Kuzco literally went from an A**hole who had everything given to him and treated others like dirt, to end up being a way better person. And all it took was him to be turned into a Llama and journey with a peasant to help him change for the better. Definitely one of the best character developments that I’ve seen Disney do!
Not all teens are like Kuzko, but man this and Treasure Planet are probably the most accurate Disney animated movies in regards to depicting believable teenager behavior 😂😂😂
I love how, unlike in other redemption arcs, Kuzco isn’t presented as the character who does bad things but then feels really bad about it inside; wanting to be good deep down. Keeping true to his stubborn, insecure and arrogant character, he doesn’t see the need to be nice to others and constantly tries to cover it up. Like he doesn’t want to admit to himself that there are benefits to being good and compassionate. But he learns that if you’re nice to others, they’ll be nice back and help you. Because Kuzco had absolutely no friends to rely on when Yzma was out to kill him, and he realized that having no friends really isn’t a great or happy life; especially if you’re a llama. But Pacha never gave up on him, even when he treated him like complete shit. Pacha realized that sometimes, you have to show people kindness so that they can know what it even looks like. Because Kuzco clearly had no family to even teach him HOW to be a good person. And hopefully, they’ll find it in themselves to show it back. Like during the canyon scene, Kuzco realized that he had to stop being stubborn, and actually cooperate and be nice for Pacha to continue to help him. You have to be nice to people for them to show it back to you, and I love how naturally and realistically it’s shown in this film 😊😊
What I like about Kuzco is that he's lived with such a sheltered life that once he goes out into the real world, he realises he knows... essentially nothing about survival. Most of the issues throughout the movie are of his own making, and it's hilarious.
The early 2000s were the era of the indigenous cultures (emperor's new groove, lilo&stitch, brother bear, maybe atlantis), and is really underrated in general in my opinion. That being said, emperor's new groove really has a cult following and is iconic to all, even to those who have only seen it once. It's really a shame and mystery why it didn't do so well. Probably a marketing issue I suppose.
Kuzco's character can almost be seen as a blueprint on how to have max character development/growth. If a character is likeable from the start, their journey may be a story of perseverance and overcoming challenges. A classic heroes tale. But make a character unlikeable you are given much more room to show them maturing and become a character the audience can cheer for.
I think another reason why this movie works is when you compare it to another movie that just came out recently, Raya and The Last Dragon. That might sound odd, but when you actually compare the two, you realize that both movies tackle the theme about earning trust. But Raya and the Last Dragon failed, as the character Namaari, not only did her actions hurt so many people, even physically, but the fact that they chose to cut out her apology in the end, feels very contrived, as well as the fact that her seemingly redeeming herself in the end doesn’t work. Whereas Kuzco, while his actions are going to hurt people, the fact that they don’t ever actually happen, kind of works more. Especially when you consider that even if he does make it back to the palace, it wouldn’t matter either way, as Yzma will be waiting there to kill him. So either way, he’s a dead man. It also helps the fact that the character Pacha, unlike Sisu, while he’s shown to be a “nice guy” who’s is overly trustworthy of everyone, is not a pushover. As when he tries to make a deal with Kuzco, he tells him, “Don’t shake, unless you mean it.”. And when Kuzco ends up breaking his promise, Pacha gives him what he deserves, even calling him out for what he is. There's also the scene when Kuzco ends up, running into him when he’s finally all alone, where Pacha talking crap about him to the other llamas. So while Kuzco‘s apology never actually comes out of him, it’s sort of he’s more justified as he’s finally excepted that he is indeed a horrible person, but Pacha’s willing to give him one more chance.
The ultimate reason kuzco earning trust works is because we see him slowly bonding with pacha and changing for the better. We don't get any of that with namari; we don't see her have her ideology get shaken, we dont see her experience the consequences, we dont see her expressing regret in tangent to those experiences, and even the minor cases she does she does not full heartedly admit or realize her fault and feel apologetic towards raya. It is why we spit on the fact that the movie forces raya to trust namari as namari literally did not earn OUR trust
This is the reason I despise Raya and the Last Dragon. The moral is completely botched with its own characters actions. Also I have BOTH The Emperor’s New Groove DVD and the old Disney story book adaptation. My 6 year old daughter adores those. I’m glad I took care of my old childhood things.
Omg,ı remember that Tv show. Not in a same level as the movie,but deffinetly really close. Humor and chracter personalities are same. Animation is more stiffy,but thats it. İt was so funny. I am glad they keep Yzma as the main villian in that show. I love her Yzmpolis song. Like,forget snuff out the light. Yzmapolis song is the underrated one.
When it comes to great characters, we have pure hearted heroes, we have traditional villains, and lovable rogues. However, this movie manages to perfectly craft a sleazy narcissist character in the form of Emperor Kuzco. An issue I usually see in animation is that arrogant characters are always portrayed as villains or bullies, Kuzco manages to make a vain character work because not only does it make him hilariously wicked and villainous, but it fits in with the movie’s well-executed theme of humility. When Kuzco goes on his life changing journey with Pacha, not only does he gain a new perspective on life and work to becoming a better emperor, but he keeps some of his egotism without coming off as the evil tyrant he was once was. He’s also very subtle and causal when he tells Pacha that he’s decided not to destroy the village after all.
*Kronk* *is* *the* *BEST!* "Break it down? This is hand carved mahogany." "Ok, but we still have 98 monkeys to go." "Three oinkers wearing pants, a plate of hot air, a basket of gramma's breakfast, and change the bull to a gill. Got it." "Oh, right. The poison. The poison for Kuzco; the poison chosen specifically to kill Kuzco; Kuzco's poison. . . That poison?" "Oh, I know: Miss Nalca's interpretive dance, two semesters. I usually was in the back because of my weak ankles."
Love this movie ever since I was a kid, it’s considered in my eyes the funniest Disney animation movie, I hope you can do a video on how great Treasure Planet and Atlantis The Lost Empire are, if you feel like they’re worth it.
Oddly enough in a way kuzco reminds me a bit of Gilgamesh. Both started out as jackasses and then grew into better people as the story progressed. We need more characters like this guy.
Definitely has to be my favorite Disney movie. It passes the nostalgia test and I still enjoy watching it over and over again as I did watching it as a kid! Truly a classical gem in my eyes 👌
Kuzco is one of my favorites. Arrogant,Insulting,Full of Himself at first,as he goes on his forced journey he learned there are more important things in the world then himself. Or course,the "The Theme Song Guy" joke was hilarious.
One of the things I loved was that it wasn't a musical. You actually shared in the fear, struggles, reflections, lessons, and successes of the heroes rather than them just singing about it.
Just watched this movie, and forgot how good it was, so it's cool you just put out a video on it. Me and my family loved this movie, one of our favorites, I remember watching it a ton as a kid. This and Megamind were probably my favoirites
hey! great video as always! i always get SO HYPE when i see teng being talked about, and you did NOT disappoint. i just wanted to point out something about yzma. kuzco doesn't kick yzma out for no reason/'just because she's old', as you said. although it's true that yzma was running the kingdom when kuzco is away, this is explicitly against kuzco's wishes and the inciting incident of the movie. and it's important to note that kuzco says that yzma is doing it "again". this means she has likely done this several times, and the fact that he says 'again' to her face indicates that they've even conversed about this at least once before. so yzma had the opportunity to correct her behavior, but was too fixated on having more power. and we know she felt kuzco was a brat unworthy of the throne, yes, but she was already in the highest possible position next to being the empress itself, right? so to insinuate that kuzco didn't give her the respect/payment she deserved i feel would be to miss a large point of the movie. cause like -- here's the other important thing: yzma is kuzco's direct foil. her being old is actually very VERY important in this story, because she's a picture of what kuzco would become if he never mended his ways. and the scene in which we meet her demonstrates this most effectively, because we see that she and kuzco honestly run the kingdom with similar callousness and disdain for its poorer subjects. i mean her line, "you really should have thought of that before you became peasants!" is one of her most iconic lines (and she has MANY), but it's also one of her most important because it highlights the fact that a kuzco that doesn't change would be so callous as to just... directly deny people with food, apparently. and there are other implications too, of course, like how in disney fashion, he's pretty-looking now, but quite vain, so it would be his worst nightmare to grow old and awful-looking like yzma. lastly, i just wanted to point out that it's so, SO brilliant that yzma [practically] raised kuzco herself. so he got a good chunk of her nastiness along with being soiled bc ~royalty~ and had little to no exposure to the outside world. yzma raising a person to be just like her and then ultimately hating that person due to the clash of egos & interests makes sense, firstly. (how many times have you heard of parents clashing with their teenagers, right?) but it also enhances the reason why kuzco would trust yzma and kronk when they cross paths at the diner. honestly, given all that, the fact that he had any positive growth at ALL is a goddamned disney miracle. xD to be clear: i 100% agree with the overall thesis. i just felt the statement about yzma was important enough to warrant a response, you know? you know.
i can't believe that this movie is 23 years old i may have watched this movie 100 times when i was a kid and a few years later when they made the cartoon i watched that sure that movie contradicts the movie saying the potions have short time limits but still
Hi Aldone, since you've talked about every animated film from different studios over the last several months I'm wondering if you can go over Blue Sky Studios and their filmography. I believe they deserve some attention even after their closure.
This movie portays the very accurate way stubborn people change: they deny any idea of them perverting from their carefully fabricated ego they've sold to others, yet when they choose to do good, they don't want to claim it because it shows they do care. Narcissists CAN change, even ones in power
Sometimes a privileged asshole has a good side KUZCOOOoo (I couldn’t help myself) is a perfect example of this. He doesn’t know any better and he’s taught. Also, snuff out the light is a bop and I will not be told otherwise.
Funny how even before Kuzco goes through his redemption arc that he’s still more likeable than many leads in Disney’s recent movies and television shows
I saw a Marvel ad on this video and realized why I stopped caring about Marvel. I actually liked not being expected to like the main character , it gave me a choice. That's why my favorite Marvel character is Rocket The Limb Snatcher.
And that is why emperors new groove is the best movie ever made in the history of cinema, actually cinema never existed before emperors new groove. Kuzco actually created movies because it’s so perfect
He, Naveen, and Gaston are alike due to narcissism. Yet Naveen and Kuzco took the redemption route through the tribulations and hard paths. While Gaston chose to go his way through extreme measures and paid the ultimate price almost near Yzmas hubris
Can you do some talking about Disney sidekicks like comparing the ones of the past to the ones we have today and ranking of them? I think you can tell us about Disney Junior shows like the Lion Guard, Jake and the Neverland Pirates, and Little Einsteins. Lastly, I think you should do a video about the rest of Sony Animations following the rise of the Spider-verse franchise.
Sadly, we don’t have protagonist like this anymore in Disney. Protagonists and characters should be like trees, Blessed are the trees that start off barren, but learned how to grow. 🌲
Kuzko is one of the best flawed protagonist ever written, I have a feeling this is what the main character of HBO Velma and I am not StarFire going to but they made their protagonists too toxic.
emperors new groove never clicked for me tho, i might have been too old when it came out, i think i was 16, and i enjoyed darker stories already, emperors new groove was too goofy, and i didnt like the villain or her muscle brain lackey, found it too goofy.
I've seen True Disney Heroes Throughout the Years. Here's My Respectful Disney Heroes I've known and seen Throughout the Years: 1. Mickey Mouse 2. Hercules 3. Aladdin 4. Fa Mulan 5. Tarzan 6. Jack Sparrow 7. Tron (Disney's 1982 Tron) 8. Prince Eric 9. Prince Phillip 10. Peter Pan 11. Beast (Original Name: Prince Adam) 12. Simba 13. Stitch 14. Jack Skellington 15. James P. Sullivan *Sully* 16. Detective Basil 17. Prince Naveen 18. David *Dave* Stutler (Disney's The Sorcerer's Apprentice) 19. Darkwing Duck 20. Goliath (Disney's Gargoyles) 21. Buzz Lightyear (Disney's Buzz Lightyear of Star Command) 22. Kim Possible 23. Jake Long (Disney's American Dragon: Jake Long) 24. Jack Brewer (Disney XD's Kickin' It) 25. Chase Davenport (Disney XD's Lab Rats) 26. Penn Zero (Disney CD's Penn Zero: Part-Time Hero) 27. K.C. Cooper 28. Elena Castillo Flores 29. Anne Boonchuy 30. Raya (Disney's Raya and the Last Dragon) These are the True Disney Heroes I've known and seen before Throughout the Years. They're all WAY Better than Kuzco right.
Kuzco literally went from an A**hole who had everything given to him and treated others like dirt, to end up being a way better person. And all it took was him to be turned into a Llama and journey with a peasant to help him change for the better.
Definitely one of the best character developments that I’ve seen Disney do!
Yup
Amen
I've always seen Empower's New Groove as the BEST Disney comedy movie, glad to see it's being appreciated again.
Hopefully this is one movie that won’t get a live action remake
@@forrestdupre87 word
@@forrestdupre87me too
100% agree
Not all teens are like Kuzko, but man this and Treasure Planet are probably the most accurate Disney animated movies in regards to depicting believable teenager behavior 😂😂😂
I love how, unlike in other redemption arcs, Kuzco isn’t presented as the character who does bad things but then feels really bad about it inside; wanting to be good deep down. Keeping true to his stubborn, insecure and arrogant character, he doesn’t see the need to be nice to others and constantly tries to cover it up. Like he doesn’t want to admit to himself that there are benefits to being good and compassionate. But he learns that if you’re nice to others, they’ll be nice back and help you. Because Kuzco had absolutely no friends to rely on when Yzma was out to kill him, and he realized that having no friends really isn’t a great or happy life; especially if you’re a llama. But Pacha never gave up on him, even when he treated him like complete shit. Pacha realized that sometimes, you have to show people kindness so that they can know what it even looks like. Because Kuzco clearly had no family to even teach him HOW to be a good person. And hopefully, they’ll find it in themselves to show it back. Like during the canyon scene, Kuzco realized that he had to stop being stubborn, and actually cooperate and be nice for Pacha to continue to help him. You have to be nice to people for them to show it back to you, and I love how naturally and realistically it’s shown in this film 😊😊
What I like about Kuzco is that he's lived with such a sheltered life that once he goes out into the real world, he realises he knows... essentially nothing about survival.
Most of the issues throughout the movie are of his own making, and it's hilarious.
The early 2000s were the era of the indigenous cultures (emperor's new groove, lilo&stitch, brother bear, maybe atlantis), and is really underrated in general in my opinion. That being said, emperor's new groove really has a cult following and is iconic to all, even to those who have only seen it once. It's really a shame and mystery why it didn't do so well. Probably a marketing issue I suppose.
It took me years to notice that Kuzco looked sad before hugging Pacha's wife at the end because he was moved by the gift she gave him.
Kuzco's character can almost be seen as a blueprint on how to have max character development/growth. If a character is likeable from the start, their journey may be a story of perseverance and overcoming challenges. A classic heroes tale. But make a character unlikeable you are given much more room to show them maturing and become a character the audience can cheer for.
I think another reason why this movie works is when you compare it to another movie that just came out recently, Raya and The Last Dragon.
That might sound odd, but when you actually compare the two, you realize that both movies tackle the theme about earning trust. But Raya and the Last Dragon failed, as the character Namaari, not only did her actions hurt so many people, even physically, but the fact that they chose to cut out her apology in the end, feels very contrived, as well as the fact that her seemingly redeeming herself in the end doesn’t work. Whereas Kuzco, while his actions are going to hurt people, the fact that they don’t ever actually happen, kind of works more. Especially when you consider that even if he does make it back to the palace, it wouldn’t matter either way, as Yzma will be waiting there to kill him. So either way, he’s a dead man.
It also helps the fact that the character Pacha, unlike Sisu, while he’s shown to be a “nice guy” who’s is overly trustworthy of everyone, is not a pushover. As when he tries to make a deal with Kuzco, he tells him, “Don’t shake, unless you mean it.”. And when Kuzco ends up breaking his promise, Pacha gives him what he deserves, even calling him out for what he is. There's also the scene when Kuzco ends up, running into him when he’s finally all alone, where Pacha talking crap about him to the other llamas. So while Kuzco‘s apology never actually comes out of him, it’s sort of he’s more justified as he’s finally excepted that he is indeed a horrible person, but Pacha’s willing to give him one more chance.
The ultimate reason kuzco earning trust works is because we see him slowly bonding with pacha and changing for the better. We don't get any of that with namari; we don't see her have her ideology get shaken, we dont see her experience the consequences, we dont see her expressing regret in tangent to those experiences, and even the minor cases she does she does not full heartedly admit or realize her fault and feel apologetic towards raya. It is why we spit on the fact that the movie forces raya to trust namari as namari literally did not earn OUR trust
This is the reason I despise Raya and the Last Dragon. The moral is completely botched with its own characters actions. Also I have BOTH The Emperor’s New Groove DVD and the old Disney story book adaptation. My 6 year old daughter adores those. I’m glad I took care of my old childhood things.
Amazing movie. Amazing tv show. Kusco truly is a great character on how he became more humbled
Whoever thought of the animal potions deserved a raise
Wait-
There is a tv show?
@@gcrbnyeah emperor's new school it's old but a classic.
@@gcrbn YES THERE IS
Omg,ı remember that Tv show. Not in a same level as the movie,but deffinetly really close. Humor and chracter personalities are same.
Animation is more stiffy,but thats it.
İt was so funny. I am glad they keep Yzma as the main villian in that show. I love her Yzmpolis song. Like,forget snuff out the light. Yzmapolis song is the underrated one.
KUZCO EXCELLENT WORK,
"The Emperor's New Groove" was one of my favourite childhood movies! Now that i'm 20 years older i actually get all the meta humour😂
When it comes to great characters, we have pure hearted heroes, we have traditional villains, and lovable rogues. However, this movie manages to perfectly craft a sleazy narcissist character in the form of Emperor Kuzco. An issue I usually see in animation is that arrogant characters are always portrayed as villains or bullies, Kuzco manages to make a vain character work because not only does it make him hilariously wicked and villainous, but it fits in with the movie’s well-executed theme of humility. When Kuzco goes on his life changing journey with Pacha, not only does he gain a new perspective on life and work to becoming a better emperor, but he keeps some of his egotism without coming off as the evil tyrant he was once was. He’s also very subtle and causal when he tells Pacha that he’s decided not to destroy the village after all.
Kuzco: You threw off my groove.
Imperial Guard: I’m sorry sir, but you threw off the Emperor’s groove.
SOOOORRYYYYY!!!
Beware the groove….
😱
You were saying...
even after all of these years this movie is animated with so much passion. everyone is so unbelievable emotive
Iconic movie. And with an even more iconic side character. Kronk.
*Kronk* *is* *the* *BEST!*
"Break it down? This is hand carved mahogany."
"Ok, but we still have 98 monkeys to go."
"Three oinkers wearing pants, a plate of hot air, a basket of gramma's breakfast, and change the bull to a gill. Got it."
"Oh, right. The poison. The poison for Kuzco; the poison chosen specifically to kill Kuzco; Kuzco's poison. . . That poison?"
"Oh, I know: Miss Nalca's interpretive dance, two semesters. I usually was in the back because of my weak ankles."
Love this movie ever since I was a kid, it’s considered in my eyes the funniest Disney animation movie, I hope you can do a video on how great Treasure Planet and Atlantis The Lost Empire are, if you feel like they’re worth it.
Oddly enough in a way kuzco reminds me a bit of Gilgamesh.
Both started out as jackasses and then grew into better people as the story progressed.
We need more characters like this guy.
He also reminds me of Woodys character development from the first Toy Story
Fun fact Pacha had to be animated with restrain as the writers in the commentary said he could at any point " Smack Kuzco upside the head"
Definitely has to be my favorite Disney movie. It passes the nostalgia test and I still enjoy watching it over and over again as I did watching it as a kid! Truly a classical gem in my eyes 👌
Kuzco is one of my favorites. Arrogant,Insulting,Full of Himself at first,as he goes on his forced journey he learned there are more important things in the world then himself. Or course,the "The Theme Song Guy" joke was hilarious.
One of the things I loved was that it wasn't a musical. You actually shared in the fear, struggles, reflections, lessons, and successes of the heroes rather than them just singing about it.
Just watched this movie, and forgot how good it was, so it's cool you just put out a video on it. Me and my family loved this movie, one of our favorites, I remember watching it a ton as a kid. This and Megamind were probably my favoirites
he's not simply an emperor, he's a dramatic sarcastic sassy princess and we all collectively agree
The day I found out this had a TV series made me so happy
hey! great video as always! i always get SO HYPE when i see teng being talked about, and you did NOT disappoint. i just wanted to point out something about yzma.
kuzco doesn't kick yzma out for no reason/'just because she's old', as you said. although it's true that yzma was running the kingdom when kuzco is away, this is explicitly against kuzco's wishes and the inciting incident of the movie. and it's important to note that kuzco says that yzma is doing it "again". this means she has likely done this several times, and the fact that he says 'again' to her face indicates that they've even conversed about this at least once before. so yzma had the opportunity to correct her behavior, but was too fixated on having more power. and we know she felt kuzco was a brat unworthy of the throne, yes, but she was already in the highest possible position next to being the empress itself, right? so to insinuate that kuzco didn't give her the respect/payment she deserved i feel would be to miss a large point of the movie.
cause like -- here's the other important thing: yzma is kuzco's direct foil. her being old is actually very VERY important in this story, because she's a picture of what kuzco would become if he never mended his ways. and the scene in which we meet her demonstrates this most effectively, because we see that she and kuzco honestly run the kingdom with similar callousness and disdain for its poorer subjects. i mean her line, "you really should have thought of that before you became peasants!" is one of her most iconic lines (and she has MANY), but it's also one of her most important because it highlights the fact that a kuzco that doesn't change would be so callous as to just... directly deny people with food, apparently. and there are other implications too, of course, like how in disney fashion, he's pretty-looking now, but quite vain, so it would be his worst nightmare to grow old and awful-looking like yzma.
lastly, i just wanted to point out that it's so, SO brilliant that yzma [practically] raised kuzco herself. so he got a good chunk of her nastiness along with being soiled bc ~royalty~ and had little to no exposure to the outside world. yzma raising a person to be just like her and then ultimately hating that person due to the clash of egos & interests makes sense, firstly. (how many times have you heard of parents clashing with their teenagers, right?) but it also enhances the reason why kuzco would trust yzma and kronk when they cross paths at the diner. honestly, given all that, the fact that he had any positive growth at ALL is a goddamned disney miracle. xD
to be clear: i 100% agree with the overall thesis. i just felt the statement about yzma was important enough to warrant a response, you know? you know.
i can't believe that this movie is 23 years old i may have watched this movie 100 times when i was a kid and a few years later when they made the cartoon i watched that sure that movie contradicts the movie saying the potions have short time limits but still
One of my all time favorite Disney movies, Kuzco and Patcha were definitely long lost friends
I still think Kuzco is the best Disney princess
disney prince
Kuzco, Perfect and Hero are not words I expected to see in the same sentence together today
Hi Aldone, since you've talked about every animated film from different studios over the last several months I'm wondering if you can go over Blue Sky Studios and their filmography. I believe they deserve some attention even after their closure.
If only to praise The Peanuts Movie. That and the original Rio.
This movie portays the very accurate way stubborn people change: they deny any idea of them perverting from their carefully fabricated ego they've sold to others, yet when they choose to do good, they don't want to claim it because it shows they do care. Narcissists CAN change, even ones in power
i love Emperor's New Groove 100% in my top 10 moves of all time
Take a shot every time he says “Actually”
I need a hospital
Sometimes a privileged asshole has a good side KUZCOOOoo (I couldn’t help myself) is a perfect example of this. He doesn’t know any better and he’s taught.
Also, snuff out the light is a bop and I will not be told otherwise.
Man I used to watch this movie on repeat when I was 10. 😅 I had to have noodles (top ramen) when I watched it too.I couldn't help but laugh.
That rare hero who can actually keep up with the villain instead of being overshadowed. I do hope Disney reworks "Kingdom of the Sun," though.
Utterly under rated movie
Funny how even before Kuzco goes through his redemption arc that he’s still more likeable than many leads in Disney’s recent movies and television shows
Kuzco is a reformed villain.
I saw a Marvel ad on this video and realized why I stopped caring about Marvel.
I actually liked not being expected to like the main character , it gave me a choice.
That's why my favorite Marvel character is Rocket The Limb Snatcher.
And that is why emperors new groove is the best movie ever made in the history of cinema, actually cinema never existed before emperors new groove. Kuzco actually created movies because it’s so perfect
This comment is approved by Kuzco.
It is Llama approved.
It is is Pacha approved.
It is Kronk approved.
The angry cat Yzma does NOT approve.
Why not cover Treasure Planet as well? I really like your take on these films.
He, Naveen, and Gaston are alike due to narcissism. Yet Naveen and Kuzco took the redemption route through the tribulations and hard paths. While Gaston chose to go his way through extreme measures and paid the ultimate price almost near Yzmas hubris
Honestly, the character arcs in this film are peak. Absolute goals.
This was such a good journey.
Can you do some talking about Disney sidekicks like comparing the ones of the past to the ones we have today and ranking of them? I think you can tell us about Disney Junior shows like the Lion Guard, Jake and the Neverland Pirates, and Little Einsteins. Lastly, I think you should do a video about the rest of Sony Animations following the rise of the Spider-verse franchise.
I love this movie, it's a comedy classic, the 4th wall breaks are probably my favorite moments, I still like them but not as much
My favorite disney animated film!! It's really so great
I love this movie and his character ark
He went from treating others like trash, to changing for the better.
Kudos Kuzco!
Literally so so very
completely true
The first time we watched this was a blast! I can quote the whole movie! It's literally a comedic masterpiece.
The greatest cartoon intro lmao
omg kusco appreciation yay
Could you make a video about Aladar from Dinosaur?
The movie got Squirrel on Up, happy birthday on onwand, frying pan....😊😊😊
That's Y he got in into Diseny's Mirrorverse
W video🗣️💯🔥
Suggestion nick wilde from zootopia aldone
Sad you hardly ever see merchandise from this movie
Sadly, we don’t have protagonist like this anymore in Disney. Protagonists and characters should be like trees, Blessed are the trees that start off barren, but learned how to grow. 🌲
I just realized, would Kuzco count as Disney’s first twist hero?
Kuzco is like Gilgamesh!
Theon greyjoy
Kuzko is one of the best flawed protagonist ever written, I have a feeling this is what the main character of HBO Velma and I am not StarFire going to but they made their protagonists too toxic.
emperors new groove never clicked for me tho, i might have been too old when it came out, i think i was 16, and i enjoyed darker stories already, emperors new groove was too goofy, and i didnt like the villain or her muscle brain lackey, found it too goofy.
I thought kronk is a hero
I think The Emperor's New Groove is okay but Kuzco is not very nice
I've seen True Disney Heroes Throughout the Years. Here's My Respectful Disney Heroes I've known and seen Throughout the Years:
1. Mickey Mouse
2. Hercules
3. Aladdin
4. Fa Mulan
5. Tarzan
6. Jack Sparrow
7. Tron (Disney's 1982 Tron)
8. Prince Eric
9. Prince Phillip
10. Peter Pan
11. Beast (Original Name: Prince Adam)
12. Simba
13. Stitch
14. Jack Skellington
15. James P. Sullivan *Sully*
16. Detective Basil
17. Prince Naveen
18. David *Dave* Stutler (Disney's The Sorcerer's Apprentice)
19. Darkwing Duck
20. Goliath (Disney's Gargoyles)
21. Buzz Lightyear (Disney's Buzz Lightyear of Star Command)
22. Kim Possible
23. Jake Long (Disney's American Dragon: Jake Long)
24. Jack Brewer (Disney XD's Kickin' It)
25. Chase Davenport (Disney XD's Lab Rats)
26. Penn Zero (Disney CD's Penn Zero: Part-Time Hero)
27. K.C. Cooper
28. Elena Castillo Flores
29. Anne Boonchuy
30. Raya (Disney's Raya and the Last Dragon)
These are the True Disney Heroes I've known and seen before Throughout the Years. They're all WAY Better than Kuzco right.
And? so what?
@@noorbohamad5796 I'm guessing you have no respect for these Disney Heroes I've known Throughout the Years, don't you?