The Pixar Short That Changed Pixar Shorts...
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 28. 04. 2023
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Pixar shorts are some of the greatest shorts of all time, and that's not just my opinion several SEVERAL of them have been nominated for full-on Oscars! But when looking at all of the Pixar Shorts side by side... which one stands out as the best? Which one comes out as just a tier ahead of the rest? Well for me, I would have to say that goes to Domee Shi's Bao. Doing so good it properly WON from it's Oscar nomination! So let's spend the next 25 minutes fully dissecting the shots as they come as we discuss The Pixar Short That Changed Pixar Shorts...
#dazzreviews #Pixar #Bao #PixarShort #Disney #PixarBao #movie #VideoEssay #scenebreakdown #clips
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...Wow. I don't think any of us anticipated that ending. - Kråtké a kreslené filmy
Fun Fact: The girlfriend looks different after the human boy is revealed, implying that the mother has exaggerated the events.
Gods thatâs a nice catch
Ayo we got like a Greek demigod over here. Minotaur???
It's like the mother saw the son's new partner as a tramp, but in reality she's down to earth, and also a quick learner, not to mention pleasant
@@THAT1ZELDAFAN I'm glad you pointed this out. I was just about to point this out.
I just assumed it was a different woman
I didnât mind Incredibles 2. But this short stood out to me more than the actual movie for the most part.
Same. Me and my mum cried in the theatre when we watched it together lol.
@@MrMelonsz Iâm speechless.
Incredibles 2 was not the best Pixar Sequel, but Bao made the trip to the theater worth every penny. đ„ â€
Same, I almost cried while watching bao.
Yo as a 8 year old when I saw this the short scarred the SHIT out of me I WAS HAVING FUCKING HEART PALPITATIONS WHEN SHE ATE HIM
I interpreted the "eating" thing as saying one of those horrible things you say when youâre angry and didnât even mean, but you can never quite take back. And the mother and son donât take it back, and thatâs good. They move with it. Grow from it. They donât hate each other forever, they both see they have work to do, but they clearly care about each other. And thatâs nice.
there's definitely a Chinese proverb about "swallowing [a person's] head" meaning saying something you can't ever take back
@@kasagure. woah, seriously? Rad! I didnât know that!
@@kasagure. oh i never knew. this short really makes you *Feel* that proverb tho
I thought it represented the ultimate selfish act a parent can do to a child, or really any person can do to another: if I can't have you then no one else can. The mother eating him was showing how she'd strip away his choices and agency in an attempt to keep him all to herself.
@@riversgrace Truly a hallmark of good writing. Having so much meaning in one little action.
I recall really enjoying this short in theaters and understanding its theme, but I was shocked by just how many people disliked it online - finding the premise too weird or foreign for their tastes. Domee Shi canât seem to catch a break with audiences despite the critical praise, with âTurning Redâ receiving a similar reaction for its themes and subject matter.
I mean I like the shortâs animation, but it is pretty weird. Not saying itâs bad, just not my cup of tea. I didnât like Turning Red but Iâm also not the target audience for that movie. I really do like the animation for both of the films though.
@@professormadhattgaming583 Thats the thing, i think a lot of people have been saying both are bad, but basing that off of opinion of the story at face value rather than there being anything wrong with the animation/symbology or otherwise. Ive not seen either in entirety so i dont have a strong opinion besides thinking most of the bad reviews are based on cultural differences and not liking the way things were symbolized (especially for turning red, them reviews be harsh)
@@pugglebiscuit9600 same can be said for âEverything Everywhere all at Onceâ. The reviews are so divided, either they liked it or not, and itâs clearly about the cultural difference. I was the target audience, same with Joy Iâm Asian, queer and an immigrant, really hits close to home and suffice to say its one of my favourite movies. I also loved Turning Red, these movies just hit so close to home
I remember seeing this on CZcams before the Incredibles 2 movie came out and I loved it so much. And it was before I even started learning about Chinese culture. There is just so much emotion in a little eight minute short
â@@professormadhattgaming583 as someone who was once a cringe ass 13 year old girl, I loved Turning Red
I like how everyone praised this short more than the following movie after it
Not surprised
Lol
Wait what movie
@@I.do.edits- I think thatâs case and point
@@I.do.edits- Incredibles 2
Domee Shi really knocked it out of the park with this. A lot of critics rip into the art style and content of Turning Red but man, I think her direction and the way she grounds relationships into feeling very realistic is incredibly compelling
âCriticsâ are those white men and women so itâs worthless, if a grandma who hardly watches movies approves, itâs rightfully a masterpiece, and def both of these gained their title as the best in the eyes of my grandma, so this is funny
I see it as everything about the Bao being a dream, and her waking up in her bed is when the dream ends.
A few things point to this:
- The fact that this is happening at all.
- The fact that her husband isn't in the story at all between the beginning and when she wakes up.
- The fact that her actual son looks so similar to a Bao bun, that she actually mistakes him for it at first.
Now, that's not to say that everything that happened in the story was meaningless. Rather, I see it as her dealing with her son leaving through the lens of her other love of food. The dream is symbolic, as dreams sometimes are.
Stories in general are symbolic, and whether this is a dream or a metaphorical representation of her relationship with her son doesn't really change anything about how it affects the watcher.
@@undeniablySomeGuy Fair point.
Not to mention that after she eats the Bao, the next scene has her in bed. The first time we see this, we assume it is because she has gone to bed to cry herself to sleep, Even though this isn't logically consistent with the previous scene. (While we can imagine his fiancee' might stay outside during the row, to let mother and son sort out their argument, it's hard to imagine her just... leaving.) But of course it was a dream.
18:45, which is very similar to another saying around babies, "Oh, you're so precious i could just eat you up!"
It also needs to be said that the absent father wasn't always absent. It's him that pushes them together in the same room and he who closes the door. As well the father is not at all surprised that his daughter-in-law can perfectly make bao.
He is present but in a very calm way.
As someone who's a 1st generation Asian American, Bao hit really close to home for me
I feel it
Lava was the first pixar short I ever saw, it's so good, it's genuenly a crime that it wasn't nominated.
Fr.
I agree
i used to cry to that short every time i saw it
My mom watches Lava every year. She adores it and has a tee shirt based on it.
I always assumed Bao Boy and the Human Boy were the same person, that the switch was meant to be when she finally shocked herself into reality, not her recreating all the events with this new Bao Boy
Thereâs also a small detail with the blonde girl when we first see her sheâs wearing crazy clothing but the second time we see her sheâs wearing more sensible clothing
Because tony learns from his mistakes ;)
Itâs most likely because the look of the blonde girl before was an exaggeration by the mother.
She's just wearing normal clothing in the first time, I though?
@@Joy-zz8wz Yeah but the color palette is changed from black and red, a more agressive color palette, to a purple and blue color palette, which are more calming to look at.
this short made me feel more emotional than the actual movie, glade to see it get the appreciation it deserves.
like the stuff that smells good?
I feel like another reason the bao boy was a dumpling the whole time and small was because moms see the children as âtheir babiesâ even after they grow up and so even after heâs an adult and engaged heâs viewed by her as still just her baby so heâs represented as still small
The Pixar shorts are really in a category of their own, and _Boa_ is no exception. It's my all-time favorite, and really does stand out and have more to say than the feature film it was paired with.
Boa is also one of the films of all time. Truly one of the pieces in cinema.
Bao*
I'm just glad that it got so much praise because we ended getting up Turning Red!
I love boa so much, truly a spectacular pexar short!
Happy to see _Boa_ snake its way up to an Oscar. A ssssssspectacular short!
I know that this short is about a mother and son of a distinct culture forging ahead between tradition and modernism, but I love the characterization of the dad. In Turning Red, too. They both have this quiet, caring, loving, supportive nature that you rarely seen played straight as part of a dynamic, rather than the more typical punchline of "Strong feminine personality and their weak male counterpart." It's okay if you're a male and a quiet type, as long as you're there for your family for however long you choose to be there for.
I remember going to the cinema to see Incredibles 2 and everyone (including me) gasped at the scene where the mom eats the Bao. The most genuine reaction in that place, not even the movie had that
So your explanation of this short has actually hit me in a place I didnât expect. I only saw this short once in theaters and just thought it was a sweet short. But as the years gone by there have been some realizations that Iâve discovered about my own father that has made me realize I canât be in a healthy relationship with him as much as I wish I could.
I wish I could have a Bao ending where coming back years later and offering some food would solve it. But sadly it wonât. Because heâs the type to never open up and so Iâm stuck wishing for something that will never happen from a father who refuses to change.
Honey I know that feeling. I think about my adoptive mom and wish it was this easyâŠ
I was 100% shocked when she ate him till I realized he was just a "stand in visualization" for her real son.
I love this short. The bao bun reminds me a lot of my brother, who used to lock himself in his room all the time talking to his friends, but he never paid the rest of the family any attention. Even so, my parents were still very supportive in helping him get into university and paying for his flight there. They still keep in contact, and I think having a taste of reality, my brother is learning to appreciate my parents a little more, even if he doesn't outright say it. He even found himself a love interest like in Bao too.
When I saw the scene of the son rejecting the food, I immediately said, "Bro if I did that with my ma I would've been aborted at the age of 20!"
This short came out when it was my big brother's senior year of high school. Both of my older siblings didn't have a great relationship with my mom (for entirely different reasons), but this really hit home for me because my brother was going to be leaving for college in what felt like no time at all. The whole of the last three minutes or so made me sob really hard. In all honesty I cry every single time I see this short. It holds a very special place in my heart.
I watched this short in the theaters, and I don't usually cry from visual medias. However, when I watched it, and it got to the scene when we saw the human son, I finally understood what the short was saying, and the tears just streamed down my face. I thought it was just from the first time watching it, but I was tearing up watching this video. Testament to how emotional this short is.
Bao was hands down my favorite short. I'm shocked so many people didn't like it or thought it was comedic. They just don't get it.
Bao hits different.
And you can tell Bao & Turning Red were the same creator.
Jeez, really? Bao was certainly a lot better than Turning Red.
@@dazedandconfused5711the turning red hate is such a trend lol watch it again but go in positively
@@dazedandconfused5711 no bro, youâre just coping to not be âchildishâ
I think the last short I really liked was Piper. First off, the animation was stunning, Pixar and beach/ocean scenes are a match made in heaven. And it's just a sweet, simple little story about a sandpiper chick learning about life.
Also the birds and crabs were really cute!
I remember watching this short with my mother in the worst moment possible, 3 months after my brother moved to the Netherlands to be with his wive, and she started crying, and got angry with me because she thought that I brought her to the cinema to watch that short, and I was like I brought you to see the incredibles to cheer you up, how was I supposed to know about this short đ
Lmaaaaaao talk about ironic. In the worst way possible đ
Coming from a Chinese family, this short really hit young and modern me hard. Such a beautiful work deserved the praise it got. It grows even more beautiful once you start analyzing the metaphors that this short is built off of.
I think the girlfriend being able to make buns perfectly could also be a representation of them having kids
The first time I saw bao, I thought that it was cute. I came back to it after a few years and immediately started crying my eyes out. Such an incredible film.
I absolutely hated the incredible 2. Both as a sequel, and as a movie in general. But I still own and pop in that dvd just for this short, itâs absolutely amazing. Gorgeous, emotionally gripping, audibly lovely, timeless.. itâs wonderful.
At the end of this video I started crying, no joke. I donât cry often either đ Bao is a true masterpiece. Also the son wrapping the food shot is me trying to make wontons. I can never get the wrapper to look right
it took me a while to wrap wontons and dumplings too x) i used to overfill and squeeze the excess out
I watched this in theaters. When she ate the dumpling and the screen went black, the theater was silent, except for one guy in the back. "What the heck did we just watch? This is terrible - why are they even showing it to us?" And it made my dad and I crack up.
We own the short now, and I love it, but my Mom is weirded out by it (coincidence?).
đ
Iâm sorry but that is just incredibly disrespectful-I donât care if you didnât get it you keep that to yourself đĄ
i remember watching the short with my friends, they gasped and were shocked. I. also Chinese with immigrant parents, gasped and then started laughing, because I got it right away, the message, because my mom would say something very similar of how she didn't like how I was changing and show she wished and how she wished she could put me back and start over. But the whole translation involved something with eating or a word that sounds like eat, but being an illiterate kid I interpreted as eat. I dont really remember exactly how it translated now, but I remember explaining it to my friends and they were just like "Why", and I told him it sounds worse when you translate it.
This short had me and most of the theater bawling.
Even the end credits were heartwarming, especially with using cute simple drawings that showed more of the family bonding.
Now that I have the context behind the short, it makes me want to cry even more. I absolutely love this short.
Bao and La Luna are still my favorite Pixar Shorts. Theyâre both beautiful in every wayâŠ
Do you guys think Turning Red and Bao could take place in the same universe?
I honestly think Bao could be Turning Red had Ming not learned to let loose on Mei and made her seal her panda
This short got audible gasps from the theater I was in. It was packed since everyone was so excited for the new Incredibles movie. But when the mother ate the bao was the only time the audience had any sort of reaction besides a few laughs during the actual movie. It's a pretty great short
This is one of the few shorts that actually made me cry even after years of not seeing it and maturing, ts still hits
you know, sometimes i think i cant get disappointed in society more.
but cmon, the symbolism in this is so obvious, and it's a great short. as someone with a strained mom-son relationship myself this almost made me tear up.
how are people really so dense that they can't get it? this is why animation gets no respect, the medium can tell fantastical stories with amazing symbolism in ways impossible and often more powerful than live action, but people just can't wrap their head around it if it doesnt look or behave realistic enough.
I like the bookending of the table, the opening shot of it, with just the mother and husband is cold, dark, cast in shadows of loneliness.
The final shot is bright, warm and brimming with love. Even the husband is invested for at least a few moments before turning back to the tv.
just hearing the music from bao makes me want to bawl my eyes out, it was the first time I ever cried in a theater and I still cherish it as a beautiful and heart warming short about life.
This short still made me cry, even with narration. Iâm almost 16 now and cold towards my parents. It almost makes me feel bad about myself. But itâs such a relatable and cool short. Really the ONLY short I remember because of how good it was when I saw it as a 10 (or so) year old.
I'll always remember this short because the little boy in the row behind me at the theater started screaming when the mom ate the bun. I mean horror movie screaming and I spent the opening of The Incredibles 2 doubled over from it.
I'm so sad that Lava didn't even get a nomination, it's my personal favorite and it genuinely makes me cry sometimes
I personally love this short because although i am in the Philippines i can relate to being a child and my mom/grandmother goes to the city buying groceries, eating bread on the way home, and just slightly rebelling when theyâve become too protective
when i first saw the mom eat the son, my entire mood completely changed. it went from "aw cute story about mom not wanting to let go of her son" to "oh shit a murder just happened"
My personal favorite short isn't even from a Pixar movie. It's "Inner Workings", the short that preceded Disney's "Moana".
I love that short! I didn't realize it played in front of Moana
I saw this short on the cinema and the fire alarm went off. Can't see it the same since
I feel like for some reason, that the cooking scenes in turning red (made by Mei's father) were heavily inspired by this short film, (Edit: I feel like Turning red was based on Bao.)
Another interesting thing is if you look at how the bao boys girlfriend is dressed versus her son's girlfriend, the imaginary version is dressed in very skimpy skirt and heavy makeup but the real version of her is much more conservative
dude wtf, i had watch the short before, but yout narrative is truly amazing, even made me cry 10/10 keep it going
Boa was the first Pixar short I ever watched. I was so confused through the whole thing but my mom was almost crying by the end.
I never watched bao watching this video just by a couple of minutes are honestly really pleasing and making me want to watch bao rn- but like he said the textures are beautiful and pleasing and he points out all the perfect shots that iâd never take note of just stands out now
take what you want from this comment, i just wanted to state that
Throughout the whole video I was trying to hold back the tears, I love this short so much! Seriously, even rewatching without the background music, just the visuals hit so hard
The first time I watched this it low-key traumatized me, but the second time I watched it I was able to understand the symbolism better and I appreciate it a lot more now
This short was BEAUTIFUL and honestly made me cry when I first saw it years ago. I had NO IDEA it was made by the same director of _Turning Red,_ (which I was NOT a fan of, btw.) I can see similarities in the "overbearing" mother figure who refuses to let go, except that in this case, I feel that _this_ mother felt more overprotective due to actual love and care, whereas the mother in _Turning Red_ just wanted to control by any means necessary.
I like how despite how much the son disliked being coddled growing up, he didnât hold any grudge for it as an adult and seemed even grateful that his mom cared so much. Something Iâm sure a lot of us felt towards our parents when we grow up
I am so happy that this short is finally getting more attention. no matter how many times I watch it I still cry every time. I think it is a work of art truly one of Pixar's best, not just of their shorts I mean out of EVREYTHING they have made. Bao still holds up way better then most of there movies
cannot watch that eating scene without tearing up, shit hits too hard when you empathize with her regret
honestly i didn't understand this short until i watched this video and slowly while listening to you explain some of the basic things that i ignore when i go to turn of brain and just watch something mode it made me realize that this is actually really good and beautiful short
Not a slow cooker but a Rice cooker. Essential.
If you are still doing that series where you review cutscenes from video games, I highly recommend the Sonic Frontiers Prologue: Divergence animation. It has incredible animation and story-telling. Even if you don't make a video about it, I'd still recommend checking it out.
This hit home so close Iâve never cried this hard to a movie or short. My favorite of all time. Love my mom and dad â€
Okay this just reminded me of how much I loved this short at the time and now. I was crying through your review too đđ đą. Now this is even more relevant cause I foster a preteen son. And man I can relate on both sides (parent & child).
I was lucky enough to see Bao in theaters before Incredibles 2. I was about 12 at the time, around a year and a half since my parents divorced. I was there with my dad and brother, but mom wasnt present due to the separation. At 12, I didn't really have too much of a concept of symbolism, but as I watched it, I understood the passage of time of the kid growing, and seeing as my own mom was terrified of me riding around the block on a bike at age 12, I felt it when the kid was restrained. The eating scene surprised me, but what came next got me into tears for the first time in my movie history. Seeing the bao fade into the son as they reconnect once more made me understand just how precious and emotional this short was, and right before Incredibles 2, unnoticed, I began to cry, as I asked myself "Why am I crying?" I never cried at a form of movie before, so when this happened, that's when I knew I had just watched something special. Later that year, a local park showed Coco for free on a projector, and that soon became the first full movie I cried during.
Bao had me thinking it was from Asia.
That's not a slow cooker, that's a rice cooker; a very important distinction cause 1) rice cookers only really make rice (some have steamer baskets, and some fancy ones have other buttons, but that one does not as you can see it just has the push button to start the rice) and 2) a rice cooker is a staple of baisically every Asian household, we all have one and I've rarely seen non Asian people have them. To the point that, as a mixed Asian person myself, I found out a friend of mine was mixed Asian (I noticed a couple other things but this like was the confirmation) was cause they were a new person that was moving in as a room mate with some friends of mine, and mentioned excitedly that they have a rice cooker while we were talking about appliances, and I was like "are you Asian?" "YES! OMG NO ONE NOTICES!" "BRUH SAME" and we talked for like an hour, later they were like "what tipped you off?" "The rice cooker" "lmao omg of course"
Also my family had one that looked just like the one in Bao when I was growing up, my great grandma brought it back from a trip to Hawa'ii visiting some family and it lasted like 40 years before it died.
TLDR; that's a rice cooker and is another visual que about them being an immigrant Asian family
I assume the creator knew about the Oedipal Mother trope - also known as the Devouring Mother
That's exactly what I thought when I saw it.
This short made me cry and it was best short ever and it's will be my favorite short ever â€â€
i love this short with all my heart. My parents were also asians who moved to canada for a different life, and food is definitely a love language as a whole
â€â€â€ Love your Reviews Dazz
bao almost made me cry when i saw it in the theater
I was a new mom of twins when I saw this short and the way I gasped when she ate him! This one made me cry so much all the way through, both happy and sad tearsâŠalways one of my favorites â€
I interpreted The mother eating her child as swallowing the idea that her child is no longer a baby, he is no longer her little boy. A âhard to swallow pillâ and the realization of how she herself had acted. Even so containing frustration because accepting this is still difficult even after realizing.
4:34 see this short is when having a female director is good, because they had her on the project not just for "diversity" but for a reason.
It is interesting though, that whenever you seem to have a lot of women heading a project it does seem to get a lot more... personal, shall we say. Most films tend of have a broad appeal, I mean just look at *anything* from illumination. Women seem to *generally* take a more personal approach, and write *their* story, even if not all audiences will understand it.
I think this short specifically had a good balance as it does get into some specific details of specific struggles for specific people, but has a message I feel anyone could relate to.
i remember seeing this in theaters, almost cried over it
watching this again through this video and. i did cry. whoops.
this short made me cry so much it was insane
LOVE the Zelda music in the backround
Hello meep
*I always loved this short the food looked amazing and the message is nice*
I actually needed this video to understand this short.
Haha, dude turned 8 minutes into 25.
Great video, loved it Dazz
loved this short when it came out
I know Iâve watched this before but it was a really long time ago. This video really hit me hard for some reason. My parents, specially my mother, kicked me out at 17 and we always had a really rocky relationship with a lot of abuse. Iâve tried mending the relationship before and it always ending quickly and terribly. This short and video make me want kind of want to try to fix it before itâs too late. But ima scared and I donât know if I can do it
this short makes me so emotional. i started crying in the middle of this video lol
A minor note: at 4:54 that's not a slow cooker, it's a rice cooker. My grandmother had one just like it.
3:35screw you (*undoughes your dough*)
when i first watched this on theatre. Tears rolled down on my cheek. similar experience after watching video
Back when this was first made, I was like hella younger and hella stupid, and I still managed to get the message. Made me cry too.
This is why diversity is good, it makes for more interesting stories and gives more perspective and in an ideal world different experiences and perspectives can be combined to make even better stories
But also diversity should be about equity which is sadly not always the case where bad story writers are employed just because "we need diversity"
But this just shows how got it can be when done right
Fun fact; domee chi, the directer of this short, is the director of turning red aswell.
Dunno if its mentioned at all but even the super small details like the tin foil on the oven burner makes it feel so grounded i love this short lol
Despite the lack of overlap between me and the short, i knew it was something special when i first saw it.
Nice video! I felt like you stretched it out a LOT, but I still watched the whole thing and enjoyed it
this short had 11 year old me bawling and hugging my dad in the theater
this short fucking freaked me out as a kid i'm gonna be honest. watching a mom vore her son scarred me forever
I think there might be some enmeshment stuff going on.
At the beginning of the film, after she makes the meal in the kitchen, she brings the food out to the table in the dining room to her husband. In that scene, we are shown how the husband is too busy to spend time with the wife. I think she clung to her son so hard because of her marriage problems.
I think that's why she was so upset about the son spending less time with her, and getting a girlfriend. I think she kind of adultified him in a way. I mean, she's seen babying her son, but I think she was using him to replace the affection she wanted from her husband. This film doesn't seem right...
Something's not right. I can't quite explain it, but I don't think this is about a mother-and-son relationship. I think this is a story about a woman who tries to get the affection she's not getting from her husband from her kid. That sounds crazy, but a relationship like this just doesn't seem right. Something's wrong. đ
On one hand, yeah, parents will miss the relationship that they had with their kids, when they were younger, after they start growing up, but this is strange...
She's so extra sensitive to every new change. Her wanting to still be pregnant, with her son, makes this film creepier! The overall feel of the film is strange, in general, but her wanting to stay pregnant with him makes it worse!
It's funny how I first new this short because of the uh,eating the bao part,it was everywhere I could swear it
I think another comment said it and I repeat it cause I liked it,that it was all the mom's dream. Dreams are a combination of past real events and a bunch of other stuff important for us,she loves her son and she loves food so there's a bao child. This is all how she felt,she felt her son growing up ridicously fast,she felt unappreciated by him,and maybe his fiancé was the straw that broke the camel's back for her breaking the relationship (until he comes back at the end of the short of course)
It kinda would explain why nobody minds the literal bao walking around like a person or why the dad is not very present (he's implied to work a lot,I guess) as dreams are all about that,things just make sense.
No matter the explanation,it's honestly a really sweet short
I remembered the story pretty well and lovinâ it all but the observations that you gave... the direction is so great, the lighting use for narrative, the emphasis in the food and the table... it makes me appreciate it even more ÂĄbrilliant!