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AMERICAN FICTION Movie Review | Jeffrey Wright | Issa Rae

Jeffrey Wright gives one of the best performances you'll see all year in "American Fiction," a sharp and biting satire that marks the feature debut of writer-director Cord Jefferson. Wright stars as a professor and struggling novelist who writes a terrible book that's chock full of African-American stereotypes, just to prove a point -- then is shocked when it becomes a legitimate hit. Co-starring Issa Rae, Tracee Ellis Ross, Sterling K. Brown, Leslie Uggams, Erika Alexander and John Ortiz. In limited theatrical release now, opens wider Dec. 22.
#americanfiction #jeffreywright #issarae
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Пікірлер: 115

  • @dorothyhusen6718
    @dorothyhusen67186 ай бұрын

    Just saw the movie in theater today. Theater was fairly full. Thoroughly enjoyed it from beginning to end. Enjoyed being surprised many times. A 9 for me.

  • @paradisecity0406able
    @paradisecity0406able7 ай бұрын

    It's nice to see Jeffrey Wright becoming a household name.

  • @NYGiantsfan230

    @NYGiantsfan230

    7 ай бұрын

    Is this comment from the 90s…..

  • @popsandpuns
    @popsandpuns7 ай бұрын

    Seen over 250 movies in theaters this year and it's in serious contention for my favorite movie of the year.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    That's wonderful! Let us know what you end up picking.

  • @Jeannine_9
    @Jeannine_96 ай бұрын

    Finally saw this today and absolutely loved it. The cast was great, so refreshing while it does have a number of comedic moments I really enjoyed the dramatic and emotional moments with this family. Wright and Brown deserve their award season recognition, hopefully they can win one of the big awards.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    6 ай бұрын

    So glad! Yes, both actors are tremendous here.

  • @dlg5485

    @dlg5485

    5 ай бұрын

    As a gay black man, I felt Brown's character was a bit slight and not nuanced enough. I know it wasn't his movie, but I would have liked to see more development of that character.

  • @kyleb8655
    @kyleb86557 ай бұрын

    I saw it yesterday and I loved it. I thought the last scene on the Hollywood lot was a great ending. Definitely one of the best movies of the year for me

  • @filmsforsmartpeople3587
    @filmsforsmartpeople35876 ай бұрын

    I loved Jeffrey Wright ever since his amazing performance as Roy Cohn's nurse in "Angels In America"

  • @AllInTheGame01
    @AllInTheGame017 ай бұрын

    Rooting hard for Jeffrey Wright & writer-director Cord Jefferson during Awards Season, have loved Cord's work on HBO's Watchmen, Station Eleven, The Good Place & Master of None.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Cord Jefferson is going to be on Roger Deakins' next podcast episode, do you ever listen to that? It's really informative.

  • @AllInTheGame01

    @AllInTheGame01

    7 ай бұрын

    @@BreakfastAllDay Appreciate the heads up, will definitely be checking it out!

  • @eurofree
    @eurofree7 ай бұрын

    Fantastic movie! Its a movie that satirically explores Class & Diversity within the Black community & how the main stream simply lumps the race into one & encourage / demand a certain stereotype.

  • @michaelgrife6964
    @michaelgrife69647 ай бұрын

    Alonso, I love the shotgun shell Christmas ornaments on your tree. It gives me a newfound admiration for your personality.

  • @dodgelandesman
    @dodgelandesman5 ай бұрын

    A hilarious, impactful and heartfelt performance from Wright. I realize he may be the great actor of this era

  • @Cubanlinx63
    @Cubanlinx637 ай бұрын

    My favorite movie of the year. I know Jeffrey Wright is getting some award love. But I hope Sterling K Brown gets a nomination. Maybe his best performance.

  • @sfbsfb
    @sfbsfb7 ай бұрын

    “Earrrrrned.” Loving the John Houseman reference

  • @menevetsny

    @menevetsny

    7 ай бұрын

    We make money the old fashioned way.

  • @veganpeace7890
    @veganpeace78907 ай бұрын

    Alonso, thanks for mentioning The Forty Year Old Version. I had never heard of that movie. I watched the trailer and that's another I need to watch!

  • @skipthepreviews
    @skipthepreviews7 ай бұрын

    I can't wait to see this movie! Jeffrey Wright has been incredibly consistent for so many years. What a great actor! I'm happy to see him and Paul Giamatti get so much love this awards season. 👏 Happy Holidays! 🎄

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Both great performances this year! Very nuanced, not just cranky, cantankerous dudes.

  • @1pknail
    @1pknail7 ай бұрын

    Loved this, and it wasn't at all what I thought it would be based on that first trailer. Probably my favorite scene was the one with Keith David and Okieriete Onaodowan, which is kind of the thesis of the whole movie. Also, I was completely on Monk's side regarding that student in the opening scene -- her opinion on the offensiveness of that word has way less weight than his.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    The meta nature of that scene was very clever.

  • @sandal_thong8631

    @sandal_thong8631

    6 ай бұрын

    At first I thought he was correct: a course in school, particularly college is the appropriate place to deal with difficult subject matter. _Huckleberry Finn_ was banned from some school curriculum because of the N-word. Like the F-word, context matters like whether a child is saying F-you to another kid or adult, or talking about sex, exclaiming when something bad happens or quoting a song or other work. However, we learn that it's a pattern that Monk doesn't accept the opinions of women. Not the college girl's, not his girlfriend's, and not his rival author's. (I forget whether or how he disagrees with his sister.) If his mother had something to say he didn't want to hear, maybe he would have gone off on her, too. The irony is that his girlfriend said she liked his book because of how he writes the women characters. I think that's a throwaway line as there's no evidence of that in the movie, in fact the opposite.

  • @jennifer5512
    @jennifer55127 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed this film but I think the novel's original ending that reference Ellison's Invisible Man is more effective. Great review!

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Ah interesting, how was the book? Thanks for watching!

  • @danielwarrenguitar
    @danielwarrenguitar6 ай бұрын

    Just saw the movie today. So clever, funny and well acted.

  • @alansaltz8308
    @alansaltz83087 ай бұрын

    so well deserved for Jeffrey Wright

  • @BottleConcreteBlond
    @BottleConcreteBlond7 ай бұрын

    This sounds really good! What a great cast!

  • @forallthestupidshit3550
    @forallthestupidshit35507 ай бұрын

    This looked super good. I'm glad it's not a disappointment!

  • @wexwuthor1776
    @wexwuthor17767 ай бұрын

    8.9? Come on man. It's Christmas. Give it the 9.

  • @jonwesick2844
    @jonwesick28447 ай бұрын

    This is based on a book by Percival Everett who is a smart, honest, and original writer. I was fortunate to hear him live in San Diego several years ago.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Oh very cool, the book sounds good, too.

  • @Locusto199
    @Locusto1997 ай бұрын

    It's really good. If you're searching for a new, interesting film to watch, definitely watch this.

  • @jeremydawe341
    @jeremydawe3417 ай бұрын

    My first reaction to this was "hmm, it's Spike Lee's Bamboozled in the literary world." This does sound very interesting though.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Good point Jeremy! And thanks for your Lunch Date questions. Video coming soon on Patreon 😊

  • @sandal_thong8631

    @sandal_thong8631

    6 ай бұрын

    Funny how people think this is new and exciting, so should get awards, yet it's similar to the Spike Lee movie from 2000. In the movie, _Weeds_ Nick Nolte's character in prison writes a play about prisoners that gets the attention of a reporter then theater critics, and he and his troupe get to perform it, though it's only successful at other prisons. But someone finally discovers that it's based on a French play that he read in prison.

  • @jenng7389

    @jenng7389

    5 ай бұрын

    i think it's closer to robert townsends hollywood shuffle.

  • @Sachin_C10
    @Sachin_C107 ай бұрын

    Happy Holidays Christy & Alonso 🎉 🎁🎄

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Likewise, Sachin!

  • @dollarsaurus01
    @dollarsaurus016 ай бұрын

    Saw this last night and absolutely loved it. It's so savagely funny but so unexpectedly warm and heartfelt at the same time. Lots of valuable and timely insight about the pandering and shallow ways our culture often discusses race, and how people are reduced to their surface-level identities and nothing more. I miss these kinds of smart, fun adult studio comedies!

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    6 ай бұрын

    So glad you found this film!

  • @VenusPrime612
    @VenusPrime6127 ай бұрын

    The multi-endings had me thinking we were dealing with something akin to Clue a-la three different endings but we decide what's canon.

  • @RykComerford
    @RykComerford7 ай бұрын

    First thing I saw Jeffrey Wright in & thought he was really good in it was George Clooney's Syriana.

  • @chrissergeant7798
    @chrissergeant77985 ай бұрын

    American Fiction. The Holdovers. Two movies every American should see.

  • @czars694

    @czars694

    Ай бұрын

    Now on Amazon, so I just saw both in the past week.

  • @dulcimerrafi
    @dulcimerrafi6 ай бұрын

    I, too, thought that Wright's character in this film and Giamatti's character in The Holdovers had similar personalities.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    6 ай бұрын

    They could be buddies, right? Intellectual misanthropes commiserating across time.

  • @brianng8350
    @brianng83507 ай бұрын

    Heard some good things about the movie. Been behind in my movie watching, but hope to catch this too. By the way, is Monster playing near you folks? Heard great things about this Japanese import as well. Would love to hear your take, if you see it.

  • @e-care-books9867
    @e-care-books98677 ай бұрын

    Christy, Alonso, great show. P.S., here's a fun podcast episode you might like... about the history of movie polls. Podcast by Jeopardy! host Ken and musician John Roderick. (They don't usually talk about movies, but did this time.)

  • @jascam1
    @jascam16 ай бұрын

    This movie is theatrical art and Oscar worthy, not like the make believe superheroes hanging from cables next to green screens.

  • @sandal_thong8631
    @sandal_thong86316 ай бұрын

    _American Fiction_ was a disappointment, particularly with the ending. I laughed out loud at the first trailer. I didn't realize it had started as a limited-release movie on Dec 15, 2023, but thought it had just opened Thursday January 11 opposite _The Book of Clarence._ I felt because of that it split the Black audience that would have otherwise gone to the latter movie. I was worried that because it wasn't in the top ten of the week I wouldn't be able to see _American Fiction_ before it left the theater, as I missed two movies that were only there a week last year. If you liked the trailer I would recommend just watching it a few more times and imagining what the movie should have become based on that. Both movies give us a bait-and-switch with the trailer pretending to be comedies but are really something else. This movie starts with the joke premise but soon becomes a family tragedy, though they didn't have the guts to make the ending "real." _The Book of Clarence_ also is presented as a comedy, but by the second half (or third act?) it becomes what at least one person calls "a redemption story." In that case I was able to take the turn with it, as we expected his ploy of pretending to perform miracles and posing as a messiah would have repercussions. However, in _American Fiction_ we expect there to be consequences for the main character's Monk's actions of perpetrating a fraud (although using a pseudonym may be accepted in that line of work) but there really wasn't. Remember _Tootsie?_ Another thing of note is that Monk's girlfriend says she liked his book because he writes women well, but I think this was a throwaway line. The irony in the movie is that he either doesn't hear the opinions of women, or is actively hostile to what they're saying, starting with the girl who challenges him in his class, to his girlfriend, to his rival who made the successful low-class book that inspired him to write his book as a parody. I haven't seen hardly any of the "awards-contention" movies this year because they almost all seemed depressing (except for _Barbie)._ Giving this one an award is like the main character getting an award for his work: a travesty.

  • @veganpeace7890
    @veganpeace78907 ай бұрын

    I love Jeffrey Wright and I'm so happy for him. This movie is right in my happy place so I will be checking it out! It sounds like a nice Sunday afternoon movie!

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Please do, and let us know what you think!

  • @jmason61
    @jmason617 ай бұрын

    Sounds like a very clever premise

  • @christopherfelipe60
    @christopherfelipe607 ай бұрын

    Will you be reviewing another movie All of us Strangers ? thanks let me know …I can’t wait to see American Fiction Jeffery Wright is a good actors

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes, today!

  • @apocalypsetedium
    @apocalypsetedium2 ай бұрын

    Scituate was known as the Irish Riviera. Pejoratively so. Strong lobster industry. A lot of working class but it's on the water so it has become more upperclass.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    2 ай бұрын

    Good to know, thanks!

  • @DF-we4pt
    @DF-we4pt4 ай бұрын

    This movie was so hilarious including the shootout ending.

  • @SuperWhofan1
    @SuperWhofan111 күн бұрын

    Reminded me of The Player movie

  • @raulduke6105
    @raulduke61056 ай бұрын

    Just saw it, fantastic

  • @KnarfStein
    @KnarfStein7 ай бұрын

    If the message of mocking anti-intellectualism stays true throughout the film, then I'll surely enjoy it!

  • @Crazywater1976
    @Crazywater19764 ай бұрын

    Loved the movie but hated the ending. I do feel they avoided answering questions and to resolve the story. The whole feel of the movie changed in the last 10 minutes and that did not sit well with me.

  • @markfrancis5164
    @markfrancis51646 ай бұрын

    Great movie in so many ways…

  • @benjamindover4337
    @benjamindover43377 ай бұрын

    Looks good

  • @martymascarin486
    @martymascarin4866 ай бұрын

    Not nearly as bitiing as, let's say, "The Player' which is a different media form, true, but why make Wright's character a fugitive? Yes, that'll hype sales but also spark the hounds that will ultimately lead to unmasking the ruse; and the movie "endings' provided at the end don't pay off, especially one involving a police raid that's totally ridiculous; but then, so was the sell-out ending for the movie in The Player so I guess i've cancelled out my point; lol.

  • @sandal_thong8631

    @sandal_thong8631

    6 ай бұрын

    No, you're correct in that the ending here doesn't pay off. There's no consequences, and he hasn't grown as a character. I thought the raid in the trailer was hilarious, following his agent's comment "You haven't done anything, it's not like they can arrest you." Better to just watch the trailer again, have a good laugh, and imagine what the movie could have been. kzread.info/dash/bejne/m2SBxK58oLywgKQ.html By comparison, the movie _The Book of Clarence_ started as comedic, but instead of turning into a family tragedy like this, turned into what's called "a redemption story." Some people rightly felt a movie shouldn't change in tone halfway through, but I was invested. I felt the ending was a good payoff for who Clarence was and what he did.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    5 ай бұрын

    Ha, thanks for your thoughts! Glad you caught up with this.

  • @UltimateAwe
    @UltimateAwe6 ай бұрын

    8.2? No way!

  • @santiagolopezlopez987
    @santiagolopezlopez9877 ай бұрын

    Vais a hacer un top 10 mejores peliculas 2023?

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Si, la primera semana en enero.

  • @jeremiahnoar7504
    @jeremiahnoar75045 ай бұрын

    This was the first time in a while a Hollywood movie made a scathing critique of the super progressive leftist Hollywood and Hollywood STILL ate it up. It could be a while before a movie pulls off a trick like that again.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    5 ай бұрын

    It was impressive!

  • @commandZee
    @commandZee7 ай бұрын

    I ❤ _The Forty Year Old Version_

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Right? Not enough people saw it.

  • @edgarohito4662
    @edgarohito46624 ай бұрын

    I must be missing something here. I found this movie thought it was way more clever than it thinks it is. Its a movie with black people, about black people but it's not really serving any reality. I don't recognize these characters dynamic.

  • @marrowbonez
    @marrowbonez2 ай бұрын

    These 2 "reviewers" are the exact people this movie is mocking

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    2 ай бұрын

    Wait, this is confusing, we liked the movie. Appreciate you watching, though.

  • @millsykooksy4863
    @millsykooksy48636 ай бұрын

    it was really good, very funny

  • @damonx6109
    @damonx61097 ай бұрын

    Wow... Alonzo actually liked a movie? Mark it on the calendar.

  • @myytchanneldinakoha8498

    @myytchanneldinakoha8498

    7 ай бұрын

    I mean, he cried at Barbie, so…

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Alonso likes lots of movies. Take a look around our channel and stay a while.

  • @LaSenoritaLadrillos
    @LaSenoritaLadrillos4 ай бұрын

    Uh uh I wanted what I saw on the first trailer . I felt bamboozled . I feel like the writter was talking down on hood experiences to put his experience up. Only ignorant people would think every black person is hood. Not the worst movie it was watchable but wasn’t great.

  • @user-iy2pu8np6c
    @user-iy2pu8np6c5 ай бұрын

    This movie was great. Headed the ending though

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    5 ай бұрын

    Why did you hate the ending?

  • @fabiorodriguez4207
    @fabiorodriguez42076 ай бұрын

    This movie reminds me of woody Allen. Am I the only one who thinks this? 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @kimberlyrobinson3992
    @kimberlyrobinson39924 ай бұрын

    No. Brittany did not deserve kindness. Brittany deserved to be smacked. I thought Monk actually showed great restraint. I’ve had that conversation before with a white person telling me that they were SO offended by the “N-word”. And, I’m like, there’s nothing for you to be offended about because it’s not aimed at you; it’s aimed at us. Trying to co-opt outrage that has nothing to do with you is just another aspect of white entitlement. I mean, I don’t like racial slurs that are aimed at Asians or Latinos but those aren’t my words so I can’t be offended by them even though I’m a person of color, too. Or, rather, there are levels of offense and that little girl, Brittany, was taking *personal* offense, which she can’t do with her white self. It’s fine that she walked out because she wasn’t bright enough to do well in his class, anyway. Also, as a Black intellectual and academic who also went to an Ivy League school, I didn’t find Monk “unlikeable” at all. I found him smart and charming. Ha! Of course, I also didn’t grow up with the alarming family trauma that he did, so who knows if I would have become bitter and closed off like him if I had. Not that my family is perfect but his family was an absolute train wreck. The more I found out over the course of the movie, the worse I felt for him. I think the movie should have ended with him writing a book about his own family. That is the act that would have healed him, I think. He was carrying all of that trauma inside. That book, whether autobiographical or fictional, would have been a real transformative work of literature. What Monk dealt with are things people of his generation are dealing with all over: aging parents, a career that isn’t going as well as you hoped back when you were 20. It’s a classic Sandwich Generation story - only he’s Black. I wish the movie had ended that way. I didn’t care too much for the ending although I saw why they did it that way. “American Fiction” is really, I think, the successor to the New York movies Woody Allen made in the 80’s, like “Hannah and Her Sisters”. Like Monk, Allen’s characters were always the intellectual on the outside looking in, defined and confined by his Jewishness as much as Monk is by his Blackness, whether either of them wants to be defined that way or not.

  • @PrincipiaDeCinema
    @PrincipiaDeCinema7 ай бұрын

    I've been hearing about this movie for a while but hadn't seen a trailer or heard somebody talk about the plot yet. This is virtually the same premise of Spike Lee's Bamboozled, but less combative and without black face. I'm sure there are other differences, but the premise is so similar the fact that nobody ever mentions the similarity is kind of shocking to me.

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    Forgot about Bamboozled! Thanks for making the comparison.

  • @sandal_thong8631

    @sandal_thong8631

    6 ай бұрын

    Agree. How "original" can an awards-contender movie be if Spike Lee did a similar one in 2000?

  • @PrincipiaDeCinema

    @PrincipiaDeCinema

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sandal_thong8631 I'm just surprised how similar it is and nobody brings it up. Don't Look Up was compared to Dr. Strangelove repeatedly, usually disparagingly.

  • @crakatoot5480
    @crakatoot54807 ай бұрын

    Wasn’t this the plot of Bamboozled You know that awful spike Lee film

  • @jasoncarrick5461
    @jasoncarrick54617 ай бұрын

    My issue w/ Wright is I can see him acting, or I guess over acting in his roles. The high score you guys gave will have me giving it a shot but who knows when.

  • @vodkabooty
    @vodkabooty7 ай бұрын

    I really don’t like Jeffrey wright but it still sounds interesting

  • @forallthestupidshit3550

    @forallthestupidshit3550

    7 ай бұрын

    Have you seen Hold The Dark?

  • @Locusto199

    @Locusto199

    7 ай бұрын

    Why don't you like him?

  • @tlovehater

    @tlovehater

    7 ай бұрын

    Lol what? So random 😆

  • @vodkabooty

    @vodkabooty

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Locusto199 he has bad politics and wouldn’t shut up about “Bernie bros”

  • @vodkabooty

    @vodkabooty

    7 ай бұрын

    @@tlovehater I said I was still interested in the movie

  • @azure5644
    @azure56447 ай бұрын

    This movie really surprised me. I’m not really into comedies because the only comedy that consistently makes me laugh is Borat, so I had low expectations and was only looking forward to them making fun of upper class white liberals. But jokes like the black voices joke or the bipoc victim of the carceral state joke are so smart and hilarious they made the movie an 8/10 for me.

  • @tonyg76
    @tonyg767 ай бұрын

    This movie was not great. Wright is very unlikable, the humor making fun of white people showed a double standard. If white people made a movie making fun of black people, it would be offensive and considered trash, not award winning.

  • @sandal_thong8631

    @sandal_thong8631

    6 ай бұрын

    That didn't bother me, in fact they should have done more of that instead of the family tragedy. What bothered me was how his girlfriend says he writes female characters well (though we never see that) but then turns around and gets hostile to women's opinions: hers, the college girl's, and his rival author's that inspired him to write his book.

  • @tonyg76

    @tonyg76

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sandal_thong8631 More of that? Why? A comedy that is not funny would be even worse. Done less tragedy I agree with.

  • @sandal_thong8631

    @sandal_thong8631

    6 ай бұрын

    @@tonyg76 Comedy is subjective, and the first trailer had me laughing out loud. I heard several laughs in the theater at the beginning of the movie, but after the tragedies, not so much. One joke was about a guy in a broken rowboat that couldn't swim, so had to decide to row versus wade.

  • @rics1883
    @rics18835 ай бұрын

    I found this movie painfully boring, themes were way too on the nose. Film thought it was being clever commenting on black experiences but failed.

  • @shadotunga5529
    @shadotunga55296 ай бұрын

    Nah. Sir, you're very eloquent. But if you were Black you might have noticed that every racial reference in the movie was written on the nose. Overall, the end result is this movie was more of an essay making points than an honest, let alone courageous work of art. But you (and everyone else) is falling for the trap. . . just like people did for the book in the movie. For a learned, insightful take on it, watch Armond White's interview.

  • @hoos3014

    @hoos3014

    6 ай бұрын

    Armond White hates everything, by design. He's a one-trick pony and you'll get nothing insightful from him.

  • @shadotunga5529

    @shadotunga5529

    6 ай бұрын

    @hoos3014 Hello, good sir. What does what you said have anything to do with what I say? P.S. Think well. Think carefully.

  • @hoos3014

    @hoos3014

    6 ай бұрын

    @@shadotunga5529 You recommend White's review so you ought be delighted to support his work.

  • @cjwright79
    @cjwright797 ай бұрын

    I was a little confused when Alonso dropped the title of this one! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Forty-Year-Old_Version

  • @BreakfastAllDay

    @BreakfastAllDay

    7 ай бұрын

    It's very good!