The Pacifier fight scene with Vin Diesel vs Brad Garrett. Wrestling coach bully gets humbled. Don't forget to match the tough guys in the end of the video!
@@dommybigshot21 since f9 is coming out his voice is deep asl , and I wanted to see if his voice was as deep when he was younger, also tf U doing here watching this ??🤣🤣
Just remember it's comedy. Wrestling is a submission strategy. SEALs are trained to *quickly* overcome, not submit their adversary - - combat. My brother in law is a Navy SEAL. If we're striking, or using weapons, he can surely mess me up. If we're wrestling, I can wipe the walls with him. Again, this is comedy.
To be fair, I'd bet that 99% of Vice-Principal Wrestling Coaches out there are fine teachers, valuable administrators, and positive role models for their young charges. That said. Mr. Garret's character here is just a first class A-Hole, a classic foil for a classic tweener revenge movie scene. Haven't seen this one, will take a look. Vin's got some comedy chops I was heretofore unaware of, apparently...
Interesting aside, there are a lot of seriously good college wrestlers in the SEALS. Wrestlers can be both extreme and tactical at the same time. SEALS actively recruit them.
It's a tactic used by the industry when building a celeb like this and move biography resume of the action actor hero Etc... violence is offset by cute benign family or romance moves, most if not all big violent/action celebs do this at some point some more than others. Rock bands do this as well, heavy metal bands with love ballads here and there between sex and drugs and alcohol-fueled heavy rock.
What people don't realise is that after seeing Vin Diesel help him out, the kid was inspired to join the Navy Seals and changed his name to Clay Spencer....🤣
The good thing about Brad Garrett is that he is huge. Even though we know he's going to lose, his sheer size makes him seem like a threat to the protagonist. He plays a great douche too
@Repent and believe in Jesus Christ The land is beyond cure, we are in the end of days. People however can seek redemption, but only if they (truly) seek it.
@@papabear9481 'Cause Jesus, he knows me And he knows I'm right I've been talking to Jesus all my life Oh yes, he knows me And he knows I'm right And he's been telling me everything is alright There will be no doubt in your mind You'll believe in everything I'm saying If you wanna get closer to him Get on your knees and start praying
@@Elthenarhe played a violent cop in a kidnapping scenario in one of the law and order shows. He was very believable. The ending was tragic and a bit surprising
I remember taking my niece to see this movie and at her age while she loved the wholesome moments in the movie I being a former Marine (fresh out actually) thought this was the most badass/funny scenes ever lol.
I had a wrestling coach that tried pulling this crap in high school. He said I would regret it for the rest of my life. Really? That kind of mental coercion is morally wrong on so many levels
I remember seeing this in the theater, it made me laugh so freaking hard right here. The actor who played the couch was just hysterical 😂. I would love to see the bloopers from this scene 😊.
He's a performer and actor the rock wishes he could be. Vin has range and true love of the art of acting. As the Co... I mean Rock just likes the money.
This scene reminds me of my friend Jake. He's a short bald guy, but he can literally pick up 6'5 350lb guys by their belt and throw them. He's also one of the sweetest guys I know The coach isn't a man, he's a bully. Men live by the code "do not harm but take no shit"
yep usually how it is. the nice quit guys who dont start shit are always the ones you should never mess with. i have a friend, not short hes about 6'4. nicest guy in the world dosent talk crap about people nice to everyone just kind of worries about his own life. dude has a black belt in multiple disciplines and trains at mma gyms every day.
@@allantidgwell5624 *Videos of bouncers doesn't have shit to do with your friend. That's like saying your friend can deadlift 1000lbs and for proof go lookup someone else doing it. Clown.*
@@bufflatino5121 Maybe YOU can't. Some guys are just built differently. My step dad was 6'7 and 370 in his prime and grew up on a farm. His core strength was just silly from growing up doing hard work. I saw him get pissed and throw a transmission from an Isuzu pickup truck once. Just picked it up and yeeted it. Besides, if you watch high level wrestling or MMA you will see huge guys get bitch tossed all the time. All you need is the right techniques and enough power.
Lol. The nipple cripple. I was in 7th grade walking out of the gym, when an 8th grader did this to me. I just stood there and held in my pain while he squeezed. Couldn't show any weakness. He just looked at me and smiled. He knew it hurt, but at the same time, I think he gave me some respect for not crying out. I'm 50 now, and I still remember his name.
anytime the writers put in a script that Vin Diesel's character is a "criminal", even if he's not portraying one, it's pretty much a reminder of how Vin Diesel got into acting. He and some friends trespassed into a theater they were caught by the theater director. However instead of calling the police, the director gave them $20 and a script, casting them be a part of her next show.
What the coach never understood was that he was wrestling with a man who was trained to use wrestling as a weapon with potentially lethal consequences. His objective was always to be in the position to make the decision if it was going to be lethal or not.
What you don’t realize is any coach worth his salt or college wrestler would beat vin diesel or any member of the armed forces without years of hand to hand combat training And they called pin when he was on his stomach. And the coaches stance looked so bad he definitely was a let down wrester
@@logancraft5589 Perhaps I was too vague in my comment. What I was implying was not that an elite warrior (which in this movie was what Vin Diesel was portraying) was a great wrestler. Their objective is rarely to pin an opponent. If they are facing an opponent, their objective would most likely be to kill, disable or capture their opponent. Most coaches or college wrestlers are not trained to handle that kind of opponent.
Great comedy. Great performances. You know you're giving up a lot of strength when you're a wrestling coach and someone is kicking your ass with Aikido))
Those who act tough are usually quite cowardly in combat and those who seem passive and unaggressive out of it are often the coolest and most capable in it. Charles Upham, the only combat soldier (others two were medics) to earn the Victoria Cross and Bar believed that, and so does this guy.
@@Bro-cx2jc I meant that he became it after his false sense of superiority was broken. But yeah, in a sense you are right. He put on a show of force, and when it was broken, so did he break.
What I hated about the coach was that he was insulting the kid just because he loved to act as well as being just cruel about the fact that the dad is gone by saying that there is no man in the house. he gets his karma in the end
@@Disembow1280 it's funny because he played Raymond's brother in everybody loves Raymond. There was an episode where he got gored in the ass by a bull.
@@Disembow1280 a reference to an actors previous work isn't relevant? My guy, movies do this all the time.... Tf have you been? 🤦🙄 Get over yourself and come out from under your rock.
The thing this movie does right is give this character a journey. He goes from being a pompous bully to understanding what brought the young man to theater… it’s still played for laughs, but the guy is less of a cliche in the end.
Fun fact for you did you know The Pacifier and Racing Stripes were 2 movies released in 2005, they both had one actor from A Bug's Life (The Pacifier had Brad Garrett Racing Stripes had Hayden Panettiere) and one actor from The Iron Giant (The Pacifier had Vin Diesel Racing Stripes had M Emmet Walsh) and one movie was owned by Warner Bros the other by Disney, also Vin Diesel interacts with Brad Garrett and M Emmet Walsh interacts with Hayden Panettiere LOL 😂 did anyone else know that?
He reminded me of those parents in their late 30s who try and show their kids the cool flips and tricks they used to be able to do, only to wind up in the ER with a ruptured disc.
we need this done in real life to real people by real people for real people, not just in the movies where the bullys can just lauph it off and continue
Thanks for the video post! I saw this movie a while back. I think that it's my favorite Vin Diesel movie. The guy playing the coach did a good job too. The movie was well done. I like well done comedy/drama/action movies. The Die Hard movies also have some humor in them, and I own 1 through 4, and have seen # 5 a couple of times. I've gotten into the habit of watching all of the Die Hard movies and the Home Alone movies between Halloween and New Year's Day as part of my holiday tradition, along with some holiday and Biblical movies. I realize that the tough guy movies are somewhat violent, which I'm not too crazy about, but I do like seeing the bad guys brought to justice. It also helps if the movie is well done, as these movies are. I suspect that I like seeing the bad guys lose so much because of all of the bullying I suffered through when I was growing up. My tormenters were rarely punished. It would also explain why an old (60s) disabled woman is into action movies. In the Die Hard movies I liked the exploded subway train segment in #3 and the car launched at the helicopter segment in #4 the best, but all parts of those movies are pretty wild and crazy.😄
2:38. Vin Diesel: "Rule #1... Never be to eager to rush your opponent." 3:11. Vin Diesel: "Chicken wing." 3:17. Vin Diesel: "Arm-bar." 3:20. Vin Diesel: "The Crowbar." 3:25. Vin Diesel: "The Pacifier!!" 3:43. Vin Diesel: "Ah, the Nipple Crippler."
My favorite part of a good movie. It's so satisfying to see this demonstration that a blackbelt is no match for a highly-trained, top-tier military man, especially one with a high Papa Wolf instinct, and an opponent with a low moral compass and severe overconfidence. However, against an opponent that wasn't as skilled as Wolfe, Murney would have been a legitimate threat, thus this is an example of the Worf Effect. (I think).
@@fuzzyninja6496 Whereas I understand that was a Fast & Furious reference, you're not wrong. Wolfe had begun to see the kids as his family, whereas Murney was just an overconfident jackbleep.
I still can't believe that the kid with blonde hair is the actor who played Dylan from Bates Motel Norman's older brother I still can't get over the series finale even though it's been five or more years
In every movie I always wonder when will they say the title of the movie in the movie. I know it doesn’t happen in every movie, but 99.9% of the time that seems to be the trend and like I said I wait patiently for it when I’m watching movies. Anyway in this movie I remember waiting wondering when would they say it and how would they work it into the script lol. I would of never dreamed that the title of the movie “The Pacifier” would of been said while Vin Diesel was taking Brad Garrett’s hand and sticking it in his own mouth lol. It was a pretty clever way to do it though not going lie lol🤘🏾.