Well, it was only a matter of time before Donald Trump weighed in on possibly the dumbest film controversy of the year. Last week, right-wing pundits and politicians united in fury over the supposed revelation that the Neil Armstrong drama First Man, Damien Chazelle’s first film since La La Land, omitted the American flag from the story of the moon landing in 1969. The problem? The flag actually appears in multiple scenes—there’s just no set piece in which we watch the flag actually get planted.

Still, that hasn’t stopped conservative critics from getting mad over a movie they haven’t seen. And now, in an interview with the Daily Caller, the president has given his two cents. Unsurprisingly, he, too, is disappointed.

The president sat down with Daily Caller reporters Saagar Enjeti and Vince Coglianese, who asked at one point if he had seen “the news about the Neil Armstrong movie? That they won’t be showing the scenes.” When Trump confirmed that he had seen the news, the two asked for his take—and whether he found the decision upsetting.

“I think it’s very unfortunate,” future Space Force commander Trump said of the flag’s supposed omission. “It’s almost like they’re proud of, it’s almost like they’re embarrassed at the achievement coming from America. I think it’s a terrible thing.” He added, “I really believe when, ’cause when you think of Neil Armstrong and when you think about the landing on the moon, you think about the American flag. And I understand they don’t do it. So for that reason, I wouldn’t even want to watch the movie.”

But does Trump believe that others should see the movie? There, he’ll let people make their own choices: “I don’t want to get into the world of boycotts,” he said. In the past, the president has called for boycotts of CNN, the N.F.L., Apple, and more, but perhaps he’s had a change of heart.

First Man recently premiered at the Venice Film Festival, where critics found it technically dazzling, if a little boring. Since the controversy was kicked up, both Buzz Aldrin and Armstrong’s sons have sounded off. The astronaut seemed to agree with the uproar; Aldrin posted photos of himself and fellow Apollo crew members posing on the moon with the flag, and made sure to include hashtags like “#proudtobeanAmerican” and “#onenation.” The latter, however, offered a more unifying message in a statement: “This story is human and it is universal. Of course, it celebrates an American achievement. It also celebrates an achievement ‘for all mankind,’ as it says on the plaque Neil and Buzz left on the moon. It is a story about an ordinary man who makes profound sacrifices and suffers through intense loss in order to achieve the impossible.”