him build

[01:32:07] his career and when he divorced you, he gave you nothing that you're struggling.

[01:32:12] Yep.

[01:32:13] Right.

[01:32:13] And clearly he had enough to help me attain it.

[01:32:18] And just how mean he is to her without sticking up for her, putting Shelly

[01:32:25] in her place and saying, you know what?

[01:32:26] We're not together anymore.

[01:32:27] But that's some other my child do not speak to her like that in my presence.

[01:32:31] He does none of these things.

[01:32:34] You know, he cheats on her, which is also horrible.

[01:32:37] So like he's already showed you who he is as a person.

[01:32:43] So there's no fucking way.

[01:32:46] That's why I love when Annie was like, yeah, Erin asked for us to get back

[01:32:50] together and I told him go to fucking hell like in no way.

[01:32:54] And of course, Bill catches Shelly outside with his old Lamborghini.

[01:33:00] I know they deserve each other.

[01:33:03] Yes.

[01:33:04] 100% here with somebody.

[01:33:05] She's like, not really bitch.

[01:33:07] But he also he learns from his mistakes because he's like, how old are you?

[01:33:15] I would have been like, let me see that license.

[01:33:16] You don't hesitate.

[01:33:18] I'm going to need some papers to confirm that you are of age.

[01:33:23] Age of consent.

[01:33:25] So now that the event has ended, they're kind of closing up for the night.

[01:33:30] And they're all dressed.

[01:33:32] I was like, how did they freeze this dress code?

[01:33:36] Because it seems like almost all the women are in white and all the men are in gray.

[01:33:41] So it's not even like they were like, it's black tie because everyone.

[01:33:45] And I thought that was a really interesting thing to do.

[01:33:49] It's like kind of you don't even get like that stark contrast.

[01:33:54] You're gray to us.

[01:33:56] Like you fade into the background.

[01:33:59] So then we get the full, you don't own me dance routine.

[01:34:06] And that's how the movie ends is them dancing out of the space and into the street

[01:34:14] and they just dance off into the moonlight together.

[01:34:18] I love how like, I know this dance routine and I love how when Annie sings her or Diane

[01:34:24] Keaton essentially sings her part, she goes, I know that's going to be a jib.

[01:34:29] Tell me what to say.

[01:34:31] Like are you having a seizure or are you singing?

[01:34:35] That's what I'm like, Shelly, Sally Fields could have done it.

[01:34:39] Like she would.

[01:34:41] You just have to carry some sort of a tune.

[01:34:44] You don't have to be.

[01:34:46] Or be dubbed by someone else.

[01:34:48] It wouldn't be the first time.

[01:34:49] It's true.

[01:34:51] Well, that is First Wives Club.

[01:34:54] Let's hear from the moms on their like overall opinion about the movie and any

[01:35:00] other sprinklings of insight they have.

[01:35:06] Well, anything else that stood out for you guys for this about this movie?

[01:35:11] I liked, I like Diane Keaton's outfits.

[01:35:16] I like her stuff.

[01:35:17] I did.

[01:35:18] I liked how she put how she put together.

[01:35:22] I mean, Goldie Horn was a little bit different because she was more, you know,

[01:35:27] sexy and girly and she was fat.

[01:35:30] Yeah, she was fabulous.

[01:35:32] And then I just liked Diane Keaton.

[01:35:34] I think that goes back to Annie Hall, Arrow, which that movie and and she

[01:35:40] dressed, I liked her stuff.

[01:35:43] Yeah, it's about it.

[01:35:44] Yeah, I just think Diane Keaton was playing Diane Keaton like she does in a lot of

[01:35:48] movies. Yeah.

[01:35:51] That's true.

[01:35:52] What about you?

[01:35:54] I really enjoyed the end song.

[01:35:56] Yes. Yes.

[01:35:58] Yeah, that's a fun song.

[01:36:01] And their little dance.

[01:36:04] Jackie and Terry didn't bother you that all of their outfits weren't

[01:36:08] the same kind of white.

[01:36:09] My mom and I had this conversation last night.

[01:36:12] That one was like a winter white one had cream.

[01:36:15] Like, did it bother you?

[01:36:16] Did even think about it.

[01:36:17] Just a question.

[01:36:19] Ask my mind.

[01:36:20] Jackie.

[01:36:22] No.

[01:36:23] So mom, I am your daughter.

[01:36:25] More.

[01:36:26] It bothered you.

[01:36:27] It bothered me this time.

[01:36:29] I mean, I noticed it, but it didn't.

[01:36:31] I'm like, you know,

[01:36:32] it always bothered me about that movie.

[01:36:34] I love their outfits, but I'm like, wow.

[01:36:37] And you know what else it is if, OK, let's see.

[01:36:42] I say Elise was in winter white fully.

[01:36:44] And then Annie was in cream and then Brenda was in like off white.

[01:36:50] Fine.

[01:36:51] But Annie had a cream jacket with the off white outfit.

[01:36:57] And I'm just like, oh, did you?

[01:37:01] I do not notice that.

[01:37:02] I'm going to have to go back and look.

[01:37:04] You'll never not look at it again.

[01:37:06] I'll focus on that.

[01:37:09] Something to focus on.

[01:37:11] Yes.

[01:37:12] I have just a fun fact that I thought would be interesting.

[01:37:15] What would you guys have thought about Sally Field playing the role of

[01:37:19] Annie instead of Diane Keaton?

[01:37:21] Do you think it would have still worked or would you have preferred Diane Keaton?

[01:37:25] Oh, you just said Diane Keaton was playing Diane Keaton.

[01:37:29] Yeah.

[01:37:30] My opinion, Sally Field plays Sally Field in every movie.

[01:37:35] So it would have been the same.

[01:37:37] It would have been the same difference, right?

[01:37:39] Yeah.

[01:37:40] I think Diane Keaton was perfect for that role.

[01:37:45] She's kind of, you know, quirky and a wimpy, you know, wimpy.

[01:37:51] Because, you know, because her husband, he, ah,

[01:37:56] The pedo.

[01:37:57] He's been worst out of the three of them.

[01:38:00] He is the worst.

[01:38:02] Yeah.

[01:38:03] He was worse than what he did and how he conned her.

[01:38:07] You know, I didn't think that she responded besides screaming.

[01:38:14] I think that was enough.

[01:38:16] I would have killed him, you know, just for how he did.

[01:38:20] No, that was a total betrayal.

[01:38:22] I didn't like that.

[01:38:23] And I'm thinking,

[01:38:24] isn't there laws against therapists or was he not?

[01:38:27] Yes.

[01:38:28] I said this.

[01:38:29] She should have called the bar or whatever.

[01:38:31] Whatever association.

[01:38:32] Because not a lawyer.

[01:38:33] It's not a bar, but like there's a psychiatrist.

[01:38:35] Yeah.

[01:38:36] Yeah.

[01:38:37] An association.

[01:38:38] But I think there's rules about them having relationships with

[01:38:41] their parents.

[01:38:42] Patience.

[01:38:43] I really do.

[01:38:44] She could have gotten in trouble.

[01:38:45] I told Jackie, I would have ruined both their lives.

[01:38:48] Slowly and surely.

[01:38:49] But you know, I'm like, Marsha Gay Hardin.

[01:38:52] I do too.

[01:38:53] Yeah, me too.

[01:38:54] I like her.

[01:38:55] I think the rules were a little bit different.

[01:38:57] I think the rules were a little bit different.

[01:38:59] I like her.

[01:39:00] I think the rules were a little bit different back then, you know,

[01:39:04] as opposed to now where, I mean, I know that they're standards,

[01:39:09] but I do think how easily it was for them to get,

[01:39:15] you know,

[01:39:16] get all of the, what do you call it?

[01:39:20] The furniture and all the things they sold and everything that I'm

[01:39:24] like, wow, you know, I could have done that.

[01:39:28] I mean, that's too easy.

[01:39:31] I mean, that was very, very easy to do.

[01:39:34] Why couldn't I have done that?

[01:39:35] I could have sold everything and to my friends and yeah.

[01:39:40] So the movies made it look a lot easier.

[01:39:42] Yeah.

[01:39:43] And they're also extremely rich.

[01:39:45] I feel like rich people live by totally different rules.

[01:39:48] Yeah. Oh yeah.

[01:39:49] Yeah.

[01:39:50] They just called somebody and kind of taking care of it.

[01:39:53] I would have had the uncle like take care of all of them and just

[01:39:57] call it a day.

[01:39:58] None of this first West Club.

[01:39:59] Just take them out.

[01:40:00] Iced them.

[01:40:01] In y'all.

[01:40:02] Sorry mom.

[01:40:03] The script itself had an interesting Bernie.

[01:40:06] So it was, it originally belonged to Sherri Lansing who bought

[01:40:10] the unpublished manuscript of the novel in 91 after many

[01:40:14] publishers had rejected it.

[01:40:16] She handed it over to producer Scott Rudin when she became

[01:40:19] the CEO of Paramount Pictures in 92.

[01:40:22] She was quoted saying it was one of the single best ideas for a

[01:40:26] movie I had ever heard in a 1996 interview with the New York

[01:40:30] Times.

[01:40:31] The situation of a woman getting left for a younger version of

[01:40:34] herself was far too common, but we didn't want a movie about

[01:40:37] women as victims.

[01:40:38] We wanted a movie about empowerment.

[01:40:41] Scott Rudin then consulted Robert Harling to write the

[01:40:44] screenplay whose script was reworked by the director

[01:40:48] of the script was reworked by Paul Rudnick when Harding left to

[01:40:52] direct the evening star in 1996.

[01:40:55] I think it's very interesting that this movie about female

[01:41:01] empowerment and like taking power back.

[01:41:06] All of the screenplay writers seem to be men.

[01:41:11] But yeah, that I was, I'm not surprised at the time it's

[01:41:15] about women, but also I think they did a good job because

[01:41:20] there weren't anything.

[01:41:23] There was still a woman behind all this.

[01:41:25] So the great thing is that she was the CEO of Paramount.

[01:41:28] So I think she had a lot more to say about what was going on

[01:41:33] here.

[01:41:34] But also the fact that we also had a male director.

[01:41:39] Yeah.

[01:41:40] It was very male driven, which leads me to question like

[01:41:45] were there ghost writers who were women and they just were not

[01:41:49] credited with this movie?

[01:41:50] Probably a hundred percent.

[01:41:52] There were a lot of hands on this, on this script.

[01:41:55] So I wouldn't be surprised if other people had their hands in

[01:41:58] it.

[01:41:59] Well, if you, if you love this episode have questions for the

[01:42:04] moms questions for us and you want to give us feedback head

[01:42:07] over to no more late fees at Instagram, Facebook,

[01:42:11] TikTok, Twitter, YouTube and threads.

[01:42:13] And let's get to our present day ratings.

[01:42:15] Start with you, Jackie.

[01:42:17] It's still a would buy.

[01:42:19] I enjoyed every moment of this movie and when Ken gets home,

[01:42:24] I'll probably rewatch it with him.

[01:42:26] Like it's so good.

[01:42:28] Same.

[01:42:29] A win is win.

[01:42:32] I love this movie a lot.

[01:42:35] It's one of my all time favorites.

[01:42:37] And it's probably because of the personal connection that I

[01:42:41] attach it with my mom.

[01:42:43] Speaking of the moms, let's ask them what their present day

[01:42:46] rating after making them rewatch it.

[01:42:48] All right.

[01:42:49] Now we're going to ask you guys now that you rewatch the

[01:42:52] movie, what your ratings today would be.

[01:42:54] So I'll start with, I'll start with you, mom.

[01:42:56] What would your rating be?

[01:42:58] I would do a five day rental.

[01:43:00] Okay.

[01:43:01] Because.

[01:43:02] I saw so many different things that I didn't pay attention to the

[01:43:06] first time.

[01:43:07] So yes, I'm going to go back and watch it again because I know

[01:43:12] there's just so many things.

[01:43:13] So I would buy it.

[01:43:17] But you don't have to because you can watch it.

[01:43:20] Yeah.

[01:43:21] But I would, I would still buy it if we couldn't watch it free.

[01:43:24] I would, I would definitely buy it.

[01:43:25] Yeah.

[01:43:26] Again, cause I would buy it.

[01:43:27] I would buy it.

[01:43:28] Okay.

[01:43:29] Well, Jackie and I said would buy it on both rounds.

[01:43:32] Apparently we very much like revenge a lot.

[01:43:36] I told you all the actresses in it too.

[01:43:38] Yeah.

[01:43:39] I enjoyed them all.

[01:43:40] And we have a couple of comments from Instagram.

[01:43:44] Or our quick drop.

[01:43:45] Those men are lucky.

[01:43:47] All they lost was their money.

[01:43:49] And that's the doom generation pie.

[01:43:51] I love, I love a vengeful response.

[01:43:56] This movie in all caps is a treasure and an amazing woman

[01:44:01] empowerment film from millennium underscore girl GURL.

[01:44:07] I love this movie, but I wish Rector,

[01:44:10] retro act, retro movie,

[01:44:12] retro movie,

[01:44:13] retro movie,

[01:44:14] retro movie,

[01:44:15] retro movie,

[01:44:16] retro movie,

[01:44:17] retro movie,

[01:44:18] retro movie,

[01:44:19] retro movie,

[01:44:20] retro movie,

[01:44:21] retro movie,

[01:44:22] retro movie.

[01:44:23] So I wish rektira retro active recasting were a thing saying

[01:44:27] two words.

[01:44:28] Stephen Collins and that's from Angela to be PEC.

[01:44:31] And then.

[01:44:35] This movie 10 out of 10 from wherever sunshine.

[01:44:43] So if you want to be featured on our quick drop,

[01:44:45] give us a ring at nine zero nine six zero and six,

[01:44:47] and you could be featured on a future episode.

[01:44:51] And join us next week as we take on the DECOM Brink.

[01:44:55] And don't forget to come back next week

[01:44:57] for our bonus episode with our moms.

[01:45:00] And thank you again to our mamas for joining us.

[01:45:03] I know it was some heavy lifting,

[01:45:06] some technology that we had to learn how to use,

[01:45:09] but we appreciate y'all and we love you.

[01:45:12] And yeah, happy Mother's Day.

[01:45:15] Happy Mother's Day and thank you for having us.

[01:45:18] Thank you for birthing me.

[01:45:22] And as always, be kind and rewind.

Movie Review,Nostalgia,no more late fees,movie podcast,Comedy,Friendship,second chances,first wives club,millenials,girl talk,female empowerment,divorce,bette midler,goldie hawn diane keaton,maggie smith,dan hedaya,bronson pinchot,marcia gay harden,sarah jessica parker,stockard channing,scott rudin,victor garber,