There weren't any vaccines in and I was sittin' around and everybody I knew was like 'oh, I binge-watched this' and I was like 'I have a child who doesn't sleep at night, I don't binge-watch anything, I go to bed at nine.' But at some point, I got bitter and resentful about this. 'I'm gonna watch some goddamn TV,' right? So I, y'know, I did what I want[ed] to do, I started watching, like, Japanese silent movies, y'know? If you have a child who is gonna wake you up at 2 AM, maybe the Japanese silent movie is not your speed –– you will not make it to the end of that one, if he goes to bed at 9, then at 9:30, however good that movie is, that's not the time for it. You need your three hours of sleep. On the other hand, if you got movies where a guy gets out a gun and wastes everybody in the first five minutes, that gives you a shot of adrenaline, that'd keep you awake. That is the genesis–– and all these movies, whether they're from Indonesia or the U.S. or France or Belgium or wherever, they all have the same thing. There's a point where the hero, y'know, something bad has happened to him. He goes through a hero's journey kind of thing but it's a more degrading type of hero's journey because always there's, like, very degrading stuff he has to suffer and, uh, yeah, he like goes to battle at some point and just gets ... just humiliated. And you think, man, you set him up to say he was good, but all those guys just beat the crap out of him, right? But then he has to go away to an island or something and practice, right? That's what he has to do, he has to, he has to, he has to, he has to like, look at his hand, y'know, he always has about a thirty-second shot where he's, like, lookin' at his hand and tryin' to understand the power of it or somethin' like that, it's deeply inspiring. And then, y'know, at the end of all this inspiration [?], he just goes back and kicks a bunch of guys' asses. This is called 'Training Montage.'