Paul Rudd, Jenna Ortega and the 'Death of a Unicorn' cast reveal when their minds were utterly blown
2K views
Apr 1, 2025
"I think that was my first my acid trip."
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0:00
Touching a unicorn horn seems to kind of open up humans' minds to, like, the greater existence in the world
0:05
And I'm curious, in your own lives, what's something that touched you either physically or metaphorically that made you kind of, like, reconsider what you thought you knew about the world
0:14
What an incredible question. Yeah, that's a big question. Also, good morning
0:20
That's good morning. Wow. That's a good morning. I think that was my first acid trip
0:26
That makes sense. Yeah. Yeah, probably. That'll do it. Yeah, that'll do it
0:32
I got that's so strong. Ridley? Are you okay? Um, it kind of felt like it was showing me something
0:40
I get this feeling I don't think we're supposed to be here
0:47
A lot of species in this area are rare. Um, what exactly are we saying this is, though
0:56
It's a unicorn. I don't think I should be in swim shorts for this moment
1:03
There's been some incredible films You know what kind of blew my mind
1:10
I was trying to get into I was trying to diversify my knowledge of film
1:16
And I found this film called Climax And somebody had said something good about it
1:20
And I watch it and I just had never seen a movie like that before my life
1:24
The Gaspar Noay film And I think it kind of opened my mind to all
1:28
a whole new possibility of filmmaking and creating and what that could be like
1:32
So I felt like that was really big. I felt like learning how to meditate. I never thought that I was somebody who could meditate
1:38
As somebody who's incredibly anxious and jittery and that has completely changed the way that I go about my day and go about my life, which was a revelation for me
1:49
I don't know. Do you have anything? No the thing this is weird because it isn really it doesn really answer your question but something that surprised me and really kind of blew my mind was seeing Pompeii
2:06
Oh, like actual, the actual Pompey. I was like, oh, the movie? No, going to Pompeii
2:11
And, like, I'd always heard about Pompeii, but I'd never been there
2:16
Wow. To really see how huge it was. Yeah. And it really kind of stayed with me for a long time
2:22
It didn't really, again, answer your question. But it's a great place to go to if you find yourself in Italy
2:28
I don't know. I mean, I appreciate it in the film because I see it as this sort of reminding notion
2:35
that we've gotten so disconnected from what is beautiful and mystical and magical right in front of us
2:45
But I really, I did. I appreciated that nod to that connection
2:49
I think it's, I don't know, right now, this is. the perfect film for this world
2:57
Yeah, it's a really beautiful aspect of the story and the fact that it requires contact with the unicorns
3:03
for kind of specifically, I guess, like Paul's character, to reconnect with the most important thing
3:09
which is family, which is loved ones, which are the people like nearest and dearest to you
3:13
regardless of how, you know, crazy the environment around you is or maybe how kind of problematic
3:20
the people you are interacting with, like the Leopold, you know, it like reminds you like who the good people are
3:25
and where the good exists. And yeah, the unicorns and the unicorn horn
3:29
is kind of the conduit for that. Mother Nature, which is the victor on at the end of this film
3:35
that no matter what humans do, you're always going to be out tsunami by everything
3:40
that the planet can hold back. I like that out tsunami, that's a good phrase. That was a good one
3:44
That was really good. I'm picking up good vibration
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