When I watched this with my dad, he laughed so much that he had to pause the film and go outside to breathe. When he came back and the old guy kicked the mine again, he completely lost it and we had to take a 20 minutes break because he couldn't breathe anymore. I was really proud
I once watched a clip in a geology class and the guy was from a town literally 20 or so miles away from me and he was utterly incomprehensible to me his accent was so thick
@Mar Lin Bastardized yes, completely incomprehensible no. Compare: Standard UK:"A hedge is a hedge. I only chopped it down because it spoilt the view. What's Reaper moaning about?" American: "A shrub is a shrub. I only cut it down 'cause it ruined the view. What's Reaper complaining about?" Mr. Webley: Ahedgeisahedge. Neeonlychoppedetdowwncozeespoltseeviewwhashemombo?"
Best part of an Edgar Wright movie is every little detail you miss your first time through. It always encourages you to come back and find something you didn’t before
I'm from Somerset and ole Webley is actually fairly like some of folks round here. Considering actors from Yorkshire he does a bloody good job of taking piss
CWrathall1994 actually Pegg and Wright based this on a real story of a London copper who moved to Wiltshire and needed to take a local bobbie around with him to help him understand what the locals were saying
...yet he still has a very faint West Country growl to it. It's brilliant, considering Frost isn't even from the West Country. He manages to sound exactly like, say, a newsreader from the West Country who had to speak in a more formal manner for reading the news but still has a hint of it.
@@alexandratrifilova4369 Nah......The West Country starts at Andover, the North at Watford and "Foreign" somewhere just East of a line drawn south from Rochester.. ;)
Actually, a seamine has a system where they disarms themself for a few moment to prevent unnecessary detonation from other seamine explosion shockwave, so the standart procedure is to hit it with a hammer as strong as possible
@@Kevin-fj5oe So basically, when they confiscated the sea mine, the hit it and kick it, it armed itself again? So it exploded at the end killing the last member of the NWA who was actually behind the killings of people for random reasons, killing people for the greater good of ultimately winning the BEST VILLAGE OF THE YEAR award????
@@Kevin-fj5oe I used to know a guy (my barber, since died of old age) who was in the navy in the late 40s and told me how they used to do mine clearing in the Black Sea following WW2. Basically, they'd go around in a wooden hulled minesweeper (impervious to magnetic influence mines) towing paravanes, severing the sea-bed anchor, and, once the mine floated to the surface, they'd approach it with a row boat and dock to it backwards. The lieutenant in charge of the boat then placed a block of TNT on the mine and lit the fuze. As soon as they heard "it's burning", they'd start rowing like the blazes, to get as far of it as possible.
Nick Frost's delivery of, "Yes, I suppose" is one the funniest line deliveries in comedy. It gets me every time. Throw away gags like that, when done perfectly, can really elevate an already great film. This movie should be studied in film courses the world over. Acting, writing, editing, music--in a perfect world, this would've been at least nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars.
Makes me miss my sister having that accent. I learned to talk in London. She learned to talk in Devon. My Mum was in school in London and Dad was serving in the military, so we were being watched by my great-Nan. After a few years, we were back in London and it took years for her to lose that accent. In her 20's, if you get her drunk enough, it creeps back in.
@@campeãodomundo2137 Pretty sure he took them from all the Stark bannermen they slaughtered. The war would have gone much more smoothly if the North still had all those guns. There was a reason Robb never lost a battle.
Uuh wait... Farmer's name is Arthur Webley, and Weasleys father's name is Arthur Weasley Webley ~~> Weasley OOOOOOOOOOOOOHHH MYYYYYYYY GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD !!!
"IIII SBOOOSE" "III Spoose" "yes I suppose" - Danny Butterman one of the best deliveries of a line of all time. Got so many laughs in theaters here in Pittsburgh.
I like how Mr. Webley has an extensive firearms collection, as Webley and Scott was a British firearms manufacturer that primarily made revolvers and long guns. And what is Mr. Webley carrying? A Stevens 12 gauge double barrel shotgun. So much nuance in just one character.
To be fair, he's kicking the main casing (the sphere), and sea mines are designed to explode when a ship touches those spikes on the sides, which makes them slide into the casing, settign it off.
@@eurosalamander To be unfair, after it's been moldering in a shed for decades, what it was designed to do is a bit academic, it's what it feels like doing *now* that matters.
I'll never forget seeing this in theaters with a best friend. The crowd was so into it and just had a blast. Everyone cheered at the end when the Hot Fuzz logo came up. What a film.
As an american southerner.... Who has never been to the english countryside. Should i be worried that i understood this man perfectly? My god he sounds like my drunk grandad in law.
It's thought that Appalachian English stemmed from around the Midlands of the UK. They can be similar, and some US southerners have an "English" accent that some describe as a mix between American, Irish, and Australian.
there's an island off the coast of I want to say.... south carolina?? And the local accent is a carbon copy of the Bristol/somerset accent, not even with an American twang to it, watched a video about it and my mind was very slightly blown
@@sirtrollalot7762 You mean Ocracoke Island, off the coast of North Carolina? I always thought it sounded more Irish. It's a shame the accent's kinda dying out.
I once used this clip while teaching English in Asia to illustrate the fact that English has many different accents and dialects and not to obsess over the "correct" way to pronounce something but rather to try for consistency in learning whatever version of English they decide to pick. They loved the clip, not sure if it actually got the message across...
I train language interpreters. I use this as an ice breaker sometimes. And of course, to illustrate the importance of speaking clearly. Have you ever watched “Lost in translation”s Santori time clip? I use that one to show the need for accuracy in language interpretation.
"By the power of Greyskull!" Nick Frost's reaction to that collection of guns makes the scene for me. Also, as proof of how deep Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg's action movie nerdery goes, the music playing over the scene is the music that was used for all four Lethal Weapon theatrical trailers!
@Mark H well think about it this way: the whackadoos who pull that stuff will think twice if they know there's a possibility for someone to shoot back.
squidtron 90000 I doubt that. These unhinged people are past caring and a lot seem to commit suicide by cop but just take a lot people with them. Arming everyone to stop shootings is not a solution or even a good idea.
@@damianaguilera7866 Most of those guns the NRA helped get banned under Reagan and Bush Sr. other than the 20th century bolt actions. NRA just supports Republicans not gun owners.
This is England so those will almost all be antique WW1 and WW2 surplus stuff. Probably a good few Garands in there alongside the Lee Enfields and maybe some looted Mausers. And I would absolutely bet that there's a working Vickers or Maxim in there because those things are so resilient that they're still in active use in Ukraine right now. It's glorious.
Does anyone else notice that when the old man runs out of the shed, he takes cover behind the little tin hen cover... right next to the room filled with ammunition and a ticking sea mine? lol
pieV3000 Well yes lol. I never expected a bush to provide cover either. But it's just more of the fact that to keep focus on the primary characters that the old man had to find the nearest manner of cover to take him out of the picture even if that means hiding ride by the possibly exploding shed lol. This movie. Hilarious
Ok, this has been driving me crazy for seven movies now, and I know you’re going to roll your eyes, but hear me out: Harry Potter should have carried a 1911. Here’s why: Think about how quickly the entire WWWIII (Wizarding-World War III) would have ended if all of the good guys had simply armed up with good ol’ American hot lead. Basilisk? Let’s see how tough it is when you shoot it with a .470 Nitro Express. Worried about its Medusa-gaze? Wear night vision goggles. The image is light-amplified and re-transmitted to your eyes. You aren’t looking at it-you’re looking at a picture of it. Imagine how epic the first movie would be if Harry had put a breeching charge on the bathroom wall, flash-banged the hole, and then went in wearing NVGs and a Kevlar-weave stab-vest, carrying a SPAS-12. And have you noticed that only Europe seems to have a problem with Deatheaters? Maybe it’s because Americans have spent the last 200 years shooting deer, playing GTA: Vice City, and keeping an eye out for black helicopters over their compounds. Meanwhile, Brits have been cutting their steaks with spoons. Remember: gun-control means that Voldemort wins. God made wizards and God made muggles, but Samuel Colt made them equal. Now I know what you’re going to say: “But a wizard could just disarm someone with a gun!” Yeah, well they can also disarm someone with a wand (as they do many times throughout the books/movies). But which is faster: saying a spell or pulling a trigger? Avada Kedavra, meet Avtomat Kalashnikova. Imagine Harry out in the woods, wearing his invisibility cloak, carrying a .50bmg Barrett, turning Deatheaters into pink mist, scratching a lightning bolt into his rifle stock for each kill. I don’t think Madam Pomfrey has any spells that can scrape your brains off of the trees and put you back together after something like that. Voldemort’s wand may be 13.5 inches with a Phoenix-feather core, but Harry’s would be 0.50 inches with a tungsten core. Let’s see Voldy wave his at 3,000 feet per second. Better hope you have some Essence of Dittany for that sucking chest wound. I can see it now…Voldemort roaring with evil laughter and boasting to Harry that he can’t be killed, since he is protected by seven Horcruxes, only to have Harry give a crooked grin, flick his cigarette butt away, and deliver what would easily be the best one-liner in the entire series: “Well then I guess it’s a good thing my 1911 holds 7+1.” And that is why Harry Potter should have carried a 1911.
Real life police officers admire this scene because there actually are situations where police officers need translators for people with distinct voices.
It’s a very real job, one I have done a few times as a language interpreter. Especially nowadays with high rates of immigration, there is a demand for trained individuals to work in the interpretation of different languages.
it's the best form of comedy I think. You don't write a joke, you just ram an overly serious character and the goofiest and hit them with an abnormal situation, and the joke will be created automatically.
For the Americans who can't understand Danny's accent, he said... "A hedge is a hedge, he only chopped it down because it spoiled his view; what's Reaper moaning about?"
NamiRocket what he’s saying is that the British has many many accents that can drastically change from city to city, from one end of a city to another. And the fact that people say British accent is kind of an oxymoron as there is no one British accent
I think it depends a lot on the context in which people say it. If they say "do a British accent" and expect a specific one, it's definitely ignorant; but if they class a specific one as British because it does indeed come from somewhere in Britain (and maybe they don't know enough of the nuances to be able to tell where exactly but can at least broadly tell), is it really so wrong?
@@johndean4998 Set in Gloucestershire (where Simon Pegg grew up), filmed in Somerset (Edgar Wright's hometown). But the Gloucestershire and Somerset accents really aren't that different. When they wrote this together they drew inspiration from having both grown up in the West Country. Sure, in a lot of places nowadays they're diluted and not as many people speak with strong Somerset or Gloucestershire accents, but I'm surprised you live in Somerset and haven't once heard an old local talk with a West Country accent. I mean, just listen to the Wurzels, the most quintessentially Somerset band there is. Heck, the whole farmer stereotype that this draws from has massive connotations with Somerset.
@Drop ammo please Didn't mean to imply it was, I just worded it badly- Somerset is the county but Hot Fuzz was filmed in Wells which is Edgar Wright's hometown in Somerset.
I've an aunt who lives in a little village in the West of England and TBQH the way farmer tWebley talks isn't that far off of reality. Also, nice bit of trivia, the percussive music that plays when they first open up the barn and see all the guns is from the original theatrical trailer for Lethal Weapon.
I love this kind of story telling. Correct me if I'm wrong, but we're never told where these weapons actually came from except that the dude found them. So it's left up to us to fill in the blanks. Like, maybe they were part of the NWA's armoury at one point and he stumbled upon them. The sea mine suggests that the NWA maybe raided them from some war museum or something. Or it could be anything, that's what makes it so neat to me.
I know it's a comedy, but it's not entirely implausible. The US Army had dumps of weapons and ammunition stacked unattended all over some parts of Southern England just prior to D-Day. Besides which, members of the Home Guard had weapons in their houses and members of the armed forces brought home souvenirs. You still get random bits of ordnance turning up in sheds and outbuildings.
StuartRW64 I love it, too. Instead of stopping the story dead for a couple of minutes to explain where all the weapons came from (and it really isn't important to this story) they just have the farmer say, "found 'em" and move on.
I grew up with this on dvd. At 25 I just realized his name is Mr.Webley. An obvious reference to the Webley revolver. Which was very popular around the first and second world wars
One old man in my village passed away is 70s, his son came from city and started looking around in his barn and found similar arsenal. It turned out, that the old man was keeping several dozens of rifles and handguns (Mosins, Mausers and others), 5 machine guns (Lewis and Maxim), several thousands rounds, grenades. Echo of Civil War.
They're laughing at us! All across the Riverlands... right down to King's Landing, they're laughing at us. I hear it in my sleep! I'm not dead yet, unfortunately for you. And I'll not leave this world until they all choke on that laughter
Reminds me of when I had to move from Australia to Cornwall in the South West of England with my mom when I was a kid. Couldn't understand a word anybody was saying in particular my grandpa. I would just nod and agree; took me about three years to understand them.
I love how you can see David Bradley hide INFRONT of the little tin chicken coop trying to get out of the shot rather than somewhere actually safe from the mine
Lets also not forget his name is Mr. Webley, and Webley and Scott is a firearms manufacturer. If you Google "webley" the first thing you'll see is the Webley Mk IV, probably the most iconic British handgun.
I would watch the same dvds over and over with my grandma and this was one of them, watched it so many times I could actually understand every word clearly the hedge and all
When I watched this with my dad, he laughed so much that he had to pause the film and go outside to breathe. When he came back and the old guy kicked the mine again, he completely lost it and we had to take a 20 minutes break because he couldn't breathe anymore.
I was really proud
To be fair, this movie is hysterical
Sounds way to farfetched 20 mins the film is funny, but not 20 mins laughing till you can't breath funny!'
@@timfagan816 maybe not to you...
Tell that to my dad.
The important thing is that your Dad has a good sense of humor.
@@thefirstofthelastones8952 Ahh spose.
I can just imagine this guy rolling the sea mine across the countryside to his house.
Someone yells to him "what have you got there? And he yells "IT'S A EEYMOHN!"
+Sonic waffle productions its just aloda junK
Probably found it on the beach XD
'It's moin' - "yes, Mr. Webley, I know it's yours, but what is it?"
Found em
When you are so deep into the British countryside you need two translators to speak the same language
What funny is that if you come from the deep countryside (Somerset) you don't actually need the translator 😂
I once watched a clip in a geology class and the guy was from a town literally 20 or so miles away from me and he was utterly incomprehensible to me his accent was so thick
eating sugar no papa Isn’t that a song from My Fair Lady?
@Mar Lin Bastardized yes, completely incomprehensible no. Compare:
Standard UK:"A hedge is a hedge. I only chopped it down because it spoilt the view. What's Reaper moaning about?"
American: "A shrub is a shrub. I only cut it down 'cause it ruined the view. What's Reaper complaining about?"
Mr. Webley: Ahedgeisahedge. Neeonlychoppedetdowwncozeespoltseeviewwhashemombo?"
Riley Hill well im from somerset and i can confirm this is true
The little jokes in these films. Like the hedge that they couldn't have jumped over if he hadnt cut it
Have to admit, I didn't catch that one.
@@phapnui Same
Best part of an Edgar Wright movie is every little detail you miss your first time through. It always encourages you to come back and find something you didn’t before
That's brilliant.
I never noticed that 😂
Yanks: "I love the British accent"
Actual Brits: "...which one?"
Cockney
By british you mean western
Same for the Irish accent! 😂
Do you mean the Pierce or the Conor? 😂😂
@@Charkunt.d5 I mean the west country villagers speak the west country accent while a few speak in the Irish accent
All of them,
You know you've seen this too many times when you don't need the translation
I'm from Somerset and ole Webley is actually fairly like some of folks round here. Considering actors from Yorkshire he does a bloody good job of taking piss
+Jack Bonney some Yorkshire men are like this as well.
CWrathall1994 actually Pegg and Wright based this on a real story of a London copper who moved to Wiltshire and needed to take a local bobbie around with him to help him understand what the locals were saying
Or you can understand them anyway because you have the same accent
Rock Dweller like me I'm from that neck of the woods and I could understand webley quite clearly
I love the Nick Frost puts on his most proper accent for the "Yes I suppose" line. Very subtle but maybe my favorite in the whole movie.
It's beyond good, isn't it? It's like he's reacting to the dog handler, who is more coherent than usual.
"proper" lol
...yet he still has a very faint West Country growl to it. It's brilliant, considering Frost isn't even from the West Country. He manages to sound exactly like, say, a newsreader from the West Country who had to speak in a more formal manner for reading the news but still has a hint of it.
hoilst Gloucestershire isn’t West Country!
@@alexandratrifilova4369 Nah......The West Country starts at Andover, the North at Watford and "Foreign" somewhere just East of a line drawn south from Rochester.. ;)
"It looks live" *KICKS IT*
SkeletonKing322 then boom
that is the uk response to something weird or potentially dangerous
that or poke it with a stick
Actually, a seamine has a system where they disarms themself for a few moment to prevent unnecessary detonation from other seamine explosion shockwave, so the standart procedure is to hit it with a hammer as strong as possible
@@Kevin-fj5oe So basically, when they confiscated the sea mine, the hit it and kick it, it armed itself again? So it exploded at the end killing the last member of the NWA who was actually behind the killings of people for random reasons, killing people for the greater good of ultimately winning the BEST VILLAGE OF THE YEAR award????
@@Kevin-fj5oe I used to know a guy (my barber, since died of old age) who was in the navy in the late 40s and told me how they used to do mine clearing in the Black Sea following WW2. Basically, they'd go around in a wooden hulled minesweeper (impervious to magnetic influence mines) towing paravanes, severing the sea-bed anchor, and, once the mine floated to the surface, they'd approach it with a row boat and dock to it backwards. The lieutenant in charge of the boat then placed a block of TNT on the mine and lit the fuze. As soon as they heard "it's burning", they'd start rowing like the blazes, to get as far of it as possible.
I just love how Mr Webley starts to sound more coherent as the scene goes on.
Yes exactly! As if Angel is slowly learning and understanding, very nice touch
I not long realised he was Filch in Harry Potter
It’s our brain working out his accent in addition to him saying it a bit slower
@@womenturneddeadlyAlso Walder Frey.
I just want to know where the middle translator disappeared to.
Nick Frost's delivery of, "Yes, I suppose" is one the funniest line deliveries in comedy. It gets me every time. Throw away gags like that, when done perfectly, can really elevate an already great film. This movie should be studied in film courses the world over. Acting, writing, editing, music--in a perfect world, this would've been at least nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars.
I loved that the “translation” switched when Nick Angel asked about the sea mine hahaha
My class is doing a film study on it
I agree. Sadly, comedies don't get taken seriously enough in order to win Oscars...
*_NAHSJUSTALOADOFJUNK_*
"Sea mine!"
"EEMOYN."
By the Power of Gray Skull.
Best translation of that line yet! XD
Makes me miss my sister having that accent. I learned to talk in London. She learned to talk in Devon. My Mum was in school in London and Dad was serving in the military, so we were being watched by my great-Nan. After a few years, we were back in London and it took years for her to lose that accent. In her 20's, if you get her drunk enough, it creeps back in.
Seemoine
If you think your puns are bad, wait until you sea mine.
Angel: "Where on earth did you get these?"
Farmer: "Confiscated them from the Weasley twins."
@@campeãodomundo2137 Pretty sure he took them from all the Stark bannermen they slaughtered. The war would have gone much more smoothly if the North still had all those guns. There was a reason Robb never lost a battle.
confindentem froda weeslydyns.
Uuh wait...
Farmer's name is Arthur Webley, and Weasleys father's name is Arthur Weasley
Webley ~~> Weasley
OOOOOOOOOOOOOHHH MYYYYYYYY GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD !!!
@@MultiNat94 No he means he looks like Filch, as this is the same actor, he also played Walder Frey in GOT.
@@zynian
"What did he say?"
"Sezzee conf'dem frumma weezyd'ns"
".... and what did _he_ say?"
"Says he confiscated them from the Weasley twins."
1:24 -- "Naaaaaaaaaoooohhhh it just alotta juonk."
Best line in the whole movie 😂
*FOUND EM*
"IIII SBOOOSE" "III Spoose" "yes I suppose" - Danny Butterman one of the best deliveries of a line of all time. Got so many laughs in theaters here in Pittsburgh.
Comedy is so much better than drama, add action to that and Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. 10/10 seen this movie like 5 times and might watch it again 😂
The Lethal Weapon riff really does sell it. Edgar Wright is the spiritual successor to Mel Brooks.
I swear it's become my favorite comedy of all time. Definitely the best Pegg/Frost/Wright matchup.
Yarp!
That is subjective
Wow, 5 times. What _do_ you do with your life? :D
I like how Mr. Webley has an extensive firearms collection, as Webley and Scott was a British firearms manufacturer that primarily made revolvers and long guns. And what is Mr. Webley carrying? A Stevens 12 gauge double barrel shotgun. So much nuance in just one character.
You mean Argus Filch
@@janvirtanen6199 the multiverse is true after filch retired from hogwarts he became a crazy farmer and conspiracy theorist.
Mans got enough guns to supply the entire British expeditionary force in france.
That ammo dump qualifies him for honorary American citizenship.
@@janvirtanen6199 No, Walder Frey
looks like...he's prepared enough for a wedding.
He prepare for skynets take over of the planet.
......You didn't get what they were saying, did you?
Or war
OH YOU SO DID NOT!!!!!
Hah, it'd been a 'golden easter egg' if he had a reply mumbling 'Nah i'm saving it for a wedding" with a big smile and a blink.
I love the fact that he yells that it looks live right before he kicks it.
TheSmithersy of course, just because it’s been deactivated doesn’t mean it it’s empty of explosives
@@harrier331 and it wasn’t deactivated
@@harrier331 so how did it explode at the end if it was deactivated?
To be fair, he's kicking the main casing (the sphere), and sea mines are designed to explode when a ship touches those spikes on the sides, which makes them slide into the casing, settign it off.
@@eurosalamander To be unfair, after it's been moldering in a shed for decades, what it was designed to do is a bit academic, it's what it feels like doing *now* that matters.
I'll never forget seeing this in theaters with a best friend. The crowd was so into it and just had a blast. Everyone cheered at the end when the Hot Fuzz logo came up. What a film.
0:57 I love how this sequence is much longer than it'd be necessary
'ahh aanissers sen eir rgaads'
Rob: 'Right... What did he say?'
'The Lannisters send their regards'
Rob: 'SHIT'
SkizzyMcfrazzlepop this is an underrated comment.
@@1994moviebuff You know, except that line doesn't come from Walder Frey.
"Why do we need the dog?"
"Its not the dog we need!"
Tremendous
such an underrated quote XD
Pls explain the joke, do they need the owner but he won't travel without the dog?
@@whereDoCarrotsComeFrom yes exactly
"It's the dog we deserve"
NAAaaaaaahisaloadaJONK"
This is one of my favourite bits in the entire movie, but the movie itself is also amazing.
Yarp!
As an american southerner.... Who has never been to the english countryside. Should i be worried that i understood this man perfectly? My god he sounds like my drunk grandad in law.
It's thought that Appalachian English stemmed from around the Midlands of the UK. They can be similar, and some US southerners have an "English" accent that some describe as a mix between American, Irish, and Australian.
As a Bristolian (About 10-15 miles from where Hot Fuzz was filmed), I'm genuinely impressed 🤣
there's an island off the coast of I want to say.... south carolina?? And the local accent is a carbon copy of the Bristol/somerset accent, not even with an American twang to it, watched a video about it and my mind was very slightly blown
@@sirtrollalot7762 You mean Ocracoke Island, off the coast of North Carolina? I always thought it sounded more Irish. It's a shame the accent's kinda dying out.
Southern dude, thought the same thing. It’s kinda crazy but I guess we can just understand all sorts of hillbilly.
I once used this clip while teaching English in Asia to illustrate the fact that English has many different accents and dialects and not to obsess over the "correct" way to pronounce something but rather to try for consistency in learning whatever version of English they decide to pick. They loved the clip, not sure if it actually got the message across...
I train language interpreters. I use this as an ice breaker sometimes. And of course, to illustrate the importance of speaking clearly. Have you ever watched “Lost in translation”s Santori time clip? I use that one to show the need for accuracy in language interpretation.
"By the power of Greyskull!" Nick Frost's reaction to that collection of guns makes the scene for me.
Also, as proof of how deep Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg's action movie nerdery goes, the music playing over the scene is the music that was used for all four Lethal Weapon theatrical trailers!
All those guns...
My inner American is crying tears of joy right now.
Rob Mick same i wish i had that many guns im a southerner i am supposed to have them by Birth
Like the tears of all the children and parents who cry because of school shootings? Your gun crazy culture is fucked.
@Mark H well think about it this way: the whackadoos who pull that stuff will think twice if they know there's a possibility for someone to shoot back.
squidtron 90000 I doubt that. These unhinged people are past caring and a lot seem to commit suicide by cop but just take a lot people with them. Arming everyone to stop shootings is not a solution or even a good idea.
well, if you have a problem with it, too bad. 2nd Amendment grants right to bear arms.
simon pegg has a really expressive face and i love it
As an American, I am impressed by that man's gun collection.
Best reason to get a collection that big “Fun’um!”
Its like an NRA promised land in that man's tool shed
@@damianaguilera7866 Most of those guns the NRA helped get banned under Reagan and Bush Sr. other than the 20th century bolt actions. NRA just supports Republicans not gun owners.
Least armed American
This is England so those will almost all be antique WW1 and WW2 surplus stuff. Probably a good few Garands in there alongside the Lee Enfields and maybe some looted Mausers. And I would absolutely bet that there's a working Vickers or Maxim in there because those things are so resilient that they're still in active use in Ukraine right now.
It's glorious.
I love how you can actually understand him once you hear the “translations”😂. This movie is brilliant.
I love how country accents are country accents wherever you are. Sounds a lot like backwoods folks I know here in the southern u.s.
I said the same! lol
Apparently some backwoods American accents are very close to Elizabethan English.
Or here in Austria for that matter…
Just as indecipherable. ^^
It's the same here in the Philippines
Yep. Northeastern American. Lot of Appalachian folks I deal with and I understand like half of them.
Does anyone else notice that when the old man runs out of the shed, he takes cover behind the little tin hen cover... right next to the room filled with ammunition and a ticking sea mine? lol
Well the police hide behind a Bush not much farther away so
pieV3000 Both can't cover for shiet =P
pieV3000 Well yes lol. I never expected a bush to provide cover either. But it's just more of the fact that to keep focus on the primary characters that the old man had to find the nearest manner of cover to take him out of the picture even if that means hiding ride by the possibly exploding shed lol. This movie. Hilarious
It's probably so the old actor didn't have to run very far, lol
would have worked in beirut!
Let's see all those students call Filch a Squib now
*Busts into Hogwarts with guns blazing*
@@daslol25s Expeliamus? Does that work on guns? My gut says yes
Ok, this has been driving me crazy for seven movies now, and I know you’re going to roll your eyes, but hear me out: Harry Potter should have carried a 1911.
Here’s why:
Think about how quickly the entire WWWIII (Wizarding-World War III) would have ended if all of the good guys had simply armed up with good ol’ American hot lead.
Basilisk? Let’s see how tough it is when you shoot it with a .470 Nitro Express. Worried about its Medusa-gaze? Wear night vision goggles. The image is light-amplified and re-transmitted to your eyes. You aren’t looking at it-you’re looking at a picture of it.
Imagine how epic the first movie would be if Harry had put a breeching charge on the bathroom wall, flash-banged the hole, and then went in wearing NVGs and a Kevlar-weave stab-vest, carrying a SPAS-12.
And have you noticed that only Europe seems to have a problem with Deatheaters? Maybe it’s because Americans have spent the last 200 years shooting deer, playing GTA: Vice City, and keeping an eye out for black helicopters over their compounds. Meanwhile, Brits have been cutting their steaks with spoons. Remember: gun-control means that Voldemort wins. God made wizards and God made muggles, but Samuel Colt made them equal.
Now I know what you’re going to say: “But a wizard could just disarm someone with a gun!” Yeah, well they can also disarm someone with a wand (as they do many times throughout the books/movies). But which is faster: saying a spell or pulling a trigger?
Avada Kedavra, meet Avtomat Kalashnikova.
Imagine Harry out in the woods, wearing his invisibility cloak, carrying a .50bmg Barrett, turning Deatheaters into pink mist, scratching a lightning bolt into his rifle stock for each kill. I don’t think Madam Pomfrey has any spells that can scrape your brains off of the trees and put you back together after something like that. Voldemort’s wand may be 13.5 inches with a Phoenix-feather core, but Harry’s would be 0.50 inches with a tungsten core. Let’s see Voldy wave his at 3,000 feet per second. Better hope you have some Essence of Dittany for that sucking chest wound.
I can see it now…Voldemort roaring with evil laughter and boasting to Harry that he can’t be killed, since he is protected by seven Horcruxes, only to have Harry give a crooked grin, flick his cigarette butt away, and deliver what would easily be the best one-liner in the entire series:
“Well then I guess it’s a good thing my 1911 holds 7+1.”
And that is why Harry Potter should have carried a 1911.
scouty mcscoutface I'd pay to watch/read that
scouty mcscoutface you’d need to coat those bullets in Basilisk venom
This is Chekhov's gun taken to the extreme
Ba Dum, chssss
If you have a shed full of guns, they all have to go off by the final action scene
@@IrvingIV Ka Bum CHHSSSSS---
This is more like Chekov's arsenal.
@@Crrrow
Chekov’s Weapon Stash, perhaps?
Not only are the writing and acting in Hot Fuzz funny, but the cinematography enhances the jokes.
So rare. So beautiful.
I love how the farmer just runs out of the barn for a couple yards to hide from the camera behind that little shed at 1:42.
Real life police officers admire this scene because there actually are situations where police officers need translators for people with distinct voices.
Heard this scene was inspired by a city officer who relocated to the countryside and needed a translator lol
It’s a very real job, one I have done a few times as a language interpreter.
Especially nowadays with high rates of immigration, there is a demand for trained individuals to work in the interpretation of different languages.
Pegg played it straight for virtually the whole movie and was actually the funniest character in it.
it's the best form of comedy I think. You don't write a joke, you just ram an overly serious character and the goofiest and hit them with an abnormal situation, and the joke will be created automatically.
There's a doctor in Cornwall...
For the Americans who can't understand Danny's accent, he said...
"A hedge is a hedge, he only chopped it down because it spoiled his view; what's Reaper moaning about?"
I love that Webley is able to understand Angel yet refuses to even attempt what Angel would consider a comprehensible accent
Or how the first cop to translate can speak with an accent Angel understands but chooses to speak more or less the same way as Webley.
Well most people watch TV so understand the English polite southern accent that is used by majority of news and TV presenters.
Best old brit ever.
1:56 When you look at eacht other and realize, you are lucky, that this edge was cut down.
Love that subtle humour^^
Arranging a new wedding, are we?
Not with those guns.....and the Sea Mine.
Yarp?
I thought his accent was a gross exaggeration until i saw some interviews with real irish farmers. This is spot on lolol
Not Irish. West Country
@@chriswyatt9869 Oh my bad. Thanks for clarifying
@@loquatmuncher I know the video you're talking about, mad irish accents in that video, incomprehensible
This is why I get annoyed when people say "British accent"
That's not an accent. That is slurring words.
@@Nami ya dunno wut an aksent i mate
People say “American accent” as well
NamiRocket what he’s saying is that the British has many many accents that can drastically change from city to city, from one end of a city to another. And the fact that people say British accent is kind of an oxymoron as there is no one British accent
I think it depends a lot on the context in which people say it. If they say "do a British accent" and expect a specific one, it's definitely ignorant; but if they class a specific one as British because it does indeed come from somewhere in Britain (and maybe they don't know enough of the nuances to be able to tell where exactly but can at least broadly tell), is it really so wrong?
“...And what is this?”
-“A sea mine?”
“EEYMIYINE.”
TFW you're so Somerset you understand what the farmer's saying
Really? You understand that guy? lol
@@cyrrog6779 This is supposed to be Gloucestershire, not Somerset (I live in Somerset and people don't talk like that).
@@johndean4998 Set in Gloucestershire (where Simon Pegg grew up), filmed in Somerset (Edgar Wright's hometown).
But the Gloucestershire and Somerset accents really aren't that different. When they wrote this together they drew inspiration from having both grown up in the West Country.
Sure, in a lot of places nowadays they're diluted and not as many people speak with strong Somerset or Gloucestershire accents, but I'm surprised you live in Somerset and haven't once heard an old local talk with a West Country accent. I mean, just listen to the Wurzels, the most quintessentially Somerset band there is. Heck, the whole farmer stereotype that this draws from has massive connotations with Somerset.
An 'edge' s an 'edge, you know. I only chopped' 'em down cause I couldn' t see t'view no more. What's 'e moanin' 'bout?
@Drop ammo please Didn't mean to imply it was, I just worded it badly- Somerset is the county but Hot Fuzz was filmed in Wells which is Edgar Wright's hometown in Somerset.
It seems like David Bradley has been in everything. Such a good actor
So overlooked
1:13 love that there is a rake apart of his deadly weapon collection.
Not going to lie: I've watched this clip at least 10 times this past week. Never gets old.
The LATE Walder Frey he called me. Thought he was witty. Look at me now Tully!
Love that when your from Gloucester and you can tell what he said without the need for either translation 😂
lmao same
I love Hot Fuzz! Simon Pegg is great in any movie he's in.
He may be that but it doesn't necessarily mean every movie he's in is great.
@@mediapark101 luckily nobody hear said that
I've an aunt who lives in a little village in the West of England and TBQH the way farmer tWebley talks isn't that far off of reality. Also, nice bit of trivia, the percussive music that plays when they first open up the barn and see all the guns is from the original theatrical trailer for Lethal Weapon.
The amount of foreshadowing in this clip is fantastic Edgar Wright is a genius
0:09 Filch attempting how to pronounce a spell
I love this kind of story telling. Correct me if I'm wrong, but we're never told where these weapons actually came from except that the dude found them. So it's left up to us to fill in the blanks.
Like, maybe they were part of the NWA's armoury at one point and he stumbled upon them. The sea mine suggests that the NWA maybe raided them from some war museum or something. Or it could be anything, that's what makes it so neat to me.
your profile picture is amazing lol
*****
Elizabeth :3
BOOKER, CATCH!
I know it's a comedy, but it's not entirely implausible. The US Army had dumps of weapons and ammunition stacked unattended all over some parts of Southern England just prior to D-Day. Besides which, members of the Home Guard had weapons in their houses and members of the armed forces brought home souvenirs. You still get random bits of ordnance turning up in sheds and outbuildings.
StuartRW64 I love it, too. Instead of stopping the story dead for a couple of minutes to explain where all the weapons came from (and it really isn't important to this story) they just have the farmer say, "found 'em" and move on.
I grew up with this on dvd. At 25 I just realized his name is Mr.Webley.
An obvious reference to the Webley revolver. Which was very popular around the first and second world wars
One old man in my village passed away is 70s, his son came from city and started looking around in his barn and found similar arsenal. It turned out, that the old man was keeping several dozens of rifles and handguns (Mosins, Mausers and others), 5 machine guns (Lewis and Maxim), several thousands rounds, grenades. Echo of Civil War.
"It looks live!"
*me, after seeing the movie* "IT IS LIVE!!!"
Hogwarts finally drove Mr. Flich over the edge.
you mean 'over the hedge'
he's kept it tp fght the dark wizards.
@@mrsts95 well thats what he said innit? o'er the 'edge.
Sometimes when I'm alone at home I yell "EEMOIN" at the top of my lungs.
Just cause.
I yell out RELEASE THE KRAKEN whenever I open a bottle of rum. But yep. Got a new one now. Thanks!
“ this is an extremely dangerous collection“…
“Nahhh, iissaajjuusssllooddaaJONK!”
"Deactivated!" *THUNK*
"Looks live!" *CLANG*
I wish more people understood the power of grey skull comment haha
I use to think David Bradley was just rambling on making nonsense for the scene, I now realize I can perfectly understand him...
2:04 I love how they did this in frame 😂
0:37 - Ah, the extra "proper" British accent. Brilliant!
Legend says that Filch was a menace during the Battle of Hogwarts.
I love how they barely make the jump over the hedge... that has just been trimmed. Details, oh glorious details!
1:06 that’s enough firepower to arm a small army
Or wipe out a wedding
@@MrAsaqeor a classroom…..
Oh no I’ve said too much 😳
I’m American and even I’m impressed by that collection.
Love that the Alsatian looked at the driver when asked “why do we need the dog?”
0:58 The cinematography and music of this scene is amazing. This scene works perfectly for someone who loves film making and fire arms.
David Bradley is one of my favourite character actors, he makes anything worth watching😁🌟
*David Bradley is such an incredible, and underrated actor!*
The scene where the light switches on in the cabin going on for just a little too long gets me every time :'D
A quite realistic depiction of how English conversation works between me, my husband, and every movie ever watched in our home.
The translator😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Walder Frey has been getting hints from Aerys Targaryen. Stock up on explody things
It’s funny that they could only find a place to take cover because farmer Webley had been trimming hedges that weren’t his.
Great observation. I missed that the first hundred times watching this clip.
Ah, there you are Mr. Filch.
XxBioshockxXgod13 you are the only person here that has mention Filch!!! Everyone’s been saying Walder Frey!!! Much respect to you!!!
I’m going with Merlin from Trollhunters to be unique
I also mentioned.
1:24 still gets me every time. rip replay button
Gerald from Clarkson's Farm 😂
They're laughing at us! All across the Riverlands... right down to King's Landing, they're laughing at us. I hear it in my sleep! I'm not dead yet, unfortunately for you. And I'll not leave this world until they all choke on that laughter
"By the power of Grayskull!" gets me every time. 🤣🤣🤣
Reminds me of when I had to move from Australia to Cornwall in the South West of England with my mom when I was a kid.
Couldn't understand a word anybody was saying in particular my grandpa.
I would just nod and agree; took me about three years to understand them.
Man went from countryside Brit to average American
I love how you can see David Bradley hide INFRONT of the little tin chicken coop trying to get out of the shot rather than somewhere actually safe from the mine
Lets also not forget his name is Mr. Webley, and Webley and Scott is a firearms manufacturer. If you Google "webley" the first thing you'll see is the Webley Mk IV, probably the most iconic British handgun.
I gotta say this guy's got enough guns to make Texan full on cry! And that's coming from a guy born in Texas.
*"AAAAAA BO."*
"Ah 'spoze."
_"Yes, I suppose."_
How He geowls SEAMINE gets me every Time😂😂
David Bradbury is one of them actors that has been in everything.
No one's gonna talk about how absurd that first conversation was?
"Why do we need the dog?"
"It's not the dog we need."
You've heard of Chekhov's Gun, now for modern audiences we have Webley's Sea Mine
i can't claim this comment as original, but this was Chekhov's Arsenal
The 2 levels of interpreters is so good 😂😂😂
"It looks live!"
*proceeds to kick a sea mine*
I would watch the same dvds over and over with my grandma and this was one of them, watched it so many times I could actually understand every word clearly the hedge and all
2:04 That's right!!
BANG!!!!
Deactivated!! :)
It's not live
@@joshuabeattie2374 it looks live
@@benjaminvleugels5609 alright